12/20/2008

Spinach with Sesame Seed Dressing

So, my passion now still cooking and I like to share with you. My receipts now are Spinach and Eggplant.

Spinach with Sesame Seed Dressing



Ingredients


  • 3 tablespoons white sesame seeds
  • ½ teaspoon sugar
  • 2 tablespoon light soy sauce
  • 3 tablespoon dashi
  • Large pinch of salt
  • 500 g (1 lb) fresh spinach, washed, thick stems discarded
  • 1 teaspoon vegetable oil

    Cooking Direction


  1. Brown the sesame seeds in a heavy based frying pan over low heat until golden brown, about 3 minutes.
  2. Set aside 1 teaspoon of the toasted sesame seeds for garnish. Using a mortar and pestle, grind the remaining seeds until smooth.
  3. Blend in the sugar, soy sauce and dashi to make the dressing, set aside
  4. Drain excess water from the washed spinach. Heat oil in a medium saucepan and add a handful of the spinach leaves, stirring with a wooden spoon until leaves have wilted. Continue stirring, adding more spinach as each previous batch cooks down
  5. Place cooked spinach in a colander to squeeze out any excess moisture. Combine spinach and dressing in a small bowl, and serve either hot or at room temperature. Garnish with reserved sesame seed.

Eggplant with Miso



Ingredient
  • 125 ml (1/2 cup) water
  • 60 ml (1/4 cup) miso
  • 2 tablespoons light soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons sugar,
  • 3 tablespoon oil 5 cm
  • (2 in) fresh ginger, finely chopped
  • 500 g (1 lb) Japanese eggplant (aubergine), cut across into chunks
  • 1 large red or green capsicum (bell pepper), cut into chunks
  • 2 tablesppon sake
  • 2 teaspoons cornflour, mixed with a little water
Cooking Direction
  1. in a small bowl, combine the water, miso, soy sauce and sugar, and stir until sugar is dissolved
  2. Heat oil in a work over high heat, then add ginger, eggplant and capsicum, stirring until vegetables are almost tender, about 3 minutes
  3. Add sake and stir for 20 seconds then add the miso mixture
  4. Stir in cornflour until sauce thickens, and serve immediately




12/18/2008

Intermezzo: Cooking

What are you doing when you feel not have mood to do anything and hungry but no money to buy some food. I will cook simple food to eat.

Many time I practiced these receipt from my dear one when nothing to do to eat.

Sauteed Tofu

Ingredients


500 g tofu, drained
4 fresh shiitake mushrooms, stems removed
1 medium carrot, peeled and shredded
1 medium potato, peeled and shredded
1 green capsicum (bell pepper) cut in julienne shreds
1 small leek cut in julienne shreds
1 egg white
2 tablespoons light soy sauce
2 tablespoons sake
40 g (1/3 cup) corn flour


Cooking Direction


  1. Cut tofu horizontally across the middle. Remove excess moisture by pressing tofu between pieces of absorbent paper.
  2. Cut mushroom caps in half then slice each half finely
  3. In a medium bowl, combine the mushroom, carrot, potato, capsicum, egg white, 1 teaspoon of the soy sauce and salt to taste. Sift all but 1 tablespoon of the corn flour over the mixture and stir to mix well. Turn grill onto high.
  4. Shift remaining corn flour over the tofu pieces, and then pile the vegetable mixture on top. Lift tofu pieces with a spatula and place them on a griller rack. Cook under the grill for 2 to 3 minutes until vegetables are lightly cooked.



Egg Drop Soup

Ingredient
  • 100 g (3 ½ oz)boneless, skinned chicken breast, cut in 2 x 4 cm )3/4 x 1 ½-in) strips
  • 1 tablespoon sake
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 litre (4 cups) dashi
  • 1 teaspoon light soy 2 eggs, beaten
  • 180 ml (3/4 cup) water
  • 8 thin, decorative slices carrot, blanched, for garnish
Cooking Direction
  1. Mix chicken strips in a small bowl and with sake and ¼ teaspoon salt. Marinate for 5 to 10 minutes.
  2. Heat dashi in a medium saucepan until boiling.
  3. Add ¼ teaspoon salt, soy sauce and chicken to the dashi and cook for 1 minute.
  4. Slowly pour 1/3 beaten egg into the soup whilst stirring constantly. When soup returns to the boil, add another 1/3 of the mixture, stirring constantly. Bring soup back to the boil, add the final amount of egg and, when all the egg ‘threads’ are formed, remove from the heat.
  5. Ladle soup into 4 serving bowls and garnish with carrot. Serve immediately.

