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Monday, July 31, 2006

reuni feui96

well, its been a decade since I first met my college friends back in 1996. I cant believe its been 10 years. gives me a chance to look and reflect. where i've been, how far i've gotten compared to the people who relatively started on the same track as i did. am i a success, am i a failure. what do u use as a measure? the car you drive, the label on your name card, the number of kids and nannies you bring along? i don't know. each person has their personal measure of success and happiness. i'm just glad i got a chance to meet up with old friends. i forgot to bring my camera so i don't have pics to upload yet. but we did get 1 picture shot as a souveneer. should've been taken with a hubby n kids, or alone, but i took mine with my pal As. I'm not much in a story mood now, so I'll just post the pic and head offline for today. Good nite & good luck.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

untitled

Thursday, July 20, 2006

The Songs They Sing

It’s funny what kids pick up nowadays. I just spent a week in Jogya and had a chance to meet up with my three adorable nephews. They give you the best laugh when they start singing. And I’m in awe at the songs they sing, the lyrics they know by heart.

You see when I was a kid, the songs I knew didn’t go far from Balonku, Pelangi-Pelangi, Bintang Kecil, or Aku Seorang Kapiten. Now listening to these kids, I’m amazed at what sticks in their heads.

Nephew #1:
Setiap ada kamu otakku berpikir
Bagaimana caranya untuk berdua bersama kamu

Aku sedang ingin bercinta karena…
Mungkin ada kamu di sini
Aku Ingin (lagunya DEWA)

Nephew #2:
Aku memang suka pada dirimu
Namun aku ada yang punya
Lebih baik kita bertemanKita berteman saja
Teman tapi mesra (lagunya RATU)

Duh kecil-kecil udah belajar jadi penjahat kelamin, gimana besarnya nanti ya? Padahal kelas satu SD aja belum?!! Can’t wait to see them grow up. I wonder how many hearts they’re gonna break?! Huahaha….

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Call for Desperate Measures

On a bright Saturday afternoon, at 3 o’clock, came a phone call from IDF. Turns out there’d been several calls since 1 o’clock from their number in Cikini, but because I left my cell in my room, I didn’t hear a thing. Alkisah, IDF had been preparing their program booklet that needed to go into printing at 8 pm that night. The problem was, their designated translator had to go out of town and couldn’t finish one (the largest) portion of the booklet. Rumor has it they asked another translator to do the job, but apparently her work was not up to standard a.k.a abal-abal. So they called me to do the emergency job. Eight pages double spaced in less than 5 hours. Yeee….yang bener aja. Padahal kan jam 6 sore gw ada acara di Kotabaru. That means I’d have to have it all done in 3 hours. Impossible! But eniwhooo, I couldn’t really say no since that would indirectly mean I refuse to help my dad. Too bad he was still on a plane from Surabaya, so I couldn’t complain. I asked the IDF crew for a time extension and sent the job past midnite. Now I wonder whether I’m gonna be paid! Hehehe… I already told them my rate was in dollars now. They just laughed. If only they’d asked me to do the job from the start -- could’ve paid me double the rate than waste it on that abal-abal translator. Oh well, we’ll see.

Monday, July 10, 2006

Tambah Satu Umurku, Bukan Kecil Lagi

Birthday present #1
Got stood up by my professor. Made an appointment to meet my Kajur at 10 am, Monday morning. Turns out my prof had been sick since the week before and couldn’t make it to campus that morning. I wonder why his secretary hadn’t informed me about his illness earlier. Had I known, I would’ve made a later appointment so I would have time to confirm his availability that day. Oh well, tough luck.

Birthday present #2
Witnessed a throw up. Took the Mayasari Bhakti Patas 84 from Kelapa Gading to Depok and back home again. Cheap Rp 4.500,- one way. Big bus, full AC. Note: taking the car to Depok costs nearly Rp 70.000 nowadays (Rp 50.000 for gas, Rp 16.000 for the not-so-free-way, and Rp 2.000 for UI entry), so taking the bus was a great alternative for thrifty me. Better yet, the road was packed on the way home, so thank goodness I wasn’t driving. Anyway, I grabbed an aisle seat. Across from me was a young lady carrying a baby in her arms. Sitting beside her were her 2 sisters, it seems. As I was trying to fall asleep listening to Dewa blasting from the speakers I saw some commotion from the corner of my eye. The lady across me nearly threw up in her baby’s face. Good thing her sister quickly took the baby and she was left to barf into a big black plastic bag. Eueww…

Birthday present #3
My Dad went missing. I knew my dad was scheduled to come in from Amsterdam that Monday morning at 10.10 since I was the one who took care of his itinerary. But until 4 pm that evening, my dad was nowhere to be seen or heard. Since my dad has his regulation against carrying a cellphone, we couldn’t contact him at all. We called his hotel in Amsterdam but he had already checked out. We called the airline and his name wasn’t on the flight. I kept checking the email, but there was no news, nothing. Great! Knowing my dad, no news is good news, but still, we worried a bit. Good thing my dad came home the next day. It turns out his flight was double booked and more than 20 people had to spend the night at Schiphol. It also turns out that he had sent a fax home informing his whereabouts but it never got to us. Come to think of it, I did remember Bayu Buana saying his return flight was still on waiting list, but I assumed they settled the matter before issuing the ticket. Furthermore, the travel agent didn’t remind me of the waiting list issue when I picked the ticket up. So it couldn’t have been my fault, could it?? Duuh… I hope not… But in the end everything was resolved, wasn’t it?

