Sunday, June 26, 2011

short break


After taken two days break from my hectic work, it makes a lot of difference in the way I behave and see things. I changed to be more in a good manner when communicate with my parents. Of course they seemed happy with the change :)

The past two days were so precious to me. I don't even dare to waste a minute on doing nothing. And so happen, Wimbledon is on-going and I got the chance to watch it live from astro. Let me share with you, thing that I like the most is lying on the sofa while watching tennis matches. I've been long time never enjoy watching TV like how i described.

Tennis has been part of my life since my dad thought me about it.

On the 1st day of my holiday, I went for jogging at DO Hill (famous small hill in Taiping). The place was amazing. Peaceful, many trees around and with no air pollution! I really enjoy the view and love to jog there. After the jog, I do some housekeeping of my own things and also renewed my IC. But, it can only be collected after a month :( In the evening, I jogged a long distance surrounding the Lake Garden. It was to prepare for today's marathon. At night, CK,KH, PT, Guat Theng (friend that never meet up for quite some time) and I had a drink at Tai Hu (our must go yam cha wonderland). It was great to chit chat and meet with all of them. I love the hectic-less of Taiping :)

As we'd planned, we hike up Maxwell hill on my 2nd day. Although it's tiring, we managed to reach the 3rd stop!! 'round of applause to all of us' Of course the next thing we had was breakfast! we ate at an old coffee shop. I really like the feel of it. Besides, the food served were all tasty. Too bad, on that day, my phone was ran out of batt, so didn't get chance to take any pictures.

After filled the stomach, we have no where to go. Entertainment in Taiping is very limited. Out of sudden, CK suggested to swim at waterfall. Without any delay, we headed there and have fun till 11.30am. One word to describe - awesome!!! I've been long time never feel so relax and have fun with friends. Thank God for giving me this pleasure :)

This time wise, I did not plan at all. But everything seems to be under the plan. Apart from all these, on Friday was also the AGM of HL Scout. As a senior, I attended the meeting together with CK and KH. I'm very happy to see all our junior scouts and also our beloved Mr. Chan. A lot of things had changed, but the scout's spirit will never be destroyed!

That's all about my short holiday. I really miss it!

It's time to back to reality and I wish my family & friends live a happy life!!

Thursday, June 9, 2011

The way you are


Life is unpredictable. Many things could just happen without our realization. As I always remind myself, sincere to everything you do, honest to people around and enjoy every moment in life. Somehow, I just couldn't control or change the situation that I'm going through. What I want is only a simple and happy life. Unfortunately, the world is always complicated. Money and Power are ruling people's behavior and attitude. At first, I thought I can stand strong with my own view. However, the situation doesn't allowed me to do so...

No matter what, I will never ever let the evil side to rule my life! Fight till the last breath.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011


Forget the past, look forward; sincere to the job and people around:) Hope today is a good day.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

badly organized event

As I always said, time flies...

yesterday was the energizer 2011 night marathon and I took part in 21km race! unfortunately the organizer did it badly and I'm sure everyone finds it a bad experience! we were supposed to collect the headlight before the run, but there's no direction or even instructions of where we should take it from. anyway, we still managed to found it and it was actually a few boxes thrown at a dark foyer for everyone to grab it themselves. oh gosh! it really mess up the entire place and my hot temper started to blow up in my mind! I feel like shouting in front of the MD or chairperson of Energizer, you failed and please return my money!!!

luckily my rational and excitement over the run still remained strong! eventually the race started on time and we didn't expect the situation got worsen towards the end. after I finished a big round surrounding sepang circuit and a round on the circuit, I heard the organizer made the announcement...21km...please turn into the right gate to collect your medal and goodies!!! I'm so curious of whether I have finish 21km and asked the PIC standing at the finishing line. he answered, I think so... what the fuck!!! it's so unprofessional and badly organized. other runners from the same category also proceeded to the collection counter and I did the same. Who knows...I have only finished 16km with a medal on hand! for the rest who completed 21km did not managed to get their medals. immediately, the organizer apologized saying that they had mix up everything and the goodies together with the medal will send it to our doorstep. On the night, some aggressive people have shown their dissatisfaction and created havoc there. I would not blame them as we should show to the organizer of how we feel.

if you think about it. this is not only causing people to boycott the run. but, also a great damaged to the brand image. Energizer, I wish you luck and so sorry to tell you that no more next time;)

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Appreciate

After 12, we have come to the last day of Feb 2011. without realized, I have completed 2 mths in the station. Hopefully these 2 mths did shown my hard work and passion in the job. As I always told myself, family members are the priority and friends were the one who supported me. Changing to a new job is a big turning point in my life. I learned to take up the challenge and face all kind of difficulty.

My quote of the day:

Do not stay and feel proud with the past, live in the current and do the best. There's nothing 100% perfect in life. God Blessed:)

Monday, November 15, 2010

Aung San Suu Kyi was freed after jailed for more than fifteen years

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) - Myanmar's democracy heroine Aung San Suu Kyi is vowing to press ahead in her decades-long fight for political liberty while also calling for compromise with other political parties and the ruling junta after taking her own first steps back to freedom.

