Tuesday, June 3, 2014

IT'S BEEN A LONG TIME SINCE I LAST POST SOMETHING IN HERE.

                          Everytime I post something into my blog, I recall the days when I used to be single and be so free, have lots of time. Now, since I already have 2 kids, it's no longer the same.

                       



                                                                      See how time flies.

                 The journey of having kids, being a mother is another great experience that every woman should experience. I know some woman are less fortunate when they are trying to conceive but could not conceive. Well, what I can say to them is: "Don't Give Up!" There are a lot of ways for you and your partner to conceive. I know one of the way is to take R2. Insya-Allah definitely can. You can message me in here if you want to know more about it.

                 The journey of Pregnancy during 9 months. These stages are already mentioned in the Quran, the process of when the organs, the blood, the skin, the soul will take place etc. It is truly amazing when you have a baby inside your womb. My son, Kaysan Afraz, he love to kick when he used to be inside my womb. The feeling of your baby moving around, kicking in your tummy, make you feel so special that you know, you are responsible for this Future baby's health and development as well. You need to take supplements, eat well.. There are so many things that you should and you should not do, during pregnancy.

                  The journey of bringing up a child is also another different kind of level. The different level of stress you have to handle. But overall a Great Experience. I hope that they could grow up fast enough. Haha.
All I want is for them to grow up healthily, have good education, share their knowledge and love to people around them.

                   Hope that my post above is sweet and simple for everyone to understand and benefit from it. Insya-Allah. :) Hope to post in here soon. Bye!

Monday, July 4, 2011

The Feeling of Being a WiFE..



Well I can't Believe I'm MARRIED!

Im so happy to be able to celebrate it with My Relatives plus some of my Friends. Thank you so much for attending our wedding. I know its not much. Its not a BIG Grand wedding, but really appreciate you all for coming.

First and foremost, would like to thank my Husband for making it all happenned. Im still not use to calling him Husband or "Abang" yet. Hopefully I will adapt to it as soon as possible. Things have changed definitely after we're married. He's staying with me now in my room while waiting for us to get our own house. I hope I can be a good wife to him.

2nd, I would like to thank my Mom n Dad for letting us stay in their house. I know by right, I should be independant and should have our own place. But yet, after 3 times of applying Build-to-order (BTO) house, we didn't get it. Hopefully will get it soon after our status have changed to Married. =D

Currently, Im still trying to adapt myself, change the way I think, change my daily lifestyle that I used to do, change my Priorities and be able to be more Matured to face my MARRIAGE Life. I've heard alot of positive and negative stories about Marriage Life. I hope I can make use of all the lesson learnt into my Marriage Life so that our journey together will be Easier.

3rd, I would like to thank my parents in law, for accepting me to be part of their Family. Im glad I have a wonderful Mother-in-Law who loves me just like her own child. =D A wonderful new Family! Great to feel that way. ;)

Last but not least, Thank to my Family, my close Relatives for Supporting me all this while through my hardships in Life. Im nothing without them.

OKlah no need to be so sad now. Im glad everything went so smooth that day. Hope that this feeling will stays forever.

Will upload the pictures in Facebook & in here soon once I get the pictures. =D

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Nearing and past events.

Snapbucket

Photobucket

Snapbucket

Look how handsome and beautiful my frens are. Its gonna be my turn in 2days time. The nervousness is settin in my big head nw. So kancheong.. Its a simple event but yet i wan it to be near perfect. To the rest of my frens whom i did not invite. Im terribly sorry. I didnt forget all of u. I hope all of u be happy for me.

Till then gdbye singlehood and hello couplehood.. Hehe.. :)

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Something That Everyone should know Before or After Marriage: The Six Financial Mistakes Couples Make


IF YOU AND YOUR partner are like most couples, chances are, you fight about money. Numerous studies have shown that money is the No. 1 reason why couples argue and many of the recently divorced say those battles were the main reason why they untied the knot.
While anyone will tell you that talking about money is the first step in resolving problems, talk alone won't do the trick.

