BEWARE.

CAUTION ALL PERSONAL PHOTOGRAPHS ARE EMBEDED WITH TRACKING DEVICE PLEASE DO NOT COPY AND RISK BEING EXPOSED TO GERMS AND DESTROYING YOUR COMPUTER/HANDPHONE.BY ORDER OF ME THE OWNER OF THE BLOG AND PHOTOS.THANK YOU FOR UNDERSTANDING THE NOTICE.

Monday, October 11, 2010

ISW SEOUL KOREA 6TH OCT - 8TH OCT 2010 PHOTOS

Sarina at Incheon airport before boarding for home 9th Oct 2010.

With Mr Kim Ki Woo starter KRA Seoul wearing suit at Seoul racepark.

At Famous highway rest stop, temperature here is nice and cool around 10degrees.

At Rest Stop highway to JANGSU

My opening at ISW2010.

At ISW2010 with Wuhan China starter Mr Tang Lu.

Welcoming speech by Mr Ko Chief Starter KRA and opening of the ISW2010.

Participants of ISW2010 with our host at VIP conference room 6th floor Luckyville Seoul racepark.

A discussion prior to Trials at Seoul racetrack.

Early track work at Seoul before trials.

A toast to the success of ISW2010 and to new friendship at a dinner hosted by KRA graced by ED and GM with the participants.

participants of ISW2010 at a slide presentation of JANGSU stud and training centre by Moon Jaho,Deputy Manager Breeding section with the GM Mr Choi Han Ho.

Briefing by GManager of Jangsu Stud and training centre on the facilities and services ,Q&A session.

The training starting gates for young and fractious horses.Note there is a walk through area to give horses the confidence and not be afraid of the gates.

Participants of ISW2010 group photo with GManager of stud farm and training centre Jangsu.

With Senior staff at the indoor barrier training centre in Jangsu.

At the stud farm with a leading stallion.

At KRA Stud and training farm at Jangsu abt 4hrs drive from the city.

Overlooking the bridge famous for the coloured water fountains in Seoul.

The participants of ISW2010 had a big boost with the presence of Executive Director Seoul Racing Division,Mr Suh Sung Jo(white shirt)& Mr Kim Byung Sun General Manager/Chief Stipe(standing Left next to ED)

Checking out the Korean made starting gates.

Chief Starter KRA explaining the equipments used on trials and race days to aid the loading of fractious horses.

Barrier Trials at Seoul racetrack.

Mr Ko, KRA Chief Starter & me on the starter's platform using hydraulic lift mounted on the back of a van during the barrier trials at Seoul racecourse.

Palace grounds with Wuhan china delegates.(GYEONGBOK PALACE)

Korean palace grounds(GYEONGBOK PALACE)

At the famous Korean Palace grounds.(GYEONGBOK PALACE)

DINNER HOSTED BY CHIEF STARTER ON THE 7TH OCTOBER 2010

Pictures paint a thousand words so here are photos of the ISW 2010.from the 1 st day to the last day (ARRIVAL 5TH OCTOBER 2010 DEPARTURE 9TH OCTOBER 2010.)

KAMSAHAMNIDA ANNYONG HA SAYO MANASOB PANGGAP SUMNIDA MY WIFE SARINA AND I WISH TO SAY THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH TO MR KO,CHIEF STARTER AND MR KIM KI WOO STARTER AND ALL FROM KRA FOR MAKING THE ISW2010 A SUCCESS AND MEMORIES WILL BE TREASURED FOREVER AND TO ALL NEW FRIENDS WE MET DURING ISW2010 FROM KRA AND WUHAN CHINA DELEGATIONS WE WILL MISS YOU ALL.

Mr Kim Ki Woo,who we must say a special thank you for making our stay in Seoul Korea TRULY MEMORABLE STAY and your efforts while we are there is to be remembered and that you are a fine example of a loyal professional with utmost integrity to your company the KRA and a credit to Mr Ko Jin Hyung,your Chief Starter. Once again TERIMA KASIH.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

10/10/10/ JUST AN ENTRY TO PUT ON RECORD

view from our room 706 NOVOTEL AMBASSADOR GANGNAM.

