Thursday, July 30, 2009

A fairytale wedding - Mark & Sarah Cross

This is how a wedding should be. A fairytale wedding celebrated with your closest friends and family and people who simply love the pair of you together filled with abundant joy and love. Throw in the laughters and giggles and you know that - dreams do come true. Just have a little faith. Pictures are worth a thousand words.


















Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Wheel of Life

Last night's outing with the Wednesday provoked a profounding realisation upon me. Our life is such a routine that we all need something to look forward to. A detour. A pinch of spice or a splash of colour to what's grey and dull. Taken the average working week, we spent nearly 12 hours (sometimes more) working and/or commuting to work and what's left after deducting 8 hours of sleep (if we are lucky) is nothing more than 4 hours that seemed to whizz by in Bullet Train style. There is not much social hours, not much cup-of-tea-time, not much My-time and not much to keep us going unless we work in the entertainment industry, PR, or anything to do with a hip-hop beat, which most of us don't.



Its such a routine, doing the same thing week after week and yet the grim fact remains, we are stuck in this lifestyle. Like the adults always say, welcome to the working life. The closest friends you make at work are a chosen few : - heart attack, stress, hair loss, boredom and lost of sleep. There may be loads of tedium and toil but little of excitement and joy. The hamster wheel of work has become our life and sometimes we ponder, "how did we ever get here?" Soon after, we drone on in the fog of a mundane life for so long that we forget how to enjoy life, how to have fun and how to catch the silver linnings in the dark clouds. Is work all about sustaining ourselves financially? Has everyone fall prey into believing that if we don't work, we are lazy bummers? Actually, it is not a myth. Its true that the society place an importance of bringing home the bacon and topping up the figures in our bank accounts. The rat race to be employed, to ascend the corporate ladder, and to be a workaholic has all been programmed into us...or some of us.

We all need that rainbow to keep us going. That promise after the storm. A silver lining for us to look out for. A purpose to drive us. Humans were made to have meaning, without purpose, life is meaningless. Rick Warren wrote, "“Without God, life has no purpose, and without purpose, life has no meaning.” Are you caught in your daily dilemma of the hamster wheel? Going round and round, day in day out, just drifting along life and your motto is, "come what may"? A purpose produces passion and by knowing your purpose, you will be passionate about achieving it.

I think sometimes, it no harm to take a little break, take time off to contemplate on how life has been? Do you realise that everytime someone ask their perfunctory, "how are you?", we reel our automated answer of, "I'm fine, thank you?" Is our life really fine? Or are we satisfied with just being fine?

God, grant me the serenityto accept the things I cannot change;
the courage to change the things I can;
and the wisdom to know the difference.

Monday, July 27, 2009

He sang

What Hurts The Most (By Rascal Flatts)

I can take the rain on the roof of this empty house
That don't bother me
I can take a few tears now and then and just let them out
I'm not afraid to cry every once in a while
Even though going on with you gone still upsets me
There are days every now and again I pretend I'm ok
But that's not what gets me

What hurts the most
Was being so close
And having so much to say
And watching you walk away
And never knowing
What could have been
And not seeing that loving you
Is what I was tryin' to do

It's hard to deal with the pain of losing you everywhere I go
But I'm doin' It
It's hard to force that smile when I see our old friends and I'm alone
Still Harder
Getting up, getting dressed, livin' with this regret
But I know if I could do it over
I would trade give away all the words that I saved in my heart
That I left unspoken


What hurts the most
Was being so close
And having so much to say
And watching you walk away
And never knowing
What could have been
And not seeing that loving you
Is what I was tryin' to do

Thursday, July 23, 2009

A simple wish


"Race you to the Gate. Loser buys dinner!" I yelled against the blowing wind in my face and sped of, pedalling as hard as I could, huffing and puffing. "Loser buys breakfast, lunch and dinner!" the Date screamed back. In lightning speed, he shot beside me with a grin plastered on his face and pedalled furiously ahead. I tried to pedal faster but my legs refuse to cooperate with my will power and the sight of the Date's butt was distracting mine concentration. It was ineluctable that victory would be on his side. He was bigger, stronger, and close to being the next Lance Armstrong whereas I was petite and far from qualified to compete in any Tour DE France. I reached the Gate glowering at the Date who flashed me his oscar award winning smile and was standing pridefully at the Gate, waiting for the petite tortoise to arrive. I was flustered and a sore loser. Being the magnanimous person he is, the Date ameliorated my loss with an ice-cream treat. We both sat licking our ice cream cones while watching the picturesque sunset at the horizon. The sky was painted with shades of orange and crimson, the giant glow of the sun setting behind some hills and fluffy cotton clouds were forming shapes around it.


