Malang Trip

Sunday, December 28, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

I went to Malang on 26th Dec 2008 with my mom, my dad’s sister, and my cousin. Jarang banget tuh bisa pergi ke luar kota hehehe... Walo perjalanan berangkat ama baliknya kepentok macet di Lapindo, tapi tetep aja perjalanannya menyenangkan hehehe... Kapan lagi getu loh...

Sempet mampir ke Pusat Kerajinan Ken Dedes, itu ada di seberangnya Pasar Singosari (setelah Lawang tapi sebelum Malang). Aku pengen ke sini gara-gara ngeliat beberapa foto di internet. Di sana ada banyak macem barang-barang kerajinan, dari mulai kursi, meja, tempat majalah, rak, bunga ‘n vas penghias ruangan, jam, pigura, tudung saji, cermin, sendal, pernak-pernik souvenir, segala macem deh... bahannya unik-unik, dari kerang-kerang ‘n butiran pasir, daun pembungkus jagung, rotan, de el el... Kemaren pas ke sana siy rada ragu-ragu, soalnya sepi banget. Ternyata lagi ada pameran di hotel Purnama Batu, jadi maybe sebagian barang-barang kerajinan juga kan diboyong ke tempat pameran. Sebenernya sayang loh peminat barang-barang kerajinan masih dikit... padahal unik-unik ‘n bahannya juga ga mahal...  Kalo dipoles ‘n dipromosiin dengan cara yang tepat, itu harusnya bisa jadi salah satu barang beken!

Aku di sana cuman beli semacem barang souvenir (yang ada kerang-kerang ‘n butiran pasirnya), itupun gara-gara sepupuku mo beli juga, kan kalo beli dua harganya murahan dikit hehehe... Jadi ya udah beli juga, cantik siy... cuman belon kepikir mau ditaruh mana, sayang  aja kalo ntar kotor. Sebenernya naksir ama jam ‘n cermin yang dihias ama kerang-kerang ‘n butiran pasir juga, unik banget! Tapi karna harganya mahal (sebenernya ga mahal siy, worth it kalo dibandingin ama barangnya ‘n juga cara pembuatannya yang pasti ga gampang), plus juga ga tau mau dipasang di mana jadinya ga beli deh hehehe... Kalo ngayal siy asik banget kalo punya rumah yang didekor ama barang-barang unik kayak gitu trus juga ada bagian-bagian rumah yang kesannya alami (misalnya, ada bagian dinding yang terbuat dari batu, jadi permukaannya ga rata gitu)... oke sebelon makin ngayal let’s cut the chase hehehe... Ni beberapa foto di Pusat Kerajinan Ken Dedes:

















































































Kita cuman nginep semalem di hotel Tosari Malang –recommended niy buat yang cari penginapan murah ‘n ga terlalu butuh fasilitas hotel. Kamar standar-nya aja yang buat 2 orang (ga ada AC ‘n TV, ga dapet breakfast kalo pagi, cuman dapet teh atau kopi, dapet air minum, kamar mandi di dalem, ada selimut, ga disediain handuk) cuman 90rebu per malem plus tax 10%, jadi 99rebu. Murah kan? Kamarnya bersih kok, pokoknya recommended buat yang cari penginapan murmer cuman buat tidur doang.  Di sana juga disediain kamar buat driver yang kamar mandinya di luar, cuman separuh dari harga kamar standar.

Sabtunya kita sempet ke Taman Safari di Pandaan ^o^ For me this is sooo fun!!! Walo mahal, tiket masuk per orang 40rebu plus mobil bayar 10rebu, tapi ya kapan lagi? Hehehe... This is the first time for me, so it’s fun!!! Di sepanjang jalan bisa ngeliat dari deket semua hewan-hewan... ngasih makan rusa... sepanjang jalan ketawa-ketawa gara-gara mamaku sempet takut kok mulutnya kuda zebra hampir masuk ke jendela mobil pas kita ngasih makan hihihi... trus aku juga foto-foto-in mereka, ngeliat macan yang jalan-jalan dari deket, ngeliat serigala (tapi serigalanya rada aneh... kakinya kurus... kayak kurang makan gitu...), keliling-keliling di tempat rekreasinya, seru deh hehehe...

Yang ga puas niy, foto-foto ama anak-anak macan ‘n anak singa T_T Di sana kita kan bisa foto-foto tuh ama 3 hewan: anak-anak macan, anak singa, ama kera. Per orangnya kalo bawa kamera sendiri beli tiket masuknya 10rebu (mahal yah hehehe... tapi ya itu, demi... abis kapan lagi hehehe...) Rada nyesel c oz sepupuku yang moto-in aku ga biasa pegang kamera, jadi framingnya kacau semua T_T Huaaaa.... ga relaaaaa.... Padahal anak-anak macan itu, they’re so damn cute!!! Blom puas pokoknya... Pengen foto-foto lagi... Eum... rada mikir aja maybe itu anak-anak macan ‘n anak singanya dikasih kayak semacem obat tidur kali yah, soalnya mereka pada teler-teler gitu... ya aslinya kan emang binatang buas... dibikin kayak gitu biar ga bahaya dibuat foto-foto... Kapan yah macan ‘n singa bisa jinak kayak kucing? Hihihihi... ngayal lagi hehehe...