My wife Sarina on her first day in SEOUL SOUTH KOREA.

Too good a date 10/10/10 not to have an entry,so just a photo to show our first day at Seoul NOVOTEL AMBASSADOR lobby, gangnam gu.
Further stories from the 1st day arrival till the last day at INCHEON AIRPORT,will follow soon insyaallah,i am still feeling the long journey 7 1/2 hours flight to our home.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

ISW SEOUL KOREA 6TH OCT - 8TH OCT 2010



MY WIFE AND I, started our journey from Penang on 4TH OCTOBER 2010 and landed in INCHEON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT SEOUL SOUTH KOREA on the 5TH OCTOBER 2010 on scheduled at 6.45 am korean time,which is 1 hr ahead of us.At the aiport to greet us was Mr Ki Woo-Kim assistant starter KRA Seoul.We then checked in at NOVOTEL AMBASSADOR GANGNAM-GU in the heart of the city.After a short rest,it was dinner with the WUHAN JOCKEY CLUB CHINA delegates and our host,KOREAN RACING AUTHORITY Chief Starter Mr KO JIN HYUNG & MR KIM KI WOO assistant Starter.
Thats the start of the ISW,and will write a day to day happenings with photos after my return to Penang today.Insyaallah will arrive Penang by midnight today,our flight home starts from Incheon to KLIA & then late tonite arriving home.Till my next posting ANNYONG HA SAYO - KAMSAHAMIDAH - MA NA SOH PANGKAP SUMNIDA to our Host KRA.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Korea for the ISW conference 4th to 9th oct 2010



Insyaallah,will be leaving today for a racing conference (INTERNATIONAL STARTERS WORKSHOP) in Seoul Korea.Taking a flight from KLIA and arriving at Incheon International Airport.Will be away from the 4th to 9th Oct 2010.Insyaallah.Will update with stories and pictures of the trip soonest insyaallah.

Monday, September 27, 2010

INTERESTING READING ARTICLE ON AGEING BY LEE KUAN YEW.



FAMILIES AND FRIENDS ,I came across this brilliant article via an email from a good friend,in Penang,DR Edward Samuel,i thought i share it with you all.

Lee Kuan Yew - On Aging.....A very good read !


MY CONCERN today is, what is it I can tell you which can add to
your knowledge about ageing and what ageing societies can do. You know
more about this subject than I do. A lot of it is out in the media,
Internet and books.

So I thought the best way would be to take a personal standpoint and
tell you how I approach this question of ageing.

If I cast my mind back, I can see turning points in my physical and
mental health. You know, when you're young, I didn't bother, assumed
good health was God-given and would always be there.

When I was about 57 that was - I was about 34, we were competing in elections,
and I was really fond of drinking beer and smoking. And after the election campaign, in Victoria
Memorial Hall - we had won the election, the City Council election - I
couldn't thank the voters because I had lost my voice. I'd been smoking
furiously. I'd take a packet of 10 to deceive myself,
but I'd run through the packet just sitting on the
stage, watching the crowd, getting the feeling, the mood before I speak.

In other words, there were three speeches a night. Three speeches a
night, 30 cigarettes, a lot of beer after that, and the voice was gone.

I remember I had a case in Kuching, Sarawak . So I took the flight and I
felt awful. I had to make up my mind whether I was going to be an
effective campaigner and a lawyer, in which case I cannot destroy my
voice, and I can't go on. So I stopped smoking. It was a tremendous
deprivation because I was addicted to it. And I used to wake up
dreaming...the nightmare was I resumed smoking.

But I made a choice and said, if I continue this, I will not be able to
do my job. I didn't know anything about cancer of the throat or
oesophagus or the lungs, etc. But it turned out it had many
other deleterious effects.

Strangely enough after that, I became very allergic, hyper-allergic to
smoking, so much so that I would plead with my Cabinet ministers not to
smoke in the Cabinet room. You want to smoke, please go out, because I
am allergic.

Then one day I was at the home of my colleague, Mr Rajaratnam, meeting
foreign correspondents including some from the London Times and they
took a picture of me and I had a big belly like that (puts his hands in
front of his belly), a beer belly. I felt no, no, this will not do. So I
started playing more golf, hit hundreds of balls on the practice tee.
But this didn't go down. There was only one way it could go down:
consume less, burn up more.

