Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Nukilan yang Tidak Berapa Gembira tentang Kegembiraan


Aku rasa antara penipuan yang paling besar dalam hidup adalah bahawa kegembiraan mempunyai sifat yang malar. Tidak berubah. Yang kau wujud dalam keadaan binari. Kau samada gembira, atau tidak.


Tapi kegembiraan adalah seperti motivasi, suatu proses yang dinamik dan sering berubah-ubah. Masuk tahun baru kau penuh dengan motivasi dan azam baru, dan motivasi itu kemudiannya makin pudar sampai lah tahun seterusnya. Begitu juga dengan kegembiraan.


Jadi kita sebagai manusia sebenarnya sering terkejar-kejar sesuatu yang tidak wujud. Kau bukannya patut gembira setiap masa dan orang lain bukannya gembira sepanjang masa. Berhentilah rasa sedih sebab kau rasa orang lain lebih gembira daripada kau dan kau sepatutnya lebih gembira. Sifat kehidupan (kalau kau bukan seseorang yang malang) ialah kadang-kadang kau akan gembira, dan kadang-kadang kau akan sedih. Just embrace that.


Kegembiraan sifatnya dinamik, dan nasib dan perasaan kau boleh berubah bila-bila masa.


Dan kegembiraan juga sifatnya kompleks, maka perkara yang kau rasa akan buat kau rasa gembira kadang-kadang tak mendatangkan kegembiraan langsung.


Kadang-kadang benda yang 'jahat' dan messed up pun boleh buat kau happy. Schadenfreude. Kisah malang orang lain. Atau kegembiraan daripada misery sebab kau suka complain. Ramai juga manusia yang gembira tengok orang lain pamerkan kebodohan. Iya lah, tak ada lah pelik sangat bila kau pikir yang kita manusia ni derive joy bila tengok orang lagi malang daripada kita. Walaupun malang dia tu wujud dalam bentuk kebodohan. Tengok, kebodohan pun ada hikmah kan? Boleh buat orang lain rasa bagus pasal diri sendiri dan bersyukur. Bukan saja itu, boleh wujudkan peluang untuk tunjuk pandai lagi.


Tapi semua ni hanya perkataan, dan kita tidak rasional. Kita nak apa yang kita nak.


I could tell you that the things we think will bring us joy will probably never be enough and that some of them are probably bad for us, but we'll never stop wanting them and we'll only learn by finding that out ourselves. And maybe that's just what it means to be human.

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Finding Joy in the Mundane


(The layout of this post and photos might be 'off' and messy if you're viewing this on your mobile device or on a laptop with a screen resolution different from mine. Sorry about that!)

About 2 years ago, I wrote a post on how I personally felt that the world revolves around 4 things and one of them was our obsession to feel. I went on about how some might have felt that adulthood felt boring in comparison to childhood because we had less 'firsts' and we were becoming desensitized to many things. Well, you can read about it here if you're interested.

I don't know how true that was, but it was just something I was starting to feel at the time and I was trying out this new thing called 'doing one new thing a week'. I wanted to experience many 'firsts' again. The articles on the internet were throwing grand suggestions like travelling to new places and trying out extreme sports, but I decided to just create my own list. This list was of things I was curious about, lifehacks I wanted to try out or things I wanted to do when I was a child but couldn't for various reasons. It just made sense at the time. I was turning 30, I had access to stuff then, so why should I whine about never having the opportunity to, say, learn a musical instrument? I mean, I was almost 30 then, dammit. If I really wanted something that badly to still be bitter about it by 30, I should just go ahead and do it, not whine about how envious I was of the kids who could learn playing the piano in primary school. 

Going through the list made me realize I didn't really want some of the things I thought I did. One of the items in my list was 'using a dishwasher' (well, this should give you a glimpse of what kind of list I had). I've just always hated washing the dishes and fantasized about using a dishwasher every time I saw it in a film. My opportunity came when my tenancy agreement came to an end in 2014. Immediately after, I rented an AirBnB which happened to have a dishwasher. It was then I realized I actually hated dishwashers and that I found it more of an inconvenience more than anything. Plus, I felt guilty because I felt like I was running up the water and electricity bill every time it ran. So the dishwasher and I parted ways. I was relieved though, because at least I knew now. At least I won't end up being a 60-year-old who is still fantasizing about using a dishwasher.