12/05/2008

Firewalk Training

This Training has aim to encourage people to have confident and dare to face their life. You need to focus on your goal, not on your obstacles so you can reach your goal faster and easier.

The feeling is important; if you focused on obstacles your feeling become weak and you are far away from your goal but if you focus on your goal your feeling become stronger and stronger and the way to reach your goal openly wide.













This training has been arranged by Pranala Magni Daya
Venue: Pusdiklat Kesos, Jl. Margaguna Raya I, Radio Dalam-Jakarta
Photograph taken by Wiwik W

9/17/2008

6/29/2008

Let’s Fight!

The best thing you can do to change your life is to fight for yourself. What I mean by fighting for yourself is that you need to do things that ultimately help you in some way. Always watch for things that you can do that give you something positive.

Even if the walk is kind of short, or you miss a couple of days, it still counts in helping you out in the long run. Always remember that you will eventually get a reward for your hard effort.

It doesn't matter what the task is, as long as you keep in mind that you are doing it for you! If you need a job and you fill out an application every day, then you are giving yourself the best chance to get employed. If you want to quit smoking and you refuse to smoke on your smoke break just one time, then you are fighting for yourself. It doesn't matter what it is, but you have to decide to make the change.

The hardest part about fighting for yourself is doing things that you think are impossible for you. The trick here is to see if you can do a part of it or do it just one time. If you want to get in shape and think you couldn't do push ups, try doing just one of them. If you can do one then with practice and time you can do more.

Always be willing to do things you never did before. You will be surprised at what you can do and what talents you have. These other abilities may lead you in a different direction in life. It may be better for you in the long run to go in a new direction, especially if your current situation is not that great.

Nothing is going to happen in your life just because you want it to. You have to make things happen for you. You have to take the steps to get the chance at the things you want. Fighting for yourself means that you are making sure that you get that chance in life.

6/01/2008

Story about My Orchid Flowers


Just waiting
For the blooming of yours
Never bloom
Even I take care of you

When I am not waiting
In the rain season
You bloom so beautifully
Coloring my garden

Then I am waiting
You are not bloom again
Again and again

I am not waiting
You bloom
I am waiting
You are not bloom

Then
I will not wait
Again and again


WW, 30.05.08

5/30/2008

The Rain

When the rain coming
Wet my garden
Plant the seeds
My flower joy

It is raining
Falls to my roof
Like a guest knocking the door

It is raining
Clean my house from the dust
Breathe the warm wind

When the rain coming
I open the window to receive them
And feels its drizzling

It is raining
Falls in my garden
Bring secret happiness to my heart

WW, 02/05/08
20.11 pm

3/25/2008

Today

Today is my strange day
my mind is going everywhere
my body doesn't fit
my heart is melting

may be, everyday is my strange day
may be, I am strange person
that feel everyday is strange day

may be just this day
I feel a strange day

16.03.08
at 11.25 pm
W.W

3/04/2008

The Author of The Famous Five: Enid Blyton


Enid Blyton is British writer who published over 600 children's or juvenile books during her 40-year career. Blyton's most famous series was The Famous Five. Its central characters were Julian, Dick, Anne, George, and the dog Timmy. Her works celebrated good food, spirit of comradeship, and honesty. By the 1980s, Blyton's books had sold some 60 million copies and had been translated into nearly seventy languages.

"Anne saw some cows pulling at the grass in a meadow as they passed. 'It must be awful to be a cow and eat nothing but tasteless grass,' she called to George. 'Think what a cow misses - never tastes an egg and lettuce sandwich, never eats a chocolate aclair, never has a boiled egg - and can't even drink a glass of ginger-beer! Poor cows!'" (from Five Get Into Trouble, 1949)

Enid Mary Blyton was born on 11 August 1897 at 354 Lordship Lane, East Dulwich, London, the eldest child of Thomas Carey Blyton (1870 – 1920), a salesman of cutlery, and his wife, Theresa Mary, née Harrison (1874 – 1950). There were two younger brothers, Hanly (b. 1899), and Carey (b. 1902), who were born after the family had moved to the nearby suburb of Beckenham. From 1907 to 1915, Blaydon was educated at St. Christopher’s School in Beckenham, where she excelled at her Endeavour, leaving as head girl. She enjoyed physical activities along with the academic work, but not maths.