Another turning point came when -this was 1976, after the general
election - I was feeling tired. I was breathing deeply at the Istana, on
the lawns. My daughter, who at that time just graduating as a doctor,
said: 'What are you trying to do?' I said: 'I feel an effort to breathe
in more oxygen.' She said: 'Don't play golf. Run. Aerobics..' So she
gave me a book , quite a famous book and, then, very current in America on
how you score aerobic points swimming, running, whatever it is, cycling.

I looked at it sceptically. I wasn't very keen on running. I was keen on
golf. So I said, 'Let's try'. So in-between golf shots while playing
on my own, sometimes nine holes at the Istana, I would try and walk
fast between shots. Then I began to run between shots. And I felt
better. After a while, I said: 'Okay, after my golf, I run.' And after a few
years, I said: 'Golf takes so long. The running takes 15 minutes. Let's
cut out the golf and let's run.'

I think the most important thing in ageing is you got to understand
yourself. And the knowledge now is all there.
When I was growing up, the knowledge wasn't there. I had to get the
knowledge from friends, from doctors. But perhaps the most important bit
of knowledge that the doctor gave me was one day, when I said: 'Look,
I'm feeling slower and sluggish.' So he gave me a medical encyclopaedia and
he turned the pages to ageing. I read it up and it was illuminating. A
lot of it was difficult jargon but I just skimmed through to get the
gist of it.

As you grow, you reach 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 and then, thereafter, you
are on a gradual slope down physically.
Mentally, you carry on and on and on until I don't know what age,
but mathematicians will tell you that they know their best output is
when they're in their 20s and 30s when your mental energy is powerful and you
haven't lost many neurons. That's what they tell me.

So, as you acquire more knowledge, you then craft a programme
for yourself to maximise what you have. It's just common sense. I
never planned to live till 85 or 84.! I just didn't think about it. I
said: 'Well, my mother died when she was 74, she had a stroke.. My
father died when he was 94.'

But I saw him, and he lived a long life, well, maybe it was his DNA. But
more than that, he swam every day and he kept himself busy.. He
was working for the Shell company. He was in charge, he was a
superintendent of an oil depot.

When he retired, he started becoming a salesman. So people used to tell
me: 'Your father is selling watches at BP de Silva.' My father was then
living with me. But it kept him busy. He had that routine: He meets
people, he sells watches, he buys and sells all kinds of semi-precious
stones, he circulates coins. And he keeps going. But at 87, 88, he fell,
going down the steps from his room to the dining room, broke his arm,
three months incapacitated.

Thereafter, he couldn't go back to swimming. Then he
became wheelchair-bound. Then it became a problem because my house was
constructed that way. So my brother - who's a doctor and had a flat
(one-level) house - took him in. And he lived on till 94. But towards
the end, he had gradual loss of mental powers.

So my calculations, I'm somewhere between 74 and 94. And I've reached
the halfway point now. But have I ?

Well, 1996 when I was 73, I was cycling and I felt tightening on the
neck. Oh, I must retire today. So I stopped.
Next day, I returned to the bicycle. After five minutes it became worse.

So I said, no, no, this is something serious, it's got to do with the
blood vessels. Rung up my doctor, who said, 'Come tomorrow'. Went
tomorrow, he checked me, and said: 'Come back tomorrow for an
angiogram.'

I said: 'What's that ?' He said: 'We'll pump something in and we'll see
whether the coronary arteries are cleared or blocked.' I was going to go
home. But an MP who was a cardiologist happened to be around, so he came
in and said: 'What are you doing here?' I said: 'I've got this.' He
said: 'Don't go home. You stay here tonight. I've sent patients home and
they never came back. Just stay here. They'll put you on the monitor.
They'll watch your heart. And if anything, an emergency arises, they
will take you straight to the theatre. You go home. You've got no such
monitor. You may never come back.'

So I stayed there. Pumped in the dye, yes it was blocked, the left
circumflex, not the critical, lead one. So that's lucky for me. Two
weeks later, I was walking around,I felt it's coming back. Yes it has come
back, it had occluded. So this time they said: 'We'll put in a stent.'