Ni beberapa fotonya, aku cuman pasang yang bagus-bagus aja:
























































Oiya, oleh-oleh di Malang, yang terkenal itu “Gaya Baru”, jual macem-macem kue basah ‘n kue kering... Spiku-nya enak ‘n legit buangeddd! 

Laen kali pengen ke Malang lagi =p hehehe... Masih pengen ke Sengkaling juga mengenang masa kecil hihihi... soalnya dulu pas masih kecil banget pernah ke sana ama sepupu-sepupu, waktu kita semua masih imut-imut hehehe... Yea hopefully kita bisa ke sana lagi dah... This is the most enjoyable vacation for me ^o^

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True Forgiveness

Thursday, December 18, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

Recently I’ve been reminded about one unsolved heart’s matter… and it made me realize that for all along I haven’t completely forgiven a person. I thought I did, but it turns out that I haven’t finished the process…

This morning, I imagined about Him… He’s been through something similar, even harder ones…

I imagine He was looking to people, one by one, who raise their hands… shouted His name in great joy, when He entered Jerusalem by a colt…
I imagine He was looking to people who followed Him, who have been healed by Him, who have been fed by Him in a miraculous night, who have been taught by Him… The faces that expressed gratitude, amazement, and loyalty…
(Not to mention His “faithful” diciples…)

But later on, He saw the same faces, this time full of anger and disgust… They shouted His name, this time in hatred, while He was in Pilate’s court… He saw their faces when they picked Barabbas over Him to be set free, when they cursed Him and demanded Him to be crucified…
(Not to mention the fact that His diciples had left Him all alone because of their own fear).

And… don’t forget about Peter’s denial, in spite of what he had said just before (Luke 22:33). Imagine that moment when Jesus saw Peter straight in the eye (Luke 22:61)…

I just speechless about what was on His mind and His heart at that time… either towards Peter or other people…

He, who is blameless and sinless, can forgive us…
While we, the same sinful people, tend to keep other’s faults and find it hard to forgive them…
It’s kinda ironic, don’t you think?

Forgiving is forgiving. End of sentence.

There’s no “but” or “even though” or “only if”…
Because a true forgiveness arises from a broken heart that has been completely restored by His unconditional love…


He said that to love Him is to obey Him (1John 5:3) and He wants us to forgive others (1 John 2:9, 1John 3:15, Luke 6:37, and Col 3:13)

For I have given you an example, that you should do as I have done to you.”

(John 13:15)

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Being Real is a Real Problem

Monday, December 15, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

(By Gregory Spencer)
Source: Boundless

When I was a boy, I spent many afternoons with my legs straddling a wide white branch of a walnut tree. I fingered the dials and wheels of the plywood instrument panel I knew would one day take my brother and me to Mars.

During dreamy summer days, we might pose any number of profound questions to each other, but our favorite was, "If you had to choose, would you rather go blind or deaf?" The answer could not have been more obvious to me then. I would rather go deaf, sight being too precious to lose. For the sighted, seeing is usually the most defining sense.

How much more so in an image-saturated culture. Unfortunately, in our times, we have come to believe that seeing is all that is necessary for experiencing. This is what I call the Gospel of Sight: What the eye values is the most important truth; the image — our image — is what matters most.

Though I don't dislike the media (I love movies. I watch TV), I take what I have assumed to be G.K. Chesterton's observation to heart: "The thinking person always resists the most dominant thing in his culture because the most dominant thing is always too dominant." I see "the most dominant thing" as the way images have influenced the way we think and behave. In light of our longing for and our need to develop authenticity (a virtue I define as "the courage to love with a rigorous inside-out consistency"), two consequences seem especially important.

The Gospel of Sight teaches us that appearances are all-in-all. We are image-driven, image-obsessed, image-conscious to a fault. The obvious needs to be asserted: We have defined "being attractive" in visual terms. Most commercials tell us that all that matters is being as beautiful and young and thin and fit and ripped as possible. That and being rich.

How can we be deeply authentic if we think that "how we look" is top priority? Of course, caring about our appearance is not unimportant or "beneath us." God made us to notice beauty and appreciate style. We each have our own personal "way of being," our God-given uniqueness, much of which is related to our image. Everything has a kind of style: dresses, cars, sermons, governments. If we wish to communicate well, we must attend to what sounds pleasing to others and to what our body "says." But our culture has grossly overstated the role of the image. As exercise guru Jack LaLanne says: "I can't die. It would ruin my image."

We are outside-in focused, instead of inside-out. Parents have said for years that it's what's on the inside that counts, but their voices get drowned out by the thousands of voices we hear every day to the contrary. We need better skin, brighter teeth, more glowing hair. We hear that everything in our future rests on our attractiveness. A woman admiring herself in an ad for Avia shoes wants it both ways: "She knows true beauty comes from the inside — but she doesn't mind finding it in the mirror."

Inevitably, this outside-in orientation makes our sense of self dependent on external forces. We need to be noticed, to be praised for our image — and we conspire to get that attention. Over a century ago, Henry Ward Beecher got it right: "Clothes do not make the man, but once he is made, they greatly improve his appearance."

