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Sunday, May 13, 2018

39 Today

Another year,
Another digit added,
Another age to mark the passing of the years.

Today I rejoice,
My baby Sunkist is home,
My family (that's left) is hale and hearty,
Friendships surround me with their warm glow,
And most of all, I still breathe today.

Today I am thankful,
Today I am blessed,
Today I am grateful.

And yet today my heart aches,
My Mommy isn't here,
She who I hold so dear,
And all of my fur babies that I've lost along the way,
And for dreams that are yet to be realized,
And for dreams that I have had to cast aside.

Today,
I am making promises to myself,
To always carry Mommy in my heart forever after,
And cherish the memories of those fury faces all the time,
And to let go of those dead dreams,
And to not give up and to go on chasing those dreams that still breathe in me.

Today.
I am 39 today. 

Friday, September 8, 2017

Being Me and Facing Reality

Those who have faithfully followed my blog here would have figured out that I'm not all there sometimes. For a while in 2013 I suffered a really bad relapse of my schizo-affective disorder.

The new doctors in my new care facility revert my diagnosis to bi-polar but I know myself better and know that I actually suffer from schizo-affective disorder.

It's a part of who I am. A part of me that makes me, me.

It is a knowledge that I struggle to accept that there will always be a part of me that could at any time take over my life and take it to directions that I don't even dare contemplate even though I've been through the ringers with it a few times. 

It's a challenge daily to wake up and face a new day and wondering if I am normal today or if I show signs of relapsing.

A doctor I once was under the care of told me that sometimes you can tell when you are about to fall to that precipice and relapse and if you take measures enough you can prevent the relapse from happening.

I don't know if it is my over tired mind or if it's actually happening, but I feel out of sorts, like I'm there at the edge just waiting for a hair-trigger to push me into that abyss once more.

So I write this. And hope and pray that this will not be a self fulfilling prophecy.

I hate to have to go through and put my family through another repeat of 2013.

I'm just writing this as a reminder for myself that I should always be vigilant and not let my mind wander and not let that spark of insanity back in my life.

Reality might not be as fun to contemplate as the delusions I am won't to get during relapse, but reality is the true reflection of what life is really like and I should never lose sight of what really matters just to ease the inadequacies and incompleteness that I suffer.

My emotions should not get the better of me. I can't afford to get sick. Each relapse become worse and worse. I'm afraid that there will come a day when the relapse is permanent and there will never be a normal me ever again.

I don't want to lose the real me while chasing some fantastical notion of my version of what I hope reality is actually like.

May Allah protect and guide me. 

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Happy 41st Birthday Along

“I have a dream, a song to sing; to help me cope with anything.”  This line of Westlife song came to my mind as I was thinking of something to write for you. It seems apt to link you as a person to that line somehow.

Your songs always keep you going. Through the hardest part of your life songs can enliven and brighten your day. Your singing gives you joy and although the family, Abang in particular complains about it when you are singing and me too at times, I know the cathartic ability it has on your state of mind.

I wanted to conjure up a story for you consisting of song lyrics alone, but somehow I am not creative enough at this moment to think of connecting multiple song lyrics smoothly into one coherent, flowing prose.

So I write this for you instead.

Like I said before, it is hard to top my gift for your fortieth birthday. And you told me not to bother with anything this year since I’m having so much trouble thinking about what to get you this year, but you know me and birthdays, I have to make a capital issue of it, regardless of whose birthday it is.

I know you dread your birthdays, another year where you feel you didn’t achieve much, another year you feel unfulfilled. But I thank God for every year that you greet, for every year that you still walk this earth with me.

I lost Mom much too soon, and I dread thinking of a time when you would be gone too. I don’t know if you know just how much you mean to me. Perhaps I don’t tell you enough.

I know sometimes you feel as if I hate you at times or that I don’t appreciate you for all that you do, but I’m writing this too tell you now, that you mean the world to me.

There are too many things that I am so thankful for that you did for me. Like how many times you saved my life, or made my life richer, made my life better. How many times you’ve been there for me, had my back, supported me, build me up.

On this day, your special day, I just want to celebrate what a wonderful, giving, caring and loving person you are.

You always ask if I love you and when I say yes, you ask why and my automatic answer is because you are my sister, to which you would reply, if you weren’t my sister that means I wouldn’t love you. And to this I would say I love you because you are beautiful, clever, kind and you would scoff at me, and I know why, because for you this does not ring true.

If you could only see you the way I see you. To quote Simple Plan’s song which I’m crazy for at this moment, you are ‘perfectly perfect’.

Maybe you’ll never see it, but I’m telling you, flawed as you are you are one of the most wonderful person I have ever been lucky enough to meet, and per se we weren’t born sisters I would still find you to be awesome.

A sliver of your spirit would do the whole world good if everyone could but experience your special essence. You are good at your very core and your goodness is something that will not tarnish or spoil.