A date could be a walk in the park or even a cycling race. It doesn't have to be dinner served with candlelight for romance to fuel. My ideal romance would be a moon in the sky lighting up my walk with that one person along the beach but the little outings, such as last week's cycling race with the Date has adumbrated how small things count, how childhood activities still excites and how much I have missed out as an adult. How I have forgotten that not everything ideal is perfect and not everything perfect is ideal.


So often I look for that extra something in a date be it, the one who makes me laugh the most, the one who with the most wit, or even the one with the nicest teeth that I overlook the one special thing in that person. He who brings out the best in me. He who gives no room for louche or sly behaviours. That one person who was determined to put the cares of the world behind him and do what he loved best -- enjoying an evening of anecdote and badinage with the girl who lights up his world. Maybe by saying this, I am being paradoxically because the statement goes deeper than the superficial attitudes or physicals of a person but rather to the core of his character and upbringing. Its asking for more. Like PEPSI - ask for more. Not just the fizzy taste of a carbonated drink or the sugar high from a can of soda. Its that exquisiteness that sets PEPSI apart from Coke...that dash of lemon twist perhaps?


The Date would be like that dash of lemon twist. He makes me ask for more of his companionship, more of his ebullient character and more of his attention. Like a craving that is insatiable and an addiction that keeps you high. The circumstances that kismet throws me in may not be my ideal romantic notion nor may it be perfect. I dare not hope for anything more than a good time when out with him for I believe "Hope" wraps you in a frolly of make believes and it can be inconvenient. Hope is paradoxical. It can be painful. It can search my heart and motives to the very bottom. I don't ask for hope, and often I don't actually want it. What I really want is for the desire to go away, or be granted.

I do well to remember that romantic love cannot be bought, even with the coin of deserving or longing for that love. Ultimately, romance is a mystery. Even Solomon, with all his wisdom, included it in his list of things that were "too wonderful" for him to fully comprehend.

With The Date, I have stopped trying to catch that love bug. Stop trying to comprehend the complexity of situations. He has taught me to seize the moment. carpe diem. seize the moment with his genuine longing for a whale of fun. sometimes, you just have to keep things simple. Make a simple wish. He may be just one of the gazillion stars in the sky, but his honesty and simplicity shines through my heart for me to want to make a wish upon.

Here's to more titillating dates.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Things I miss about England - Part 1

Friends

Freezing beaches

S Winter and Snow








Handsome Gorgeous Princes












Shopping and christmases














Naked man and castle evasions

Friday, July 17, 2009

What maketh a man

Last night,the Astronomist was maundering and to some extent speaking in gibberish. He had just finish watching Poison Ivy: Lust & Seduction. A must watch recommended by yours truly for all hot blooded male with a penchant for "romance". His usual intelligence and compose self has vanish in that interim of 2 hours. Men are miracles of evolution but after 3 billion years, there is still alot of room of improvement - the crucial point here being pin pointed by comedian Robin Williams, 'God gave men a brain and a penis, but only enough blood to run one at a time.' This certainly explains the insane blabbering coming from the Astronomist.

A woman lacks the extra spark of a special gene
called the SRY that determines the sex region of the Y-Chromosome and summarily explains that even after watching reruns of Lust & Seduction we can still hold a perfectly intelligent conversation with the President. The SRY has clearly got a lot to answer for. But how can such a tiny sliver of genetic material have such profound consequences for a human being? The answer, says geneticist Professor Steve Jones, of University College London, is simple. 'The SRY is a switch that directs other genes on to their allotted path,' he states. It's like the railway points outside a large terminus: with a single tiny shift the SRY sends the sexual express towards one destination rather than another.

Al Kennedy describes what maketh a man perfectly. I shared this with the Astronomist and I feel obligated as a responsible alpha female to share this with you too..so bear with the torture and read on.