From her earliest childhood, Blyton had been schooled in the belief that she would eventually be a musician. However, she had also started to write and send stories, articles, and poems to various periodicals. Although her family thought, that most of her writing was a waste of time, she remained undaunted. Her first published poem, entitled 'Have You-?' - appeared in Nash's Magazine (1917).

Blyton's first book, Child Whispers (1922), was a collection of verse. This twenty-four-page work was followed by Real Fairies: Poems (1923), Responsive Singing Games (1923), The Enid Blyton Book of Fairies (1924), Songs of Gladness (1924), The Zoo Book (1924), and other books published by J. Saville and Newnes.

Blyton, who was trained as a kindergarten teacher at Ipswich High School, opened her own infants' school. When the literary commitments increased, Blyton devoted herself entirely to writing. In 1926 Blyton took on the editing a new magazine for children, Sunny Stories. Her stories, plays, and songs for Teachers' World were received with enthusiasms. She also compiled a children's encyclopedia, but it was not until in the 1930s, when her stories started to attract a wider audience.

In 1924 Blyton married Hugh Pollock, an editor of the book department of George Newnes. When she visited a gynecologist, she was told that she had a much underdeveloped uterus, equivalent to that of a young girl. Enid and Hugh moved soon to Elfin Cottage, a newly built house in Shortlands Road, Beckenham, which Blyton eventually called her first "real home". In 1929 they moved to "Old Thatch", a large sixteenth-century cottage, close to the River Thames at Bourne End in Buckinghamshire. The house, that was to be associated with Blyton for the rest of her life, was Green Hedges. It was built of red brick with black and white half-timbered gables, and situated in Beaconsfield, a small town about twenty-five miles from London.


In the mid-1930s Blyton experienced a spiritual crisis, but she decided not to convert to Roman Catholicism, because she had felt it was "too constricting". Although she rarely attended church services, she saw that her two daughters were baptized into the Anglican faith and went to the local Sunday School. Blyton's first full-length children's adventure book, The Secret Island, was published in 1938. This fast-moving story, woven around familiar characters, led to such series as The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, the Adventure series, the Mystery series, and the 'Barney' Mystery books.

During World War II, when publishing was restricted, Blyton managed to get her works printed. In the following decades she ruled the field of juvenile literature. Blyton could write 10,000 words a day, which enabled her to keep up her prodigious output. In 1940 eleven books were published under her name, including The Secret of Spiggy Holes, which had appeared earlier in serial form in Sunny Stories, Twenty-Minute Tales and Tales of Betsy May, both collections of short stories, The Children of Cherry Tree Farm, and a story book annual for the News Chronicle. The remainder were brought out by George Newnes, who continued as Blyton's main publisher. Under the pseudonym Mary Pollock she wrote Three Boys and a Circus and Children of Kidillin.

Blyton's marriage ended in 1942. Next year she married Kenneth Darrell Waters, a middle-aged surgeon. An exploding shell at the Battle of Jutland during First World War had permanently impaired his hearing, but helped with a hearing aid, he could pick up Blyton's speech. He was also genuinely interested in her work and they shared many interests in common, including gardening. According to Duncan McClaren, Blyton ridiculed her first husband in the character of PC Goon, a bumbling policeman in the Mystery series.

In 1945 Blyton decided to wind up her column for Teachers' World. Seven years later she withdrew from Sunny Stories. In 1953 appeared the first edition of Enid Blyton Magazine. Regular news was given for sponsored clubs. The Famous Five Club originated through a series of book about the 'Famous Five'. After the publication of the first story in 1942 a new title followed each year. The main object of the magazine was to help the young spastic children and the special centre in London.

In 1949 appeared Little Noddy Goes to Toyland, a story of a little toy man, who always ends up in trouble and has to seek help from his Toyland friends. Its sales exceeded expectations. Other Noddy books of various sizes and types followed in rapid succession. The stories were illustrated by Van Der Beek who died suddenly in Holland in 1953. 'Noddy' became a household name, the subject of music hall jokes and sketches. and the series also produced a play and a film.

