Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Learning to be strangers

(abstracts from Dr.Michael Vincent Miller)
Can't we be friends? It's an old refrain, ready-made for the one who wants out of a relationship to deliver to the one who doesn't. Frank Sinatra gave it a permanent place in popular culture with the song "Can't We Be Friends?" (This is how the story ends / She's gonna turn me down and say / Can't we be just friends?) Sinatra, who never backed away from melancholy (at least in his music), understood a thing or two about mourning. And mourning is the theme that matters here. Trying to be friends immediately following a breakup tends to prevent the rejected partner (and maybe both partners) from mourning the death of romantic love—from accepting its finality by suffering it all the way through.

As painful as this can be, it ultimately performs an essential function. Behind the tears, mourning has silent work to do: It binds up the torn places where love was and gives them a chance to heal. This is crucial, because falling in love carries us beyond our customary limits of self-expression into territory that puts our sense of self at risk. Two people in love place much of themselves in each other's hands for safekeeping; that kind of interdependence is why the loss of an intimate partner entails the depressing experience of being left behind with a diminished sense of your own existence.

Grieving the end of a relationship is a gradual process of extracting the "I" from a vanishing "we." It provides a way—the only way—to retrieve what you invested in a lover or spouse who has departed. Mourning is like casting a line into dark waters and trying to reel in those parts of yourself that you surrendered to the relationship, before they, too, disappear. Although friendship just after the split may offer temporary relief, it blocks the slow but necessary passage from loss to restoration of independence.

All human development entails suffering losses that need to be grieved. At every stage of life, we are propelled beyond familiarity and security into a new situation: A baby's first steps mean that she will soon leave behind the comforting security of being carried. A young adult going off to college feels the thrill of freedom but has to contend with homesickness. For all the important gains, there are also losses that bring up anxiety and sadness. Grief might be thought of as the growing pain of human development. A child's love is really no different from dependence, and that equation haunts us to some degree all our lives.

The residues of early dependence in all our intimacies play a large part in making the loss of love so hard to bear. Yet we all go through such loss, leaving behind a trail of casualties—outdated selves, broken promises, lovers we realize we chose for the wrong reasons. Mourning these helps change what can seem like failures into wisdom. In learning how to grieve our losses, it doesn't help that American culture, with its emphasis on romantic love and happy endings, isn't very hospitable to mourning. But when we enter into the deeper and more difficult stretches of loving, Hollywood can't shield us from the truth: All love stories come to an end, even those that last a lifetime. When loss hits us hard, it can be difficult to know what to do with it, or even how to bear it. Many people in grief turn to antidepressants, which may reduce the pain but don't necessarily provide much by way of self-discovery.

Mourning teaches us how to accept the end of love and helps us start the process of feeling whole again. True, the self you get back is never quite the same as the self you relinquished to your relationship; although wounds can heal, they leave scar tissue. But there's more to gain than just surviving the breakup; there's also the possibility of becoming more than you were, more able to undertake the experience of love in its moments of sadness as well as joy. As with any art or skill, the only way grieving can be learned is through practice—whether we like it or not.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Goodnight kiss


The way I see it, life is a journey. Sometimes it's stormy and you get caught in a downpour, sometimes you dance in the sunlight and occasionally you get to see a big, bright, beautiful rainbow. What makes the journey so interesting is who travels with you and how you decide to travel. I'm pretty sure the bumper sticker that reads, "The joy of the journey is not in reaching the destination but in the ride," is one of those simple truths and is most assuredly an ancient wisdom.

If along the journey you meet someone you want to marry, my advice in a nutshell is, "Never forget to kiss each other good night." I know it seems like surprisingly basic and pleasant advice, but it is also time-tested and downright good for you.
Let's face it: We are running so fast through life.

Our days are packed with work, chores, obligations, dirty dishes, laundry, phone calls, text messages, the Internet, e-mails, high gas prices, low stock prices and more to do than we want to. Although we have every intention of putting our partners first, sometimes we get swept up in the tsunami of life and they get washed out with our good intentions.