Ah, men. Ah, sweeping generalisations. Of course, you wouldn't want to put the two together. Then again, somewhere in my reptile brain, they are together, because I am a creature of hormones and natural fluids and so, for me, men are divided sweepingly into Dofindattractive and Dontfindattractive. The ones in the former category can behave like lobotomised Visigoths with relative impunity and those in the latter can be saints come to earth, with particle physics degrees and the muscle tone of gods, and yet still seem, somehow, completely uninteresting. I try to rise above this, but frequently I don't. And as I find so very few men attractive and the rest of them are pretty much invisible, I can't say that I'm any kind of expert when it comes to my masculine counterparts.

But I have noticed a few points. For instance, there aren't any New Men. There are only men who want to hear about your periods so they can give you the kind of solemn look they'd offer to someone who's suffered a bereavement. When this makes you want to slap them, they will then look even more sympathetic because your Special Girlie Body Chemistry is clearly leading you astray. Then they will offer you cake. Or try to shag you. Or both. Naturally, there are men who want to hug each other, sit in sweat lodges and weep theatrically, but that's not exactly New.

Because men are all softies. I know, I know, that's entirely sweeping, but I've given this some thought and I would still argue that it's true. I have, for example, spent four hours trailing round shops with a man locked in the agony of buying himself trousers. The assistant in the first shop made him feel old, the second place made him feel fat, then he worried about his hair - and dying, possibly alone - and finally he stood, shaking and on the verge of hysteria, unable to even tell a gentleman's outfitter that he hadn't intended to test-run an overcoat.

Men don't actually want to have such a limited sartorial repertoire; they don't want to drag about in suits and ties and jeans and shell suits - they're just far too scared to try anything else. It takes huge support and coddling to get a man to even change his socks. Men can sometimes break out into brave, little displays of colour, the occasional mini-kilt, but this takes months of encouragement from other, understanding and strong-minded men who are used to adversity and well-versed in exotic fabrics. Men who dress like abandoned sofas and whose personal maintenance regimes rely entirely on stolen cloakroom soap and irregular splashes of cold water aren't hideous slobs, they've just given up, lonely and overwhelmed by the weight of their own ugliness. Men are expected to like and understand football, badger baiting, power tools, the internal combustion engine, and yet very many of them are tragically unhandy, unsporting and fond of badgers. Men are never allowed to be wrong, to read instruction manuals, and are expressly forbidden to ask directions.

Add to this the fact that men are required to fight - in wars, in bars, in post office queues - and it's easy to appreciate that most spend their lives in a broth
of nervous tension and sensations of impending doom.

Which explains why they're generally so messy. And, to make matters worse, they're big. Even quite small men are big. They have to clomp round on their big feet, support the constant, nagging weight of their big heads and manipulate objects with their big hands when everyone knows that all the useful things in life - remote controls, computer keyboards, mobile phones, buttons, bra clasps, cutlery - were actually designed for people with the hands of slender elves. No wonder there are breakages and hasty words.

Possibly for some of the reasons above, my relationships with men amount to a series of slow-motion car crashes. But now, after mature reflection, I've discovered the one key fact that would have helped me approach all male contingencies: men are essentially like horses.

No, no, no, not like that, nothing Catherine the Great about it. I mean, if you've ever had to deal with horses, you will know that they are large, powerful and
often fine-looking things. But they are also afraid of dust, air, newspapers, traffic, loud noises, quiet noises, intermediate noises, each other, themselves and anything else they feel like. They tread a ghastly path between nervous exhaustion, potentially fatal coughing and leg injuries. Fair enough, if they're really terrified they can kill you by mistake, but treated with consideration they can be pitifully trusting and will put themselves tirelessly to work in return for a few pieces of liquorice or a kind word.

So speak gently to your men folk, rub their foreheads, make no sudden moves and you may find they'll be your friends for life. Be tender - they can seem noisy and inconvenient at times - but they're still probably worth the effort. And, above all, keep them away from sweeping
generalisations that may irritate them, or affect their self-esteem.

So I hereby retract what I said about you being a slobberish incoherent speaker of the English language. I thought it was pretty cuteeeeee. :)