We suffer a perfectionism exacerbated by the manipulation of pixels. Every commercial photo of a face or body is altered, enhanced, made more visually stunning. Yet the more perfect the image, the greater the distance from our imperfect lives. This disparity discourages and corrupts us, especially women. I have watched my three daughters struggle with these issues. It's hard enough to live up to a good friend's beauty; but how does one compare to a digitalized "perfection" that even the supermodel doesn't possess?

And analysis is not enough. Though I know the supermodel's skin is not impeccably unblemished, that her original image might have a pimple or tired eyes, I still say, "Wow, she's beautiful." Perfectionistic words are also associated with the images: "For flawless looks, spotless skin," etc. We cannot measure up so we bury ourselves in the guilt of starvation diets and persistent self-deprecation.

We may be paying a higher price as well. Recently I asked one of my classes why so many of their generation were committing suicide. Their responses surprised me. They said that because so many resources were at their disposal, they had no good reason not to make the world better. And they should be able to make themselves better as well — perfect even — and they couldn't bear the weight.

The resonance in the classroom seemed profound to me. Yes, the world's problems overwhelm them. But the depressing tipping point is that they feel they should be dramatically other than they are. They have no excuse not to live up to the consistent messages that they ought to be perfect.

The Gospel of Sight presents "illusion" as preferable to the authentic. When my family is on vacation, someone often says, "Ooh, look at the scenery! That would make such a good picture." My typical response is, "Yes, but isn't it a good landscape? I mean, isn't it worthy without being a photograph?" It's not that I dislike photographs or images — really. It's just that they have changed the way we experience the world, and we ought to do our best to understand these ways.

The illusion becomes the standard. This last Christmas, my wife and younger daughters and I visited my eldest daughter who, at that time, was living in St. Petersburg, Russia. After getting robbed in the Metro and negotiating the somewhat uninviting city for eight days, I was delighted to spend the next five days in London before returning home to California. I said, "Ah, London is wonderful; it's like Disneyland." Ouch. Shouldn't I have said that Disneyland was like London? For shame! Somehow, the faux-reality of Disneyland has burrowed into my head as the higher standard of excellence.

This "standard of illusion" can be seen in every day life. If the norms for the speed of romance are adopted from film, we may think our own plodding efforts ought to be pumped up. And nature television has become the norm for nature. Real nature just doesn't measure up. It is not populated with enough "cute" or "fierce" beasts, nor do the wild things perform for us as they should.

Perhaps our declining participation in authentic experiences makes being authentic more difficult. We're uncomfortable in the wilderness of genuineness. We tend to be either too blunt or too evasive. At any rate, inexorably, the standard of illusion leads to my next point.

We prefer illusion. As a freshman in college, I had on my wall a newspaper photo of my girlfriend as she was receiving her crown as Homecoming princess. To this day, I am convinced that I broke up with her because she failed to live up to the photograph. You may think me shallow but I had constructed my fantasy and I was sticking with it. When we were together, she didn't look as idyllically beautiful, nor did she treat me as I imagined she should: with that radiant smile, those perfect eyes, that facial expression that let me know I was the center of her life. In person, she was, well, a person, and I preferred my image of her.

Journalist Kiku Adatto says this choice makes a curious kind of sense: "In a media-conscious environment, authenticity means becoming the master of your own artificiality." Why would a fake authenticity become preferable? Charles Williams' cautionary thriller Descent into Hell provides some insight. He tells the story of middle-aged Lawrence Wentworth who has a romantic crush on a much younger woman, Adela. In Williams' supernatural scheme, Wentworth's desire for Adela is so strong that, once Adela rejects him, he "creates" an illusion of Adela who caters to his every desire. Once, during a torrential rain, the real Adela shows up at his door and asks to be let in. Wentworth looks at the phantom Adela in his room and then out at the real one, wet and needy. Williams' says, "He recognized well enough that the real Adela might have given him considerable trouble to lift, but his whole damnation was that he would not choose the trouble to lift the real Adela."

I have been haunted by this line for years. What and who are the "real Adelas" in our lives that we refuse to lift? When do we dwell in our imagined ideal and ignore the plain truth in front of us — or inside of us? In order to live a rigorous inside-out consistency, we have to be willing to face, among other things, tragic realities. If we pretend that we don't have problems or that the world is "just fine," we will be more deeply shaken when tragedy comes our way.

Perhaps this explains some troubled marriages and divorces. Newlyweds can be shocked when they discover the darker sides of their spouse.

At my college, I sometimes hear students say (after the revelation of some terrible event on campus), "I can't believe that could happen at Westmont." I think, "Why? Do you not know that Westmont is inhabited by people?" Many of us prefer the illusion that followers of Jesus lead outwardly better lives, that they always have superior marriages, more fulfilling jobs, less tragedy. We would be better off telling the truth about our humanity, even the difficult, tragic truths. Jesus says that "the truth will set you free" (John 8:32).

As we grow increasingly comfortable with illusion, we may find that we are more concerned with creating ourselves than with knowing ourselves. We alter our outer selves incessantly: our hair color, facial features, body shapes — anything to keep looking young. And we also alter our inner selves. We affirm a version of "the Good Life" that keeps our souls in a gated community, safe from the need to deal with uncomfortable realities. We may also distance ourselves from friends who tell us disagreeable truths, especially truths about ourselves. And since we know how far we are from the image we present, we know others are distant also and so, ironically, we don't trust them.

