27 July 2008

RobertDeSilva@58

10 most remembered@Robert deSilva
  1. Riding our superbike through a very dark stormy night from KL to Ipoh, and survived.
  2. His talents and special ability to smell for best food around Kuala Lumpur, Ipoh Penang… any where lah
  3. Untiring and passionate organizer for the annual berbuka puasa for his comrade at the site office… thank you
  4. The heartbreaking period he had to face the predicament pertaining to his ailing mother.
  5. Laughing about having to bring umbrella to his faithful but leaking Mitsubishi.
  6. Buying an expensive mattress in the hope of seeing him becoming a millionaire and one day flying me of to an expensive lunch in a posh restaurant in Washington.
  7. Bayan Baru projects, which is adjacent to the airport, and the close call for allowing the mobile crane going vertical right in the middle of the flight path.
  8. Always have the family at the top of his priority and a very very family kind of person
  9. Site office’s joker and entertainer, assisting in reducing work stress, through laughter.
  10. A sensitive and easily sulk…. sulking to those he love at the site office, a process of expressing this complex and sensitive emotion.

Bert 58 birthday.. . NOT 1958

Mr Bert never fail to call me on my birthday eve….

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Wish you health and happiness always.

Do keep in touch... apart from your St Michael Institutions buddies.

Interesting reading at your site > http://smi.robertdesilva.com/

22 July 2008

Health@50

This week starts with some unpleasant news. Our Aunt Mak Nab was warded in Ipoh Hospital and currently in coma. We pray to Allah she’ll recover soon. The sudden passing away of a friend in TNB Group HR (Madi) and also the father of a friend (Halim Amin) on Monday. And I’m stuck at home, not feeling too good, down with exhaustion, lack of sleep and wrong food intake. Hope to be back at work tomorrow. A REMINDER MAYBE…

Daily Steps to Good Health after 50

  • Be tobacco free.
  • Be physically active.
  • Eat a healthy diet.
  • Stay at a healthy weight.
  • Plenty fluid intake and adequate sleep

The Pilgrimage [22.6] This is because Allah is the Truth and because He gives life to the dead and because He has power over all things

BreadAD@mohaSHUK

19 July 2008

HappyBirthday@Blogspot


Let's LAUNCH on the 19 July 2008@Syazwan's BIRTHDAY

Syazwan@23

Excited…welcoming our first child 19 July 1985> The world are busy with Live Aids concerts> Not coming out voluntarily> Tried forcing out> Doctor “Sorry we've try our best”> Finally a “door” need to be open that Friday afternoon> Together ever since, from sesame street@tv, roti canai@mamak to tawaf@kaabah> Partner at the mall every time we "split up"> Consider a friend and a son, sharing topics from computer,religions, politic> Have being a good and trouble free son> Saddest day/night sending off to MRSM> Video games a passion since “birth”> Biggest headache PC hard disk crashed for the final project, missing the Thailand Tour> Move forward into new experience, career, marriage, fatherhood>

HAPPY 23 BIRTHDAY
Always set high target> work hard> pray hard and be thankful for all the nikmat and rahmat

17 July 2008

Fuel Hike@Ride A Bike

Sure, cars make a lot of sense in certain situations. If you have to transport small children, bulky objects or many small ones, three or more people or one with broken foot, cars are better than two-wheelers. Cars are also better when you have to travel on sandy roads, thunder storms or through riots.

But as a normal means of day-to-day transportation, cars are inconvenient, ineffective, annoying, environmentally offensive, anti social, boring and expensive. When I look at the time it takes to get around the city in the car and then consider what I save with motorcycle, it is inconceivable to me that so many city commuters prefer cars.

My ride to work, split between highways and city streets, is about 25 Km one way. It takes at 25 to 30 minutes on a motorcycle on a normal day. It take at least 20 minutes longer in a car, though sometimes it takes almost twice as long . I normally waste an average of 15 minutes by commuting in a car. That’ half an hour a day.

And time lost is just part of it. On a bike I almost never have to pay for toll and parking charges. Fuel is just 25% comparing to car consumption. And parking in a car, the RM2.00 an hour that KL parking lots regularly extort is unavoidable. You also usually have to park much farther from your actual destination.

You’re also more likely to be a victim of someone stupidity in a car. This can take the form of being rear-end or sideswiped because there isn’t room for car to escape. More often it is the driver in front of you who decide to turn without signaling and make you sit through an extra cycle of traffic light, who are busy sending sms messages instead of moving, who simply decide to park at a no parking/waiting zone. On motorcycle you simply pass these morons.

Need anything be said about driving experience in KL after heavy downpour or when traffic is interrupted by accident upstream.

Malaysian driver s have a lot of ways to alleviate their suffering in traffic. They talk on their cell phones (while trying hard to hide it) , they read newspaper, they shave, put on make up. They turn up the bass/woofer and play their music loud to test how well-installed their windows are or are trying to share their music preferences, while they sit in a deepening layer of exhaust fumes and most of them listen to radio.