I've got to be honest, it really wasn't one new thing a week. Unless me watching a new movie every week was categorized under me doing a 'new thing'. I usually did that one new thing on the weekends, and some weekends I was catching up on work and others were me lazing around watching Netflix. Some months I only did one new thing a month, and others were one new thing every week. So I averaged them out and called them my 'one new thing a fortnight'. Most of them were fairly simple things too, like trying out a new recipe like making almond milk or burger patties from scratch, or exploring a new local attraction. They were my short-term happiness. 

But recently, I rediscovered.. a slightly longer-lasting form of happiness through it.

I've been renting for a couple of years now, and it's usually old houses run by old folks in their 70s who love to DIY. I love 'restoring' (for lack of a better word, the stuff I do is really simple, nothing fancy) old furniture and exchanging tips with my landlords. My previous landlord in 2014 actually taught me a cool plumbing trick which I found useful to this day. I was that kid who, after learning about the U, S and P bends in Kemahiran Hidup in secondary school, went home eagerly to apply my newfound 'knowledge', much to my parents' dismay. So when these lifehacks articles and videos were making rounds on the internet, you can imagine how excited I was. I was that person who'd go and buy a small bag of walnuts for £1 to buff out some old wooden furniture in 2014. It was just so, very, oddly satisfying.











Before and after buffing an old wooden furniture at the place I was renting with three pieces of walnuts.





Then I moved out and into a modern home and kind of forgot about the whole restoring thing. Until recently.

Last year I moved into an old home. For me, it was ideal: Unfurnished, my landlord was nice and my neighbours minded their own business. I knew it was old, because of the poor insulation and the guy who lives above me told us he's been renting his flat since 1988. My landlord is 73 with a twisted sense of humour and doesn't bother me much. Once, during a fire safety check in my flat, he told the woman from the City Council that she didn't need to check the locked cellar, it's just where I kept my stash of drugs and alcohol. Needless to say, she was not amused. He also insisted on repainting the rooms before I moved in (it really was to cover up the mouldy walls, but never mind).

The old flat had its own charm, even though almost everyone who visited us was blind to it. Haha. The previous tenant seemed to have left in a hurry. The freezer stank of something fishy and was filled with some brown liquid and no amount of lemons, dishwashing liquid, lemongrass or baking soda got rid of the smell. You know what worked in the end? I found a container of frozen kaffir lime leaves in an Asian supermarket, tore up about 20 pieces and threw it in the freezer. Yeah, daun limau purut. Amazing.

After a few months the place started to look like a home, but there was something that never failed to bother me. The poor caulk job in the bathroom. It was messy and mould was starting to set in the rubber. What's caulk? Well, it's that black or white sealant you always see around sinks, bathtubs, walls and things like that. Let me just google up a photo of what it is:



















For nearly a year, every time I looked at the sink or bathtub, I was filled with annoyance. Every single shower, every time I used the toilet, every time I brushed my teeth, I felt like the shitty caulk job was taunting me. And I didn't want to bother my landlord about it since he was 73 and would probably insist on doing it himself. I had a sinking feeling he was responsible for the previous caulk job anyway. Can't blame him, it's not as easy as it looks.

"Well, why don't you do something about it?" my partner asked.

"It doesn't bother you?" I asked.

"No, not really."

So that was that. That was gonna be my 'one new thing a fortnight' thingy for that week. 

I watched a couple of videos and read a few blogposts to see what I was getting myself into, and went shopping on Amazon. I was pleasantly surprised to find that everything I needed cost slightly under £13.















Piu piu piu! Check out my caulking gun.








So, below (on the left) is what's been irritating me every morning. 



Before and after removing the old caulk. New caulk hasn't been applied at this point.


