Tag Archives: true character

Starbucks with Cecilia Epilogue: So 25 Years Ago

4 Apr

Episode 1: Running Away From Your Problems
Episode 2: A Millionaire Affair
Episode 3: Romance in Marriage
Episode 4: An Undoable Mistake
Episode 5: The Cost of Negative Energy

Looking to the past by ~Butterfly-HC

Looking to the past by ~Butterfly-HC

Cecilia and I didn’t exchange many words on the way to her studio. The positive energy that was previously there between us had been drained away by the negative energy of her fiance. Both of us had things on our mind, and it prevented us from talking to each other.

During her phone conversation, Cecilia did her best to defend me as a friend who is truly just a friend. She tried to comfort the anger and jealousy of her fiance by reassuring him there is nothing between her and I. Cecilia also mentioned that he didn’t know what I was like, and if he did he would understand that I am really no threat to their relationship.

But Cecilia also mentioned I didn’t fit with any of her other friends. I suppose she said this because her fiance might have suggested or asked why we couldn’t meet up in the company of her other friends. Her statement made me think about the truth to that question: Why are Cecilia and I friends?

Lonely excitement

When I think about it, her fiance does have a point: Cecilia and I share almost nothing in common, and we come from almost completely different backgrounds. The only similarity we shared was a moment in 2001 when we were in the same room, doing the same thing together. Is that a strong enough bond to justify a friendship?

I’m quite convinced I like seeing Cecilia not because I have a secret agenda with her. I like having conversations with her because I believe there’s much value to be created. The synergy of her character with mine, often results in inspiration good for the both of us.

But sometimes I wonder whether Cecilia doesn’t feel the same way, and the excitement is mine alone. Her fiance might be right, in that she and I don’t have a strong enough reason to see each other. And for a moment, I believed that thought.

Mrs. Cecilia

It made me upset, knowing that I won’t see her just as a friend anymore. Cecilia told me that we might not be able to meet up without her fiance – soon to be husband – there with us. She politely asked that I understand and I replied that of course I do.

On the drive back, I thought about why this was irritating me. Then I found out it was because I was accused of being a man I wasn’t. Her fiance’s response was as if I was a man who might try to steal her from him; and that made me furious.

Then I realized, I don’t have time for his childish behavior. I don’t have time to be involved in his game of jealousy and self-satisfaction. The drama their playing, is so 25 years ago for me; and that’s what made me upset.

Still, I hate missing out on an opportunity to create value.

Is Every Woman Beautiful?

10 Mar

Must beauty hide behind the sadness of a tree by Lemuel Cantos

Must beauty hide behind the sadness of a tree by Lemuel Cantos

Last weekend I attended the AXIS 2010 International Java Jazz Festival [1]. I hadn’t planned on coming before, because I felt I didn’t appreciate jazz enough to justify the time and money for a jazz festival. But because Diane Warren [2] came to perform, and me being a musician and all, I decided to come anyway during the busy and jam packed Saturday night.

One of the bands who performed were Tika and the Dissidents [3] – a local indie band whom I heard from Adit, my guitarist. I first heard them when Adit and I were traveling to Bandung together, and he brought their CD. I chose to see them at Java Jazz because their schedule was precisely before Diane Warren, and I wanted to know how they sounded like live.

During one of their songs, the vocalist – Tika – said the inspiration behind it was the thought “every woman is beautiful”. She said every woman is beautiful in her own way, and guys should know that too. Of course, the audience responded with a cheer (or at least most of the female audience), but standing at the back line I said to myself I want to contest that theory:

IF every woman is beautiful, then it should also be TRUE that every man is handsome. Is this correct?

The permutations of beauty

Think about that for a moment: is every man handsome? I think accepting the belief that every woman is beautiful is far easier than accepting every man is handsome. Because history and society has had its share of mass murderers, corruptors, terrorists, kidnappers, violent husbands who are largely the male population. Yet from the logical relation, it should hold true, that ALL men are handsome.

IF you disagree and say NOT ALL men are handsome, how can ALL women be beautiful? What’s the difference between women and men such that ALL women are beautiful but NOT ALL men are handsome? It’s like we’re going against a law of nature when we make that statement.

