Monday, January 30, 2012
Novak is Super Human
Yes... that's him. Novak Djokovic the 2012 Australian Open tennis champion. After an almost 5 hour battle with Andy Murray in the semi final on Friday night, he beat Rafael Nadal in an epic battle that went almost 6 hours and into early Monday morning in Melbourne.
Wow! That's really something! Super human perhaps. But I think Djoko has great talent,strong mind, big heart and huge will power to win. Stronger and bigger than his opponents. Talent and skill wise, they are about there equal. Phew! They way he played and pull those shots greatly showed his determination to win over his nemesis. He did just that!
At the end of the marathon match, he just lay down on the court and in a gesture of a true champion (plus told so by the TV) he showed the world his number 1 ranking is to stay for a long long time and many more of the Grand Slams to his taking.
As for Nadal, he is a champion too. He did all the right things to beat Djoko but sadly not good enough I would say. Djokovic is simply the best tennis player on earth now.
In the end, it was a great tennis match. Unfortunately, there's only 1 winner.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Hello guys... Lets put a stop to all these nonsense!
Come on people... stop it! Lets us all move on and make the country progress and the rakyat productive. What you guys are doing is regressing. It ain't progressing. This is not on!
Cukup-cukup la tu. Boring la.... Bawa la cerita yang bermutu sikit. Like how we can make our GDP better than our Singapore neighbour. Or how we can ensure that we don't live in the thin line of racial segregation that we are in now. Or how we can convince our people that "we" don't need to use dollar and sen to win votes in every election.
Pathetic la lu orang ni!!!
Friday, January 27, 2012
Thriller @ Melbourne Park
In an epic 5 hours semi final 5 sets thriller @ the Australian Open 2012, Novak Djokovic defeated Andy Murray 6-3 3-6 6-7 (4-7) 6-1 7-5. As put by former British number 1 player and now a BBC Sports commentator, John Lloyd, "...What a match. It was an epic. One of the best I've seen..." Indeed.
They both were fighting for every point. It was purely a great tennis match to witness. And great rivalry too.
Lets hope for another great tennis in the final this Sunday - Djokovic vs Nadal
RIP Razali Alias
Today I read the news on the passing of Razali Alias a former Selangor footballer due to Hepatitis B. He was 51. Read here
Razali migrated from Singapore and played for Selangor in the 1980s. He won 3 Malaysia Cups with Selangor in 1982, 1984 & 1986.
RIP
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Ohio University Alumni Dinner
Recently on December 9, 2011 I attendede the Ohio University (OU) Alumni dinner @ PJ Hilton. Yeah... 1st time tho they have had it annually. This time they are celebrating the visit by OU's President Roderick McDavis to Malaysia.
I didnt realized there were a lot of Bobcats in Malaysia. Met my ex-boss, my new lawyer friend and a few others.
I also met my MBA classmates tho there were just 4 of us at the dinner. But it was still fun
Carling Cup 2012 Final... MALAYSIA vs ???
Yeah! Go Malaysia! Lets win the Carling Cup this year... hahaha
Cardiff City has just beaten Crystal palace 3-1 0n penalties in the semi final of the 2012 Carling Cup. A 7th minute own goal puts the aggregate score at 1-1 till the final whistle. Cardiff are the first team from outside of the top flight to reach the League Cup final since Birmingham in 2001. This will be its 3rd final visit to Wembley since 2008. Cardiff reached the FA Cup final in 2008 and the Championship play-off final in 2010.
Who will they meet in the final?
Liverpool? Manchester City?
Update soon... ;)
Oh ya.... Its Liverpool!
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Not Bad For A First Try...
My daughter's first try on baking... Chocolate Fondant. Not bad for a start. Taste great! Just a bit of technicality that needs to be improved the next time. Lets make the chocolate melt Fariha!
Alangkah baik nya...
...Kalau politikus2 Malaysia mengambil ikhtibar dari video ini dan jadikan ia sebagai pengajaran akan betapa bodoh dan tololnya mereka di sisi kami yang memerhati. Video...
Monday, January 23, 2012
Old and New
iPad, iPhone, iPod, iPay!
Only Found In The Rao Clan
Once Upon A Time
Its The Time Of The Year Again....
Its the time of the year again when the highways in Malaysia are jam packed with cars leaving the city of Kuala Lumpur for the Chinese New Year "balik kampung" annual pilgrimage.
