Monday, January 25, 2010

I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.

From What the eyes cannot see

There are things in life that impact us - be it lessons taught or lessons learned. But as we go about our circadian, these priceless nuggets lose its meaning and is soon forgotten. So, to honor this timeless poem that i heard while watching a movie today - I will post it in my blog:


INVICTUS
William Ernest Henley. 1849–1903

Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the Pit from pole to pole,

I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud,

Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the horror of the shade,

And yet the menace of the years
Finds, and shall find me, unafraid.

It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,

I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

TIME

From What the eyes cannot see

What is it about the random but steady ripples of time?
That even the renowned Little Prince
Spoke about life through rhythm and rhyme
Which my thoughts bedazzle

Upon the heavens the stars stand as witnesses
Of the first walk from the first men in Africa
To its other quests bringing the peak of ruthlessness
And the greatest of chivalry all at once

Sublime is it to see the ticking of every clock
Rising and setting - the passing of each day
Our shadows bouncing to and fro along with our epochs
As we shun the important ones for thingamajigs

Ancient natural philosophers see the water and waves
Others conceive the eternal and immutable
Many believe in a God that saves
But did this really serve well in our daily ways?

Everyone agrees that time is linear
And yet man continues to commit looping mistakes
Do learning curves form a loop too?
Irrational thinking for a rational being

Friday, January 8, 2010

Zonked Out

My girlfriend and I went out to the Parkmall last night, it was a cold and wind-chill filled evening, and decided to check out some food shops where we can get some pica. So we then proceeded to finding a nice place and after a good tramp around area we chose to dip our taste buds with something that wasn’t familiar to us. And Since there were a few new resto’s in the vicinity, we threw the dart while blindfolded and picked one.

This restaurant has an above average façade, a huge LCD TV on the inside and had paintings all over the area and had a small terrace right on the second floor – quite a good choice if you ask me. We sat down, had a quick glance at their menu and in less than 20 seconds, we knew were in for a poignant surprise.

We thought we had the concept all figured out with the manner in which the entire store packaging was presented but apparently their dishes said otherwise. We stared, browsed, got confused, read, reread, flicked and flicked some more from one type of food to the other while trying so hard to understand – and I guess see the point, of what is being offered. They had such a myriad of food categories (pasta, appetizers, soup, desserts, beef, pork, vegetarian and etc) to choose from but only had so little options to choose from each (probably had three soup choices and four pasta choices and three desserts and etc). What’s worse is that you cannot even identify if it’s supposed to showcase American, Pinoy, Italian or whatever cuisine – and it’s not even right to tag it as Fusion simply because it just did not have any identity. It sure does make say, “What were they thinking?”

This ushers us to the simple fact that strengths should be developed further before weaknesses are to be treated. Here is a bistro that wanted so hard to impress its diners with the range of choices (or the lack thereof) that they present to them but only had very few offerings – talk about spreading yourself too thin!

Without question, it was clearly evident that this restaurant was run by an amateur. Not that I am claiming to be a restaurant guru myself, but I felt that it was not a well thought of investment especially that you would already be zonked out just to put up the business. Maybe I am spiteful to these restaurants where I can see huge and exciting opportunities for growth. But their millionaire owners just didn’t care enough or do not know enough where to strike them and instead they just pack-up and leave.

The most successful food places start with an attractive concept, this word is what encapsulates the place and in turn helps gravitate more and more customers to you. And when the business concept is poor, it will still gravitate customers but towards the opposite direction – away from you.

Oh well, I wish that store all the best, but with how it stands, I doubt if it will survive the next 6 months.