Ugh, just looking at the 'before' picture is making me irritable. The sinks were fairly easy. But then came the bathtub..

No amount of scrubbing got rid of the black mould on the caulk. There was no other way, I had remove all of the previous caulk and re-caulk it. I wasn't prepared for what greeted me when I removed the caulk though.


 






It was nasty! Just nasty! I had to clean them up before re-caulking. I don't know how long ago the previous caulk job was, but I'm glad I got the anti-mould caulk for this. To be frank, the whole thing was tiring, especially when it required me to squat or kneel for hours in the bathtub while doing it.










But I felt like the results were so worth it.
It wasn't perfect, but it made me feel so much better. It kind of made the tub look new too.




Let me just skip through the boring and tedious process of caulking, especially when it comes to curved edges and you don't have a masking tape for the straight lines. I used my fingers to push and smoothen the caulk and ended smelling like ammonia in the end, well, rubber tappers would know that smell. I didn't have any spirit or whatever for the caulk that ended on the metal taps, so I used WD40 instead and that worked fine. Then I ended up smelling like WD40. But my taps were shiny.












With the caulk and WD40 applied. See, shiny. I had spent so long on this that the sun had set after I was done so I had to take this picture with the bathroom light on. 

 


So in the end, my back and legs hurt, I smelled terrible, my fingers were sticky but my taps were shiny and the previous messy caulk job was gone.

It's incredible how doing this small thing changed the days after. Looking at the sink while brushing my teeth made me happy. I started smiling while staring at the bathtub. I was like a crazy person.

I suddenly had this newfound appreciation for neat caulk jobs and those who did this thankless and unappreciated job. 

And that's the thing with my previous 'one new thing a fortnight' activities. They just felt so, temporary. I'd cook something new, eat it, and then it's gone. But when it came to something like caulking, I really felt like this small thing changed my daily life in a big way. So here's to more of doing things like these, especially those I've been postponing, and to rediscovering joy in the mundane.

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Those Abandoned Dreams.


Every now and then, you come across a passage that really speaks to you. 


"Since I knew you, I have been troubled by a remorse that I thought would never reproach me again, and have heard whispers from old voices impelling me upward, that I thought were silent for ever. I have had unformed ideas of striving afresh, beginning anew, shaking off sloth and sensuality, and fighting out the abandoned fight. A dream, all a dream, that ends in nothing, and leaves the sleeper where he lay down, but I wish you to know that you inspired it.”
- Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities



The thing is, I know little of the context of this passage. I read the book when I was about eight, and understood close to nothing. I hardly remember any of its contents now. But I came across this paragraph again as an adult, and it really spoke to me. 

Someone entered your life, out of nowhere. They stirred feelings and aspirations that you thought were long gone or were buried too deep, and now that you realized those feelings you thought were long dead have awaken again, you're filled with a deep yearning. But for what? You start dreaming again, fantasizing the things you could be and do and these yearnings make you restless. You suddenly feel like giving up your bad habits and taking up good ones. You suddenly want to become a much, much better person. You want to become a better person who makes the world a better place for others. And all because of this uninvited guest in your life.

But alas, you're you. Deep down you know these dreams are short-lived. They'll only remain in your head. You won't actually do most of those things and even if you did, you are only that 'better' person, for a short while. Because the demons in you will always win. But you just can't shake off that you need to be better. And you both love and hate the uninvited guest for stirring those feelings, dreams and possibilities in you and you're suddenly constantly reminded of how flawed you are. But you thank them anyway. Thank you, for making me realize I am not dead inside. Thank you, for making me feel again. Thank you for inspiring me although I led myself nowhere. The flaws were all mine, and your existence made me realize what I could have been, had I not been so flawed. I will cherish these dreams forever, even if they only live to exist in the deep recesses of my mind.