Living in the age of the image is often thrilling and pleasing. But when its qualities dominate all others — when the Gospel of Sight reigns supreme — authenticity is threatened. The loud and flashy world shouts down this quiet virtue. A sincere effort will be required of us if we hope to be more genuine.


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Faceless Generation - Story from Papua

Saturday, December 13, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

(Sumber: Renungan Harian BOOM edisi Oktober 2008)

Oktovianus Pogau 
Masih SMA tapi jadi "guru" di pemerintahan.

Zaman sekarang ini, dunia nggak terlalu luas untuk dijelajahi, karna teknologi informasi makin canggih. Meski tekno udah berkembang pesat, ada juga orang yang belon bisa menikmati dan memahami tekno canggih tersebut. Salah satunya internet... Bayangin, di Papua sono, main internet ke warnet aja 1 jamnya bayar 10rebu loh! Puji Tuhan, lagi-lagi ada satu sosok pemuda yang dibangkitkan Tuhan untuk melihat keadaan ini.

Oktavianus Pogau, salah satu teman kita dari Papua yang udah terjun di bidang jurnalistik 'n pernah belajar internet sendiri, punya kerinduan untuk mengajar internet. Meski Okto yatim piatu, namun semangatnya tinggi untuk membangkitkan Papua dari ketertinggalan. Remaja yang duduk di kelas 2 SMA Kristen Anak Panah, Nabire-Papua ini sempat bikin website dan blog untuk pemerintah sekaligus jadi guru di sana. Penasaran ama pengalamannya? Simak obrolan kita bareng Okto!

Sejak kapan kamu tertarik dunia tulis menulis dan media internet?
Aku suka menulis sejak SMP kelas 2, sekitar tahun 2005. Saat itu di sekolah, guru bahasa indonesiaku menunjukkan sebuah berita tentang lumpur lapindo di Porong, Sidoarjo. Beliau meminta murid-murid untuk memberikan tanggapan melalui tulisan. Entah kenapa, waktu itu aku punya banyak gambaran dan pendapat tentang kasus ini. Akhirnya apa yang aku pikirkan aku tuangkan dalam tulisan. Saat guruku baca, dia langsung bilang kalo tulisanku bagus. Sejak itu, aku termotivasi untuk menulis. Kebetulan waktu itu juga, warnet di Nabire baru ada. Nah, begitu denger ada warnet, aku jadi penasaran 'n jadi lebih sering ke sana.

Kabarnya di Nabire, warnet jarang ditemukan. Apa yang bikin kamu terdorong untuk terus belajar internet meskipun sulit?
Sejam main internet, aku harus bayar 10ribu. Padahal, kalo aku main internet bisa berjam-jam. Demi ke warnet, aku sisihkan uang saku. Di Nabire warnet cuma ada satu. Tantangan lain yang aku dapatkan adalah budaya. Banyak orang pelit untuk membagikan ilmu baru, apalagi yang punya gelar. Makanya ilmu pengetahuan di Papua itu mahal. Nggak heran kalo Papua dianggap tertinggal. Dari sinilah muncul motivasiku untuk belajar keras tentang internet, komputer, dan dunia jurnalis. Aku ingin berbagi ilmu membangun Papua untuk lebih maju dan bebas dari ketertinggalan.

Siapa sih yang memotivasi kamu untuk nggak menyerah?
Tuhan Yesus, Pribadi pertama yang sangat memotivasi aku. Yang kedua, diriku sendiri, lalu orang-orang terdekatku. Tiap menghadapi tantangan, aku selalu ngobrol ama Tuhan, supaya Dia tunjukkan apa yang harus aku lakukan. Saat Teduh adalah waktu yang tepat untuk terus minta motivasi dan kehendakNya. Merenungkan FirTu tuh wajib hukumnya. Saat orang lain nggak dukung, aku belajar untuk gak dengerin hal-hal negatif yang bisa melemahkanku. Aku belajar untuk selalu bisa memotivasi diriku sendiri setiap saat.

Siapa sih yang kamu ajari?
Banyak banget! Semua teman-teman yang aku kenal di Nabire, termasuk orang-orang yang lebih tua dariku. Dari mahasiswa sampai pejabat di pemerintahanpun aku ajari main internet dan aku buatkan blog. Selain itu, teman-teman di sekolah dan siapapun yang datang minta tolong, pasti aku ajarin tanpa dipungut biaya. Aku akan ngajarin mereka sampai paham benar, jadi nggak ketinggalan.

Kabarnya kamu juga pernah nulis dan jadi wartawan, juga kolumnis muda beberapa media cetak. Gimana bagi waktu dengan sekolah?
Wah kalo diceritakan satu-satu bisa jadi satu buku ^_^. Aku pernah bikin web untuk ajang kebudayaan Papua secara otodidak. Emang sih sederhana... Puji Tuhan dapat penghargaan dari banyak kalangan termasuk pemerintah Papua. Sampai saat ini, aku aktif memberikan tulisan dan liputan di Papua Pos, Kabar Papua. Aku juga sempat dipercaya jadi editor yang punya kuasa untuk mengijinkan sebuah berita dimuat atau enggak. Puji Tuhan, sekolah nggak terganggu, lancar-lancar aja. Kuncinya, aku bisa atur waktu. Sampe-sampe, 24 jam itu terasa kurang buat aku bekerja, hehehe... Ini semua anugerah Tuhan, sehingga hasil kerja keras itu bisa memberkati banyak orang.