I am glad to know you and proud to call you my sister, my partner in crime, my best friend. And I know your dreams, and the songs you want to sing will always lift you high and help you cope with anything.
Happy 41st Birthday Dear Sister and I’m posting this way ahead of time, so Happy Birthday in Advance.

Love you Always,


Adik

Saturday, May 13, 2017

Happy Birthday Me!


38 today. 

That’s how long I’ve lived. And 31 of those years my Mom was beside me until God took her away at age 60 when I was 31 in 2010. Our family is less complete but nevertheless still strongly bonded.



As I celebrate yet another year of getting older (and hopefully wiser) I share with you the blessings of my life:

1. A loving father, I call Daddy, who is always there.

2. My sweet mother, Mommy, gone but never forgotten

3. My sister, Along, my rock and shoulder to cry on.

4.My lil brother, Abang, my constant joy and verbal sparring 
   partner.

5.The entire Ziarah Karyawan Family who gives my dad their 
  endless support, and in turn making me happy to see my dad 
  honoured all the time.

6. My feline family present and those that has crossed over the 
    rainbow bridge.

7.My friends, who stick by me despite the crazies I go through 
    from time to time.

8.A first time budding relationship that is still too early to make 
   anything out of but still brings me a secret joy.

9.My words, without which my life would be that much emptier.

10.My faith in the Almighty, who never steered me strong, and is 
    always looking out for me, and gives me strength to live this life 
    that was given to me.

And on that note, I want to share the well wishes Daddy and Along wrote for me.

What Daddy wrote:

Wishing our dearest beloved Adik Yasleh Hani Wati many happy returns on this auspicious day of her birth. May the year ahead be blissfully sublime, filled with happiness and contenments in health and prosperity. Happy Birthday Adik.


The poem Along wrote:

Happy 38 Birthday Adik
************************
Thirty eight years ago,
you took your time to arrive,

everyone had to reluctantly
do stuff instead of waiting for you
Da had to go be P. Ramlee in KL,
the midwife had to take her leave
because you don't seem to be
in a hurry to be born.
And that was when you decided,
one and a half month overdue,
the tenth anniversary of a historical date,
is a good time to greet the world
with the loudest demand for food.
Adik, you had your own unique way
of arriving to this world,
why are you questioning the unconventional way you're living your life?
Define your life as uniquely as you decided how and when you be born,
Happy 38 birthday Adik!
I love you.
rya
12/5/17
11.06 a.m.


Saturday, December 31, 2016

Hello 2017!

Here is to another year lived in time to see the dawn of another year. I would have liked to say that 2016 was a year marked by remarkable and noteworthy moments, but alas for the most part 2016 had been rather mundane.

Life went by rather monotonously. At least it was for me.

Can't be said the same for my family. Dad Turned 70, Along Turned 40 and Abang turned 21.

Big year for the three of them. And life also had significant moments which left its mark on each one of them, but as for me, 2016 left me unchanged.

I am hoping that the year ahead will have more in store for me than the status quo. But whatever life had been or will be, I am just glad that I am still here to live it be it underwhelming or not.

I am hoping that the new year will bring new cheer to all of you who are reading this and may your life be all the richer for it.

Happy New Year 2017!