In fact, a 2004 study commissioned by SmartMoney magazine and Redbook, another Hearst publication (SmartMoney magazine and SmartMoney.com are jointly published by Dow Jones and Hearst), found that more than 70% of couples talk about money on a weekly basis. So what's the problem? "Most of us don't know how to talk about money," says Mary Claire Allvine, a certified financial planner (CFP) and co-author of "The Family CFO: The Couple's Business Plan for Love and Money."

"People tend to be emotional and reactive about money, not strategic," she says.
When emotions run high, people tend to make fiscal mistakes. Allvine's solution: Approach family finances as if you were running a business. "If you put a business metaphor into the picture, you'd be surprised how much more methodical people are."
And so, to help make your next state-of-the-financial-union meeting run smoothly, we've assembled a collection of the six most common mistakes couples make when handling money issues, along with some advice on how to correct them. Do yourself a favor: Make sure all board members review this before you talk.

1. Merging the Finances

The Wrong Approach: United we stand, divided we bank.
The Right Approach: It's yours, mine and ours.
One of the first issues newlyweds face is how to handle their finances. "Couples struggle about this one," says Ruth Hayden, author of "For Richer, Not Poorer: The Money Book for Couples." Should you merge everything you have and earn into one joint account, or should you maintain individual accounts and open a joint one for household expenses?
SmartMoney magazine's survey found that the majority of couples (64%) put all of their money in joint accounts, while 14% kept everything in separate accounts, and 18% had both. "Married couples should try different ways of handling the money to see what works for them," says Ginita Wall, CFP and co-founder of the Women's Institute for Financial Education.
For many newlyweds, the right choice may be somewhere in the middle. "You should have some autonomy money, I should have some autonomy money, and we need to learn how to practice being a couple together with our money," says Hayden.
The advice is different when one spouse enters the marriage with a high debt load. (See our next point below.) But assuming you both have a clean bill of fiscal health, finding a way to blend finances comfortably without feeling like big brother is watching every financial move you make can dramatically cut down on fights. Over time once kids and mortgages come into play many couples find that merging all their finances is simply easier. But unless you're both comfortable with the idea, there's no need to rush things.

2. Dealing With Debt

The Wrong Approach: Your debt will ruin us; you must find a way to pay it off.
The Right Approach: It's our debt: Let's decide how to pay it off together.
Of all the issues that spark a fight, debt ranked No. 1 for most (37%) of SmartMoney's survey respondents. "That's one of the places where couples have most disagreement," says Hayden. Couples often don't see eye to eye on how much debt is too much and which kind of debt is bad.
Compounding the problem: in many cases, one spouse enters the marriage with a lot more debt than the other. "We saw that more frequently than we anticipated when we began interviewing couples [for our book]," says Allvine. "It's almost unavoidable. Even if you manage to get to your 20s or 30s without debt, you hook up with a partner who's in debt."
Unfortunately, all bets are off should you get divorced. For more on that, click here. But even with separate finances, your spouse's credit score will affect your ability to get joint credit. "It's a public [credit reporting] system, and what you do will absolutely affect the other," says Hayden.
For those couples not yet married, it may be worthwhile to think about a prenup, just to make sure that assets that one spouse brings into a marriage will always be protected from the other spouse's creditors.
But those who've already tied the knot should find a way to pay down the debts as quickly as possible, and without any late payments. For help with this, visit our Debt Management center.