Pesannya buat teman-teman muda se-Indonesia apa nih?
Jangan terpengaruh dengan keadaan dan keterbatasan. Dalam berkarya, nggak harus punya fasilitas lengkap, supaya terlaksana. Yang penting harus punya kemauan keras, tekad, dan selalu ngobrol sama Tuhan. Jadikan keterbatasan sebagai kunci sukses kita! (*/Bb)

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Bunga Dalam Pot Retak

Saturday, December 13, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

Rumah kami langsung berseberangan dengan pintu masuk RS John Hopkins di Baltimore. Kami tinggal dilantai dasar dan menyewakan kamar-kamar lantai atas pada para pasien yang ke klinik itu.

Suatu petang dimusim panas, ketika aku sedang menyiapkan makan malam, ada orang mengetuk pintu. Saat kubuka, yang kutatap ialah seorang pria dengan wajah yang benar buruk sekali rupanya. "Lho, dia ini juga hampir cuma setinggi anakku yang berusia 8 tahun," pikirku ketika aku mengamati tubuh yang bungkuk dan sudah serba keriput ini. Tapi yang mengerikan ialah wajahnya, begitu miring besar sebelah akibat bengkak, merah dan seperti daging mentah., hiiiihh...!

Tapi suaranya begitu lembut menyenangkan ketika ia berkata, "Selamat malam. Saya ini kemari untuk melihat apakah anda punya kamar hanya buat semalam saja. Saya datang berobat dan tiba dari pantai Timur, dan ternyata tidak ada bis lagi sampai esok pagi." Ia bilang sudah mencoba mencari kamar sejak tadi siang tanpa hasil, tidak ada seorangpun tampaknya yang punya kamar.

"Aku rasa mungkin karena wajahku .. Saya tahu kelihatannya memang mengerikan, tapi dokterku bilang dengan beberapa kali pengobatan lagi..."

Untuk sesaat aku mulai ragu2, tapi kemudian kata-kata selanjutnya menenteramkan dan meyakinkanku: "Oh aku bisa kok tidur dikursi goyang diluar sini, di beranda samping ini. Toh bis ku esok pagi-pagi juga sudah berangkat." Aku katakan kepadanya bahwa kami akan mencarikan ranjang buat dia, untuk beristirahat di beranda.

Aku masuk kedalam menyelesaikan makan malam. Setelah rampung, aku mengundang pria tua itu, kalau-kalau ia mau ikut makan. "Wah, terima kasih, tapi saya sudah bawa cukup banyak makanan." Dan ia menunjukkan sebuah kantung kertas coklat. Selesai dengan mencuci piring, aku keluar mengobrol dengannya beberapa menit. Tak butuh waktu lama untuk melihat bahwa orang tua ini memiliki sebuah hati yang terlampau besar untuk dijejalkan ketubuhnya yang kecil ini.

Dia bercerita ia menangkap ikan untuk menunjang putrinya, kelima anak-anaknya, dan istrinya, yang tanpa daya telah lumpuh selamanya akibat luka di tulang punggung. Ia bercerita itu bukan dengan berkeluh kesah dan mengadu, malah sesungguhnya, setiap kalimat selalu didahului dengan ucapan syukur pada Allah untuk suatu berkat! Ia berterima kasih bahwa tidak ada rasa sakit yang menyertai penyakitnya, yang rupa-rupanya adalah semacam kanker kulit. Ia bersyukur pada Allah yang memberinya kekuatan untuk bisa terus maju dan bertahan.

Saatnya tidur, kami bukakan ranjang lipat kain berkemah untuknya dikamar anak-anak. Esoknya waktu aku bangun, seprei dan selimut sudah rapi terlipat dan pria tua itu sudah berada di beranda. Ia menolak makan pagi, tapi sesaat sebelum ia berangkat naik bis, ia berhenti sebentar, seakan meminta suatu bantuan besar, ia berkata, "Permisi, bolehkah aku datang dan tinggal disini lagi lain kali bila aku harus kembali berobat? Saya sungguh tidak akan merepotkan anda sedikitpun. Saya bisa kok tidur enak dikursi."Ia berhenti sejenak dan lalu menambahkan, "Anak-anak Anda membuatku begitu merasa kerasan seperti di rumah sendiri. Orang dewasa rasanya terganggu oleh rupa buruknya wajahku, tetapi anak-anak tampaknya tidak terganggu."

Aku katakan silahkan datang kembali setiap saat. Ketika ia datang lagi, ia tiba pagi-pagi jam tujuh lewat sedikit. Sebagai oleh-oleh, ia bawakan seekor ikan besar dan satu liter kerang oyster terbesar yang pernah kulihat. Ia bilang, pagi sebelum berangkat, semuanya ia kuliti supaya tetap bagus dan segar. Aku tahu bisnya berangkat jam 4.00 pagi, entah jam berapa ia sudah harus bangun untuk mengerjakan semuanya ini bagi kami. Selama tahun-tahun ia datang dan tinggal bersama kami, tidak pernah sekalipun ia datang tanpa membawakan kami ikan atau kerang oyster atau sayur mayur dari kebunnya. Beberapa kali kami terima kiriman lewat pos, selalu lewat kilat khusus, ikan dan oyster terbungkus dalam sebuah kotak penuh daun bayam atau sejenis kol, setiap helai tercuci bersih. Mengetahui bahwa ia harus berjalan sekitar 5 km untuk mengirimkan semua itu, dan sadar betapa sedikit penghasilannya, kiriman-kiriman dia menjadi makin bernilai.

