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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Skirts and Daugthers

Wonderwomancostume
Conversation between father and 4-yr old daughter (translated from Tagalog):

Bettina: Daddy, I want to wear mini skirt.

Me: No.

Bettina: I want to wear mini skirt, it has cute designs on it.

Me: No, wear short pants, it's better.

Bettina: No.

Me: No mini skirt.

Bettina: No. Mini skirt!

(Argument between dad and daughter goes on for five minutes or so. Mommy comes to the rescue and selects a more appropriate attire for the daughter.)

Whew!

I now dread the day ten years later when me and Bettina will get into the same argument again.

Mommy to the rescue, please? :-)

~Florent Flora

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Answers to Prayers


It has been said God has three possible answers to our prayers:

YES!
“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.” (Matthew 7:7)
NOT YET.
"Be still and know that I am God..." (Psalm 46:10)
I HAVE SOMETHING BETTER...
"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." (Jeremiah 29:11)
      As a child, remember that you could almost ask anything from your parents and they would do their best to grant your request?  We can have this same confidence when we approach God, our Father, with our prayers: "This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us -- whatever we ask -- we know that we have what we asked of Him." (1 John 5:14)

      Charles Stanley, senior pastor of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta and founder of In Touch Ministries, discusses more about this in "The Key to Answered Prayer"

      Whatever God's answer is to our prayers, underlying each and every answer is the silent promise, “I am here.”  Our Heavenly Father enjoys giving to us because He loves us and wants us to experience intimacy with Him — the best gift we can ever have.
~Florent Flora
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Sharing time: Pastor Joby Soriano from Christ's Commission Fellowship testifies of God's extreme faithfulness in his life and tells of his touching story on how God answered his prayer in this video:

Experience Intimacy With God by Pastor Joby Soriano, February 12, 2012

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Perfect Imperfection

      I always admire people who do things perfectly -- the singer who hits the right notes in a song, the gymnast who executes a daring aerial maneuver, the leader delivering an effective motivational speech to move thousands of followers to action, the chef who cooks up a gastronomic delight, etc. -- things that no ordinary mortal can do.

      What many people do not know is that their path to perfection was replete with mistakes and mostly learning how *not* to do things so that they can see and learn to tread the narrow path to perfection. Even Thomas Edison, the great inventor, learned how not to do a light bulb 10,000 times before he finally perfected his design.

      As for me, I know I'm not perfect and having a few mistakes here and there is just normal. The time I see myself not making any mistakes at all is a cause for worry. This means I'm not productive enough, I'm not risking enough, I'm not learning enough, and I'm not living life to the fullest.

      Being the personality that I am, I would rather accomplish 100 things with one miss than play it safe and accomplish only 10 things with zero misses. This workhorse attitude puts me at risk of making more mistakes than the average person, simply because I also accomplish more.  Sadly, there are people in this world who take pleasure in pointing out people's mistakes (as if it makes them any better than the rest), taking every opportunity to bash a person and remind them of their past mistakes. I always wish these types of people would disappear forever from the face of this earth whenever they do their thing on me. It makes no sense for me to go down to their level to fight back so I just ignore them and move on.

      Interestingly though, now that I have thought about it, I too am guilty of this people-bashing every time I check on my eldest daughter’s school work (she’s 4 years old and in nursery right now).  I point out and focus on her 1 mistake out of 50 items instead of congratulating her for doing 98% correct.  I know it helps to point out her error so that she'll know and learn, but the primary focus should be reinforcing her strong belief in herself that she did very well in school, that she can do better with a little more effort, and that she knows I believe in her.

      My teachers, bosses, and even business mentors were not able to drill this down into me successfully despite their efforts -- to focus on the positive side of things (I was really stubborn to their wisdom-sharing). But in one fell swoop, a small child instantly taught me that very important lesson complete with a practical example to permanently nail it down in my head.

      Looking beyond the negative and focusing only on what is good... That's actually the "biblical way" to tackle these types of situations:

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"Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things." (Philippians 4:8)

      Indeed, perfection is good.

      But imperfection... and seeing beyond that imperfection... is absolutely better.

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Trivia: Navajo rug makers always include a small imperfection in their rug called a “spirit string” to allow the “spirit” that they have put into the work to escape and because only God is perfect. If it ain’t imperfect, it ain’t perfect.

~florent flora

Monday, February 13, 2012

The Greatest

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Image source: Wikipedia

“And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is LOVE.” (1 Corinthians 13:13)

Happy Hearts day to Everyone!

~florent flora

Friday, February 10, 2012

Perpetual Motion

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Here’s one cool optical illusion that is sure to drive you nuts… the gears seem to be moving and they won’t stop!

Sorry for the headache :-)

~florent flora

Monday, February 6, 2012

Two Become One



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Finally, I’ve successfully mirrored my Posterous blog to my Wordpress blog using Wordpress’ “import” feature. My blog now exists in two different sites.


I’ve also configured Posterous to autopost to Wordpress so all posts to my Posterous blog will get posted automatically to my Wordpress blog. Posterous will still be my publishing platform of choice due to its nifty email feature (not that Wordpress does not have this feature, but I find Posterous to be more user friendly and I can also selectively post to Posterous only, or include autoposting to Wordpress, Twitter, and even Facebook. How’s that for “nifty”?)


The Wordpress theme also needs some major tweaking, but I’d leave it as is for now until I find time to tweak it to my liking.


~florent flora




Thursday, February 2, 2012

The CIO Challenge: Why 2012 is decision time for CIOs


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Image source: Wikipedia


 


This is an extract from TechRepublic’s CIO Insights blog:



…More than any other senior exec, CIOs are facing huge amounts of change to their jobs this year, making 2012 a time of big decisions for smart CIOs. A few reasons why:




  • Consumerisation and the bring-your-own-device culture mean everyone in the workplace considers themselves to be an IT expert, challenging the CIO’s ability to control the equipment used to access corporate systems.



  • The rise of cloud computing means that the days of lazily presiding over an empire of servers are numbered, with the result that CIOs have less physical control over their core infrastructure than ever before.



  • IT budgets remain flat - if you’re lucky- but at the same time CEOs are demanding that CIOs prove their claim that IT can drive more profitable businesses.




This is especially relevant for me in my “upgraded” role in my company as I help the CTO support our company in achieving its goals and targets. The pressure is on everyone, but it’s a good pressure that will certainly bring out the best in every person.


Full text can be found here: Why 2012 is decision time for CIOs


~florent flora