Moving Out

30 03 2009

On Saturday evening , I’ve packed my things and ready to go. It’s the day when I’m moving to the new place. Everything is ready , but no one is there to help me , strangely all my friends today are ‘occupied’ with something . I’m alone and the day started to rain. It’s rained the whole day. I reach my phone and dial to a friend number , i thought …at least i could talk to someone on the phone and pretend that a friend is here with me, she didn’t pick up the phone , she’s busy. Feeling lonely and neglected by everybody , i started to cry. I cancel the whole moving out plan for that day.
On Sunday morning i try again , still no friend there for me , but it’s okay now . somehow i realize all i need to surpass this moving out phase is my determination , my will … myself .

Later on …., of course with the help of God, everything turn out to be fine :) .

Either it broken heart , separation  or just a moving out phase…sometimes we like to forget , in order to surpass things that painful , uncertain or uneasy   , all we need is to convince ourselves that we can. And everything will turn out to be fine.

And if  it doesn’t work for you , maybe you need to take a break for a day and start to re plan the whole thing again. :D

moving





Worried

27 03 2009

I’m thinking to move from my old place to ’someplace’ closer to my office. But because i get attached so much with the old one , so it’s kinda hard from me to move. My friends said that I only need to give myself time to get accustomed with the new place , and that everything will be alright as soon as I made up my mind to it.

Every changes worried my a little , ” made up my mind “  this sentences , somehow  looks a bit  heavy for me .





Stupidity

20 03 2009

Aku selalu penasaran tentang satu hal, selama 2 tahun ini , aku selalu ingin melihat bagaimana pemandangan di atap gedung kantorku , merasakan kakiku terjejak di landasan helipadnya, memandang dan meludah 30 lantai ke bawah kemudian meloncat – loncat dan menari – nari disana seperti orang gila .

Emm.. mungkin bagian meloncat –loncat dan menari – narinya terlalu berlebihan , tapi paling tidak aku ingin tetap mempertahankan bagian meludahnya , aku selalu ingin tahu kalau aku meludah di ketinggian 30 lantai , apa orang – orang yang duduk-duduk di taman bawah akan menyadarinya, apa air ludah ku akan dianggap sebagai rintik hujan ? Tapi sepertinya aku tidak punya cukup air ludah untuk menghasilkan efek itu. Kemungkinan besar kalaupun aku sampai meludah , air ludah ku akan menguap habis di ketinggian tertentu sebelum jatuh kebawah .

Sampai sekarang aku masih penasaran… do you think , there’s a changes someday i might able to do it ???

menara_kebonsirih





Nuansa Bening Lyrics

20 03 2009

This song is not bad ;p .

” It tells the  journey of someone feeling  until it becomes love,  not a kinda  love that comes from first sight, but love that comes slowly and  grew stronger as day pass by. “

” Nuansa Bening “  Lyrics By Vidi Aldiano


Oh, tiada yang hebat dan mempesona

Ketika kau lewat di hadapanku biasa saja, oh…

Waktu perkenalan lewatlah sudah

Ada yang menarik pancaran diri terus mengganggu

Mendengar cerita sehari-hari

Yang wajar tapi tetap mengasyikkan

Kini terasa sungguh

Semakin engkau jauh, semakin terasa dekat

Akan ku.. kembangkan

Kasih yang engkau tanam di dalam hatiku

Oh, tiada kejutan pesona diri

Pertama kujabat jemari tanganmu biasa saja

Masa pertalian terjalin sudah

Ada yang menarik bayang-bayangmu tak mau pergi

Dirimu nuansa-nuansa ilham

Hamparan laut tiada bertepi

Kini terasa sungguh

Semakin engkau jauh, semakin terasa dekat

Akan ku kembangkan

Kasih yang engkau tanam di dalam hatiku

Menatap nuansa-nuansa bening

Tulusnya doa bercita

Kini terasa sungguh

Semakin engkau jauh, semakin terasa dekat

Akan ku kembangkan

Kasih yang engkau tanam di dalam hatiku

Kini terasa sungguh

Semakin engkau jauh, semakin terasa dekat

Akan ku kembangkan

Kasih yang engkau tanam di dalam hatiku





A Cup of Tea By Katherine Mansfield

19 03 2009

This is a short story from Katherine Mansfield that later on being continued to a novel by Amy Ephron on 1917. I haven’t read the novel, but the short story gave  me a ‘real’  ‘unease’  ’simple’ feeling that easily can be adopt by all women .

