Friday, November 11, 2011
Going With The Flow
Saturday, August 27, 2011
Back to Oz
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
P.A.S.S.I.O.N
I’m passionate.
I’m also many other things (like ‘tired’), but right now, ‘passionate’ can be used interchangeably with ‘Deb’. I believe having PASSION is a gift, a risk, a luxury and most importantly, a DUTY.
Firstly, it’s a GIFT because everyone is born and raised differently with different personae and frames of mind. We can be regimental, blasé, structured or go-with-the-flow about life and that’s perfectly fine. But it takes someone with edge to have the GUTS to have and pursue PASSION and that’s where RISK fits in.
We need to take a RISK when it comes to pursuing something we care so much about. PASSION is from the core of your being so if it ends up crashing and burning at the feet of our expectations…that’s going to hurt a bloody lot more than not taking the risk at all. Or will it?
Following your passion is a LUXURY because reality can be a wet-blanket for many people out there; money problems, family problems, health problems, lack of opportunities, lack of education… so to be free of those binding shackles already gives you grant for pursuit. You just need to give yourself permission.
And lastly it’s a DUTY. Years ago I came across a line in ‘The Dream Giver’ (yes, it’s a Christian book): ‘Your big dream is someone’s big need. If you don’t follow your big dream…someone’s need won’t be filled…’ Or something like that. And that’s when I had my epiphany.
My passion is education. My passion is life. My passion is to lift people out of mental hell-holes and provide intellectual tools for them to rebuild their livelihoods and recognize HOPE.
I’ve got a lot more to learn and a lot more to give. And as long as I feel this fire inside of me (that isn’t the impending angina) I’m spear-heading my ambitions until I’m damn-well satisfied!
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
The Swedish say, 'Congratulations! You've reached 25!'
I have reached the quarter milestone of my life. Assuming I’m going to live to be 100. Happy Birthday, Deb! Hellloooo age 25! The age everyone wishes to stay at: you’re still considered young but old enough to be ‘responsible’, you can be ‘irresponsible’ and still get away with it, but most importantly, according to general consensus, you can be single and still have a ‘chance’. *eye roll*/*shrug*
For me, it’s a great age because I feel that 25 is the tipping point of life, where you’re balancing at the fulcrum, with one foot on either side, weighing up gathered experience with where it’s going to lead you. It’s when you realize (or should realize) where you’re headed in life and have a somewhat blurred vision of where you want to end up. I keep talking in the second person like I can speak on behalf of anyone. I’m really talking about myself. So ‘ctrl F and H’, find ‘you’ and replace with ‘I’ or ‘me’.
So I’m teetering on this see-saw analogy, shifting my weight from right to left, left to right, and I’m feeling pretty happy with how I’ve lived so far. I’m living with drive and direction. Everything I did had a purpose behind it- to learn and move forward. I don’t exactly know where I’m going yet, but I see a haze in the distance and it somewhat resembles a house, a husband, a family and a meaningful, sustainable livelihood. In other words: a future nearly everyone wants!!! I’m not so eccentric after all!
At this point the path is still unfolding before me and uncertainty is still, and probably always will be, part of the adventure. I have enough confidence in my abilities and curious enough about the world to take deliberate steps into a realm of possibilities. 10 years ago, I thought at 25 I’d be ‘settled’ in the mainstream sense of the word. But I’m so glad that I’m not because it means I’ve got so much more to look forward to! I’m setting up the stones of my path, laboriously and joyously laying it down, bit by bit. And I have faith that momentum will pick up (in the form of Universal conspiracy) and it’ll eventually pave out smoothly, into a wide stretch of road welcoming those wanting (or fated) to join me.
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Eeny Meeny, Miny, Mo
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Why The Kingdom of Cambodia?
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Previously on…LIFE
Not many can do this, but I can pinpoint the exact date when everything changed. August 25th, 2008. That was the foretold date of my coming of ‘good fortune’. (I was approached by an Indian fortune-teller 3 months previously who told me what I was thinking and stated 25/8…and then asked for $10).
On that fateful day, I received a text message from the new guy at work. ‘Let’s run away. We’ll get into your car and get lost in the sticks. It’ll be an adventure! =)’. That text represented a cross-road: yes or no.
Yes: runaway with a complete stranger from my cookie-cutter, spoon-fed life and open myself to a world of infinite possibilities.
No: stick to what I know and take the 5-lane freeway towards the white-picket fence all us middle-class, Asian, Catholic school-girls are conditioned for. (FYI, I’m spiritual, not religious)
mmm...YES.
I roamed Victoria, pitched my first tent, fell in love, climbed a mountain, flew to Queensland, got a job on a remote island on the Great Barrier Reef, fell out of love, connected with the nature, found the Universe, had an epiphany, sent an email, flew to Cambodia, ran a preschool in the slums of Siem Reap for displaced Vietnamese children, got kicked out of the country for ‘terrorism’, wallowed in ambivalence back in Melbourne, flew to India, landed again in Cambodia.
My sunset life on the Island
The Island
My preschool kids
Henna tattoo in the mountains of Himachal
Cambodia round 2 with my new gang outside Angkor Wat (Unfortunately I can't post pictures of my current work due to its sensitive nature)
And now I’m Country Director of NGO Senhoa, providing vocational training and life-skills education for survivors of human-trafficking. All in a course of 2 years. I haven’t looked back once.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wrapping India Up
After the wedding, Karin and I were handballed over to the in-laws. We couldn’t have been welcomed more warmly. Kiwi’s new mother-in-law threw her arms out and crushed me against her big bosom and cupped my cheeks so that my lips made a fish-kiss, and told me to call her Aunty (by that point I had already adopted 5). For the next week in their cosy apartment, she proceeded to feed us the freshest, most deliciously prepared Indian meals YET.
The In-Laws
During our time with the Babbu family:
- we were taken to the National Park within Mumbai where temples were carved out of the natural rock
- taken on the Mumbai Safari. (awesome laughs and memories. How else can you pray at a Holy House of Hinduism and then get shipped to an entertainment centre to watch a 4-D children’s film, get caught in a monsoon down-pour, get sprayed by a toilet flush button AND watch sea turtles scrape against the glass of their1x2 meter tanks that was their new habitat?)
- weaved through the roaming cows on the wild streets
- drank fruit beer (with 0% fruit)
- welcomed the new neighbor (they lived across a cemetery)
- found out the meaning of ‘choda’
On my last day (10 July), I was accompanied to the airport by Anku, Meenu and Karin. It was a nice way to say goodbye…if I’d actually left. I was 20 minutes late for check-in so I was locked out and stranded from my flight out. The airport staff weren’t helpful in the least, constantly pointing me in different directions and finally made a cross with their arms in my face so that’d I’d get the message that I was clearly NOT GETTING ON THAT PLANE. Thank goodness I was not the only one though. Another family was fighting to get onto the same flight, but to no avail. Thank even MORE goodness that the father was generous enough to help me find a solution. I had no phone, no number to call, no cash, NO IDEA. I had a flight booked from Kuala Lumpur to Siem Reap the next day. I couldn’t afford to miss another flight! I had another dousing of kindness that day though. The father, Amil, went out of his way and looked up flights for me online (he had his laptop with a Dongle), made calls with his phone, convinced the security guards to let me pass to get to the international ATM, waited for me for 45 minutes (!!!) to get my new tickets to KL and double and triple checked that I had the right flights at the right prices. I was NOTHING to this man but he was so chivalrous and made sure I had a way out of India. 12 hours later (and bored out of my MIND) I was on my way to KL to my connecting flight to my awaiting life in Siem Reap, Cambodia.