In the 1950s and 1960s Blyton was attacked by critics. Moreover, librarians imposed sanctions on her writings owing to the books' limited vocabulary. The main target for anti-Blytons was Noddy, "the most egocentric, joyless, snivelling and pious anti-hero in the history of British fiction", as he was once called. Rumours were spread, that she did not write all her own works. The "banning" did not last long and eventually Blyton's ability to encourage children to read was recognized generally. At the end of the 1990s, well over 300 Blyton titles were still in print, including editions of the Famous Five stories linked to the popular television serialization (1995) and modern adventure games, also based on the Famous Five series.

Enid Blyton Magazine was closed in 1959. In the early sixties the author found it increasingly difficult to concentrate to writing. Her husband died in 1967. During the months that followed, her own illness grew progressively worse. Blyton died in her sleep on November 28, 1968, in a Hampsted nursing home. Although her books have been criticized for racism, sexism, and snobbishness, they have always found new readers from new generations.

"She was a child, she thought as a child and she wrote as a child," has the psychologist Michael Woods summarized the secret of her writing.

3/02/2008

The Creator of Detective Conan : GOSHO AOYAMA



Gosho Aoyama is a manga artist and best known as the creator of the manga series Detective Conan (known in the USA, Canada, and the UK as Case Closed). I‘ve been curious to wait when Conan will find the formula to cure his body.

He was born on June 21, 1963 in Daiei, Tottori Prefecture, Japan as Yoshimasa Aoyama. Aoyama was a genius at drawing even when he was young. His painting of “Yukiai War” won a competition and displayed at the Tottori Daimaru Department Store when he was in Grade 1 (in elementary school).

After finishing high school at Ikuei High School, he studied to Nihon University College of Art in Tokyo. During his university years (winter 1986), Aoyama joined a comic contest for freshmen and won, which was a stepping-stone for his career as a manga artist (mangaka) and author, as well as a turning point for his life.

Aoyama's debut work was Chotto Mattete, published in the weekly magazine Shonen Sunday on winter 1987. Soon after that, Magic Kaito was published on the same magazine.

At the beginning of the 90's, another story done by Aoyama named Yaiba was out. This 24-volume manga won the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen in 1993. He won the Shogakukan Manga Award a second time in 2001, for Detective Conan. Other works were released as tankōbon included Third Basemen No. 4, Gosho Aoyama’s Collection of Short Stories, and Detective Conan.

On May 5, 2005, he married voice actress for Conan of the Detective Conan anime and also singer Minami Takayama, but they divorced on December 10, 2007.



Gosho Aoyama manga works

Wait a Minute(Chotto Mattete) (1987)
Aoyama's first manga story, published in Shonen Sunday. It's about a boy genius named Yutaka Takai, whose time machine jetpack sends his love interest through time for two years.

Yaiba (1988-1993)
Tells the adventures of the young samurai Yaiba Kurogane. It won a 1992 Shogakukan Manga Award and was adapted into a 51-episode anime series.

3rd Base 4th (Yonban Sādo) (1993)
A 1-volume baseball manga. It tells the story of a boy named Shigeo Nagashima, a mediocre baseball player on his high school team. One day, he buys a magical bat from a sporting goods store that allows him to hit every pitch. However, he has to pay the mysterious store for each pitch he hits.

Magic Kaito (Majikku Kaito) (1988-2007)A 4-volume manga series (The fourth volume was released in February 2007, 13 years after the third volume) which tells the comical adventures of Kaitou Kid, a gentleman thief who often uses his skills in magic and disguise in every robbery he commits. Although the manga series is on pause, Kaitou Kid still appears regularly in Detective Conan.

Gosho Aoyama’s Collection of Short Stories

Various short works written over the years:

  • Play It Again (Play It Again)
  • Excalibur (Excalibur)
  • Santa Claus in the summer (Natsu no Santa Clau)
  • The detective George's job (Detective George's little little & great operations (Tantei Jooji no minimini daisakusen)
  • Wait a Minute (Chotto Mattete)
  • Shonen Sunday 19(talk) show "The wandering red butterfly" (Sunday 19(to-ku) show samayoeru akai chou)
  • Detective Conan or Case Closed (Meitantei Konan) - (1994-present)Aoyama's most well-known creation, it tells the story of a genius high school detective who one day is turned into a young boy by mysterious men. While trying to track down these men, he often encounters complicated mysteries, most of which only he can solve.
  • Tell Me A Lie (Watashi ni Uso wo Tsuite) - (2007)
    This is a one-shot manga about a girl named Terumi Arai (Arai Terumi), who can read people's minds when she looks them in the eyes.