A CUP OF TEA

By Katherine Mansfield


Rosemary Fell was not exactly beautiful. No, you couldn’t have called her beautiful. Pretty? Well, if you took her to pieces… But why be so cruel as to take anyone to pieces? She was young, brilliant, extremely modem, exquisitely well dressed, amazingly well read in the newest of the new books, and her parties were the most delicious mixture of the really important people and… artists – quaint creatures, discoveries of hers, some of them too terrifying for words, but others quite presentable and amusing.


Rosemary had been married two years. She had a duck of a boy. No, not Peter – Michael. And her husband absolutely adored her. They were rich, really rich, not just comfortably well off, which is odious and stuffy and sounds like one’s grandparents. But if Rosemary wanted to shop she would go to Paris as you and I would go to Bond Street . If she wanted to buy flowers, the car pulled up at that perfect shop in Regent Street, and Rosemary inside the shop just gazed in her dazzled, rather exotic way, and said: “I want those and those and those. Give me four bunches of those. And that jar of roses. Yes, I’ll have all the roses in the jar. No, no lilac. I hate lilac. It’s got no shape.” The attendant bowed and put the lilac out of sight, as though this was only too true; lilac was dreadfully shapeless. “Give me those stumpy little tulips. Those red and white ones.” And she was followed to the car by a thin shop-girl staggering under an immense white paper armful that looked like a baby in long clothes….

One winter afternoon she had been buying something in a little antique shop in Curzon Street . It was a shop she liked. For one thing, one usually had it to oneself. And then the man who kept it was ridiculously fond of serving her. He beamed whenever she came in. He clasped his hands; he was so gratified he could scarcely speak. Flattery, of course. All the same, there was something…

“You see, madam,” he would explain in his low respectful tones, “I love my things. I would rather not part with them than sell them to someone who does not appreciate them, who has not that fine feeling which is so rare…” And, breathing deeply, he unrolled a tiny square of blue velvet and pressed it on the glass counter with his pale finger-tips.

To-day it was a little box. He had been keeping it for her. He had shown it to nobody as yet. An exquisite little enamel box with a glaze so fine it looked as though it had been baked in cream. On the lid a minute creature stood under a flowery tree, and a more minute creature still had her arms round his neck. Her hat, really no bigger than a geranium petal, hung from a branch; it had green ribbons. And there was a pink cloud like a watchful cherub floating above their heads. Rosemary took her hands out of her long gloves. She always took off her gloves to examine such things. Yes, she liked it very much. She loved it; it was a great duck. She must have it. And, turning the creamy box, opening and shutting it, she couldn’t help noticing how charming her hands were against the blue velvet. The shopman, in some dim cavern of his mind, may have dared to think so too. For he took a pencil, leant over the counter, and his pale, bloodless fingers crept timidly towards those rosy, flashing ones, as he murmured gently: “If I may venture to point out to madam, the flowers on the little lady’s bodice.”

“Charming!” Rosemary admired the flowers. But what was the price? For a moment the shopman did not seem to hear. Then a murmur reached her. “Twenty-eight guineas, madam.”

“Twenty-eight guineas.” Rosemary gave no sign. She laid the little box down; she buttoned her gloves again. Twenty-eight guineas. Even if one is rich… She looked vague. She stared at a plump tea-kettle like a plump hen above the shopman’s head, and her voice was dreamy as she answered: “Well, keep it for me – will you? I’ll…”

But the shopman had already bowed as though keeping it for her was all any human being could ask. He would be willing, of course, to keep it for her for ever.

The discreet door shut with a click. She was outside on the step, gazing at the winter afternoon. Rain was falling, and with the rain it seemed the dark came too, spinning down like ashes. There was a cold bitter taste in the air, and the new-lighted lamps looked sad. Sad were the lights in the houses opposite. Dimly they burned as if regretting something. And people hurried by, hidden under their hateful umbrellas. Rosemary felt a strange pang. She pressed her muff against her breast; she wished she had the little box, too, to cling to. Of course the car was there. She’d only to cross the pavement. But still she waited. There are moments, horrible moments in life, when one emerges from shelter and looks out, and it’s awful. One oughtn’t to give way to them. One ought to go home and have an extra-special tea. But at the very instant of thinking that, a young girl, thin, dark, shadowy – where had she come from? – was standing at Rosemary’s elbow and a voice like a sigh, almost like a sob, breathed: “Madam, may I speak to you a moment?”

“Speak to me?” Rosemary turned. She saw a little battered creature with enormous eyes, someone quite young, no older than herself, who clutched at her coat-collar with reddened hands, and shivered as though she had just come out of the water.

