Rainbow Shoes

My rant, my banter, my cynical view, my loving words.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Moviejournal - frozen



Review of this film seemed really positive so we set the bar high. However the only refreshing bit is the opening Disney shorts. 

The film itself is fitting for any under 10 year olds. It's not an adult animation in any stretch of imagination. Which is a bit disappointing coz with Pixar influence I was expecting a more adult flavour, guess I'm mistaken.  Story is a tad dark, the ice making big sister lives timidly for like 20 years until one night she builds herself an icy castle complete with a cliff staircase after self exiled into the north mountains. Little sister and true love suffered through ordeal trying to rescue but to no avail. Evil boyfriend tried to take over city but stopped inevitably by the force of righteousness. Oh well, at least fantasy always has happy endings. 

Tuesday, January 07, 2014

转帖:3 words to change your life

I have three words to change your life: create, big, and defy. Have you got three minutes?

1. Create

Creating things is the secret path that lets you do whatever you want.

How did I become a writer? I wrote. How did I become a programmer? I programmed. How did I become an entrepreneur? I started a company. I never had professional training in any of those things, and it never mattered, because I gave it to myself.

You can, too. Create the right things, and you don’t need a resume. Create things worth noticing, and you will be noticed.

Creating is also a way of extending yourself. Your writing, or your art, or your company — all these things add to your worth, and the right creations fuse and compound over time. Think of it like buying shares in yourself.

Most people make the mistake of permanently exchanging their time for money, aka "employment." This leads to a lifetime trap of spending time to earn money. If instead you invest your time in making things of value, those things can take life of their own, and work for you while you sleep. You’ll be happier and in greater control of your destiny, too.

2. Big

The thing no one tells you about aiming big is that you pretty much always win.

That doesn’t mean you get what you planned; in fact, that almost never happens. But you almost certainly won’t completely fail, and what successes you have will almost always outweigh your losses.

Say you aim to write a single Facebook status. However that goes, you’re not likely to win or lose much. Instead say you aim to write a whole novel. There’s a good chance you will fail to finish, or take five times longer than you expect, or write utter garbagepaste that never makes it past three unhappy relatives. But in the process you will have pushed your skills beyond their point of comfort, and grown immensely. More so than most people do in their whole lifetimes.

If you keep doing this, eventually, something is going to work. And you only need one big win to set you for life.

3. Defy

If you think the world is logical or fair, you’re going to be frustrated and sad most of your life.

Influence chart

Oliver Emberton

Redrawn from "7 Habits of Highly Effective People"

The world does, actually, make a lot of sense. But not in the way that you might think. Working hard is not enough. Being smart is not enough. Really wanting stuff is not enough. Your instincts and upbringing may tell you otherwise. They are wrong.

The thing that will hold you back the most, throughout your entire life, will be yourself. You will know what to do. You will want to do it. And yet you will find yourself failing, and you won’t know why.

Most people reflexively blame the world when this happens: “my boss is blind,” “the economy is hopeless,” “girls are stupid.” Externalizing leads only to denial and pain. What you need to do — all you need to do — is look inside yourself, and ask what, if anything, you could be doing differently. If you’re certain the problem is outside of your power, drop it, and move on.

If you can make a habit of this, all of your energy will only go on things that improve your life, and you’ll free yourself from a tyranny of sadness.

Create, big, and defy. These are three things that almost no one does, which is exactly why you should do them. Just by attempting you’ll be putting yourself at an uncommon advantage. Now go forth and conquer.

This post originally appeared atOliverEmberton.com. Copyright 2014. Follow OliverEmberton.com on Twitter.

Monday, January 06, 2014

rant on being a celebrant, honesty and vows

was just listening to a RN show about a gay bishop who married with a wife and a husband, however weird the episode is in itself. I was thinking about the vows my newly wedded friends have just given to each other in the present of celebrants. Sweet and endearing words they are, but i can't help wondering the interplay between a celebrant's own consciousness in the mounting evidence of rising divorce rate and declining marriage rate, and the enormously and increasingly untenable vow for most couples sworn before them. where did the institution of marriage come from? and how is marrying enriching our society as oppose to being free loving? how did the society come to being despise single parents? and why people still strive to become a celebrant? are they merely social rejects who can't get a more meaningful and gainful employment? are they just blinding themselves in a consistent state of self numb? are are they merely ignoring the glaring social trend and choose to self reinforce the belief that marriage happily ever after is the only and glorious way to live? surely that view must come into question once a while in their lives? but hey, the same can be said for most religious endeavors. maybe a logic and scientific way of thinking eludes celebrants and that's not necessarily a bad thing? is blindingly following their own faith into death a moral or even a legal way of live? is the boundary just lie in nor harming others? by acting on behalf of the state and sometimes religion and become a conduit of state consent that decree that a couple must love and cherish each other till the end of time, it usually contradicts human nature...

end of rant