Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 January 2008

New Year's trip

My annual new year's journey has just ended. As usual, we were heading to Boja, Semarang. The last trip was adventurous. It had been raining heavily for days (as if somebody was flushing the toilet up there). Flood came. Ngawi was isolated. We had to travel through 'alternative road' to get to Sragen without entering Ngawi. Long and tiresome journey. Added to that, it was not easy to find gasoline for our car. The themes of this particular trip were: heavy rain, flood, and searching for pertamax).

Saturday, 22 December 2007

2007

For many, the end of the year is time to reflect and make new year's resolution.

Looking back, 2005 was the year when I learnt about loss, separation, and death, the true meaning of I'll see you again someday, if not on this earth, then in heaven. The year of 2006 was the bottom of the bottom, sort to say, the year where everything seemed to fall apart. However, it's not the end of the world. In 2007 I learnt to live, to dream, and to hope again, time to start planning my future.

Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead. (Hayo ... kutipan dari mana?)

Friday, 21 December 2007

Holiday!

Christmas holiday has arrived ... Merry Christmas, everyone! I hope you enjoy your holiday.

Monday, 18 June 2007

Holiday -- Tipang

I'm having a month of holiday.

In the beginning of this month, my parents and I went to North + West Sumatra. As some of you probably know, my grandfather came from North Sumatra. The thing is, he went away from home in 1914. Everybody thought this teenager was dead. Imagine their surprise when 40 years later he was on his way back, with his wife and his two oldest sons.

My father was 6 years old when his father brought him there. None of him and his siblings has ever gone to the village since.

Last year, when I was on business trip to North Sumatra, I took extra days and tried to retrace my grandfathers footstep. I found Tipang, the village where he came from, surprising the entire family. I also found our relative there, a second cousin of mine.

Was it easy to find Tipang? For our family, it was like telling an Indonesian who has never been in NL to go to Matenweg in NL (without mentioning that it is in Enschede!) ... but when I was in Balige, I found out that it was as if you happen to be in UT and asked where Matenweg is.

Tipang is situated by Lake Toba, in the non-touristic part of the lake. The scenery is very beautiful (forget Parapat).

I must confess that the road was not good though. At a certain point we had to turn around because it was not passable. Imagine turning the car in a road where its width is the same as the car's, the mountain is on your left, a cliff is on your right. :p And after it, we found 3 buffaloes on the road (yeah, lagi berkubang!).

The road condition was worse than last year. My parents were muted, praising God that their daughter was save on her adventure last year.

So, finally we reached Tipang in the afternoon. The waterfall, the rice field, the lake, they're still as beautiful as I remembered. This time, I brought my parents ... and history was made. :-)

Tuesday, 8 May 2007

Pepper Butt

Pepper butt is a term used by a friend of mine to describe people who cannot sit still -- always want to travel.

I kinda realised that the term can be applied to me. My doses of travelling had been multiplied during my stay in Europe -- wanting to see as much as I could within the limited time I had. (Though I didn't aim to get a degree in travelling like some people I know.)

Having back in Indonesia, I must adapt to working condition that only allow 12 days of leave annually. Within this 12 days I must allocate Christmas and New Year holiday with my family. It doesn't give me a lot of time left. I am currently as pepper butt as I can be.

A friend of mine reminded that I had indeed travelled around New Year -- I claimed that it doesn't count, as we were travelling mostly to the area I've known before. Later I realised that last year I had my adventure in North Sumatra, where I retraced my ancestor's path, and found my root. A physical and spiritual journey, so indeed I had travelled.

I've been planning a week of travelling next month and I want more. What can I say other than having a pepper-butt?