Thursday, July 31, 2008

Weathering the storm


The husband had good news to share last week. He had been confirmed in his job in an O & G company since joining December last year. We are ever so grateful and humbled by this expected piece of information.

There's a good reason why.

It has been more than 6 months since we were hit with adversity. The hardest kind.

Before his present job, he had worked with a company for more than 10 years. He worked his way up to his last post. In the course of his work, he was never disloyal, always reliable, been through thick and thin despite some problematic staffs, crazy workloads and even partial management. Certain individuals were given preferential treatment despite zero productivitiy.

It was in late 2006 when the company started to face problems. Future projects were scraped thus making the company fundless. Whatever on-going projects had to be done with very limited resources hence the management and employees had to suffer massive paycuts. It was a matter of time before they had to downsize. In the end, only a handful of people stayed on. Since the husband was one of the major shareholders, he had to bear the burden. For a year, he had no salary. Whatever monies that they get would be channeled to pay existing contractors, employees, office rents and bills.

So how did we get by during which hubby had no salary for a year? With personal loans and whatever savings that was left in his bank account.

With personal loans, we use them sparingly for our household expenses and other miscellaneous. The credit cards (to fill up petrol and other necessities) were used to the max. Life was very hard for us then. But we persevered.

The first practical thing we did to ease the burden was to let go our first car, the proton perdana but we maintained our second car for him to go to work. We cut down on a lot of things considered extravagant drastically. We don't go on Cuti-Cuti Malaysia holidays anymore. School holidays means the kids were going to stay with their grandparents. We stopped eating out, stopped weekend outings and shoppings were done strictly for groceries. We even stopped buying clothes during that frugal period.

During Hari Raya, we wore our previous Hari Raya clothes and amazingly, the kids were cool about it. I remembered the girls said, "Tak pe ibu. Baju kita pun masih cantik lagi tak koyak pun. Kasut raya lama pun elok lagi..." Sayu gile aku masa tu.

During these trying time, hubby applied all kinds of job that suit his qualification. Many times he was politely turned down because they (the advertisers) thought he was too qualified for a mere managerial post. Sometimes I would ask him, "Tak pe ke turun pangkat from COO jadi manager biasa je?" To which he replied "At times like this, choosing job is not an option for me. I'll take whatever that is offered (reasonably) to me".

After unsuccessful attempts in getting suitable job, he received an impressive offer and he accepted it immediately. Macam tau-tau aje. The job couldn't have come at a better time when our savings was about to dry up. Most importantly, its a steady job with perks lining up for him if he works smart and hard as he is.

For what is worth, it makes me think that life is indeed a circle. Hari ini kita di atas, esok kita di bawah. We'll never know what's going to happen in the future. For me, this invaluable experience has taught us to be prudent in our expenses, to be grateful and count our blessings for whatever Allah has bestowed us upon and to appreciate all the little things that we took for granted before.

If its not too late to say this, congratulations Abang on your job confirmation. Alhamdulillah syukur! We made it.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Scary movie

do you know who this girl is? no prize for guessing...


A couple of weeks back, I was watching a horror-slasher movie about a bunch of people get killed one by one by a vicious ghost in a playstation game. Supposedly, when they died in the game, they will die in real life. Wanna know what's so scary about the movie?

Frankie Muniz (of Malcom in the Middle sitcom fame) was in it. And he doesn't cut out to play a side-kick. Apart from that, nothing else is so scary.

I'm a big fan of horror movies. However, I don't fancy slasher flicks. Seeing people get cut up in half or several pieces, decapitated heads or severed limbs aren't exactly my kind of horror movie. Its just too gross. Plain old-fashioned scary movie is what I savor.

Horror movies today are such a bore and lack genuine thrills. Even the storylines are weak. Most of them rely heavily on special effects. Too much CGIs (computer graphic image) had somewhat killjoyed the movie. They don't look real or frightening enough to jolt you from your chair or make your heart pumping.

When I was in standard 4 in the mid seventies, I witnessed a real life exorcism. There was this local maid who worked in one of the neighbour's just two doors away from my house, had been possessed by the devil in a form of pelesit.