Tuesday, November 22, 2016

The Bittersweet

A second class lower degree with a CGPA of 2.425 is nothing to be proud of to most people; why, to some it even means nothing short of embarrassing and is something to be ashamed off. Although I would have loved it if I have had the opportunity to graduate with a higher class and CGPA, the degree I received is a blessing that I am forever thankful for and would never be ashamed of, for the journey to graduation was a long and arduous one.
Frankly saying, there was a time when many would think I will never graduate; myself included. So to have been able to get up on that stage and receive my scroll that joyous day in July 2005 was a sweet victory, not only for me but also for my family (especially my older sister) who fought hard for me to be able to call myself a university graduate.
I suppose you might be wondering why I am making such a big deal about graduating. I mean if you were smart enough to be accepted into the university, how hard could it be to work hard and graduate? What’s the big deal? Millions of people go in and out of the ivory tower effortlessly, and it really should not be a capital issue to study and at the end of your program, graduate with ease.
Well, I am going to share with you my story and let you see why my university journey was made nearly impossible.
Growing up, school was effortless for me. I never really had to study to receive good grades. In my teens, I expected my rosy studying experience will continue with me right up to my university years. Through to form, after finishing my A-Levels, I was accepted into the English programme in the Modern Language Faculty at University Putra Malaysia (UPM) in 1999.
Unbeknownst to me, the first semester of my university life, I was manifesting the symptoms of a mental disorder. My mom suffered from schizophrenia a mental disorder which is defined as “a long-term mental disorder of a type involving a breakdown in the relation between thought, emotion, and behaviour, leading to faulty perception, inappropriate actions and feelings, withdrawal from reality and personal relationships into fantasy and delusion, and a sense of mental fragmentation”, and it would seem that the first semester of my degree programme I was showing sign of a similar nature.
My family and my best friend could tell that I had succumb to the same illness as my mother, but I refused their attempts at reigning my erratic behaviour and so for that semester I was all over the place with a mind that was not sound whose thought process was not rational. I spent that entire semester thinking I was above everyone and did not need to attend class or do my school work and would simply ace all my registered paper by simply being brilliant.
Of course at the end of that semester I received mostly Fs with the exception of two subjects of which was Russian 1 which I received an A and a communication subject which I received a B. The Russian subject I aced because I really loved that subject and somehow managed to focus enough of my scattered thought to do the work necessary to get a good grade and the communication subject I passed mainly because it was entirely a group work assessment and my group mates carried me.
By the end of that semester my mind had calmed down enough and I was somehow back to as normal a mind set as I could after months of being on a ‘high’. Truth was I was not actually back on normal kilter because now I was on a downward spiral; the negative side of the disorder where your mood is low - basically depressive.
However the depressive episode was not so bad and I did all right in my second semester.
My memory is quite sketchy nowadays due to the medications I have to take after I was diagnosed with schizo-affective disorder.
To allow you to understand what this disorder is I am quoting the description given in the Mayo Clinic website: “Schizoaffective disorder is a mental disorder in which a person experiences a combination of schizophrenia symptoms, such as hallucinations or delusions, and mood disorder symptoms, such as depression or mania. Schizoaffective disorder may run a unique course in each affected person, so it's not as well-understood or well-defined as other mental health conditions. Untreated schizoaffective disorder may lead to problems functioning at work, at school and in social situations, causing loneliness and trouble holding down a job or attending school.”
My illness remained untreated until my fourth semester when I relapsed again. However that episode was worse than the one which occurred in my first semester that my family finally brought me to the psychiatric clinic at Kuala Lumpur Hospital.
My condition was so severe that I had to be admitted to the psychiatric ward. I had to defer that semester and it was my sister who had to go all the way to the university’s academic department and fought hard to get me the deferment.
My doctors advised my family that they should let me quit the degree programme. They say that because of my illness it is not advisable for me to continue my education. My sister fought with the doctors and said that I will be able to finish my degree. That I must not be made to stop my degree because that would just lower my self-esteem.
My sister made sure the doctors wrote all the supporting documents needed so that I might give it to my lecturers when I return to school in order to make my lecturers aware of my condition in case they find me behaving oddly or lapsing in my concentration.
After I went back to school, I suffered from depression and did not actually want to attend class. My sister practically had to babysit me when I go to school to make sure I actually go to class and not skip it. She would wait in the car under the hot sun every day while I was in class.
There were times when even with my sister’s vigilance I managed to evade going to exams and classes and there goes another semester with bad results.
My entire undergraduate years were riddled with episodes of schizo-affective relapses where my studies were in jeopardy because my mind had decided to betray me by going off-kilter.
It was a struggle everyday to make sure that I go to class, do the work, do the exams – learn. And it was largely thanks to my big sister who did everything she could from making sure I go to class and exams, to helping me with my schoolwork that I was finally able to graduate after five years. What should have taken 3 years to finish took me five, thanks to my friend Mr Schizo-Affective Disorder.
But in the end despite my very own mind trying to sabotage my education journey, I triumphed over my own adversity and that was why on that day in July 2005, I was able to smile proudly as I received my scroll despite only receiving a second class lower degree with the CGPA of 2.425.
Success means different things to different people and on that day as I recall my bittersweet journey to get on that stage and received my degree, I felt extremely successful.





Thursday, October 6, 2016

Me and my feline friends

I have always adored cats. As long as I can remember, I have always been surrounded with cats, mine, other people's or strays on the street. Throughout 37 of my years there have been many cats that has taken pieces of my heart along with them.

Some are lost, some died, some had to be left behind, but the memories of the time they had imprinted in my life stays with me until today.

At present, I have only one cat, Shadow, but the neighbour's cat (and now her kittens) drops by daily. Well her kittens only started to show up today. And I'm loving it.

This is Shadow:


And this is the neighbour's cat and her kittens:


These are the cats that are warming my heart at the moment, but memories are still there for the two most recent losses.

The first loss is Grey, who after seven years of love moved on to the next life due to kidney failure attributed by her untreated diabetes. I miss her still. This was Grey:


And for the brief time of two months, this little kitten I named Baby stole my heart until 'A HEARTLESS WOMAN' threw her away. 

My cats. How much do they touch my life with their sweet cuddliness. And if someone says that I am going to grow old and become a crazy cat lady, I'd take that as the highest compliment because I have truly always been cat crazy.