Without knowing it, we suddenly find ourselves floating in a sea of things to do and, although not intended, our relationships are taken for granted. We don't plan it — we really don't even see it or feel it — but before we know it, we have floated away from each other.

When you never forget to kiss each other good night, you create a life raft, and you can't float away so quickly because you acknowledge each other, pause, connect and express your love. The golden rule seems to work here. If you treat your partner the way you want to be treated, you'll have a really great shot at creating the kind of marriage that you want. If you stretch throughout the day my advice of never forgetting to kiss each other good night and create small ways to put love in your life, you'll build intimacy and closeness and your kindness and care will honor your partner and grow your relationship.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Postcard To England


Give me more loving than I’ve ever had; make me feel better when I’m feeling sad;tell me I’m special even though I know I’m not; make me feel goodwhen I hurt so bad;barely getting madI’m so glad I found you; I love being around you; You make it easy. Its as easy as 1-2-1-2-3-4

Give me more loving from the very start; Piece me back together when I fall apart; Tell me things you never even tell your closest friends; Make me feel good when I hurt so bad; You’re the best that I’ve had; And I’m so glad I found you; I love being around you; You make it easy It’s easy as 1-2-1-2-3-4


Thank you A!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

He Says..

I don’t know exactly what the purpose of being in a relationship is, but I have an idea. It’s nice to have someone to have dinner and go to weddings with. It’s good to have someone to talk to and confide in, it’s great to connect with someone on emotional, intellectual, and spiritual levels, and it’s fantastic to have someone to hang out with when there’s nothing better to do. But, regardless of what we want to believe, no one “deserves” to be in a relationship. That’s why it’s especially rewarding when we’re lucky enough to find someone to be in one with.

Relationships make life easier and more bearable, and this is why I’ve never understood why people put up with relationship problems. Life is hard enough, and a relationship with problems just makes life more difficult. The only thing worse than having relationship problems is seeking relationship advice. Seeking relationship advice is a vain attempt at solving problems that shouldn’t exist in the first place. These are attempts by insecure people to hold on to things that they want to feel they deserve. Sometimes the security of companionship clouds the focus of what the purpose of a relationship should be, which is to make life easier. If you are having problems in your relationship, then you don’t need advice. You need a new relationship.

If you need to seek advice from your friends, I’m sure they’ll gladly listen, but they’d rather not hear it. They’ll tell you what you want to hear, but this is what you need to hear:

1.) If you need advice because you think your boyfriend doesn’t pay attention to you, then you need a new relationship.
2.) If you need advice because your girlfriend keeps cheating on you, then you need a new relationship.
3.) If you need advice because it bothers you that your boyfriend doesn’t care about things that you care about, then you need a new relationship.
4.) If you need advice because you’re not satisfied that your girlfriend won’t perform the sexual acts you fantasize about, then you need a new relationship.
5.) If you need advice because you’re addicted to drama, then you need a new relationship.

If you are having problems in your relationship, then you don’t need advice. You need a new relationship. And if you’re not ready to hear that, then you need to be alone.

p/s: You are rocks, Andrew! You totally inspired me to dig a big hole and bury my head sand deep.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Postcard from England


where do we go from here? this isn't where we intended to be, we had it all , you believed in me; i believed in you. certainties disappear; what do we do for our dream to survive? how do we keep all our passions alive as we used to do? deep in my heart, i'm concealing things that i'm longing to say; scared to confess what i'm feeling... frightened you'll slip away...


Love, A


A Persiflage with the Astronomist

Another Melee hovers like dark clouds over us. Threatening to rain on us and wash away any lingering scent of reminiscences. Any sweet Echo by Davidoff that may have remained embedded in the cotton strands of our clothing would disperse through this fight. Any saccharine Smile by Sensodyne that may flash back in our memories will be wipe out by this conflict. Our disparate thoughts and incongruent hearts that cannot go in sync. We need to find a source to blame. If it was not from within us, then it must be something beyond our control. We have mastered the art of condemning everything else but ourselves. Anything but our selfish desires and our egocentric goals in life was to carry the weight of our transgression.