My father really loved Charles Dickens. And he wanted to share Dickens' magic with me. At eight, I was absolutely fascinated by David Copperfield. He gave Dickens' David Copperfield to me, and in an attempt to get me to read it, he told me it was about the magician. My English was so bad at the time that I only realized halfway through the book that it wasn't about my Copperfield, the magician. When I confronted him about it, he merely told me that well, technically he didn't lie. David Copperfield did choose his stage name based on Charles Dickens' David Copperfield. 

And so he did.

So it was absolutely bizarre (actually, no, not at all) that I should come across this passage again as an adult and finally understood what my father was getting at. Maybe it never really occurred to him that as a kid, I would never be able to fully appreciate Dickens or understand the emotional complexity of his writings. Maybe he was all too excited to share that magic with someone. So it is by pure chance that I should revisit this passage again as an adult, and feel compelled to revisit his books and discover the magic that I was blind to as a child, and to attempt to understand my father and his world. 

And so I will.

Friday, October 6, 2017

Idealis


I entered his world when he was 37.

Masa tu dia dah ada dua anak, cuma bezanya aku hadir dalam hidup dia masa dia dah selesa sikit. Hidup yang dia bina sedikit demi sedikit sejak dia datang ke Malaysia dalam bot ketika dia berusia 10 tahun. Aku pernah dengar dia cakap pasal pengalaman tu sekali je dalam seumur hidup aku, dan dia cerita pun sebab nak menerangkan kat mak aku kenapa dia tak makan telur kuning. 

"We were on the boat so long, we ran out of food, except for eggs. So we had to eat raw eggs. I couldn't look at egg yolks or anything yellow for years without feeling nauseated," dia cerita. 

Tapi tu cerita untuk hari lain. Cerita hari ni pasal aku dan bapak aku.

Mak bapak aku dedua percaya akan konsep anak pembawa rezeki. Mak aku selalu mengingatkan aku yang bapak aku naik pangkat lepas aku lahir, dan beberapa tahun selepas aku dilahirkan, kami berjaya pindah daripada rumah kami masa tu yang dipecah masuk hari-hari sebab penagih dadah suka curi makanan daripada peti sejuk kami. Juga rumah sama yang seorang penagih dadah meninggalkan 'souvenir' darahnya di atas bantal selepas ditembak polis.

Naik pangkat bermakna bapak aku dapat luangkan lebih masa dengan kami dan dia kurang stress. Mak dengan adik-beradik aku cakap dia start mellow down lepas aku lahir, dan mereka berteori sebab rupa dan perangai aku paling sama dengan bapak aku. Dan sebagai typical middle child, aku selalu, unashamedly, dahagakan validation parents aku. Bila bapak aku balik daripada kerja, aku cepat-cepat lari sambut dia kat pintu dengan senyuman paling lebar, walaupun aku tengah makan atau buat homework masa tu. Kalau dia cakap dia penat lepas kerja, aku offer nak urut kaki dia. Aku cuci kereta dia on weekends sejak aku 7 tahun. Masa sekolah rendah, aku hafal surah-surah dalam Muqaddam dan recite depan dia malam-malam sebab aku nampak benda tu buat dia happy. Bila kami sekeluarga pergi muzium masa cuti sekolah, aku bawak buku nota dan catit semua benda yang aku nampak kat muzium tu. Bapak aku happy tengok aku buat macam tu dan selalu suruh abang aku jadi macam aku. God, I was such an annoying kid. Patutlah abang aku selalu buli aku.

Bila aku kena tulis karangan 'The Person I Admire the Most' kat sekolah, aku mesti tulis pasal bapak aku. Mak aku akan kumpul semua karangan tu, dan akan tunjuk kat bapak aku. Tu antara cara aku komunikasi dengan bapak aku pasal perasaan aku terhadap dia, sebab sebenarnya, kami semua rasa kekok untuk cakap pasal feelings. Cara kami berkomunikasi macam aku cerita tadi lah. Aku repot dia apa aku achieve kat sekolah ke memana, atau tolong dia. Kami tak pernah ada personal talks. Dia punyalah rimas dengan benda-benda personal sampai kami tak dibenarkan wish dia happy birthday.