“M-madam, stammered the voice. Would you let me have the price of a cup of tea?”

“A cup of tea?” There was something simple, sincere in that voice; it wasn’t in the least the voice of a beggar. “Then have you no money at all?” asked Rosemary.

“None, madam,” came the answer.

“How extraordinary!” Rosemary peered through the dusk and the girl gazed back at her. How more than extraordinary! And suddenly it seemed to Rosemary such an adventure. It was like something out of a novel by Dostoevsky, this meeting in the dusk. Supposing she took the girl home? Supposing she did do one of those things she was always reading about or seeing on the stage, what would happen? It would be thrilling. And she heard herself saying afterwards to the amazement of her friends: “I simply took her home with me,” as she stepped forward and said to that dim person beside her: “Come home to tea with me.”

The girl drew back startled. She even stopped shivering for a moment. Rosemary put out a hand and touched her arm. “I mean it,” she said, smiling. And she felt how simple and kind her smile was. “Why won’t you? Do. Come home with me now in my car and have tea.”

“You – you don’t mean it, madam,” said the girl, and there was pain in her voice.

“But I do,” cried Rosemary. “I want you to. To please me. Come along.”

The girl put her fingers to her lips and her eyes devoured Rosemary. “You’re – you’re not taking me to the police station?” she stammered.

“The police station!” Rosemary laughed out. “Why should I be so cruel? No, I only want to make you warm and to hear – anything you care to tell me.”

Hungry people are easily led. The footman held the door of the car open, and a moment later they were skimming through the dusk.

“There!” said Rosemary. She had a feeling of triumph as she slipped her hand through the velvet strap. She could have said, “Now I’ve got you,” as she gazed at the little captive she had netted. But of course she meant it kindly. Oh, more than kindly. She was going to prove to this girl that – wonderful things did happen in life, that – fairy godmothers were real, that – rich people had hearts, and that women were sisters. She turned impulsively, saying’. “Don’t be frightened. After all, why shouldn’t you come back with me? We’re both women. If I’m the more fortunate, you ought to expect…”

But happily at that moment, for she didn’t know how the sentence was going to end, the car stopped. The bell was rung, the door opened, and with a charming, protecting, almost embracing movement, Rosemary drew the other into the hall. Warmth, softness, light, a sweet scent, all those things so familiar to her she never even thought about them, she watched that other receive. It was fascinating. She was like the rich little girl in her nursery with all the cupboards to open, all the boxes to unpack.

“Come, come upstairs,” said Rosemary, longing to begin to be generous. “Come up to my room.” And, besides, she wanted to spare this poor little thing from being stared at by the servants; she decided as they mounted the stairs she would not even ring to Jeanne, but take off her things by herself. The great things were to be natural!

And “There!” cried Rosemary again, as they reached her beautiful big bedroom with the curtains drawn, the fire leaping on her wonderful lacquer furniture, her gold cushions and the primrose and blue rugs.

The girl stood just inside the door; she seemed dazed. But Rosemary didn’t mind that.

“Come and sit down,” she cried, dragging her big chair up to the fire, “m this comfy chair. Come and get warm. You look so dreadfully cold.”

“I daren’t, madam,” said the girl, and she edged backwards.

“Oh, please,” – Rosemary ran forward – “you mustn’t be frightened, you mustn’t, really. Sit down, when I’ve taken off my things we shall go into the next room and have tea and be cozy. Why are you afraid?” And gently she half pushed the thin figure into its deep cradle. .

But there was no answer. The girl stayed just as she had been put, with her hands by her sides and her mouth slightly open. To be quite sincere, she looked rather stupid. But Rosemary wouldn’t acknowledge it. She leant over her, saying:

“Won’t you take off your hat? Your pretty hair is all wet. And one is so much more comfortable without a hat, isn’t one?”

There was a whisper that sounded like “Very good, madam,” and the crushed hat was taken off.

“And let me help you off with your coat, too,” said Rosemary.

The girl stood up. But she held on to the chair with one hand and let Rosemary pull. It was quite an effort. The other scarcely helped her at all. She seemed to stagger like a child, and the thought came and went through Rosemary’s mind, that if people wanted helping they must respond a little, just a little, otherwise it became very difficult indeed. And what was she to do with the coat now? She left it on the floor, and the hat too. She was just going to take a cigarette off the mantelpiece when the girl said quickly, but so lightly and strangely: “I’m very sorry, madam, but I’m going to faint. I shall go off, madam, if I don’t have something.”

“Good heavens, how thoughtless I am!” Rosemary rushed to the bell.

“Tea! Tea at once! And some brandy immediately!”