Year in year out it is the same scenario of vehicles travelling northbound,southbound and eastbound to their respective kampungs to celebrate the New Year with their families. Some will take the opportunity to take a holiday break (again!).
However, this dragon year, I think has the worst traffic congestion all over the highways. I for one got stucked in the mad traffic. 40km ride from KL to Rawang took 1 hour. There's another 168km to Ipoh. Another 4 hours journey??? No way man! I aint gonna kill myself to drive 5 hours for a journey that usually takes 1.5-2 hours max!
Thank God my parents said "turn back". Cancel the trip! Afterall its just a wedding. Phew! Boy... am i glad to hear that. And so, I turn back at Bukit Beruntung interchange and heads back home.
To those who had to continue their journey, I can only empathize with them. I know its gonna be long hours for them on the road. One friend posted on the Facebook on her 8 hours journey from KL-Ipoh. Another friend posted that it took him 3 hours to reach Tanjong Malim from Kota Damansara.
I am sure those southbound and eastbound travellers faced similar predicament on this auspicious long weekend of 2012 Chinese New Year.
Gong Xi Fa Chai!
Year in year out it is the same scenario of vehicles travelling northbound,southbound and eastbound to their respective kampungs to celebrate the New Year with their families. Some will take the opportunity to take a holiday break (again!).
However, this dragon year, I think has the worst traffic congestion all over the highways. I for one got stucked in the mad traffic. 40km ride from KL to Rawang took 1 hour. There's another 168km to Ipoh. Another 4 hours journey??? No way man! I aint gonna kill myself to drive 5 hours for a journey that usually takes 1.5-2 hours max!
Thank God my parents said "turn back". Cancel the trip! Afterall its just a wedding. Phew! Boy... am i glad to hear that. And so, I turn back at Bukit Beruntung interchange and heads back home.
To those who had to continue their journey, I can only empathize with them. I know its gonna be long hours for them on the road. One friend posted on the Facebook on her 8 hours journey from KL-Ipoh. Another friend posted that it took him 3 hours to reach Tanjong Malim from Kota Damansara.
I am sure those southbound and eastbound travellers faced similar predicament on this auspicious long weekend of 2012 Chinese New Year.
Gong Xi Fa Chai!
Saturday, January 21, 2012
SEJARAH RAO (RAWA) DI TANAH MELAYU
Sejarah orang Melayu Rao@Rawa bermula di Kecamatan (Daerah Kecil) Rao Mapat Tunggul, di dalam Kabupaten (Daerah) Pasaman, Propinsi (Negeri) Sumatera Barat, Indonesia. Duduk di sebelah utaranya pula, bermastautin suku kaum Mandailing.Pekerjaan utama suku kaum Rao ialah sebagai petani, pedagang, pelombong; dan mahir datam bidang pentadbiran serta kerohanian/ keagamaan.
Hijrah Perantauan Rao ke Tanah Melayu
Ada empat gelombang perantauan orang-orang Rao ke Tanah Melayu iaitu:
a) Gelombang Pertama bermula pada tahun 500 Masehi hingga tahun 1400 masehi terdiri daripada golongan petani dan pemburu emas, kerana Tanah Melayu terkenal dengan Semenanjung emas.
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b) Gelombang Kedua bermula pada tahun 1401 masehi hingga tahun 1600 masehi terdiri daripada golongan pedagang, terutamna pedagang emas, kain dan ubatan –ubatan terutama apabila Melaka menjadi Pusat Perdagangan Nusantara.
c) Gelombang Ketiga bermula pada tahun 1601 masehi hingga tahun 1800 masehi terdiri daripada tokoh agama, pemburu emas. bijih timah dan tentera upahan apabila dibuka Pusat Perdagangan di Pulau Pinang dan Singapura disamping Melaka.
d) Gelombang Keempat bermula pada tahun 1801 masehi hingga tahun 1900 masehi dengan perantauan beramai-ramai apabila orang-orang Minangkabau bekerjasama dengan Belanda membunuh orang-orang Rao terdiri daripada Anak-Anak Raja Rawa dari Rao-Mapat Tunggul, Padang Nunang dan Pagar Ruyung, bersama-sama hulubalang dan pahlawan, ulamak dan tokoh agama Islam terutama ketika era Perang Paderi di Sumatera Barat (1815 – 1833) termasuk pakar-pakar dalam mencari emas, bijih timah, hasil hutan, tukang-tukang rumah, tukang-tukang emas/besi, pesilat yang handal dan kebal dan dukun/bomoh yang handal.