Kau tau macam ibu atau bapa yang terlalu sibuk untuk kau, tapi kau tetap asyik pergi kat mereka, tanya boleh tolong atau teman tak? Ha, macam tu lah. Dan aku percaya, sebab tu, lama-lama mereka balas balik affections aku. Bila aku start masuk sekolah rendah, baru lah dia mula bagi aku masuk dunia dia. Bila dia pergi pejabat atau hutan masa hujung minggu, atau pergi jumpa kawan-kawan dia, kengkadang dia bawa aku. Antara memori indah yang aku simpan ialah bapak aku bawak aku pergi jumpa kawan dia yang ada kedai buku dan dia bagi aku pinjam sebanyak buku yang aku nak, tiap kali aku datang. Ada lagi seorang kawan dia yang ada kedai runcit dan selalu offer apa-apa yang aku nak daripada kedai dia, tapi bapak aku selalu tak bagi aku terima. Dia selalu nasihatkan aku, jangan ambil barang free sebab nanti pakcik tu rugi dan dia juga perlu duit untuk survive. Jadi sebagai budak 7 tahun, aku terpaksa reject Paddle Pop pelangi daripada pakcik tu walaupun hati aku meronta-ronta nak. Selain daripada tu, cara kami bonding adalah dengan explore benda-benda baru. Dia bawak aku masuk hutan, dan lepas keluar hutan kami akan bukak kasut dan check kalau-kalau ada pacat masuk dan cabut pacat sama-sama. Pernah sekali dia bawak aku tengok mayat untuk medical students. I was so fascinated. Bila pikir balik, macam pelik jugak bapak aku buat macam tu masa aku 7 tahun, tapi sekarang aku sedar dia hanya nak kongsi hidup dan benda-benda yang dia minat dengan aku masa tu. Dan sekarang aku sedar kau boleh berusia 40 ke atas dan masih ada sifat kebudak-budakan dalam diri kau, yang kau akan tunjuk dekat orang tertentu dan terpilih sahaja.

Dan sebab dia nampak diri dia dalam diri aku, dia juga nampak kelemahan dirinya dalam aku. Perangai cepat baran (tapi cepat cool off), perangai degil dan idealistik. Aku rasa pertama kalinya dia sedar aku macam tu masa kami ramai-ramai balik kampung mak aku masa Raya. Masa tu, aku berusia 9 tahun. Aku suka gila balik kampung mak aku sebab dia cam dunia yang berbeza gila daripada hidup aku di bandar. Masa aku kat kampung je lah aku bebas nak meronda dan main dengan kawan-kawan aku sampai Maghrib. Sebab kampung mak aku jenis bebetul kampung, sampai tak ada jalanraya sebab tak ada siapa ada kereta. Mak bapak aku pun tak payah la risau aku kena langgar kereta ke apa. Kampung mak aku kecik, dan hampir semua penduduk kampung tu related dengan kami. Salah satu keluarga yang aku dengan rapat dengan ialah keluarga arwah pakcik aku. Aku rapat dengan anak-anak arwah pakcik aku ni. Aku tak tau mereka dah ada berapa adik-beradik sekarang, tapi masa tu ada dalam 7 orang, dan bini arwah pakcik aku ni penagih dadah. Kita panggil makcik ni, makcik A. Beberapa orang anak dia drop out sekolah untuk tanggung keluarga, dan aku paling rapat dengan dua adik-beradik yang paling dekat usia dengan aku, Z dan W.

Sebelum aku sambung, aku nak terangkan, masalah dadah ni benda biasa dan berleluasa di kalangan saudara mara aku. Aku tak pandang benda tu sebagai aib keluarga aku, tapi realiti kami. Close childhood friend aku (pakcik aku yang sebaya dengan aku) bebaru ni pun baru masuk pusat serenti. Aku tau mungkin benda ni tak normal bagi orang lain, tapi perkara ni just another realiti dalam hidup aku. Sebab aku tau, kalau mak aku tak break the cycle dan pergi ke bandar, kalau aku lahir kepada dia (sebagai orang lain?), aku pun mungkin cenderung hidup ke arah tu.