There are moments when everything seems perfect. The shared laughter. The shared silence. This time, I wonder what it feels like. To find the one in this life, the one we all dream of. I have been waiting for the real thing, I should know it when I get the feeling because it will play out like a scene straight out from the silver screen. So I will be holding my breath right up till the end until I find the one that I will spend forever with. Because naturally nobody wants to be the last one there, we all want to have somebody who cares, somebody to love with my life in their hands, there’s gotta be somebody for me out there.

I dislike complicated and sticky situations. I rather be credulous and enjoy our preposterous kismet. Apathy helps. As acrid as it may be, this is my tiny scintilla of hope on my dandelion wish. When you whisper your wish into the cotton fluffs and let the wind, take it to where rainbow ends, where dreams do come true.

The spaces between your fingers are to be filled by the delicate fingers of the one you love - clutched together and becoming one stronghold of a bond that is everlasting. A sign that you have finally found the one to hold you through thick and thin. Maybe, it’s all too soon to tell for now whether the space between mine fingers are to be fitted with yours because once, it seemed to fit a lot of other fingers too. We have all been through the shattered heart - with the broken pieces and shrapnel of an explosive love affair still embedded in our scars, reminding us that love hurts. Afterall, a heart that hurts is a heart that beats.

We tread more vigilantly, wary of what is ahead, especially when it is seems too virtuous. We now have a little perspicacity to what we seek for to fill those spaces. But are we really allowing ourselves to love? Does being the sentinel man afford us a to find a veritable relationship or just one that is built and guarded with so much restrictions and don’ts; with no freedom for our hearts to slide down the slippery slope of euphoria with no control, screaming woohoo! at the top of your lungs. We refuse to acknowledge the stirring of our hearts. Just the faltering staccato beats of our feelings. Irresolute. Vaccilating. Undecided. Slowly disconnecting from one and another.

My chimera of a love story differs awfully from reality. In my fantasy fairytale love story, I just want Romeo to melt to the ground, pull out a ring and say, “marry me Juliet and you will never have to be alone – I love you and that’s all the reason why, talk to your dad, go pick out a white dress, it’s a love story baby just say yes!!” In reality, Romeo put out his hand and say, “I will think about it Juliet – I am not sure if I love you and that’s all the reason why, I am talking to you, are you listening?!!”

What about the laughter and the happy ever after, the voices of sweet angels, telling us that we could be in love? Just like imaginary friends, they are make believes whenever we feel desolated. The subtleties of my love affair often lead me to slip into a faux pas of thinking that like all things in life, this love affair can be cannily work out. That time can solve it. Its a trepidation to venture into an unknown, let alone to let go and slide down the slope. Truth to be told, I lack the temerity to love. Truth be told, this is one maze that I am not au fait with. I am dubious I will find my way out from it. Having said that, I should get back to my disconsolate life and wait for mine somebody out there. Once again, I have to confess, even my sanguine nature cannot help me feel that the Astronomist got it right again. I am daft when it comes to love and often too myopic to see that a relationship is just a passage through life’s journey.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Underneath it all



Christmas trees are abit like relationships. The real thing is certainly more beautiful, but it's just too much fuss, too much mess. You can say what you like about fake ones. But you can't deny they are alot less troublesome. Alot less stressful. And who is to say these relationships are meaningless. No strings attach. No lose ends to tie or to burn. Just a thinning web of deceit, vulnerable but easy to be spun again even if destroyed. We are there because we want to be there. A thousand death cuts you get in real relationship - there's none of that.

I like you - you are nice.

Is that really so meaningless? Or is that all the meaning you need?

I see him almost everday after 6pm. I watch him talking about the day to day life thrown at him. The situation seems to change daily. Phrases that meant nothing to us awhile ago - words like love, seperation, and heart breaks- are now charged with meaning, coming home to us in all their awful reality.


Do we both deserve all these? The sneakaround. The constant watch on the time. The emotional exhaustion. The abiding contempt in my heart? Just for wanting one more go at getting it right?