Mengikut sejarah, suku kaum Rao yang mula-mula sekali berhijrah ke Tanah Melayu ialah golongan petani. Ini berlaku sekitar abad ke 5 Masehi. Faktor perdagangan bebas semasa zaman Kesultanan Melaka di abad ke 15 Masehi telah menggalakkan Iebih ramai kaum Rao merantau, berdagang dan bermastautin di Tanah Melayu.
Kerancakan aktiviti perlombongan emas di abad 17 Masehi dan perlombongan bijih timah di abad 18 Masehi telah mendorong sebahagian besar para pelombong suku kaum Rao ke Tanah Melayu, melalul Negeri-negeri Selat (Singapura, Melaka dan Pulau Pinang).
Penghijrahan beramai-ramai suku kaum Rao ke Tanah Melayu berlaku semasa Perang Padri (1816-1833) di Indonesia semasa zaman pemerintahan penjajah Belanda. Sebahagian besarnya terdiri daripada golongan istana, para ulama, cendekiawan, panglima dan sebagainya. Berikut ialah proses penghijrahan Rao mengikut negeri:
• Negeri Sembilan
• Penghijrahan ke Seri Menanti di sekitar tahun 1773 dan melatul Sungai Ujong (Seremban) di sekitar tahun 1848)
• Negeri Pahang
• Penghijrahan melalui Sungai Hulu Pahang (Bera, Hulu Pahang, Kuata Lipis, Raub, Bentong) sekitar tahun 1857-1863. Antaranya Tengku Khairul Alam, Pakeh Khalifah Saka, Tujuan Saka dll.
• Negeri Selangor
• Penghijrahan melalui Sungai Klang (Hulu Langat, Hulu Selangor) dan Sungai Selangor (Kalumpang, Ampang, Kuala Lumpur, Gombak) sekitar tahun 1867- 1873. Pelopornya belum lagi dapat dikenalpasti.
• Negeri Perak
• Penghijrahan melalul Sungai Perak, Sungal Bidor dan Sungai Bernam (Teluk Intan, Kuala Kangsar, Larut, Kinta, Gopeng, Tapah, Kampar) sekitar tahun 1875-76. Antaranya Datuk Sakti Putih dll.
• Negeri Kelantan
• Catatan sejarah juga menunjukkan bahawa suku kaum Rao turut berhijrah ke Kelantan melalul Pahang, khususnya di Jajahan Pasir Mas melalui Sutan Amir Kaharuddin Budiman.
Takrifan Rao
"Istilah Rawa merujuk kepada satu etnik suku bangsa Melayu daripada perkataan Rao – sebuah kacamatan di dalam Kabupaten Pasaman di Sumatera Barat. Negeri Rao di sebelah utara berjiran dengan Tapanuli yang didiami Mandailing manakala di sebelah Selatan bersempadan dengan Sumatera Barat yang majoriti penduduknya; Minangkabau. Di sebelah barat Rao ialah Selat Mentawai dan timur pula bersempadan dengan Riau. Perkataan Rawa hanya popular di Makkah dan Malaysia. Ia kurang dikenali di Rao. Wan Mohd Shaghir Abdullah (Utusan Malaysia: 19.3.2007) berpendapat bahawa istilah Rawa di Malaysia bermula daripada Haji Abdullah Nordin al-Rawi yang mengasaskan syarikat percetakan dan penerbit Persama Press tahun 1921 di Lebuh Aceh, Pulau Pinang. Anak beliau bernama Haji Yusuf bin Abdullah tersohor dengan gelaran Yusuf Rawa (1922-2000) yang pernah menjadi wakil Malaysia ke Pertubuhan Bangsa-bangsa Bersatu (PBB), sebagai duta ke Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan dan Turki. Pada asalnya disebut ar-Rawi mengikut istilah Arab yang bermaksud dibangsakan kepada ”Rao” tetapi lama kelamaan menjadi ar-Rawa yang menunjukkan asal seseorang itu iaitu dari Negeri Rao di Sumatera. Namun demikian, tidak terdapat dalam sejarah yang menceritakan orang-orang Rawa yang menuntut atau menetap di lain-lain negeri atau negara menggunakan perkataan Rawa atau Rawi dicantumkan pada akhiran nama mereka. Penggunaannya juga dianggarkan bermula di sekitar awal abad ke-19 khususnya sewaktu aktiviti pengajian Islam sedang berkembang pesat di Makkah. Juga tidak dapat dipastikan penggunaan ar-Rawa pada akhir nama itu seseorang itu bermula di Tanah Melayu atau Makkah. Walau bagaimanapun, mengikut catatan sejarah terdapat seorang syeikh terakhir di Makkah di kalangan orang Rawa bernama Syeikh Jamal Rawa yang menggunakan perkataan tersebut".