Anyway, aku rapat dengan Z dan W. Z budak perempuan yang sebaya dengan aku dan W ni adik lelaki dia yang 7 tahun dan suka tag along. Bila dah lelama spend time, walaupun kau baru 9 tahun, kau akan mula tertanya kenapa hidup dia lain gila daripada kau. Kenapa diaorang takyah pergi sekolah? Taknak pergi sekolah ke? Kenapa gigi dia reput? Mak dia tak suruh berus gigi sebelum tidur ke? Kenapa dia tak pakai selipar pergi bendang? Dan sebab aku 9 tahun jugak, aku berani tanya terus soalan-soalan ni semua. Bila aku tau dia tak pergi sekolah dan teringin nak pergi sekolah, dan tak ada berus gigi atau selipar, dan mak dia biasa hilang berhari-hari tak balik rumah, 9-year-old me was shocked by all of it. Mungkin untuk pertama kalinya, privileged bubble aku dicucuk berkali-kali. 

Malam tu, aku buat perangai SJW dan cerita semua tu kat mak aku dan merayu dia untuk pujuk bapak aku untuk ambil W sebagai anak angkat. Rupanya mak aku dan orang kampung dah lama tak puas hati dengan perangai Makcik A dan tolong aku pujuk bapak aku. Dan itu lah pertama kalinya aku nampak bapak aku pandang muka aku dengan ekspresi yang sangat pelik. Masa tu aku tak paham apa maksud riak wajah dia. Semacam kesian dan kecewa. Tapi sekarang aku paham, tu kali pertamanya dia nampak aku ada salah satu kelemahan dia, perangai idealistik, dan dia nampak aku akan dikecewakan dalam hidup berkali-kali sebab ada perangai tu. 

Dan dengan suara yang perlahan, dengan cara sebagaimana seorang bapa mat salleh menerangkan kepada anaknya yang Santa Claus tidak wujud, bapak aku cuba menerangkan kat aku yang walaupun ye, W patut pergi sekolah, dan ye, hidup kita lagi senang daripada keluarga W, kita tak boleh senang-senang je nak ambik anak orang daripada mak dan keluarga dia. Yang dalam hidup ni akan ada banyak perkara tak adil, tapi aku tak boleh masuk campur dengan cara tu. Dia cakap kita boleh tolong dengan cara lain. 

Bapak aku tak mention pun pasal dia sendiri kesempitan wang masa tu. Semua tu, sekali dengan cerita pasal macam mana dia juga idealist masa kecik, aku dengar masa aku dah dewasa dan daripada orang lain atau daripada status Facebook dia bila dia bernostalgia.

Over the years, aku nampak that 'look' berkali-kali bila dia pandang aku, dan aku paham it's the look someone gives you when they see you repeating or about to repeat their mistakes, and they remember the pain that it caused them. But they have to let you commit those mistakes anyway, because how else were you supposed to learn?

My idealistic tendencies and occasional naivety have caused me some pain and brought me some blessings. It explains why I'd join tons of contest even though I'd only win a few, why I used to aim for things that others tell me I have no chance for or why I'd care about certain causes more than I should. It also caused me a few failures and countless disappointments, especially when it comes to my tendency to idolize mere mortals. 

Aku suka ingat balik pada hari tu, sebab aku rasa hari tu aku rasa bapak aku cuba ajar aku an important lesson about the harsh realities of life kat aku dengan cara yang paling gentle yang dia reti. Dan aku akan teringat betapa untungnya aku, sebab bapak aku masih rasa dia kena protect aku daripada the harsh realities of life masa aku 9 tahun.

Sebab masa dia lebih kurang umur aku masa tu, dia dah kena naik bot demi cari kehidupan yang lebih baik dan face the harsh the realities of life.

Monday, May 29, 2017

Tiga Puluh: Things I Know Now (written in 2015)


Masa scroll drafts aku tadi, aku jumpa draft ni yang aku tulis in 2015. So aku decide nak publish je lah. 