2/26/2008

Tips to be Happy


I have dream and I believe that a lot of people have dream too…it’s the desire for the all those in this world to be happy and loving toward each other. Because I believe at our very human foundation we are caring, giving, loving and happy people, we come into this world happy. We know the feeling of joy. It’s not hateful or fearful.

Others have spoken of it. We can see it drift through our culture in the form of songs and books. It’s quiet and it’s subtle.

We started from the song by Michael Jackson….”If you want to make the world a better place, take a look at yourself, and make a change…..

There’s a movement towards claiming ourselves, claiming our thoughts, feelings and actions as our own. Of taking back the reins of ownership, responsibility and consequential control that comes with ownership. We are starting to take that outstretched finger we have been pointing at every one else, and turning it back towards ourselves. Not in blame, but for answers.

Then David Leonhardt, also known as The Happy Guy says we can take steps to keep our spirits up and take control of our own well-being during times of uncertainty and crisis. There are hundreds of little habits that can help us feel happier and some are particularly useful during times of uncertainty.


These are top tips for keeping our spirits up in wartime and crisis:
Be Positive mind
This is very important attitude to take the next steps.

Smile at strangers and friends alikeA smile is an instant mood-booster, both for the person smiling and for everyone else around. When you smile at someone, you will likely elicit a smile back from her, her return smile helps you. Smiles on people around us put a comforting face on what might otherwise seem like a scary world.
Don’t play the ‘play-by-play’ gameIt is important to keep abreast of how events are unfolding, but gluing yourself to war coverage is no recipe for happiness. The more war coverage we watch, the more we should watch something de-stressing.

Count blessings
Despite overwhelming events, people today enjoy more comforts, more things, more opportunity and more knowledge than ever before. Taking time to appreciate those things brings both comfort and a positive perspective.

Have faithHave faith believe in God is a great comfort to people in times like these. Many people who do not practice a faith believe in God, and this is an ideal time to seek out one’s spiritual side.
Learn a new skillLearning a new hobby or job skill adds excitement, a sense of accomplishment and a feeling of control.

Study history/ life experience
You don’t have to notice that history or life is full of wars, daily hardship and suppression, but is also full of wonder, perseverance, great deeds and recovery to give us hope even if events around us seem bleak at the moment, history shows that they will not always be that way.

Volunteer/help others
It gives us something to optimistic about and gives us a positive role to play. May be, volunteering at seniors home or food bank gives us back the power to make our world a better place.





As we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fears, our presence automatically liberates others.


-Marianne Williamson, 1992, "a Return To Love"-

2/22/2008

What is Happiness...?

For me, happiness and unhappiness is like two opposite sides that sometimes come almost together. This time is unhappy but the next time it could be feel happy, oh my God….it’s so crazy.

Then I come to the definition that happiness and unhappiness are just opposite sides of a judgment about our situation. If I judge my situation as bad for me, that’s unhappiness. If I judge a situation as good for me, that’s happiness.


Some people use to say “I feel good emotionally “to express of how happy they are. The other people use different terms to describe what feels good for them, it might be excitement, passion, fulfillment, freedom, feeling fully alive with inspiration and joy, peaceful, capable, hopeful, satisfied and comfortable feeling. What ever you say, it just feels damn good.

Supposedly, our natural state of being is to be happy.

Jennifer Hautman said when you remove all the uncomfortable emotions we humans can experience (and they are numerous), you're left with happiness. So it's easiest to define happiness by what it is not. There is list that defines what you feeling when you are not feeling happy…

  • sad
  • down
  • jealous
  • guilt
  • angry
  • self doubt
  • depressed
  • hateful
  • fearful
  • worried
  • unsatisfied
  • bored
  • grief
  • shame
  • discontent
  • anxious
  • annoyed
  • angry
  • irritated
  • stressed
  • upset
So what is about pleasure?
They look similar but actually not. Pleasure is enjoyment of outside stimuli. We might find pleasure in buying a new house or in going on vacation or having friends over for dinner, or …having sex, or etc….what you might enjoy experiencing. Pleasure requires external stimuli for us to experience it. Happiness does not
We can be doing something we normally experience as pleasurable but not be happy.
Happiness has more deep meaning. Happiness is a belief about yourself and born from the internal workings of our own minds.


“Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be.”
- Abraham Lincoln

2/19/2008

At Bangkok International Airport




A cup of coffee in the morning
Sugar & non dairy creamer
add the taste of 25 gate of Bangkok international airport
Weather is cloudy
and an hot cup of coffee
accompany my journey home
with my cloudy heart

30.8.06
at 06.56
W.W

2/15/2008

Today is my special day....!

Today is my special day. A lot of short message come to me saying happy birthday. Yeah…happy birthday to me…..! :)

In this my special day I want to talk about Self Awareness.

I knew the first time about self awareness when I involved in training in 2004 that my friend suggest to me. That time I just felt that I didn’t know about myself, I lost myself, I felt I am useless person.…then suddenly I was in the forum that talk about self awareness….

I feel that awareness is the first step in the creation process, and it’s better that every one knowing about this for the first step to move forward.

As you grow in self awareness, you understand why you feel what you feel and why you behave as you behave. That understanding then gives you the opportunity and freedom to change those things you’d like to change about yourself and create the life you want.

I suggest you to learn about self awareness because having clarity about who you are and what you want, why you want it, empowers you to consciously and actively make those wants a reality. Otherwise, you’ll continue to get “caught up” in your own internal dramas and unknown beliefs, allowing unknown thought processes to determine your feelings and action. If you don’t understand about what you do why you do and feel what you feel is like going through your life with a stranger’s mind. So, how do you make wise decisions and choices if you don’t understand what you want why you want? It’s a difficult and chaotic way to live never knowing what this stranger is going to do next.

When we ask about who’s the expert? So, it’s you.
When we want good, solid information, we turn to the experts. Who are you going to turn to for information about yourself? Of course it’s you.

A friend, a therapist, your parents, do they know more about you than you? I guess they can’t. You live in your body and mind 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. No one’s closer to you than you! The answer are in there, may be all you’ve needed to solve your riddles is a useful question.

2/10/2008

Dried leaves

Dried leaves have been falling
between you and me…
Please read for me…. 
For my blind heart
Yesterday, now ..and future
They look same for me…
Please determine for me
One that I remember
The song that you sing
Still ringing in my ear…
And make me happy…

07.04.07
W.W

1/30/2008

no title

The grass has turn to yellow
Your face still fresh in my memory
I’ve been longing to hear your voice
Whether the time is coming
Longing is a journey itself
Never really come never really go
i sit in the stair with the picture of your smile

19.06.06
while sitting on downstairs at German Embassy, Jakarta
W.W

1/25/2008

Le Grand Voyage

I am very fond of this movie! I just share this article...but I just copied ...

This film tells about father and son. Réda is a French-Moroccan teenager due to sit for Baccalauréat. When his devout father asks Réda to accompany him on a pilgrimage to Mecca, he reluctantly agrees. However, the father insists that they travel by car. As both embark on a road trip thousands of kilometers away from southern France, the once-icy father-and-son relationship starts to thaw as both gradually come to know each other.

Along the way, the two meet several interesting characters. The son learns about Islam and why his father thought it would be preferable to make the pilgrimage by car rather than by airplane.

The route taken by the father and son goes from France through Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Syria, and Jordan before reaching Saudi Arabia. According to the Internet Movie Database, the film was actually shot in some of these countries, namely France, Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Turkey. Most scenes that were set in the middle east were shot in Morocco. However, some scenes involving the two principal actors were actually shot in Mecca. While the Saudi Arabian government had previously permitted documentary crews to shoot in Mecca, this was the first fiction feature permitted to shoot during the Hajj. The film's director, Ismael Ferroukhi, said that while shooting in Mecca, "no one looked at the camera; people didn't even seem to see the crew - they're in another world."

Whatever….but what is interesting to me is how the relationship between father and son.