The maid was gone again, but the girl almost cried out: “No, I don’t want no brandy.* I never drink brandy. It’s a cup of tea I want, madam.” And she burst into tears.

It was a terrible and fascinating moment. Rosemary knelt beside her chair.

“Don’t cry, poor little thing,” she said. “Don’t cry.” And she gave the other her lace handkerchief. She really was touched beyond words. She put her arm round those thin, bird-like shoulders.

Now at last the other forgot to be shy, forgot everything except that they were both women, and gasped out: “I can’t go on no longer like this. I can’t bear it. I can’t bear it. I shall do away with myself. I can’t bear no more.”

“You shan’t have to. I’ll look after you. Don’t cry any more. Don’t you see what a good thing it was that you met me? We’ll have tea and you’ll tell me everything. And I shall arrange something. I promise. Do stop crying. It’s so exhausting. Please!”

The other did stop just in time for Rosemary to get up before the tea came. She had the table placed between them. She plied the poor little creature with everything, all the sandwiches, all the bread and butter, and every time her cup was empty she filled it with tea, cream and sugar. People always said sugar was so nourishing. As for herself she didn’t eat; she smoked and looked away tactfully so that the other should not be shy.

And really the effect of that slight meal was marvelous. When the tea-table was carried away a new being, a light, frail creature with tangled hair, dark lips, deep, lighted eyes, lay back in the big chair in a kind of sweet languor, looking at the blaze. Rosemary lit a fresh cigarette; it was

time to begin.

“And when did you have your last meal?” she asked softly.

But at that moment the door-handle turned.

“Rosemary, may I come in?” It was Philip.

“Of course.”

He came in. “Oh, I’m so sorry,” he said, and stopped and stared.

“It’s quite all right,” said Rosemary, smiling. “This is my friend, Miss _”

“Smith, madam,” said the languid figure, who was strangely still and unafraid.

“Smith,” said Rosemary. “We are going to have a little talk.”

“Oh yes,” said Philip. “Quite,” and his eye caught sight of the coat and hat on the floor. He came over to the fire and turned his back to it. “It’s a beastly afternoon,” he said curiously, still looking at that listless figure, looking at its hands and boots, and then at Rosemary again.

“Yes, isn’t it?” said Rosemary enthusiastically. “Vile.”

Philip smiled his charming smile. “As a matter of fact,” said he, “I wanted you to come into the library for a moment. Would you? Will Miss Smith excuse us?”

The big eyes were raised to him, but Rosemary answered for her: “Of course she will.” And they went out of the room together.

“I say,” said Philip, when they were alone. “Explain. Who is she? What does it all mean?”

Rosemary, laughing, leaned against the door and said: “I picked her up in Curzon Street . Really. She’s a real pick-up. She asked me for the price of a cup of tea, and I brought her home with me. “

“But what on earth are you going to do with her?” cried Philip.

“Be nice to her,” said Rosemary quickly. “Be frightfully nice to her. Look after her. I don’t know how. We haven’t talked yet. But show her – treat her – make her feel -”

“My darling girl,” said Philip, “you’re quite mad, you know. It simply can’t be done.”

“I knew you’d say that,” retorted Rosemary. Why not? I want to. Isn’t that a reason? And besides, one’s always reading about these things. I decided -”

“But,” said Philip slowly, and he cut the end of a cigar, “she’s so astonishingly pretty.”

“Pretty?” Rosemary was so surprised that she blushed. “Do you think so? I – I hadn’t thought about it.”

“Good Lord!” Philip struck a match. “She’s absolutely lovely. Look again, my child. I was bowled over when I came into your room just now. However… I think you’re making a ghastly mistake. Sorry, darling, if I’m crude and all that. But let me know if Miss Smith is going to dine with us in time for me to look up The Milliner’s Gazette.”

“You absurd creature!” said Rosemary, and she went out of the library, but not back to her bedroom. She went to her writing-room and sat down at her desk. Pretty! Absolutely lovely! Bowled over! Her heart beat like a heavy bell. Pretty! Lovely! She drew her check-book towards her. But no, checks would be no use, of course. She opened a drawer and took out five pound notes, looked at them, put two back, and holding the three squeezed in her hand, she went back to her bedroom.

Half an hour later Philip was still in the library, when Rosemary came in.

“I only wanted to tell you,” said she, and she leaned against the door again and looked at him with her dazzled exotic gaze, “Miss Smith won’t dine with us to-night.”

Philip put down the paper. “Oh, what’s happened? Previous engagement?”