I'm one of the first few in Singapore to have the stent, so it was a
brand new operation. Fortunately, the man who invented the stent was out
here selling his stent. He was from San Jose , La Jolla something or the
other. So my doctor got hold of him and he supervised the operation. He
said put the stent in. My doctor did the operation, he just watched it
all and then that's that. That was before all this problem about lining
the stent to make sure that it doesn't occlude and create a disturbance.


So at each stage, I learnt something more about myself and I stored
that. I said: 'Oh, this is now a danger point.'
So all right, cut out fats, change diet, went to see a specialist in
Boston , Massachusetts General Hospital . He said: 'Take statins.' I said:
'What's that?' He said: '(They) help to reduce your cholesterol.' My
doctors were concerned. They said: 'You don't need it. Your cholesterol
levels are okay.' Two years later, more medical evidence came out. So
the doctors said: 'Take statins.'

Had there been no angioplasty, had I not known that something was up and
I cycled on, I might have gone at 74 like my mother. So I missed that decline.


So next deadline: my father's fall at 87.

I'm very careful now because sometimes when I turn around too fast, I
feel as if I'm going to get off balance. So my daughter, a neurologist,
she took me to the NNI, there's this nerve conduction test,
put electrodes here and there.

The transmission of the messages between the feet and the brain has
slowed down.

So all the exercise, everything, effort put in, I'm fit, I swim, I
cycle. But I can't prevent this losing of conductivity of the nerves and
this transmission. So just go slow.

So when I climb up the steps, I have no problem. When I go down the
steps, I need to be sure that I've got something I can hang on to, just
in case. So it's a constant process of adjustment.

But I think the most important single lesson I learnt in life was that
if you isolate yourself, you're done for.

The human being is a social animal - he needs stimuli, he needs to meet
people, to catch up with the world.

I don't much like travel but I travel very frequently despite the jet
lag, because I get to meet people of great interest to me, who will help
me in my work as chairman of our GIC. So I know, I'm on several boards
of banks, international advisory boards of banks, of oil companies and so
on.

And I meet them and I get to understand what's happening in the world,
what has changed since I was here one month ago, one year ago. I go to
India , I go to China .

And that stimuli brings me to the world of today. I'm not living in the
world, when I was active, more active 20, 30 years ago. So I tell my
wife. She woke up late today. I said: 'Never mind, you come along by 12
o'clock. I go first.'

If you sit back - because part of the ending part of the encyclopaedia
which I read was very depressing - as you get old, you withdraw from
everything and then all you will have is your bedroom and the
photographs and the furniture that you know, and that's your world. So if you've got
to go to hospital, the doctor advises you to bring some photographs so
that you'll know you're not lost in a different world, that this is like
your bedroom.

I'm determined that I will not, as long as I can, to be reduced, to have
my horizons closed on me like that. It is the stimuli, it is the
constant interaction with people across the world that keeps me aware
and alive to what's going on and what we can do to adjust to
this different world.

In other words, you must have an interest in life. If you believe that
at 55, you're retiring, you're going to read books, play golf and drink
wine, then I think you're done for. So statistically they will show you
that all the people who retire and lead sedentary lives, the pensioners
die off very quickly.

So we now have a social problem with medical sciences, new procedures,
new drugs, many more people are going to live long lives.. If the
mindset is that when I reach retirement age 62, I'm old, I can't work anymore, I
don't have to work, I just sit back, now is the time I'll enjoy life, I
think you're making the biggest mistake of your life.
After one month, or after two months, even if you go travelling with
nothing to do, with no purpose in life, you will just degrade, you'll go
to seed.

The human being needs a challenge, and my advice to every person
in Singapore and elsewhere: Keep yourself interested, have a challenge.
If you're not interested in the world and the world is not interested in
you, the biggest punishment a man can receive is total isolation in a
dungeon, black and complete withdrawal of all stimuli, that's
real torture.

So when I read that people believe, Singaporeans say: 'Oh,
62 I'm retiring.' I say to them: 'You really want to die quickly?'
If you want to see sunrise tomorrow or sunset, you must have a reason,
you must have the stimuli to keep going..'