Directed by Ismaël Ferroukhi
Produced by Humbert Balsan
Written by Ismaël Ferroukhi
Starring Nicolas Cazalé,
Mohamed Majd
Distributed by Pyramide Distribution
Release date(s) September 7, 2004
Running time 108 min
Language Moroccan Arabic, French

Cast
Nicolas Cazalé – Réda
Mohamed Majd – The Father
Jacky Nercessian – Mustapha
Ghina Ognianova – The old woman
Kamel Belghazi – Khalid
Atik Mohamed – Le pélerin Ahmad

A Beautiful Mind


A Beautiful Mind is a 2001 America biographical film about , John Forbes Nash, the Nobel Laureate (Economics) mathematician. The film was directed by Ron Howard and written by Akiva Goldsman. It was inspired by a bestselling,Pulitzer Prize-nominated 1998 book of the same name by Sylvia Nasar. The film starsRussel Crowe, along with Jennifer Connely, Ed Harris and Paul Bettany.


The story begins in the early years of Nash's life at Princeton University
as he develops his "original idea" that will revolutionize the world of mathematics. Later, Nash develops schizophrenia and endures paranoid and delusional episodes while painfully watching the loss and burden his condition brings on his wife and friends.

Plot

The film opens with John Nash arriving as a new graduate student at Princeton University.
He is a recipient of the prestigious Carnegie Prize for mathematics. He meets his roommate Charles, a literature student, who soon becomes his best friend. He also meets a group of other promising math and science graduate students, Martin Hansen, Sol, and Bender, with whom he strikes up an awkward friendship. Nash admits to Charles that he is better with numbers than people, and that he strives for a truly original idea for his thesis paper. He is largely unsuccessful with the women at the local bar. However, the experience is what ultimately inspires his fruitful work in the concept of governing dynamics, a theory in mathematical economics. After the conclusion of Nash's studies as a student at Princeton, he accepts a prestigious appointment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), along with his friends Sol and Bender.

Five years later while teaching a class on Calculus,
he meets Alicia, a student with whom he falls in love and eventually marries. While at Princeton, Nash runs into his former roommate Charles and meets Charles' young niece Marcee. He also encounters a mysterious Department of Defense agent, William Parcher. Nash is invited to a United States Department of Defense facility in The Pentagon to crack a complex encryption of an enemy telecommunication. Nash is able to decipher the code mentally. Parcher observes Nash's performance from above, while partially concealed behind a screen. Parcher later encourages Nash to look for patterns in magazines and newspapers, ostensibly to thwart a Soviet plot. After being chased by the Russians and an exchange of gunfire, Nash becomes increasinglyparanoid and begins to behave erratically.
After observing this erratic behavior, Alicia informs a psychiatric hospital. Later, while giving a lecture, Nash realizes that he is being watched by a hostile group of people. Although he attempts to flee, he is forcibly sedated and sent to a psychiatric facility.
Nash's internment seemingly confirms his belief that the Soviets were trying to extract information from him, and that being taken by the officials of a psychiatric facility was a kidnapping by Soviet agents. Alicia, desperate to help her husband, visits a drop-box and retrieves the never-opened "top secret" documents that Nash had delivered there. When confronted with this evidence, Nash is finally convinced that he has been hallucinating. The Department of Defense agent William Parcher and Nash's secret assignment to decode Soviet messages was in fact all a delusion. Even more surprisingly, Nash's friend Charles and his niece Marcee are also only products of Nash's mind.

After a painful series of insulin shock therapy
sessions, Nash is released on the condition that he agrees to take antipsychotic medication. However, the drugs create negative side-effects that affect his relationship with his wife and, most dramatically, his intellect. Frustrated, Nash secretly stops taking his medication, triggering a relapse of his psychosis. While bathing his infant son, Nash becomes distracted and wanders off. Alicia barely manages to save their child from drowning. When she confronts Nash, he claims that his friend Charles was watching their son. Alicia runs to the phone to call the psychiatric hospital for emergency assistance. Charles, Marcee, and Parcher all appear to John and urge him to kill his wife rather than allow her to lock him up again. After Alicia flees the house in terror, Nash steps in front of her car to prevent her from leaving. After a moment, Nash states "She never gets old" as he observes that Marcee is the same age that she was when he first met her several years before. Only then does he accept that all three of these people are, in fact, part of his psychosis.