There are traffic report on radio. Traffic reports are supposed to help you avoid bad traffic. That’s impossible as all of KL is bad traffic. Occasionally the report do hold useful information, and I quote:”the only one getting through this mess are the bikers”.

I have asked people why they commute in cars. Most of them say they never have considered commuting on motorcycle and think I’m strange for asking. If I press, I get range of responses. Some concern appearances “I’ll mess up my hair”. "I couldn’t ride motorcycle well enough” is frightening responses; this is a person who belongs on the bus. “What if it rain?”.

A large more disturbing reasons given for not riding a motorcycle to work is image. "wouldn’t look good to the boss" OR “I’m not a motorcycle person" shows that motorcycling isn’t as acceptable as we like to think. You don’t want the CEO to think his executive is a rebel.

The most common answers concern the risk. Certainly battling traffic as heavy as KL’s with thoughtless and unskilled drivers, involves danger. But there’s an unsettling implication here that you don’t need to be sharp as in the car as you do on bike. Here is a person unwilling to risk operating 500 pound vehicle but will go out in a crowded city with a much larger two-ton vehicle that can do significantly more harm and not worry about it. Traffic still involve risk, even in car.

Of course, the person who offer this answer is referring to the risk to him or herself. No doubt about it, your chance of dying are greater on a bike. I figure that if you’re willing to throw away so much of your life in a car, you’re better already dead.

An average KL city motorist loses 3 years of his working life getting up in traffic jams. Also that millions of Ringgit are wasted each day in spare parts worn out in traffic jams in KL city.

In 20 years of commuting in KL , I have probably saved an average of at least 4 hour a week . That’s 200 hour a year, the equivalent of 35 working days each year.

One no motorcyclist once told me that he didn’t ride a motorcycle to work because “life too short:”. I agree, but my conclusion, obviously is just the opposite. Life is too short to burn up sitting miserably and passively in a car when you could be moving and living.

SAY NO TO rempit

The Best Part Of It Is … It’s FUN

Don’t Waste Your Life and Money….
Ride A Bike And Get Our City Moving Again

16 July 2008

Police@Kelakar


Our police must be so "teruja" to meet Anwar that they just can't wait another hour. So their "rombongan" come to "jemput" Anwar an hour early. "PENANTIAN must be KESEKSAAN for the police. Anyway I salute our police for their high motivation and proactive (selectively) ..
what else can be said about our great police force. From the news report, the dpm, igp & home minister were not aware of the police action... hmmm

Police@50 Then>Now



Then>Now =
admiration>respect>appreciative>fearful> sickening>disgust

Our police sometime works wonder… when it come to peaceful assembly, the mention of Anwar and Pakatan Rakyat … they’ll jump into frantic action.
Why can’t they focus their energies and numbers on the jobs they’re suppose to do… which is BASICALLY to reduce snatch, kidnap, abduct, thefts, burglaries, rempit, rape…… which continue unabated with increasing loss of life, limb and material? You are constantly incurring the wrath of the common person… where is the MESRA & RAKAN?

14 July 2008

Salasilah@Perak Malaysia

In the Name of Allah, Most Beneficient Most Merciful

Where do we start? Do we know our family trees or family history.

Genealogy is the study and tracing of family lineages and history. It is a complex process that uses historical records and sometimes genetic analysis to demonstrate kinship. Reliable conclusions are based on the quality of sources, ideally original records, the information within those sources, ideally primary or firsthand information, and the evidence that can be drawn, directly or indirectly, from that information. But getting the information is difficult as not many keep them. So let start with what we have.

Relative@priority

Sadqa (alms, charity) given to a poor man is just Sadqa, but when given to a relative it serves a double purpose, being both Sadqa and a connecting link.
(Ahmad, Tirmidhi, Nasai, Ibn Majah, Darimi) Sayings of Muhammad. by Prof. Ghazi Ahmad.


13 July 2008

Gotta Start@NOW


purchase wedding ring

determine the wedding date

identify venue, date & time

confirm and book venue & related facilities

look for suitable theme

appoint a wedding coordinator

identify committee members

start preparing guests list

decide on card design and confirm order

look for reliable caterer

study suitable menu

confirm tents facilities contractors

decide on number of tables & chairs

appoint videographer & photographer

relevant decorative elements & appoint florist

wedding course

medical check up

estimate total budget

11 July 2008

Start@The Opening

Surah 1. The Opening
1. In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
2. Praise be to Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the worlds;
3. Most Gracious, Most Merciful;
4. Master of the Day of Judgment.
5. Thee do we worship, and Thine aid we seek.
6. Show us the straight way,
7. The way of those on whom Thou hast bestowed Thy Grace, those whose (portion) is not wrath, and who go not astray.

10 July 2008

Let's Start @50


It never too late to start learning, which is of course include Reasoning Planning Committing Reflecting. So let's start!