Every night, we would hear her shrill of laughters and cries and it was so creepy. Being a nervously curious kid despite strong objections from my parents, I sneaked inside the house and saw a lot of people were reciting the Surah Yaasin. I saw the bomoh lifted a stick and started to beat up the floor but not so hard. It was as if he was trying to chase away the devil. I couldn't see the girl's face properly as she was lying on a thin mattress facing up the ceiling. When I heard sounds coming from the girl's mouth, I began to shiver. I had goosebumps all over my body. She spoke in foreign language that didn't make sense and her voice was so hoarse and fierce. She would then break into eerie laughter and then cry. This would go on repetitively while she's being cured.

Someone once said that a devil can sense your fear. While I stood there frozen from watching all those mumbo jumbo, she then turned her pop-eyed and ghastly face (mak oii, it was so horrible OK) to me and yelled, "Hey, apa kamu pandang-pandang hah!" (What are you looking at?). I almost fell off from the staircase. I will never forget that look from her face. Like the face of the devil itself.

True enough, I developed high fever that lasted a week.

With all that once-in-a-lifetime experience, I still love watching scary movies. I don't mind seeing Linda Blair spin her head and spit green vomit over and over again. Now that is one helluva scary movie.

*My top 10 scary movies (in no particular order)


  1. The Exorcist - nothing beats the crap out of you than watching this movie. After 35 years, still is the best scary movie of all time. best scenes - the head spinning and vomit spitting and of course the voice.

  2. The Omen I (1976) - Just one stare from that son of satan, all hell breaks loose (the zoo scene) and people die from freak accidents. The kid, Damien remains to be the creepiest kid in scary movie history

  3. The Amityville Horror (1979) - a family is terrorized by a demonic house. even the facade of the house is so creepy.

  4. The Blair Witch Project - this successful indie movie proved that eerie sounds, home video style camerawork and adhering to less is more principle (we never get to see the witch till the end) make for one hell of harrowing flick

  5. The Ring - I can never look at TV the same way again...

  6. The Sixth Sense - despite its surprise twist in the ending, this movie did have some scary moments like when Haley Joel Osment had a leak at night or when he felt that someone was following him in broad daylight and its none other than Bruce Willis himself...

  7. Dark Water (original Japanese version) - I had a hard time going into dim-litted elevators, alone and I've never been so scared of damp ceiling or sudden over-flowing water....after watching it of course

  8. Seven - the most disturbing serial killer of all time.

  9. The Eye (original chinese version) - the scariest scene had to be the elevator (again?) scene...totally freaked out!

  10. The Descent - imagine this. trapped in a claustrophobic area like a cave for example and there's something menacing lurking around you in total darkness

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

True Grit


For many of us in the blogosphere, we might come across this blog - onebreastbouncing. It chronicles the life of a courageous cancer survivor named Raden Galoh. However, her latest posting had made my heart weep silently. I admire her for putting up a brave front despite the sad news.

To Raden, there's no better words to say than this. May Allah ease your pain, be strong ahead and for bloggers and readers alike to offer prayers to her. Its the least we could all do.

*picture taken from her blog

Monday, July 21, 2008

While I wasn't looking...




bertuah punya anak...!

It took him less than a minute to create this. It took me at least 30 minutes to clean up the whole mess - the little rascal included!

Friday, July 04, 2008

Enter frame sekejap...


With TNB's new tariff coming into effect this July, I'm bracing myself to minimise the usage of electricity in my household with no holds-barred solutions.

  • No switching on lights after dark. Candlelight dinner sounds romantic.
  • Do laundry manually except for bed sheets, pillow covers, towels, blankets and stubborn stained fabrics.
  • Cook rice on stove. Same applies for re-heating leftovers instead of microwave
  • Watch tv for an hour a day and pick only favorites. When bored stiff, find other means of entertainment. Read a book, do crossword puzzles or scrabble, play masak-masak and so on. The best way to enjoy hide and seek game is to play it in the dark
  • Use manual fans. Better still, wear only undergarments if the weather becomes too hot to handle. Less clothes wear, less laundry
  • Use a broom to sweep dirt
  • To iron wrinkle clothes, put them underneath thick mattress overnight or purchase that charcoal iron from antique store. Buy non-iron clothes from now on
  • Switch to mini-bar fridge from conventional fridge
  • Terminate broadband connection thus stop blogging for good

Frugality has never been this cool. Ok, am back on hiatus mode *yawn* again. See ya.