Sumpahan KETURUNAN RAJA RAWA
Sumpahan bermula berabad-abad lalu apabila rakyat Pagar Ruyung di Bukit Siguntang, Sumatera mencari pengganti raja yang mangkat.
Yang menjadi masalah dua putera almarhum telah lama meninggalkan negeri itu, seorang ke negeri China dan seorang lagi pergi ke Rom dan anakanda ketiga almarhum pula adalah seorang puteri yang di panggil PUTI.
Masa berlalu, raja-raja dilantik semuanya mati tidak serasi, melalui tukang tilik, rakyat diberitahu bahawa cuma ada seorang sahaja yang sesuai dinobatkan menjadi raja, iaitu anak anakanda kepada puteri, tapi masalahnya, anakanda puti juga perempuan.
Lantas, rakyat bukit siguntang mengelilingi rumah puti untuk mengambil anakandanya menjadi raja, puti membantah namun tak diendahkan.
'Kalau kamu berkehendak juga, ada pantang larangnya; anak dan keturunan beta tidak boleh memijak tanah, naik buaian dan menyentuh bunga sampai umurnya 13 purnama. KALAU INGKAR, TUNGGULAH BALA DATANG MENIMPA. Juga bila raja kamu mangkat, hendaklah tujuh orang menadah air mandian mayatnya, tujuh lagi melompat keluar dari tingkap dan cacakkan tombak ditanah.
Rakyat semua bersetuju, lalu anakanda puti pun dijadikan raja.
Adat dan pantang larang terus dipatuhi sehinggalah warga bukit siguntang dan darah daging puti yang berketurunan rawa berhijrah , termasuk ke semenanjung tanah melayu.
"Kenalilah susur-galur nasab keturunan kamu, supaya membawa kepada silaturahim”
Menerusi Hadith:. Imam Tarmizi Ibnu Kathir vol 4, ms.218
Gelaran Bukan Untuk Di Puja Puji, tetapi sekadar Mengenal Asal Usul Jati Diri, Jangan Malukan Keturunan Sendiri, Amanah & Janji Harus Turuti, Bila Gelaran Sudah Di Beri, Laksanakan Tugas Seikhlas Hati
Source: http://terombarawa.blogspot.com/2008/12/sejarah-rawa-di-tanah-melayu.html
Some Things Worth To Look At
Cupping - An Ancient Alternative Medicine
Cupping therapy is an ancient form of alternative medicine in which a local suction is created on the skin; practitioners believe this mobilizes blood flow in order to promote healing. Suction is created using heat (fire) or mechanical devices (hand or electrical pumps). It is known in local languages as baguan/baguar, badkesh, banki, bahnkes, bekam, buhang, bentusa, kyukaku, gak hoi, Hijamah, kavaa (ކަވާ), singhi among others.
Description
The air inside the cup is heated and the rim is then applied to the skin, forming an airtight seal. As the air inside the cup cools, it contracts, forming a partial vacuum and enabling the cup to suck the skin, pulling in soft tissue, and drawing blood to that area. Alternately, the suction is created by a hand-pump and blood is allowed to collect. According to the American Cancer Society, "available scientific evidence does not support cupping as a cure for cancer or any other disease". It can leave temporary bruised painful marks on the skin and there is also a small risk of burns.
History
There is reason to believe the practice dates from as early as 3000 B.C.; the earliest record of cupping is in the Ebers Papyrus, one of the oldest medical textbooks in the world. It describes in 1,550 B.C. Egyptians used cupping. Archaeologists have found evidence in China of cupping dating back to 1,000 B.C. In ancient Greece, Hippocrates (c. 400 B.C.) used cupping for internal disease and structural problems. This method in multiple forms spread into medicine throughout Asian and European civilizations.