3. Keeping Spending in Check

The Wrong Approach: I'm a saver and you're a spender. That's the problem.
The Right Approach: We both spend, but on different things. Let's budget.
Your husband keeps nagging at you that you spend too much but then comes home one day with a huge smile and surprise! a 70-inch flat-screen plasma TV. He happily explains how he sealed the "terrific" deal. You're definitely not impressed.
Sound familiar? Spending is the second most common reason why couples fight, according to SmartMoney's survey. What usually happens, explains Hayden, is that one spouse gets labeled the "spender" and is blamed for skimming all the money out the checkbook. In most cases, however, that's not accurate. "Studies show that men and women spend the same, they just spend differently," she says. Women usually take care of most of the family's daily expenses: the groceries, the bills, clothes for the family while men spend on large purchases like plasma TVs, cars or computers. "If you counted up your money, you would be spending about the same," Hayden says. "But because you spend so differently, the perception is different."
The solution here is to identify the real problem, Hayden says namely, that you're both spending money on a tight budget. Then sit down and decide how much money you'll allocate to the "dailyness" of life, and how much to save for the big purchases. "What we're trying to do is get the 'Surprise!' out of it," she says.
4. Investing Wisely

The Wrong Approach: You're a risk-taker, I'm risk-averse. Hands off our retirement savings.

The Right Approach: Let's think in time frames and take as much risk as our goals allow.
SmartMoney's survey showed that when it comes to investing, men are more willing to take financial risk than their wives (62% for men vs. 19% for women). But fighting about how much risk to take with your investments based on how you feel about risk doesn't do much good. Rather, sit down and talk about your investment goals and time frames, says Christine Larson, co-author of "The Family CFO". "You could be completely risk-averse with money you need for next year, but you can be a huge risk-taker with money you're saving for retirement," she says. If that doesn't work for you, seek the help of a broker or a financial planner.
Whatever your investment choices, review your investments together at least once a year and make sure that, overall, your portfolios balance each other out, suggests Wall. "I have one couple they're in their 70s. She likes to take risks and it scares him to death, so they do invest themselves separately," says Wall. "We let her take risk with part of the money, but not all of the money."
Use our asset-allocation tool to help determine the best way to allocate your portfolio. Our retirement, college-planning and short-term-investing departments can help you save for specific goals.

5. Keeping Money Secrets

The Wrong Approach: What my spouse doesn't know will never hurt him/her.
The Right Approach: Big financial secrets can ruin a marriage.
Among Hayden's clients is a family that first came to see her when the wife found out that her husband had lost a lot of money trading commodities. The real problem? She didn't know his little secret. "It got them in horrible trouble!" Hayden says. "He's very steady, he's a fabulous doctor, he's a great dad...but he had this other part of him that's pure gambler, and it almost brought the marriage down."
Will you be shocked to hear that most couples do keep money secrets from each other? While secret trading or gambling may not be that common, our survey saw 36% of men and 40% of women confess that they had at one time or another lied to their spouse about the price of something they bought. "It's the most common secret," says Wall.
Is it a big problem? Depends on how you deal with it. "Most people also lie to themselves about what they're spending, just as they lie to themselves about how much they're eating," says "The Family CFO" author Allvine. And let's face it, if your wife saved up the extra $100 for her "only $30" Givenchy scarf from her monthly mad money, it's not that big a deal. But if your spouse has been squirreling away thousands of dollars, it may be time to seek the help of a family finance professional. "If this happened in a company," Allvine says, "they'd call it embezzlement."

6. Emergency Planning

The Wrong Approach: We're fine. We don't need to worry about money.
The Right Approach: Anything could happen. Let's plan for emergencies.
Even if you have a great career, earn a comfortable living and don't have to worry about debt, you could find yourself woefully unprepared for an emergency. "Couples today are under so much stress that anything could tip them," says Hayden. An unexpected pink slip, an accident, illness anything could throw you off track if you don't have an emergency savings account.
"With the couples we interviewed, we found a tendency to panic [in an unexpected emergency] that could lead to the wrong decisions," says Larson. Bottom line? All couples should have an emergency stash of three to six months' worth of living expenses held in a safe place, like a money-market fund. Simply knowing it's there can reduce stress, since you know you're not walking a fine line between comfort and catastrophe.

