Tuesday, September 23, 2008
JUMPER
watched this last two weekends ago and how i wish i would have this ability to just be anywhere anytime without a passport and minus all the waiting time at the airport, wake up call at the early hours just to catch the morning flights...not to mention the crap food the airlines are serving, and the endless walking journey from one end to the other at the KLIA airport. plus, crazy cab drivers that drives so fast and obviously lives vicariously through his driving.
but this movie...a must watch!!! am not to wow of the storyline, but the idea and everything else is definitely-a WOW!!!
self rating:8/10
Monday, September 22, 2008
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Current Reading-The Measure of a Man: A Spiritual Autobiography by Sidney Poitier
Sidney Poitier wrote The Measure of a Man: A Spiritual Autobiography because he "felt called to write about certain values, such as integrity and commitment, faith and forgiveness, about the virtues of simplicity, about the difference between 'amusing ourselves to death' and finding meaningful pleasures--even joy." Yet Poitier's book does not speak from on high; its tone is conversational and endearingly self-critical. He begins the first chapter by recounting an evening spent channel-surfing and wondering, as most of us do at one time or another, "What am I doing with my time?" The spiritual reflections in The Measure of a Man are nonsectarian; Poitier's faith is clearly influenced by his experience in Christian churches, but he is not, strictly, Christian. Though idiosyncratic, his faith is disciplined and rigorous, informed by leaders as diverse as Gandhi and Nelson Mandela. Poitier's love--for himself, his family, and the world--infuses his recollections of his early life on Cat Island in the Bahamas and his memories of his stage and film career (including his Oscar-winning role in Lilies of the Field). Poitier has been rich and poor; he has been popular and despised; and his extremely varied experiences have made him a wise man, as he demonstrates with statements like this one: "[W]hat we do is stay within the context of what's practical, what's real, what dreams can be fashioned into reality, what values can send us to bed comfortably and make us courageous enough to face our end with character."
PS: i just finished the first chapter...very intriguing yet full of spiritual context. will update ;-)
PS: i just finished the first chapter...very intriguing yet full of spiritual context. will update ;-)
The Widower
Finished reading this over the weekend in Ktn.
i much preferred the previous book/sequel which is Love Life though ;-)
i guess the main point of the story is that some times when you are too busy looking for something meaningful such as love or soul so far out from reach or to the distance, you may never know as the thing that you really are looking for may jsut be someone next to you or something that you have already owned, its just that you may have to look a litle bit deeper and to hear your own thoughts more often than not.
i think life can be of a simple nature if we chose that to be.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)