Tujuh tahun yang lalu, aku tulis satu post yang bertajuk, "Things You Wish You Knew at 17, But Clearly Didn’t", which some people found useful. Jadi sempena masuk 30 tahun, aku nak sambung dengan a simple post. Things I learned by 30 (which you might or might not find useful or relevant).

Sebenarnya aku rasa janggal masuk 30. Really. 30 feels weird because it feels so normal and uneventful. Masa early 20s, aku ada expectations macam-macam. I thought, "By 30, aku dah figure life and myself out. Aku takkan takut dengan dunia atau sesapa. Aku akan ada itu ini. Dah buat itu ini."

But 30 came sooner than I expected. One day I woke up and I was 30. I was different and I had done a lot of things since I was 20, but strangely I don't feel that much different from when I was 20. 

Jadi ni a few lessons I learned along the way:

1. Dah cakap ni, tapi nak cakap lagi. 30 will come sooner than you expected. Jadi kalau kau jenis suka buat janji dengan kawan-kawan macam, "Kalau by 30 kita tak kahwin, jom kahwin each other?", just don't. Trust me.

2. I should've been way nicer and more forgiving towards my parents. Parents aku sebenarnya ada anak masa diorang muda. Sekarang ni baru aku sedar betapa mencabarnya jadi mak aku sebab dia dah kena handle tiga anak sebelum umur dia cecah 30. 
 
3. Aku rasa antara benda yang pelik adalah aku banyak experience benda yang aku ingat I'd experience later on in life, by the time I hit 25. Tengok kengkawan bercerai. Bercerai dan kahwin lagi. Meninggal sebab heart attack. Meninggal sebab cancer. Tengok kengkawan tukar agama, tukar political stance, kahwin dengan bangsa yang diorang anti, eat their own words, macam-macam la. Semua ni aku nampak terjadi masa kengkawan aku in their 20s. Aku tau benda-benda ni akan happen eventually, cuma aku expect they'll happen masa aku 30-50 tahun.

So takeaway lesson untuk aku: Never say never. Because you might just eat your own words soon. Bayangkan, semua orang yang dok cakap diorang takkan jadi jenis parents yang suka upload bebanyak gambar anak diorang, became exactly that! Yang paling suka kutuk agama tetiba jadi religious, and vice versa. Yang conservative jadi liberal, dan yang liberal jadi conservative. Tak mustahil kau pun akan telan banyak kata-kata kau nanti. I ate a lot of my own words too. Nasibla aku ada blog ni untuk merekod semua benda bangang yang aku pernah pikir.

4. Aku sedar aku kena always trust my instincts. Only go for it bila hati dengan otak dedua setuju. Sebab banyak kali hati aku nak, tapi otak aku tak kasi. Also, senang gila nak rasa 'sure' ngan something. Tapi perasaan tu boleh berubah sekelip mata.

5.  On love and marriage: it's unpredictable, because you are unpredictable. Kau macam ni sekarang, tapi 5 years down the road, kau sure ke kau tak berubah? Kau sure ke partner kau takkan berubah? Would you guys be okay with that? Kau takleh expect orang nak stay the same je, sebab kau pikirlah diri kau 5 tahun yang lalu macam mana. So kalau kau nak commit, pikir elok-elok pasal ni. And sebab ni gak kau takleh judge orang yang bercerai.

6. Memang normal la rasa pressured nak buat something sebab semua orang lain tengah buat, tapi actually doing it *sebab* orang lain buat adalah tindakan yang kurang bijak. Janganlah buat big life decisions sebab orang lain buat. You might hate the consequences. Some of those decisions are irreversible.

8. Ramai orang ada short-term memory. So kalau kau mess up, don't worry, they'll only talk about you until the next screw-up comes along. Jadi kalau kau nak buat sesuatu tapi takut dengan 'apa orang kata', remember that.

9. My teens and 20s were my opinionated and self-discovery years. I craved it. Memang aku selalu dok cari orang yang macam aku gak masatu. Suka bertukar pendapat, pastu someone yang boleh validate my opinions and make me feel smart, bla bla bla. All the time. But now I find that shit annoying. Sekali sekala boleh la. Now I just want and need someone to chill with. 