Have a purpose driven life and finish well my friends.

TRUE LOVE OR FRIENDSHIP

Dear Friends and family,
This Video touches my heart and INSYAALLAH will also touch yours,beautiful story and music,after seeing this video i am sure will enlighten your life insyaallah.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

SELAMAT HARI RAYA PUASA 2010




TO ALL OUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS WE WISH YOU SELAMAT HARI RAYA 2010 MAAF DZAHIR DAN BATIN DARIPADA ALEN,SARINA & JOSHUA.

Monday, September 6, 2010

STAND UP TO ZERO ROAD DEATH


ME 2 YEARS OLD
me and wife with grandchildren




GRANDSON AND GRANDDAUGHTER ERRYZAL AND NURIN
GRANDSON ADIB

Open letter to all Malaysians.Soon the Balik Kampung exodus will begin for the Hari Raya holidays.There will be heavy traffic on the highways.Please exercise care and patience when on the road. Remember we can make a difference on the death toll. Let's all make a resolution for zero death toll.Think of your loved ones.They don't want to die yet and don't want to see you die. Remember being injured is also like being dead.So be careful Malaysians.Remember the old saying 'Biar Lambat Asalkan Selamat.' Our existence in this world is temporary, we will die one day but why not prolong it as long as possible. Yes you may say if the time is up then you cannot avoid it.But why test that time it may not be up yet but you make it happen. you may not die but cause others to die or badly injured including yourself. So 'berhati-hati bila memandu di jalan raya', we can make a difference.Already we got to battle with survival to live with illnesses like cancer, heart attacks, diabetes and host of other life threatening illnesses.So let's start a 'Stand Up To Zero Road Death' as our slogan for the coming holidays.Remind one another at home, in the office, at the market, in the restaurant, coffee shops,anywhere. Let's talk zero road death. The best advertisement campaign is by word of mouth. Just imagine if we just do our part to remind one another to be careful. I am sure the mission will be accomplished. Live to tell your grandchildren you made a difference.INSYAALLAH

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

KOREA HERE I COME



Letter from the Chief Stipendiary Steward is self explanatory.


Dear Mr Noordin,

As verbally spoken, you have been selected to represent the MRA to
attend the International Starters Workshop in Korea between the 5th to
9th October 2010.

I will, after speaking to Mr Brett Wright, Stipendiary Steward, KRA
inform you of the travel arrangements that you need to make with KRA. As
the chosen ambassador of the MRA, you will be obliged to share ideas
with the Starters of the KRA as well as those invited for the workshop.
I trust you will be able to carry out this task well and bring back new
ideas and innovations to improve on our existing system. I suggest you
bring the MRA Rule book along to explain our rules regarding starting of
races and any other material you deem necessary for this workshop.

You will also be required to submit a report of the trip upon your
return. I hope that this workshop will be beneficial to you in your
future course of work and for the education and training of your two
other assistants.

Regards,

Soo Lai Kwok

Friday, August 20, 2010

Mum admitted due to low sugar level

Thursday 19th August 2010,mum gave us all a fright,at around 245pm,she could not speak or raise her right hand.It look as though she had a 2nd stroke,which affected her right side,i then called for the ambulance and rush her to the hospital.After she was checked by Doctor Santheran,her Neurologist Physician,it was established that she was suffering from low sugar level,if unattended could have lapsed into coma.Thank God she is alright and is allowed to come home today 20th August 2010.insyaallah.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Home Sweet Home



MH126 left on time from PERTH - KUL and we landed at 720am KLIA.then connecting MH1138 KUL-PENANG,and we were home by 11am,alhamdullilah syukur to god almighty ALLAHSWT,for the safe trip.It was the most enjoyable holiday ever for me thanks to my cousins JULIE and PEGGY,whom spared no efforts to make my trip memorable.Photos for the trip will be posted soon.Insyaallah.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

PERTH ARRIVAL BY MH127 9TH AUGUST 1 A.M.