Rosemary came over and sat down on his knee. “She insisted on going,” said she, “so I gave the poor little thing a present of money. I couldn’t keep her against her will, could I?” she added softly.

Rosemary had just done her hair, darkened her eyes a little and put on her pearls. She put up her hands and touched Philip’s cheeks.

“Do you like me?” said she, and her tone, sweet, husky, troubled him.

“I like you awfully,” he said, and he held her tighter. “Kiss me.”

There was a pause.

Then Rosemary said dreamily: “I saw a fascinating little box to-day. It cost twenty-eight guineas. May I have it?”

Philip jumped her on his knee. “You may, little wasteful one,” said he.

But that was not really what Rosemary wanted to say.

“Philip,” she whispered, and she pressed his head against her bosom, “am I pretty?”

==> I got this story from here.

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Am I pretty ? Is a type of @ ‘danger ‘ rhetorical question that shouldn’t be asked , if all  the answer that we wanna hear is just a simple  ‘yes’ . Nevertheless until today I’m still asking this question to my dearest one and even to myself. Why? I guess .. It   can’t be helped , that sometimes ( in a particular time ), we ( as a human or just simply as a woman ) just need some sense of acknowledgment.

acupoftea_4801






Atonement Movie Review

18 03 2009

Atonement – Movie ( 2007 )

“Wow ” it’s my first comment after watching ‘Atonement ‘ , directed by ‘Joe Wright’  and  have brilliant cast and character playing on it .What touch me the most is not the love story or how good the movie being shoot but the essence of the story that one person misjudgment or one person misinterpretation about another could lead to a crucial impact that could  ruing another person life  including our own and cause a life time regret.

Currently, many people began to develop a lot of misinterpretation toward another, little do we know that all we need is just see the problem more clearly , understand the matter with open thought rather than create a quick thoughtless judgment. In other word.. learn it from atonement, because regret do come late .

atonement1

The movie start from Briony Tallis’s point of view (played by Saoirse Ronan), even she is only 13 years old at that time, but she was a gifted writer ( as a writer a person must have a  great imagination ). Later on she watched her older  sister (cecilia Tallis played by Kiera Knightly ) and Robbie Turner ( palyed by James McAvoy ) at the fountain in front of the family estate , Cecilia and Robbie seems argue about something and cecilia takes off  her clothes that convinced little Briony that the incident is Robbie false. Many ’scene’ between Cecilia and Robbie that happened later on being misinterpreted by  Briony. The peak is when Robbie being accused by Briony for a crime , he doesn’t commit.This event trigger a lifetime regret for Briony Tallis .

The full resume is here : (it contains spoiler and i got it from here)

atonement-ian-2

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The film starts out with a 13 year old Briony Tallis (Saoirse Ronan) writing a play that she wants to put on that evening for the return of her older brother Leon. She runs through the house and into the garden and finds twenty-something year old Robbie Turner the housekeeper’s son (James McAvoy) as he is tending to the flowers. They exchange conversation and its clear that she has a crush on him but he regards her as a little sister. We then see Briony’s mother reading the play and loving it.

The next scene shows Briony lying on the garden with her older sister Cecilia (Keira Knightley). Briony asks Cecilia why she doesn’t talk to Robbie anymore, Cecilia says she does, they just move in different circles. Then we see Briony rehearsing the play with her cousins, Pierrot and Jackson Quincy and their older sister Lola (Juno Temple). Lola is about 16 or so. The younger boys quickly get bored with the play and go off for a swim and Briony if left alone in the house. She is looking out the window and sees Cecilia and Robbie out by the fountain in some sort of argument. Then we see Cecilia strip down to her slip and jump into the fountain to retrieve something and she comes out and her slip is wet and sheer and Robbie looks away as she dresses and leaves. We suddenly see the same scene from the point of view of Cecilia and Robbie, as they are talking while walking into the garden, Cecilia is holding an expensive vase and as she tried to fill it with water from the fountain, Robbie tried to take it from her to fill it and she refuses and they pull on it, breaking the porcelain. It falls into the fountain, which is what Cecilia goes to retrieve.