Ketika aku menerima kiriman oleh-oleh itu, sering aku teringat kepada komentar tetangga kami pada hari ia pulang ketika pertama kali datang. "Ehhh, kau terima dia bermalam ya, orang yang luar biasa jelek menjijikkan mukanya itu? Tadi malam ia kutolak. Waduhh, celaka dehh.., kita kan bakal kehilangan langganan kalau nerima orang macam gitu!" Oh ya, memang boleh jadi kita kehilangan satu dua tamu. Tapi seandainya mereka sempat mengenalnya,mungkin penyakit mereka bakal jadi akan lebih mudah untuk dipikul. Aku tahu kami sekeluarga akan selalu bersyukur, sempat dan telah mengenalnya; dari dia kami belajar apa artinya menerima yang buruk tanpa mengeluh, dan yang baik dengan bersyukur kepada Allah.

Baru-baru ini aku mengunjungi seorang teman yang punya rumah kaca. Ketika ia menunjukkan tanaman bunganya, kami sampai pada satu tanaman krisan [timum] yang paling cantik dari semuanya, lebat penuh tertutup bunga berwarna kuning emas. Tapi aku jadi heran sekali, melihat ia tertanam dalam sebuah ember tua, sudah penyok berkarat pula. Dalam hati aku berkata, "Kalau ini tanamanku, pastilah sudah akan kutanam didalam bejana terindah yang kumiliki."

Tapi temanku merubah cara pikirku. "Ahh, aku sedang kekurangan pot saat itu," ia coba terangkan, "Dan tahu ini bakal cantik sekali, aku pikir tidak apalah sementara aku pakai ember loak ini. Toh cuma buat sebentar saja, sampai aku bisa menanamnya ditaman."

Ia pastilah terheran-heran sendiri melihat aku tertawa begitu gembira, tapi aku membayangkan kejadian dan skenario seperti itu disurga. "Hah, yang ini luar biasa bagusnya," mungkin begitulah kata Allah saat Ia sampai pada jiwa nelayan tua baik hati itu." Ia pastilah tidak akan keberatan memulai dulu didalam badan kecil ini." Semua ini sudah lama terjadi, dulu dan kini, didalam taman Allah, betapa tinggi mestinya berdirinya jiwa manis baik ini.

"Bukan yang dilihat manusia yang dilihat Allah; manusia melihat apa yang didepan mata, tetapi Tuhan melihat hati." (1 Samuel 16:7b).

Sumber: Jawaban.Com

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It's a Matter of Personal "Standard"

Friday, December 12, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

Last night, my elderly brother, his wife, and his daughter (Abigail, 4 years old) picked me up to go to SW. Yap, we just have our Thursday fellowship, as usual hehehe...

In the middle of our way, Abigail talked in english to his mom. She asked, "Mommy, What is a shark? Is it like a whale?" Hearing that, I was just so amazed... she's just 4 years old! I imagined back then, at the same age, I couldn't speak nor understand English yet... Yea I know, Abi's school uses English as their primary language, so no wonder if the students naturally get used to speak in English...

Another insight, the same message, I got today... My colleague who didn't familiar with online forums, has just registered on our web's forum. When my other colleague told her to open her mail first to verify her new account, she said, "Ow... why is it so complicated?"

Suddenly I realized that it's just a matter of personal "standard"... If we think something is difficult, then it becomes difficult for us... Vice versa.

In Abigail's case, she identify English as her usual language... In her brain, English is just an alternative language to Indonesian (or Javanese hehehe...), but it doesnt sound more complicated... because she's used to speak English everyday. It's just a normal thing for her.

In my colleague's case, the normal (and usual) forum's registration procedure sounds so complicated, because this is her first time to join an online forum. But to me, the procedure is just a normal thing, because I've registered to many forums and they have the same procedure.

These cases are natural though... When you do something new for the first time (or being the one who do something while another people haven't done it yet), it feels more complicated, more difficult, or maybe more challenging. But the important thing to remember is... don't ever restrict your personal "standard". When you think something is possible, then it is possible for you. But if you think something is impossible for you to get, then it is impossible for you.

Being in charge of our thoughts and manage our mindset is not an easy task... I know... but we just have to do it again and again. Why? Because His truth is our manual guide to live as His beloved sons and daughters... It's a natural thing for us to live in it...

So... come on rise up!

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Kinda Feeling Numb...

Friday, December 12, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

I don't know what is happening to me... Last night my elderly sister asked me how I feel and I said to her, I didn't feel anything, just flat... It's like just walking through day by day without any precious meaning... and unfortunately, I don't know why...

Maybe my heart is getting cold... just maybe... coz somehow I feel that I don't care much about anyone or anything... It's not that I hate everything... I just feel flat... I guess there are few reasons for this... But I still have to figure them out... by pray and digging into myself...

Probably it's because I have some heart matters that haven't been solved yet... and they have piled up or became more complicated, so I just have to untangle the twisted knots one by one...