10. Makin tua, kau akan rasa cam lagi senang nak jadi cynical. Nak prasangka buruk dengan orang sebab pengalaman. Dan benda ni akan pengaruh actions kau dan apa yang berlaku kat kau. Fight it. Ada orang ingat opposite cynicism ni adalah naivety. It's not. Kau boleh jadi cynical, sedar tentang benda-benda buruk dalam dunia tapi choose to remain an optimist anyway.

Cynicism exists in you because of something that happened in your past. Optimism, that's something that'll decide your future.

11. Masa ni penentu untuk macam-macam. Antara lesson paling penting aku sedar, kau takkan belajar something unless kau dah ready for it. Macam bayi yang belajar nak berjalan. Orang selalu nasihat kat kita macam-macam, and kita jarang peduli, sebab kita tak ready. Bila dah berlaku, baru kita sedar atau teringat nasihat tu. Benda ni buat aku teringat lagu Buses and Trains from Bachelor Girl. Dia dok marah kat mak dia,

"Hey Mom, why didn't you warn me?
'Cause about boys is something I should have known"


Aku rasa mak dia dah warn dah. Biasanya parents dah nasihat pasal benda-benda ni. Tapi tu lah, banyak benda dalam hidup ni, dah kena nasihat banyak-banyak pun kita tak belajar-belajar lagi. Tengoklah, kita manusia ni dah tua pun biasanya masih bodoh bila perihal cinta.

12. Yeah, aku rasa we should be nicer to the younger ones. Or at least not as condescending la. Biarlah diorang nak merasa pandai ke delusional ke apa. Masa kau umur tu, kau pun benci kalau ada orang kata, "Nanti tua kau tau lah". Macam lah we're in a better place by being cynical pun (macam lah 30 tua sangat pun). Aku paling nyampah kalau tengah happy ke apa pastu ada party pooper datang cakap, "Nanti dah tua/ dah kahwin lama/ dah ada anak/ dah umur cam makcik, kau tau lah". Nak imply semua akan end up in suffering. Macam doa buruk lak. Macam lah outcome semua orang sama. Jadi aku kena belajar supaya kontrol tak buat benda ni kat orang lain.

13. Learn from the old ones. Bukan semua nak ajar kau, tapi kalau ada tu, seriously, learn from them. Tak kisahlah kau rasa diorang ada mentaliti kuno ke, tak cukup kreatif ke. Kau ingat diorang kerja lama tu, diorang takda pick up shortcuts and tips yang boleh menjimatkan masa kau? Bila diorang start brag pasal zaman dulu lagi tough ke apa, kau layankan je la. Alah, cam tak biasa je. Kau pun sama je sekarang.

14. Tapi jangan limit diri kau sebab ada orang yang lebih tua kata kau tak boleh atau tak patut buat sesuatu. If you think it's worth doing, dan kau dah calculate the risks, maybe you should pursue it and find out for yourself. Orang tua memang banyak ilmu dan pengalaman. Tapi diorang bukanlah berpengalaman dalam semua benda. Dalam banyak-banyak paths dalam hidup ni, most people only took one. They might be able to make some calculated guesses about what will happen if you take a different path from them, but they can never know for sure.

15. Kalau benda tu memang ditakdirkan untuk kau, you will get it. Kalau bukan, tak ada apa yang leh ubah benda tu. Of course we must always try. But you could do everything right, and it might still not happen. Dan aku sedar, kalau aku asyik biarkan rasa serba kurang dan "orang lain lagi bagus, what's the point of trying?" take over diri aku, aku mungkin takkan berani buat banyak benda. So I'm glad I took (a few) risks.

Ok, dah 15 points. Sebenarnya banyak lagi, tapi cukup lah buat masa ni. Banyak-banyak sangat kang nyampah pulak. So 30 bahagi 2 = 15 kan, ha 15 cukup lah. Bye.