Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Decorating with low budget!




Good ideas with frugal decorating can be made possible with a low budget. Recently, I started learning the craft of making roses with streamers, the kind you use to decorate for parties. My passion of making paper roses had gotten OTT (Over the Top) when I discovered how fun it could be to make them for my loved ones.
On a boring day where I was just idling at home, inspiration hit me, and I decided to venture out to a 99-cent store to look for 6 identical white vase.
When I got home, I started to make 6 roses with red streamers. As you can see from the images, the result is pretty dramatic! Once again, it prooves that one does not have to sacrifice style and good looks in order to stick to a budget :-)

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Staying beautiful without spending a fortune

In the words of Audrey Hepburn, she gave in her pearls of wisdom for maintaining a beautiful soul, she was often quoted as saying, ‘to improve your smile, speak kind words to all, ‘to maintain a good body, feed the hungry’, ‘to improve your skin, feel the soul of a disappointed person, your kind words will make his heart lighter, allowing yourself to feel good, and the good feeling makes you more lively, ultimately making you glow. Having hectic lifestyles, it is almost impossible to follow all that is mentioned above, I think the safest and most efficient manner to look beautiful would be to feel beautiful. In short, feel beautiful, to look beautiful, as no amount of growth hormones, meal replacements and healthy eating can ever show their results to an unhappy soul. Botox=$500, facelift-$300, Liposuction-$2,500, Positive Thinking=Priceless :-) Stay happy, feel happy, and you will be naturally beautiful from the inside out!



Monday, June 2, 2008

Polish stainless steel with half price


Currently, I live in an apartment where it is has an open kitchen with stainless steel panels. To most people, it definitely looks stylish due to its uniform look. However, try returning home seeing streaks of stains on the panels, it is not a pretty sight. My boyfriend who is more of a perfectionist than me had attempted to clean it with stainless steel cleaning pads, but it did not work like it was supposed to. Both of us knew if the stubborn streaks remained, it would definitely drive us up the walls. One day, he came up with a brilliant idea, he purchased a bottle of baby oil, and poked a needle-like hole on the tip of the bottle. He poured a tiny bit of it on a piece of paper towel, and started polishing the stainless steel panels and other appliances. Voila! It works like magic :-) No more streaks, it is magical!

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Half Identity


Being an Asian foreigner in Seattle, it is challenging to be aware of my own assumptions, values and biases. The mainstream tends to think that someone like me should be passive or perhaps less articulate. Struggling to find my identity in this society has made me wonder what my cultural identity is. The ironic part is the further I move away from my native country to the United States, the closer I am to finding my cultural heritage. Often times, I am caught between both sides; trying to assimilate to be part of the melting pot has left my own community thinking that I am not retaining my roots. On the other hand, if I were not to conform to social changes, I will be accused of not being able to adapt. It is never a win-win situation, but I guess that is because I am on the crossroads of both Eastern and Western cultures. I just want to be accepted as who I am. Personally, I feel that if an individual is really committed to a rigorous respect for difference, whether in terms of cultural identity or political options, then difference is not an optional extra. In political and practical terms, diversity costs. Yet for me as a hybrid of both east and west whose culture is not completely mainstream has encountered the feeling that if I want to be different in any way, I may be a nuisance. While adapting to cope with my cultural identity, there is an absence of a dynamic of creative confrontation, of the dialectical process through which ideas are opposed to one another and something new and creative emerges in the interactive process that this entails. I am aware that I can reclaim or retain my cultural identity from the far right if I emphasize the diversity of my own origins, not its alleged unitary nature. I think that a truly transformed cultural identity should celebrate all cultures, including the dominant one, within an agreed, common, rights-based framework. Minorities within the dominant culture who feel ourselves to be excluded can join forces with other minority cultures. All of this will require meaningful power-sharing, across classes as well as across communities. This means, paradoxically, that I must be more willing to empower and support my own critics on the margins, creating in the process a self where different cultural identities and also profound differences of view are acceptable. But can I truly be me? Using Shakespeare’s famous line, “To Thine ownself be true,” suggests that an individual only has a single self to which he or she can be truthful. But can we be totally truthful to ourselves, and the people around us? Like everything else, there is no definite answer, simply because the truth is somewhere in between, just like half and half :-)