Caught between the intellectual paralysis of the antipsychotic drugs and his delusions, Nash and his wife decide to try to live with his abnormal condition schizophrenia.
Nash attempts to ignore his hallucinations and not feed "his demons", that’s really interesting. Nash is growing older while working on his studies in the library of Princeton University. He still suffers hallucinations and periodically has to check if new people he meets are real, mentions taking newer medications, but is ultimately able to live with and largely ignore his psychotic experiences. Nash approaches his old friend and intellectual rival Martin Hansen, now head of the Princeton mathematics department, and receives permission to work out of the library and audit classes. He eventually begins teaching again. He is honored by his fellow professors for his achievement in mathematics, and goes on to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics for his revolutionary work on game theory. Later, Nash and Alicia are about to leave the auditorium in Stockholm, when John sees Charles, Marcee and Parcher standing and smiling. Alicia asks John "What's wrong?" John replies "Nothing." With that, they both leave the auditorium.

Cast
Russel Crowe as John Forbes Nash. A mathematical genius who is obsessed with finding an original idea to ensure his legacy.Jennifer Connelly as Alicia Nash. A later student of Nash who catches his interest.Paul Bettany as Charles Herman. Nash's roommate and best friend throughout graduate college.Ed Harris as William Parcher. A government agent for the Department of Defense. He enlists Nash to help fight Soviet spies.Josh Lucas as Martin Hansen. Nash's rival from his graduate school years at Princeton.Adam Goldberg as Sol. A friend of Nash's from Princeton University who is chosen, along with Bender, to work with him at MIT.Anthony Rapp as Bender. A friend of Nash's from Princeton University who is chosen, along with Sol, to work with him at MIT.Vivien Cardone as Marcee. Charles' niece.Christopher Plummer as Dr. Rosen. Nash's doctor at a psychiatric hospital.Judd Hirsch as Helinger. The head of the Princeton mathematics department.

In 2002,
the film was awarded four Oscars for Adapted Screenplay (Akiva Goldsman), Best Picture (Brian Grazer and Ron Howard), Directing (Ron Howard), and Supporting Actress (Jennifer Connelly). It also received four other nominations for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Russel Crowe), Film Editing (Mike Hill and Daniel P. hanley), Best Makeup (Greg Cannom and Colleen Callaghan) and Original Music Score (James Horner).

The 2002 BAFTAs
awarded the film Best Actor and Best Actress to Russell Crowe and Jennifer Connelly, respectively. It also nominated the film for Best Film, Best Screenplay, and the David Lean Award for Direction. At the 2002 AFI Awards, Jennifer Connelly won for Best Featured Female Actor. The film was also nominated for Movie of the Year, Actor of the Year (Russell Crowe), and Screenwriter of the Year.

Note: I just copied this article from wikipedia because I fond of this movie...

Book Review: A History of God

A History of God: The-4000 Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam is a best-selling book by author Karen Armstrong. It describes the history of the three major monotheistic religions in detail. The book has been praised for its "astounding research" and "deft storytelling." The book traces the evolution of the idea of God as interpreted by the great thinkers of the three monotheistic traditions or "God religions", Judaism, Christianity and Islam, from their roots in pagan traditions of the Middle East up to the modern day.

Karen Armstrong begins with the rise of the cult of Jahweh among the pagan deities of Canaan. She also examines the sources of the Pentateuch in the figures of the four supposed authors (or groups of authors) known as J, E, P and D. After this, she examines the philosophical careers of some of the major Israelite prophets, including Isaiah, second Isaiah, Hosea and Ezekiel and examines the contribution that each made to the Jewish conception of God. Armstrong turns next to the life and career of Jesus, including his roots in the Pharisaic tradition of Rabbi Hillel, and the his effect on the Jewish conception of God. His death and its attendant symbolism are then examined, including the interpretations various authors, most notably Paul, brought to these events. After Christ's death, the book explores the rise of trinitarianism leading to the. Nicene creed. Karen Armstrong traces the evolution of the contrasting Eastern and Western Christian conceptions of God and the trinity. The rise of Islam and its subsequent take on the nature of God are examined next with Armstrong analyzing how Shia Islam, with its' emphasis on direct political action in service to Allah, led to the 1978 Iranian Revolution. Karen Armstrong continues her narrative through the rise of philosophical and mystical traditions in Islam, Christianity, both Eastern and Western and Judaism, up until the pre-modern era. Armstrong discusses the rise of modern Christian religiosity, in particular the Protestantism of Martin Luther and John Calvin. Karen Armstrong concludes with a speculative discussion of the place of God in the post-modern world.

Note: I just copied this articles from wikipedia

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