Hmm... I have to do it soon... before I get more "numb"...
Please pray for me...
Thanx friends... ^.^

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Husbands: Here's How to Have a Great Wife!

Tuesday, December 09, 2008 Fay 1 Comments

(Andrew Tallman)

He who finds a wife finds a good thing, and obtains favor from the Lord,” and he who nourishes a wife preserves a good thing and maintains the favor of the Lord.

God allowed you to find your wife because He believed you would take good care of His precious daughter. This is why you obtain the dual blessings of having her and pleasing Him. But what happens when you don’t take good care of your wife? A man who neglects his wife makes her miserable and then she makes him miserable. As the saying goes, “When mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.” But she isn’t the only unhappy one. I believe you also anger God by betraying His confidence in trusting you with her. After all, what father is happy when his son-in-law fails to keep his darling content?

I’ve been to many weddings, and I have yet to see a woman stand at the altar promising to “love, honor, and obey so long as you both shall live” while thinking to herself, “I despise this man, and I expect this marriage to make me miserable.” Not likely. She stands there with hope, anticipation, love, admiration, and the expectation of great joy in her heart. Unfortunately, if you fail to meet her needs and fulfill her hopes, she will not stay that way. The best way to ruin a good woman is to marry her and then fail to give her what she expected to receive.

Oh, sure, perhaps she exerts a tremendous effort and manages to stay sweet and wonderful in spite of you neglecting her. Even the Bible teaches her to love you into being a better man. But to expect or demand this from her is naively optimistic and, quite frankly, unfair. There is a much better way: the Biblical way.

When we quote Ephesians 5, men often emphasize the wife’s duty to submit. Okay, fine. But the husband’s duty is to love his wife as Christ loved the Church, His Bride. In thinking about the relationship between Christ and the Church, who has the greater challenge? Who does more? Who is primarily responsible for the ultimate success of the relationship? Your obligation to represent the love of Jesus in your marriage is a monumentally greater task than your wife’s obligation to represent the submission of the Church.

So, what does it take to have a great wife? Simple. Be a great lord. And what does it take to be a great lord? Equally simple. Know the needs and desires of your wife and meet them. If you don’t, she will become just the sort of wife you don’t want: nagging, withholding, bitter, and frustrated. God gave you a beautiful flower. He does not expect a dead thorn bush in return. You’d have done better to remain single than to so ruin the beautiful human rose He entrusted to you. 

That’s the simple part. It may be unpleasant to ponder, but it’s simple. Your job is to nurture, cherish, love, honor, serve, provide for, lead, impress, and protect your wife. And if you never stop doing this, the chance that she will be a great wife is very good. Yes, she retains free will and may fail on her part, but, when you do your part, it becomes much easier for her to do hers.

So how is this to be accomplished? This is where things get dicey. Willard Harley wrote a very helpful book called “His Needs, Her Needs,” in which he outlines the top needs of women. They include affection, conversation, honesty and openness, financial support, and family commitment. This is all true. Gary Chapman wrote another helpful book called “The Five Love Languages,” in which he talks about giving love through gifts, quality time, words of encouragement, physical touch, and acts of service. This is also true. Gary Smalley has written books. James Dobson has written books. Ellen Kreidman has written books. And all the books in the world are helpful and at the same time not. Here’s why.

Women aren’t a formula.

Every woman is different. Every woman is complex. Every woman is mysterious. And just about the worst thing you can do is think that she can be solved like some math equation. Men, by contrast, are not all that complex. This is why men and women don’t understand each other. Women often refuse to believe men are so simple. Men often can’t grasp that women are so complicated.

Yet God is represented in both of these. He is at once both absurdly simple and astoundingly complex. He is straightforward and mysterious. In other words, God made it so that women could learn about Him by understanding men and that men could learn about Him by understanding women. That’s why marriage is such a rich theological gift.

And your part, husbands, is the harder one. Though the task is simple (to make her feel loved and precious beyond comparison), the method is not simple. Although I can confidently tell her what to do in general to make you happy (see my previous article), I cannot tell you the same about your wife. You have to figure that out for yourself, and, even if you figure her out today, it may be a new puzzle tomorrow or the next day.

That’s okay. That’s one side of God’s nature you’re experiencing. If it frustrates you, you’re really just admitting you’re frustrated with God. But if you take it as the greatest challenge with the neatest reward, then you’ve suddenly discovered something far more interesting than fantasy football ever can be.

But if I can’t give you a formula, why did I bother writing this? Because if I can merely get you to recognize the nature of the challenge and stop thinking that there is a four-step plan you can follow to nurture a great wife, I’ve already helped you immensely.

Let me conclude with a personal example. Most women like surprises. My wife hates them. Most women like to be given sweets such as chocolate. My wife likes it once but then gets angry because she worries it will make her fat. Most women like to be given lavish gifts that show their value. My wife considers that a waste of our carefully managed budget. Most women like to celebrate anniversaries. My wife couldn’t care less. So what do I do?

Well, I could ignore everything I know about her by surprising her with an expensive chocolate extravaganza on our anniversary. Then I could pride myself for having followed a set of rules that would apply for most women as I sit back to enjoy the fruits of my stupidity. Or I could let her purchase season 10 of Little House on the Prairie on DVD for herself at Target on sale two months before our anniversary. Guess which one I did? And she was quite satisfied with that. We must give our wives what they truly want, not what we think they want … just like God.