Cupping in Europe and the Middle East grew from humoral medicine, a system of health ancient Greeks used to restore balance through the four "humors" in the body: blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile. This system was pervasive in European and Middle-East cultures at the time. Humoral medicine had a brief or short revival in European medicine in the 18th and 19th centuries, and cupping was used in this practice.
In the West, cupping therapy was part of the basic repertoire of clinical skills a doctor was expected to understand and practice until the latter part of the 19th century with some Eastern European countries such as in Poland and Bulgaria continuing to practice cupping therapy to the present. In parts of Western Europe there has been a recent upsurge in the interest from both public and academic perspectives. Scientific studies researching the effects of cupping therapy attempt to better understand the mechanisms underpinning this age old medical treatment. Societies like the British Cupping Society have contributed to its re-emergence as an alternative therapy.
Methods
Broadly speaking there are two types of cupping: dry cupping and bleeding or wet cupping (controlled medicinal bleeding) with wet cupping being more common. The British Cupping Society (BCS), an organisation promoting the practice, teaches both. As a general rule, wet cupping provides a more "curative-treatment approach" to patient management whereas dry cupping appeals more to a "therapeutic and relaxation approach". Preference varies with practitioners and cultures.
Dry cupping
The cupping procedure commonly involves creating a small area of low air pressure next to the skin. However, there is variety in the tools used, the method of creating the low pressure, and the procedures followed during the treatment.
The cups can be various shapes including balls or bells, and may range in size from 1 to 3 inches (25 to 76 mm) across the opening. Plastic and glass are the most common materials used today, replacing the horn, pottery, bronze and bamboo cups used in earlier times. The low air pressure required may be created by heating the cup or the air inside it with an open flame or a bath in hot scented oils, then placing it against the skin. As the air inside the cup cools, it contracts and draws the skin slightly inside. More recently, vacuum can be created with a mechanical suction pump acting through a valve located at the top of the cup. Rubber cups are also available that squeeze the air out and adapt to uneven or bony surfaces.
In practice, cups are normally used only on softer tissue that can form a good seal with the edge of the cup. They may be used singly or with many to cover a larger area. They may be used by themselves or placed over an acupuncture needle. Skin may be lubricated, allowing the cup to move across the skin slowly.
Depending on the specific treatment, skin marking is common after the cups are removed. This may be a simple red ring that disappears quickly, the discolouration left by the cups are normally from toxins penetrating the skin, coming from inside out as a form of fluid film, and vapour left in the cups. It is possible more aggressive treatments can result in bruising especially such as dragging the cups while suctioned from one place to another to break down muscle fiber. Usually treatments are not painful, but treatment is discontinued if the subject experiences more than minor discomfort
Fire Cupping
Fire cupping is a treatment where a cotton ball dipped in 70% or greater alcohol is lit and the cotton ball is then introduced inside of the cup for a brief second. The cup is then placed on the patient. As the heat dissipates, the cooling action creates the firm suction. The cups can be moved around the patient's body along the meridians and at specific points to help with immune boosting and other modalities.
Wet Cupping (Al-Hijamah or medicinal bleeding)
While the history of wet cupping may date back thousands of years, the first documented uses are found in the teachings of Prophet Muhammad. According to Muhammad al-Bukhari, Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj Nishapuri and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Muhammad approved of the Hijama (cupping) treatment.
In this alternative form of bloodletting or medicinal bleeding, also called blood cupping, a small scratch or incision is made with a lancet prior to the cupping, and the pressure difference extracts blood from the skin. Islamic traditional medicine uses this technique – called in Arabic Al-Hijamah or Hijamah - with a number of hadith supporting its recommendation and use by the Islamic prophet Muhammad. As a result, the practice of cupping therapy has survived in Muslim countries.
Alternatively, mild suction is created using a cup and a pump (or heat suction) on the selected area and left for about three minutes. The cup is then removed and small superficial skin incisions are made using a cupping scalpel. A second suction is used to carefully draw out a small quantity of blood. The procedure was piloted and developed by Ullah et al 2005 and has been endorsed by the British Cupping Society which aims to promote, protect and develop professional standards in cupping therapy.
Traditional Chinese medicine cupping
In traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) cupping is a method of applying acupressure by creating a vacuum on the patient's skin to dispel stagnation—stagnant blood and lymph, thereby improving qi flow—to treat respiratory diseases such as the common cold, pneumonia and bronchitis. Cupping also is used on back, neck, shoulder and other musculoskeletal conditions. Its advocates say it has other applications, as well.