Therefore, I think NOT ALL men are handsome, and NOT ALL women are beautiful. There are four combinations in total, based on beautiful inside and beautiful outside:

1. Women who are beautiful outside, not beautiful inside
2. Women who are not beautiful outside, beautiful inside
3. Women who aren’t either
4. Women who are both

The same also holds true for men.

The four pillars of beauty

This writing might make you think I’m a chauvinist [4], but I can assure you I’m not. The reason I’m writing this is because I want to ask the truth behind our beliefs. I feel the idea “every woman is beautiful” functions more to console the feelings of women who feel they aren’t beautiful, and gives women a justification to NOT do the hard work to BECOME a beautiful woman.

Beauty is a state of success, therefore it demands hard work and high commitment – whether you’re striving for inner beauty or outer beauty. To say that we are all already beautiful inside is mostly a fallacy – the fact is we all have our ugly sides that still need to be educated. Don’t let the idea make you think that you don’t have any work to do – on the contrary if you have the idea then there’s much work to do.

The conclusion: No, NOT every woman is beautiful, and NOT every man is handsome. Everyone needs to put in their hard work to be beautiful. This includes studying to be articulate in an intelligent way, exercising to be healthy and young in a physical way, experiencing enough adversity to be strong in an emotional way, and understanding grace to be humble in a spiritual way.

The question is then: are you beautiful?

Maybe you’re just pretty.

[1] Official Java Jazz International website. I share my thoughts about going there HERE (also includes pictures!)
[2] Diane Warren website. During the concert, she only appeared on stage twice; the rest of the show was to promote her new project Due Voci
[3] Tika and the Dissidents on MySpace. Turns out they have quite a number of fans (and Tika, if you’re reading this I’d like to know your thoughts)
[4] Check Wikipedia for the definition of chauvinist
[5] Photograph by Lemuel Cantos

Starbucks with Cecilia #2: A Millionaire Affair

7 Mar

Popular Affair by ~charlie45

Popular Affair by ~charlie45

Read the pilot episode here

Cecilia and I continued the topic about having affairs as she took out another menthol cigarette from the twelve-pack. She thought it was a problem specific to a certain group of people, but I told her that isn’t the case. This problem hits all layers of society from all backgrounds of educations; from the ordinary factory worker to the multi-platinum best-selling Hollywood blond.

I told her the story of a friend of mine who works as a shift manager in a garment factory. He told me at one time one of his subordinates jokingly asked him why he didn’t have an affair with one of the lady workers. Of course, this made my friend tickled to the bone from the sheer silliness of the question, but it was an honest suggestion from his coworker.

Cecilia looked slightly surprised when I told her even the simple people have domestic problems, including cheating wives or husbands. For the uninitiated, that may come as a surprise. But the truth is this: the problems remain the same throughout all layers – the difference is merely in the style and exposure it gets.

The next best thing

There is a happiness mentality that starts with the sentence, “If only I had …”. But anybody who has ever worked towards that blank sentence finds out what they sought for in the beginning didn’t bring them the happiness they expected. It’s an endless rat race as we chase down the next high, constantly searching for that sense of fulfillment but only achieving a fleeting moment of success.

Humans are very hard to satisfy, using external objects. The simple folk dream of city life, the city folk dream of luxury living, and the high rollers dream of riding the wave of the next big hit. What’s on the mind of the simple folk, is also on the mind of the privileged individuals. If a humble cab driver can have an affair, so can a millionaire have an affair.

Which raises the question: what is the real reason behind an affair? If it’s money, then the millionaires should be living happy marriages. Instead we may even see more cases of infidelity in the upper class.

Independent inside

There is no guarantee from anything that comes outside of yourself. The next big thing we think we’ll be the answer to all our problems is not. Instead, it may just be the source of our next set of problems.

I told Cecilia how she needed to be independent inside if she is ever to reach the happiness and clarity she so much desires. As long as we still rely on external objects, we will never achieve a permanent state of intrinsic security and will always be on the run. As long as we never love from the inside, affairs will always be an open option as a place to run away to.

Sometimes people prefer the drama and romance. But the happiness isn’t there. The happiness lies in the domain where we take full responsibility of our relationships, our wealth, and our character.

And the next song: #4 of 26 – “Hey Shorty” (Read the story here)

Hey Shorty by Endy Daniyanto