So that was how I spent my first 24 hours as a 28 year old (eeeh..tua!). Well, at least I got to see all my other relatives, and my dearest friends sent me their wishes. Jess & Kris came back from Bali that day, and Oon also came by. The end.

Friday, July 07, 2006

The heart dies a slow death
Shedding each hope like leaves
Until one day there are none
No hopes
Nothing remains

-Memoirs of a Geisha

Thursday, July 06, 2006

The Transjakarta Ride

It was Nad’s bday a while ago and yesterday Be was in from Bogor, so we decided to have lunch together. Nad’s treat. Since Nad couldn’t be out long from her lunch break we decided to meet around her workplace in Pecenongan. I asked around and found out I could take the busway from Kelapa Gading and get off at Pecenongan. All I had to do was walk one block from that stop and I’ll be happily sitting in Happy Day Juanda, which was where we decided to meet. I made my calculations: busway roundtrip Rp 7.000,-, one angkot ride home Rp 2.000,-, a Transjakarta experience, priceless. It couldn’t be beat. It was a much better alternative than taking a car. Would save me from the stress and frustration of driving in Jakarta, or would it?

So I was on my way. My lovely mom was so kind as to drop me off at the Kelapa Gading bus stop. I was among the first to wait for the coming bus. I waited, and waited, and waited. And… I waited some more. Finally the bus came. As a pool of people had gathered during that waiting time, only half of us were allowed in. I was not included. I had to wait for the next bus.

Protest #1: haven’t these people heard about the FIFO concept? First in, first out? Wasn’t I first at that bus stop? Shouldn’t I have been first to get on that bus? I guess they don’t have that kind of conscience around here. The concept obviously is TOFO, tough one, first out. I forgot you have to have a fisting mentality around here.

Luckily, it didn’t take long for the next bus to arrive. The bus was full, so I stood. In front of me was an elderly woman. To her right were her two granddaughters, one chubby, the other a bit malnourished. They shared a seat together and they seemed to fit just fine in the chair. Half-way into the trip, the woman left of the grandmother got off. According to the unwritten code of bus riders, it was obvious I was the “rightful owner” of that seat. How terribly surprised I was, when that elderly woman unapologetically filled the freshly emptied seat and asked her skinny granddaughter to sit in her seat. I wanted to scream my head off. If you looked carefully then, you might’ve seen steam coming out of my ears.

Protest #2: What was this woman thinking? Doesn’t she know how tiring it is to be standing in a speeding bus full of people? Hey, maybe she’s just thrifty, like me. Maybe she wanted to get her money’s worth. She bought three tickets, she’s entitled to three seats. Her small granddaughter only took up half of the seat though. What values is she teaching these children? Shouldn’t she be teaching them about sharing, and understanding limits? Instead she’s teaching them greed, getting your fair share without looking at the suffering others around you (me among others). I felt like giving that old woman a lecture, but who was I to say these things. Plus, I didn’t want to make a scene. So I think, have people begun to lose their hearts in this rough city?

In conclusion, I stood my whole bus ride to Happy Day.

On the way home, Be dropped me off at the Monas busway stop. There was a line there, so it minimized that TOFO concept people are so eager to practice nowadays. The bus was full, so I stood again. It was pretty hot. Looking up, I saw the filter clogged with dust. No wonder you couldn’t feel the aircon. Anyway this time I was in a better mood, maybe because I was full.

I must note however that standing on a Transjakarta bus is really straining. The handles are not in a fixed position so it makes it difficult for you to grasp firmly to it. Even if you hold tight, you’re always jerked around in the direction of the bus. In order to stand straight, you really have to work your hand hard. I realized that when this morning my entire right arm became sore. Felt like I’d been lifting weights the night before.

Anyway, on that ride I gave up my seat twice. And people were so overwhelmingly surprised, and of course pleased, that anyone would actually do that for another. I guess Jakarta isn’t as friendly as it used to be.

Well… its not the end to my story yet. Let’s just say a little (or a series of?) unfortunate event(s) happened to me on that way home. To cut the story short I missed my stop and ended up getting off all the way at Pulo Gadung. Definitely a big mistake. I’d only been there once before, and that could have also been considered as an accidental visit. It was in high school, when I overslept on the 52 bus and found myself waking up in a near empty bus at was already pulling into the terminal.

So yes, yesterday I panicked a bit but I still tried to look cool. I knew there was a Mikrolet (M30A to be exact) that would pass somewhere near my home, but I couldn’t find that number amidst the hustle and bustle of the terminal. Ojek was nowhere to be seen either. I scanned the area looking for a familiar number. I saw the M37 mikrolet and got on although I wasn’t sure of its route. I asked the woman sitting next to me about the route, and she didn’t know more than I did. So I just stayed in my seat and kept my fingers. Worst case scenario, I’ll end up in Senen, since on the window it said Pulo Gadung-Senen. Thank God that mikrolet passed thru Kelapa Gading. I got off near the mall and safely took another angkot home. The end. P.S. So I guess I still have a bit of street smarts left in me.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

it's us again...