Thanks to http://www.smartmoney.com/ for this wonderful information. =D

Monday, May 30, 2011

Compatibility

My 1st attempt writing on our blog. The post below was written by my beautiful wife to be sharing about Marriage in Islam.

Im gonna sidetrack a bit.. Hehe.. I dont usually believe in horoscopes. But somehow i went thru google and "recee" about Chineses Zodiac compatibility between me(monkey) and my wife to be(rat). So here is the "FICTION" about our compatibility. HEHE!!

h1>Chinese Zodiac Compatibility : Rat and Monkey


Author: Astrojasta.com


Excellent
Both the Rat and Monkey are very strong and competitive personalities. Both are clever and crafty and have an eye for opportunities. There is a lot of passion in this relationship. The Rat likes Monkey's games and talent for wit. The Monkey likes Rat's energy and the need for security. There is so much of explosive chemistry in this relationship. The Monkey however eventually outwits the Rat



Rat Personality
The Chinese say that it is an honor to be born in the year of the Rat because Rat people are have a remarkable sense of vision. They can anticipate problems and quickly develop a strategy to deal with it even before the problem arrives. Because of this ability Rats are highly respected. It will only take the Rat less than a day to gel with a work place when it takes other people days or even weeks to get adjusted. Because of their highly perceptive nature Rats make good leaders than employees. Rats almost fit into any kind of profession.



Rats do not confide in people although they are very chatty. Though they exude a very calm air they can be very nervous people inside. Rats have a tendency to collect kick-knacks and a Rat person’s house will sure to be filled with a lot of things.



Rats are not very romantic people. But when they are with a highly compatible partner they can be very intense and passionate.



Rats always save for a rainy day. Rats are not much into the “a la mode” concept. Their homes may not be luxurious but it will be filled with warmth. Rats are very domestic and take very good care of their family.



Monkey Personality
Monkeys are curious energetic people who cannot stay bored for too long. Give a Monkey a boring book, they will convert it to a very interesting play and may invite friends to watch them perform for free! Because of their high energy nature monkeys are the center of attention in many parties. They are also like to play pranks on people and may unintentionally end up hurting someone. And they may expect you to heal your hurt yourself because Monkeys do not have the capacity to put themselves in another person’s shoes and display empathy. But this does not mean that they are not caring people.



Money to money is something that needs to be used to live life. With their numerous hobbies and passion for life they may end up spending a lot. Emotionally Monkeys are slightly insecure and they also show their emotions. When they are happy or sad people around them usually know what mood a Monkey usually is in.



Monkeys are very good problem solvers and will go all the way to help someone with their homework. They are strong-minded thinkers and analyze a problem in half the time and would charge double the cost. Because they are very intelligent they can adapt to any career.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Finally our BIG day is getting nearer and nearer.

Countdown

Finally the day is getting nearer and nearer. We're getting nervous each day.
So far our preparation for our big day is a smooth one.

We really hope everyone that we invited in facebook will turn up and celebrate with us. We're really sorry for those who are not invited, don't worry, it's not that we have forgotten about you, we just wanted a small mini wedding. But don't worry, we will post all our wedding photos in here and maybe we could meet up again to catch up on things. =D

Anyway, here's some information about the goodness of Marriage in Islam:

Marriage in Islam is an important institution that has deep effects on society. Marriage is a bond containing rights and duties that each person, male or female, should preserve, protect and fulfill. Both the husband and wife, have certain rights and duties. Allah said, what translated means

"And live with them honorably."[4:19].
 
Each of them must fulfill his or her duties for the marriage to succeed. Allah said, what translated means,
 
"And they (women) have rights (over their husbands) similar (to those of their husbands) over them as regards to what is reasonable, but men have a degree (of responsibility) over them.) [2:228].
 
Women must fulfill their duties towards their husbands. Men must treat their wives fairly and fulfill their duties towards them, too. A happy marriage is assured if both the husband and the wife preserve each others' rights. A marriage that does the opposite is a miserable one.