Limited bruising cupping massage
New silicone cupping therapy massage cups are available, an innovation for cupping therapy and its wider acceptance. "Medical silicone" cups are claimed to alleviate deep bruising associated with traditional cupping.[citation needed] The cups allow for added new massage techniques because they are simple to use and are pliable, unlike glass or plastic. It is also highly recommended to drink plenty of water after cupping to help move the blood and other fluids through the area affected, general massage is able to help reduce the blood bruising immediatley after the cupping.
Practice
Cupping is used to 'treat' a broad range of medical conditions such as; blood disorders (anaemia, haemophilia), rheumatic diseases (arthritic joint and muscular conditions), fertility and gynaecological disorders, skin problems (eczema, acne) and is claimed by proponents to help general physical and psychological well-being.
References
1. [http://www.britishcuppingsociety.org British Cupping Society 2008
2. "ACS :: Cupping". 2007-05-23. Retrieved 2007-06-21.
3. A short guide to humoral medicine
4. Cui Jin and Zhang Guangqi, "A survey of thirty years’ clinical application of cupping", Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 1989; 9(3): 151–154
5. Andrew Rippin and Jan Knappert, Textual Sources for the Study of Islam, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990. 78.
6. Sunnan Abu Dawud, 11:2097, 28:3848, Sahih Muslim, 26:5467, 10:3830
7. www.britishcuppingsociety.org
8. State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Pharmacy, Advanced Textbook on Traditional Chinese Medicine and Pharmacology, Volume IV, 1997 New World Press, Beijing
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_cupping
Finally...
Finally I get to meet and watch these bunch of creative young people with their graffiti artistic imaginations at work. I wish the authority would allow them to paint the empty walls all over KL with some wonderful artistic painting. Instead of the Ah Longs sticking their money laundering services, illegal "Happy Massage" services and many other bills sticking all over KL. Its just a complete eye sore!
Emmmm... Somebody needs to carry this effort... ;)
The creative bunch of youngsters at work
Some of their graffiti artwork (if they called it art la... ;))
Another sample of the artwork
Emmmm... Somebody needs to carry this effort... ;)
The creative bunch of youngsters at work
Some of their graffiti artwork (if they called it art la... ;))
Another sample of the artwork
UMNO oh UMNO
Gong Xi Fa Cai!
The Dragon (simplified Chinese: 龙; traditional Chinese: 龍), is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar, and the only animal that is legendary. The Year of the Dragon is associated with the earthly branch symbol 辰.
The Dragon personality The Dragon is a creature of myth and legend. A symbol of good fortune and sign of intense power, the Oriental Dragon is regarded as a divine beast - the reverse of the malicious monster that Westerners felt necessary to find and slay. In Eastern philosophy, the Dragon is said to be a deliverer of good fortune and a master of authority. Therefore, those people born in Dragon years are to be honored and respected.
Sources:
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_(zodiac)
2. http://www.usbridalguide.com/special/chinesehoroscopes/Dragon.htm
Friday, January 20, 2012
Pelbagai Kisah Menarik
At 1st glance, I thought that these 2 cars have the same plate numbers. By chance they were both parked side by side...
Kot ye pun ko tu Kelisa, agak2 la nak masuk mana pun... ;)
Betul ke ni??? Due to excessive golfing, I've tanned to darkness. Tapi kan... tak da pun yang kata I sexy... :(
Mana lu mau pergi bro??? Minum kalu... tak selamat! DONT DRINK & DRIVE
Alamak! I do this sometimes... SOMETIMES???
If COMPULSORY, make it AVAILABLE la...
This is so funny...
Others hhave submarines in water. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia has the national car in water. So much about the 9.7 km (6.0 mi) SMART TUNNEL ie.the longest stormwater tunnel in South East Asia and second longest in Asia with main objective to solve the problem of flash floods in Kuala Lumpur. Yeah rite!
Men wont like it dry. The wetter the better... ;)
Rezeki ada di mana2. Meski pun di tepi pusara. Susu getah tetap ditoreh
Lion Air commercial
Persimpangan dilema or persimpangan cari nahas? Hehehe
Opppssss... Wrong translation
Kat mana tempat ni? I wanna go there! ;)
Literally means... Kindly weigh your balls here. Damn! Hahahaha
This is too much la I think... Cukup2 la tu wei!
WTF!
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