Arrived Perth WA,9TH AUGUST2010 by MH127 and was met on arrival by my cousin Julie and Stan.It WAS cold at 4 degrees,and the wind blowing strong.Photos and stories of the trip will be updated soon insyaallah.Today is the start of RAMADAN,and here is wishing all family and friends selamat berpuasa,Insyaallah semua di berkati ALLAH SWT.Happy Fasting for RAMADAN .

Thursday, August 5, 2010

SPECIAL DAY FOR DAUGHTER ZARINA 4TH AUG 2010

My daughter Zarina with my Son In Law Khairul Nizam at their WEDDING DINNER.
My daughter Zarina and me after the AKAD NIKAH ceremony of her marriage to Khairul Nizam at masjid Ampang Indah on 4th August 2010.

My daughter Zarina Merican Noordin born on 4th August,had a dual celebration at a leading Thai Restaurant last night when she got married to Khairul Nizam on her birthday.The dinner was attended by close family and friends.Earlier in the afternoon after Zohor Prayers,she perform the AKAD NIKAH, at Masjid AMPANG INDAH,(photos Later).My prayers that she be happy always. INSYAALLAH.

Friday, July 23, 2010

TODAY I CRIED MY HEART OUT



I needed to cry my heart out and even now writing this n3,tears keep streaming from my eyes as i never ever expected to see my mum in such a state.She is bedridden and starting to talk gibberish.MAK cannot accept the fact that she cannot do her daily needs by herself.This not only saddens me but makes me emotionally upset.Even during my days fighting the Big C with CHEMOTHERAPY AND RADIATION, i could cope and overcome but seeing mum in bed not able to move without help is indeed the ultimate sadness for me emotionally. But i have to show strength and patience so that she may feel a liitle assured that this is only temporary and that she be up and on the go soon.Insyaallah that be the case.Please pray for me and especially her that all will be well again ,but for now i can only make her as comfortable as possible.INSYAALLAH AMEEN.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

My Mum back from hospital today



MAK as i call her is back home alhamdullilah. She is weak and the stroke affected her left side and weakened it badly.She as all that knows her is the up and go sort of person,now is nearly bed ridden and i worry it will take its toll on her mental state.I have tried my level best Insyaallah to keep her as comfortable as possible and got a nurse and a maid to look after her daily needs.Let us all who knows her and me please pray for a recovery for my dear MAK.Insyaallah she will recover.

Monday, July 19, 2010

18TH July 2010 mom admitted to hospital

mum on extreme left with orange baju.

My mother had a mild stroke at around 7pm on the 18Th July 2010,after returning from the Ipoh Races at around 7pm,went straight as usual to check on her in the room and was surprised to see her sitting on the floor trying to get up but she had no strength.After helping her up on the bed,i could see that her left side is weak,so rushed her to Loh Guan Lye Specialist Centre and was immediately given an ECG and MRI scan of her brain,Alhamdullilah syukur to ALLAH SWT,there was no internal bleeding and results showed she had a mild stroke which weakened her left side.She is now in hospital in the care of the Dr Santheeran.
At around 10 pm she is resting in her hospital bed. The next 72 hrs will be crucial and INSYAALLAH she will be alright.Let all that knows me and her say a prayer for SITI MAHERAN BTE IBRAHIM,my mum.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

NOSTALGIC VISIT TO SINGAPORE

A NEW AREA
THE SHRINE OF HABIB NOH MY DAD USED TO BRING ME 40YEARS AGO FOR PRAYERS
ME AT THE BALCONY OF MY HOTEL ORCHARD PARADE USE TO BE MING COURT HOTEL

AT THE ARRIVAL HALL SINGAPORE
MORE PICTURES OF MY TRIP TO SINGAPORE AND CHINA TO FOLLOW.SYUKUR ALHAMDULLILAH ALL IS WELL INSYAALLAH AMEEN

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Leaving on a jetplane

Singapore
i made a wish

Today is a happy day for me, i am visiting SINGAPORE where i was born, a place so very close to my heart,with fond memories of my 1st 5 years in this world.alhamdullilah syukur pada Allah swt.I won't elaborate on the reason for this visit but as the Magic Lamp above indicates i have made a wish and insyaallah my wish will be granted.Ameen.