We then see Cecilia in her room, smoking, just generally getting ready for the evening. Through her window she sees her brother Leon drive up with a friend, some rich tycoon who owns a chocolate factory. She sees Leon talking to Robbie with dismay. They meet Leon’s friend, who seems rather shady. Leon, Cecilia and the friend, Paul Marshall, are all swimming I the lake and it is revealed that Robbie and Cecilia went to school together and that Robbie is pursuing a medical degree. Leon informs Cecilia that he has invited Robbie to dinner, and Cecilia is upset at this. The scene then cuts to Robbie in his cottage typing a letter to Cecilia, trying to apologize for his behavior earlier that day. He types several drafts before finally typing a rather raunchy sexual letter to her. While he is typing we see the scene cut back and forth between him and Cecilia getting ready and putting clips in her hair. (Important) He laughs as he writes it, then folds it up and places it next to his typewriter. He then handwrites a very heartfelt apology and goes to get ready for dinner that evening. As he walks down the lane to the main house he sees Briony playing in the garden and asks her to deliver the letter to Cecilia, which she does. As she is running to the house, we see Robbie suddenly remember that he put the wrong letter in the envelope and in fact, the raunchy letter is being delivered. He screams for Briony but its too late and she is already in the house and is reading the letter. She then delivers it to Cecilia, but without the envelope, so Cecilia knows that she has read it. We then see Paul Marshall wandering through the house and comes across the cousins, Pierrot, Jackson and Lola. He entertains the children but it is also clear that he is interested in Lola.

Later on Briony goes to her room to change for dinner and Lola enters her room, complaining about being tortured by her little brothers. Briony takes this opportunity to tell Lola what was written in the raunchy letter, calling Robbie a sexual maniac. She then gets ready for dinner and is running down the stairs when she sees a small hairclip on the floor. She picks it up and sees a light shining through a doorway, she follows it to see Robbie and Cecilia in an awkward position against the wall of the library, obviously having made love just moments before. We see Briony’s teary face just as the scene cuts to Robbie ringing the doorbell for dinner. Cecilia answers the door and he tried to apologize for giving the wrong version of the letter. Cecilia takes him to the library and basically they admit their attraction to one another and start kissing and having sex up against the wall. In the middle of it they tell each other they love one another and then continue, until Cecilia hears the door open and Briony walk in. They disentangle themselves and leave the room, with Briony just watching them.

At dinner they all pretend nothing’s happened, until Mrs. Tallis notices that the young twin boys aren’t at dinner so Briony is sent to get them. She comes back down and informs the group that the boys have run away, so a search party is immediately formed. Briony takes a flashlight and set out alone and stumbles across a man with his pants down on top of Lola. As soon as the flashlight shines on them he runs away, but you don’t see his face. Lola is crying and Briony runs up to her, asking her who the man was. Lola isn’t sure as her eyes were covered, but Briony convinces her its Robbie.

Lola is brought into the house and the police are called and Briony testifies that it was Robbie who attacked Lola and she is sure she saw him. Cecilia tells the police not to believe Briony as she is a fanciful girl but as soon as Robbie comes back to the house, having found the two young boys, the police take him away.

The movie cuts to 4 years later and we see Robbie in France with two other privates in the army, as it is now WW2. They ask him what an educated man like him is doing as a private, to which Robbie responds, you can’t get promoted if you’ve come out of prison and he was given a choice, stay in prison, or join the army. Then we see a scene from six months earlier where Robbie and Cecilia meet after 3 and 1/2 years and after some awkward conversation they declare their love for one another after all this time. Cecilia has become a nurse now in London and is living in an apartment and doesn’t speak to her sister Briony or her family anymore. Robbie returns to the war but they continue to write letters, Cecilia tells him of a cottage by the sea they can visit the next time he is on leave and gives him a picture of it to hold on to. We see him throughout the film, going through battle and looking at the same picture every chance he gets. Cecilia also tells him that Briony is now in Nurses training and has written to her, asking to talk.

We then see a 18 year old Briony, in her nurses uniform, trying to fit in at the hospital. She writes to Cecilia, asking to talk and telling her she only now realizes the full extent of her false testimony years ago. We see Robbie wounded in France and waiting for the roundup of soldiers to be taken to the hospital and then see Briony and the other nurses tending to injured soldiers. She imagines that she sees Robbie but he isn’t there. Several days later Briony then leaves the hospital to attend the wedding of Paul Marshall, who is marrying her cousin Lola. Lola sees Briony at the wedding but ignores her. Briony then goes to Cecilia’s apartment and begs to talk to her, to apologize. She sees Robbie there, who wants to break her neck but instead Robbie and Cecilia make Briony fix what she has done wrong and change her statement. Briony admits that she saw Paul Marshall attacking Lola that night in the garden and they become upset because Paul has just married Lola so he has immunity. We see Briony agree to change her statement and she leaves and we see Cecilia and Robbie finally together in the apartment, kissing. Then Briony is on a train and suddenly the screen goes black and a woman says, can we stop for a moment.