Suu Kyi, who was freed from house arrest Saturday amid a divided political landscape and days after widely criticized elections, made clear she faces a precarious position: maneuvering between the expectations of the country's pro-democracy movement and the realities of dealing with a clique of secretive generals who have kept her locked up for much of the past two decades.

"I've always believed in compromise," the Nobel Peace laureate told reporters Sunday in the dilapidated offices of her party, the National League for Democracy, with its rough concrete floor and battered wooden furniture. "I am for national reconciliation. I am for dialogue. Whatever authority I have, I will use it to that end ... I hope the people will support me."

This Southeast Asian nation, once known as Burma, has been ruled by the military since 1962, leaving it isolated from much of the international community and battered by poverty. The junta has an abysmal human rights record, holding thousands of political prisoners and waging brutal military campaigns against ethnic minorities.

In recent years, though, it has also become an increasingly important regional trading hub, and its natural gas reserves and hydroelectric possibilities have brought it close to energy-hungry China and India.

Earlier Sunday, Suu Kyi spoke to a rapturous crowd of as many as 10,000 people who jammed the street in front of the office. While the speech was technically illegal - any gathering of more than a handful of people needs government permission in Myanmar - the authorities made no arrests.

Deeply charismatic, the 65-year-old Suu Kyi is by far the country's most popular politician, a popularity the junta clearly fears. Dozens of secret police officers were on hand Sunday to record her comments and photograph those in attendance.

"I believe in human rights and I believe in the rule of law. I will always fight for these things," she told the crowd. "I want to work with all democratic forces and I need the support of the people."

But she also urged her followers to work for national reconciliation.

"If we want to get what we want, we have to do it in the right way; otherwise we will not achieve our goal however noble or correct it may be," she cautioned.

Later, Suu Kyi told reporters her message to junta leader Gen. Than Shwe was, "Let's speak to each other directly." The two last met in secret talks in 2002 at the encouragement of the United Nations.

If her comments might appear surprisingly measured for a woman who has become an international symbol of democratic reform, she has long said she was willing to negotiate, even with the junta.

The top-ranking U.S. diplomat in Myanmar, Charge d'Affaires Larry Dinger, was among a group of diplomats who met her Sunday and also met her while she was under house arrest.

"She's made clear to us that she's a pragmatic politician who wants to find pragmatic solutions to this country's problems," he said.

Energized as Suu Kyi's supporters are, she faces a military determined to cling to the power it has wielded for decades, and any collision between the two could well land Suu Kyi right back from where she emerged this weekend - house arrest and isolation.

"It could be a little bit of a cat and mouse game," said Trevor Wilson, former Australian ambassador to Myanmar and now a visiting fellow at the Australian National University in Canberra. "The regime may wait for her to make a tactical error and crack down on her again."

Suu Kyi's most recent term kept her under house arrest for seven years, though she has been jailed or under house arrest for more than 15 of the last 21 years.

In that time, she was unable to see her husband, the British scholar Michael Aris, before he died of cancer, and has never met her grandchildren. She has not seen her two sons for almost 10 years.

But she insisted Sunday her time in detention - in a crumbling lakeside family villa where she had a small staff - was far easier than most prisoners here face. Human rights groups say the government holds more than 2,200 political prisoners.

"Honestly, throughout these years of detention, they have treated me well. But they have not acted according to the rule of law, and that I will always fight against," she told reporters.

She said she "kept myself pretty much on an even keel" during her detention, but added for years she had only the radio for company. "I'd like to listen to human voices," she said.

Her release came just days after an election that was swept by the ruling junta's proxy political party and decried by Western nations as a sham designed to perpetuate authoritarian control. The leading opposition party was a splinter from Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy, was officially disbanded for refusing to register for the polls.

Many observers have questioned whether her release was timed by the junta to distract the world's attention from the Nov. 7 polls. Suu Kyi said her party would help probe allegations of voting fraud.

Myanmar's last elections in 1990 were won overwhelmingly by the National League for Democracy, but the military refused to hand over power and instead clamped down on opponents.

Suu Kyi took up the democracy struggle in 1988, as mass demonstrations were breaking out against 25 years of military rule. She was quickly thrust into a leadership role, mainly because she was the daughter of the country's most famous modern political hero, Aung San, who led the country to the eve of independence from Britain before his assassination by political rivals in 1947.

She rode out the military's bloody suppression of street demonstrations to help found the NLD. Her defiance gained her fame and honor, most notably the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize.

That defiance and the immense personal costs she has paid - held in detention, cut off from her family - has given Suu Kyi's followers a near-mystical belief in her abilities.

"She has sacrificed her family to stand for truth and justice," said Taw Hla Kyi, an 80-year-old woman standing in the crowd Sunday. "If we all work together with Suu Kyi, the generals will all run away."


Source: The Star & AP

Friday, June 26, 2009

Randomness

The blog almost half a year never been updated. Maybe I have lost my interest or out of idea... Now is already end of June and...I'm still jobless. the feeling is weird. Much of hatred accumulated in my mind. maybe I'm too naive or believes in...err...dunno how to describe. Peoples around were sooo curious and wanting to know what am I doing. It makes me feel angry and frustrated. But, I believed some of them are really concerned bout my future. I hope they would understand my situation and let me face it myself. I do not want all 'these'. please let me solve it. I'm okay......