We laugh but there is no longer warmth or humour in our laughters that night. Fear and worry has crept into our conversation. Hijacked our contemporary happiness. I caught myself wondering what am I doing in this place with him? Stuck in a tricky and sticky situation. Is it because I don've anyone else to go to? Or have my heart secretly fell in love without consulting me first? To have someone to call my own and to chat and laugh mindlessly under the starlight. Perhaps I shouldn't be so scared of caring. Perhaps I was reckless with me heart. I was too lenient perhaps?


This is not me. I tell myself over and over again. The whimpers of fear. The silent rhythmic thumps of my heart accelerating by the moment. Although I knew these are the things are unseen. The emotions I can never show to him. I still feel I have to be truly myself till the final goodbye. Brave. Selfless and funny. Concerned about everyone except myself. The things you will never hear or see. The despair and the cries. The welling tears and the tear-stained face. Ignorance is bliss.


I had love in mind. You have too much overspilling at the brink. Soon the excitement will die down. The smiles will fade and only silence will fill the night air. I cannot love you. The words poked at me. Snigger. Kept repeating like a broken record. prodding and prodding until it tore right through into my heart. The place where it hurts most. The wind blew and stung at the open flesh wound. I shut my eyes tightly. Wishing then, it will shut down the flood gates. They all eventually leave one day, darling. Every single one of them. Every person that ever succeeded in brightening my day and cheering my heart disappeared as quickly as a cat in the night. As though happiness was only supposed to be some kind of weekend ice cream treat. It was always the good people that left. The ones who weren't afraid to love or to smile. But the love and the smile never belong eternally to me. It was always someone's else love or smile that I could only borrowed for a season. For a short period.

I wish for the Astronomist to take me in his arms. The one who truly love unconditionally. The smiles and the love was never for loan. It was for mine to have forever. For the Astronomist to take me his arms, so big that I am dwarfed in his embrace. I wish to be surrounded by his love as he rock me softly and slowly whenever I went running to him to plaster my wounds. Funny how I only remember him when in pain. Funny how I never saw pass the medical badge on him. His whispers of assurance in my ears and his fingers running through my hair as he hush my cries and dry my tears. He made me believe that everything would be ok and lying in his arms, I knew it would and it felt like it could. He showed me the lavender fields that I could roll in. Lavenders are theuraptic. He used to pick bunches of lavenders to place in my room, calm my soul and pillow the screaming hurt.

Underneath it all, you never felt the uneven bumps of scars. You never hear the silent prayer of hope. you never know a heart that is broken...If only you could see me now. I am like a dandelion. Fragile and easily blown away by strong winds.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Your memoir



Within those subtle eyes are the evidence of a lifetime. Photographs, memories, hugs, intimacy and love, onced. I stare forlornly on the wall of nostalgia, helpless and unable to decide if these things are treasure to be cherished forever or nightmares from the past that will come to haunt my future..our future.

her things. their memories. her photographs. their love.

all things that I cannot take away and everything that I couldnt take away. I want him to keep them all but I know that's absurd, impossible. The photographs can stay. Perhaps some. I decide that I will keep these awful and selfish thoughts to myself, but even that is not simple.

I stare blankly and confused by my own thoughts. I myself too am lost. It all is now a blur on where right and wrong stands. Where principles and morales all seem to be washed away by the emotionally waves. Where certainties become a rarity. where my heart lies in the heart of another...yet again to be caught in this web of confusion

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Rattlings of a confused heart

I can see us not talking one day. Us, becoming strangers and not wanting to know the existence of another on this planet we share. Despite my attraction to you, I am contended to maintain a best friend and best friend relationship with you. But, as a despondent individual, my life is chronicled by episodes of transient happiness. The housemate was enthusiastic that I experienced this because she felt that it showed that my feelings were capable of moving on from he who must not be named. My other friend said that the events in my life play out like consecutive scenes in a Hollywood movie and I should take pride in the fact that my life is exhilarating. I don’t understand how excitement can be found in mortification. I don’t understand my friends, but they’re probably right. You made me happy for a little bit, even though knowing deep down it might end up in a specatular explosions of gossips and stress. Perhaps I should be happy about things that I know I should hate, which kind of describes my feelings about liking music by Daughtry.