So, what’s the lesson? Learn what YOUR wife needs from you to feel loved, and then give it to her. Pay attention. Really pay attention. Try some experiments, and see how it turns out. If you find something that works, try it some more. Never stop trying to impress her with the things you will do to make her feel loved. But also never forget that she’s a woman, not a formula… just like God.

And if you follow this simple (and completely unsimple) advice, I suspect you’ll find yourself married to a great wife. At the very least, she’ll appreciate you trying so hard to understand and satisfy her … just like God.

Source: Crosswalk

1 comments:

Ternyata oh Ternyata...

Saturday, December 06, 2008 Fay 0 Comments

Tentang 3 hal yang aku temukan hari ini... yang salah satunya ada sangkut pautnya ama pencantuman sumber tulisan...

Barusan aku kan cek FS... ternyata ada yang liat itu dari profile FS-nya salah satu forum (yang jelas bukan forum Jawaban.Com hehehe). Trus aku akhirnya jadi buka forum itu 'n iseng join jadi membernya.

Pas masuk ke salah satu thread... ada yang judulnya "Arti Pacaran"... Karna itu judul artikel yang sama kayak yang pernah aku tulis buat Jawaban.Com dulu... aku buka... 'n ternyata emang bener itu artikelku T_T Yap... lagi-lagi tanpa sumber...

Sebelon ini pernah juga nemu tulisan yang sama di salah satu blog, cuman penulisnya udah nyantumin sumbernya (ya Jawaban.Com coz haknya kan udah jadi punya Jawaban.Com hehehe...) setelah aku kasitau... Yang ini aku rada malu seh hihihi... soalnya langsung bete begitu tau ada yang copy paste tanpa nyantumin sumber... jadi aku negurnya emang nunjukin bete gitu... 

Tapi kali ini enggak... coz aku ga sepenuhnya bete siy... tapi separuh seneng coz ternyata banyak juga yang ngerasa diberkatin dari artikel itu plus separuhnya lagi bete... jadi fifty2 gitu lah hehehe... (Enjie, I'm sure you too are definitely know how I feel hihihi...) Kali ini, secara aku udah jadi member forum itu, aku posting nanya, "...itu nulis sendiri atau copy paste yah? Kok aku pernah baca di Jawaban.Com... emang artikel lama siy..." hihihi... kita liat aja responnya...

Itu hal pertama yang aku temuin... Hal kedua... ternyata yang posting artikel itu juga member forum Jawaban.Com... aku tau setelah aku buka profile dia... Emang kita ga saling mengenal, tapi aku tau orangnya... Trus... hal ketiga... pas aku liat gallery photo, ternyata ada juga member forum Jawaban.Com yang ikutan kopdar Surabaya di forum itu hehehe...

Hal pertama ini kayaknya yang bakal aku ikutin hihihi... ga rela bok hehehe... Yah kan wajar aja dalam etika tulis menulis... kalo dapet dari sumber laen a.k.a ga nulis sendiri, it's a normal thing buat nyantumin sumbernya. Kalopun gatau penulis aslinya siapa, paling ga nyantumin lah dia dapet dari mana... Kalo dari email ya tulis dari forward-an email atau milis... Kalo dari blog orang ya cantumin alamat blognya... Kalo dari website ya cantumin nama websitenya... It's a normal ethics in writing...

Hmmm... Yah... we'll see hehehe.... 

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"Just Do It"

Wednesday, December 03, 2008 Fay 0 Comments


Hehehehe... I'm not writing as much as before, yap that's the fact... I don't know why, maybe it's because here I've got people whom I can talk to, or probably it's an effect of change itself =p different habitat caused different habits... something like that...

Whatever it is, at a point I think it's better for me... coz I don't wanna be just a writer, but more and foremost, a doer. Like Nike's popular line, "Just Do It"

I don't wanna be someone who writes or talks about how to do certain thing in the right way, only to be found out later by other people that he/she himself/herself doesn't do things properly like he/she has said before. That kind of reality has made many people suffered from bitterness...

Though "walk the talk" is a good quote, but who can guarantee that? Sometimes we still can slip, as a human... So it might be better to be a living example... Like what I've been learning from my elderly brother, the way he lives, the way he acts... I see that his reality and his words are justifying towards each other. That is so powerful and has affected my life ever since... I remember once he said this to me, "I always try to do the truth first, live in it first, before I preach or say it to others..."

So, I just enjoy this change... that's why lately I seldom updating my blog =p Anyway, I will share a bit of my recent activities... In my new office, I'm learning phpBB 3.0.3 forum, as a part of our website launching preparation... and I'm still communicating with the programmer from Kairos Multimedia too... There are so many things to prepare with some people...

My daily activities, hmm... just as usual... after work sometimes if I need to buy food or snacks I go to Indomaret, but if not, I usually just stay in my room at my dorm, enjoying unlimited internet connection for a while to browse few things and also playing with my virtual pet on Facebook hehehe... or reading book (though not as much as I used to) or watching DVD or watching TV (but usually just for 1 hour or so). Once a week in work days I meet my community in my elderly brother's place and have a fellowship together...

Yap, just that hehehe... There are still many things to learn and to gain... yet there are also many things to be thankful of... "Just keep swimming!" like Dori said in "Finding Nemo" hehehe...

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