We cut to present day and we see an old Briony Tallis (Vanessa Redgrave) being interviewed about her latest book, titled Atonement. She explains how it is her last book because she is dying and she wanted to be completely honest about all the events of the situation. She admits however that she wasn’t honest about one part. That she never went to her sister that day to ask for forgiveness and that Robbie was never there because he died of septicemia in France waiting to be taken to the hospital a few months earlier. She also says that she never got to set things right with her sister because she was killed in a bomb blast a few months after Robbie died. Briony admits that she has had to live with this truth all her life so she changed it in her book, in order to give Cecilia and Robbie their chance to be together in her book, if not in real life.

The last scene shows Cecilia and Robbie playing on the beach and then going into the cottage that Cecilia had talked about earlier and the movie ends.

———————————————————————————————————————————————

Anyway Atonement is based on a novel written by Ian McEwan , and i’m  still loking for atonement (novel ) free ebook , and until now I  haven’t found it yet ck ck..

But I do find the ‘Atonement’s full script  ‘ , and you can download it on —>  here.

Enjoy.

atonement-ian





About Church

16 03 2009

Aku memang paling males ke gereja, waktu masih di Bandung bisa dibilang selama 1 , 5 tahun disana, ke gereja ga lebih dari 5 kali ( malah kayaknya kurang dari 5 kali  :P ) . Alesannya banyak banget , dari yang ga da temen jalan ( emang gereja mall ampe perlu teman jalan “^_^ ) , sampe jam misanya terlalu pagi ( jam 06.00 ) dan terlalu sore ( jam 17.00 ). Padahal gereja Barromeus itu deket banget dari tempat kosku yang di Bandung , cukup sekali naik angkot .

Parahnya lagi pas diingetin ama anak kosku ( yang beda agama sama aku  – beda agama aja masih mau ingetin aku buat ke gereja (yeah they really care for me..jadi terharuuuu)  ), aku cuma bilang ” titip absen ya buat Tuhan “

Pas udah pindah ke Jakarta, gerejanya deket banget ( jalan kaki juga udah nyampe ). Kebetulan ibu kosku orang Kristen , jadi aku yang Katholik selalu diingetin sama Beliau-beliaunya buat ke gereja ( ibu kosku banyak ) . Sekali diingetin aku bilang ” absen dulu” , dua kali diingetin aku bilang” lagi ga mood”, tapi beliau-beliaunya ama teman satu kosku ga cape-cape nya ngingetin sampai aku nya rada risih, akhirnya aku putuskan buat pergi ke gereja. Kebetulan ada jadwal misa siang. Sampai disana, aku telat , misanya pake bahasa inggris pula ( rupa-rupanya jam segitu buat misa internasional  ) . Walaupun telat tapi ada satu bapak yang ngasih aku tempat duduk, jadinya aku ga berdiri ( padahal banyak orang yang datengnya lebih awal dari aku pada berdiri karena ga kebagian tempat duduk ) . Pada saat itu aku ga kepikiran apa-apa , terus aja aku duduk dengan nyamannya :D .

Sekarang aku jadi sadar , Tuhan itu baik banget, aku yang jarang pergi ke gereja ( sekali dateng telat pula ) tapi masih dikasih kesempatan untuk duduk didalam gereja sama Tuhan. Tuhan ga perduli sekalipun aku  ini orangnya males , suka pura-pura lupa ke gereja ,nyebelin , suka marah-marah , egois , dll , dll , asal aku dateng mencari Tuhan , Tuhan pasti menerima aku.

Sekarang aku…( tetep sih ..) masih suka cari-cari alasan biar ga pergi ke gereja ( kebiasaan lama susah dihilangkan :D   ) Tapi aku merasa lebih rajin dari sebelumnya. “^_^

–> soalnya dulu punya pola pikir , kalau aku ga perlu ke Gereja buat mencari Tuhan, Tuhan khan ada dimana saja. Sekarang aku masih berpikir kalau Tuhan memang ada dimana saja (termasuk di gereja ), mmm… kalau bener-bener serius mau nyari Tuhan , mau ketemu sama Tuhan, kenapa musti keberatan kalau ke gereja, ya khan ? Sebenernya masih untung dikasih tempat yang namanya gereja , coba kalau musti ke gurun Sinai atau Laut Merah..baru bisa ketemu sama Tuhan , pasti lebih susah lagi.

Sejak  Februari ini, aku  udah 3 kali pergi ke gereja —> dibandingkan tahun lalu yang dalam 1,5 tahun ( cuma 5 kali ) , I think it’s a progress .

Walaupun pelan – pelan .. tapi moga – moga bisa jalan terus. Amin.

cruch





Etika Saat Bekerja

13 03 2009

Saat menjelang makan siang ; lewat chat , temen sekantor saya mengajukan ide untuk makan siang lebih awal , karena kami memutuskan untuk makan siang disuatu tempat yang merupakan tempat favorit karyawan kebon sirih ( murah , enak dan banyak ;p ) , jadi saat jam-jam makan siang (12.00 – 13.00 )  tempat tersebut akan penuh sekali (  tempatnya kecil ) dan jika terlambat maka makanan yang enak sudah habis terlebih dahulu. Untuk menyiasati hal itu maka kami berkompromi untuk makan siang lebih awal. Saat itu pertanyaan yang terlontar oleh teman sekerja aku adalah ; ” etis ga sih kalau kita makan siang duluan ? ” yang kalau diterjemahkan menjadi :  ” etiskah jika kami makan siang lebih awal dari waktu makan siang yang seharusnya ?”

Karena selalu bekerja ditempat yang berenvironment ” bebas” dalam artian asal kerjaan beres maka ‘ jam berapa kamu pulang’ , ‘jam berapa kamu datang’ ,  ‘jam berapa kamu mau makan siang’ atau ‘jam berapa kamu selesai makan siang’  dapat dilakukan sefleksibel mungkin. Sehingga pertanyaan-pertanyaan mengenai hal ini hanya dijawab dan diterjemahkan berdasarkan indera perasa masing -masing dalam kata lain -> lihat sikond ( situasi dan kondisi ) ;p

Etika saat bekerja tidak selalu tercantum dalam  peraturan perusahaan.  Karena kebanyakan peraturan perusahaan yang ada hanya membahas soal hak dan kewajiban seorang karyawan ( yang terfokus pada masalah yang ujung – ujungnya duit .. ralat kesejahteraan  ;p ) Saya yakin bahwa  jarang sekali ada  peraturan yang mencantumkan ” tidak boleh ngeblog saat jam kerja ;p ” atau ” tidak boleh chatting “  atau ” tidak boleh buka website yang ‘aneh -aneh’  pada saat jam kerja ” . Masalah perselingkuhan antar teman sekerja juga jarang dibahas  pada peraturan perusahaan terutama perusahaan swasta  ( he he .. entah kenapa ) . Mungkin karena itulah , hal-hal yang mengatur masalah  ini disebut etika, laksana norma adat atau norma sosial , dalam etika tidak dibuat aturan tertulis yang jelas, kita dituntut punya ’sense’  yang tajam, pelanggaran terhadap etika kerja tidak hanya mengakibatkan ketidaknyamanan dalam lingkungan kerja kita , bahkan kadang menyebabkan penurunan kinerja dan kadang berujung dengan pemecatan.

Pada akhirnya saya dan teman sekerja saat memutuskan untuk makan siang seperempat menit lebih awal :D . Namun kami juga kembali setengah jam lebih awal .. karena saya mempunyai pekerjaan penting untuk dilakukan ( yaitu ngeblog ;p )

Work Ethic adalah suatu hal yang harus  saya pelajari banyak – banyak  .

tea2





Berapa Harga Blog Aku ?

13 03 2009

Lagi iseng – iseng surfing sana surfing sini. Terus ketemu artikel ini yang ngasih alamat link http://www.business-opportunities.biz/projects/how-much-is-your-blog-worth/ ( link yang bisa memperkirakan berapa harga blog saya .

Trus aku masukkin aja alamat blog aku : www.hear2me.wordpress.com

blog21

dan dapat hasil ini :

blog1

Lumayan bo….harga blog aku 20 juta an …XD XD ; P

( Walaupun ga tahu harga perkiraan ini dapat dari mana aja , dan terlepas dari valid atau tidaknya nilai perkiraan ini tapi aku cukup hepi…he he namanya juga iseng – iseng )





Download E-Book

3 03 2009

Mau coba buat list  link e-book novel yang bisa didownload , sementara baru dapat ini :

1. Twilight  by  Stephanie Meyers klik disini

2. New Moon  by Stephanie Meyers klik disini

3. Eclipse  by Stephanie Meyers klik disini

4. Breaking Dawn by Stephanie Meyers klik disini

5. Kick Andy klik disini

6. Emma by Jane Austeen klik disini

7. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austeen klik disini

8. Persuasion by Jane Austeen klik disini

9. Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austeen klik disini

10. Jane Eyre by Charlote Bronte klik disini

Nanti rencananya daftar ini akan terus diupdate , enjoy :D :D