Why are canine lawyers always so broke?
Because they love to work pro-bone-o.

Why are canine lawyers always so broke?
Because they love to work pro-bone-o.

Sending lots of blessings and prayers this Independence Day!

yet she moves untouched. A face of serenity, painted in the ink of lifeโs beautiful mess.


I was cleaning out an old drawer yesterday when I found a small, white box. Inside, nestled carefully as if waiting for me, was my late fatherโs hearing aid. The brandโHansaton. Two spare batteries, still sealed. An instruction manual. And a receipt, dated 9.9.00, the amount paid: RM900.


Four months after this purchase, he was gone.
Holdings that receipt, I was transported back to the day we bought it. My dadโs cancer had advanced, and life felt fragile. My mom hesitated, then asked the salesperson, ‘My husband isโฆ very ill. Do you think this hearing aid will still be worth it?’
I donโt remember the exact words of the reply, but I remember the essence: “Donโt think of the illness. Think of the life he can still liveโtoday, tomorrow, for as long as heโs here. Let him hear the birds, the laughter, your voices clearly.”
At the time, RM900 was a stretch for me. Money was tight, and the future was uncertain. But Iโd do it again in a heartbeat.
Seeing the hearing aid now, I realize it wasnโt just a deviceโit was a few more months of my dad hearing the rustle of the newspaper he loved, the hum of life around him. At the time, I didnโt know Hansaton was a premium brand; I only knew my dad deserved to hear clearly in whatever time remained. That choice became his ability catch gospel songs in the car, to stay connected to the worldโs fading musicโa small but vital victory against the quiet that illness tries to impose.
Grief has a way of hiding in drawers, waiting for us to stumble upon it. But so does love. This little box didnโt just bring back sadnessโit reminded me that in his final days, we chose to give him the world, one sound at a time.
And that, no matter how much time passes, is a choice Iโll never regret.
************************************
laugh, heals!

โI sometimes think that peopleโs hearts are like deep wells. Nobody knows whatโs at the bottom. All you can do is imagine by what comes floating to the surface every once in a while.โ – Haruki Murakami

seDUCKtive muse, forever frozen in a moment of fowl play. ๐ฆโจ๐ฆ๐
P.S. Secret ducky blessing:“May your cement never crack and your creativity never waddle away!” ๐๐

A cement cat statueโone side a messy burst of white splotches on black, like a wild hair day, the other scribbled yellow on black with blue shades. Both sides share a tiny red heart at the center: chaos all around, but the heart stays good.


This little one took me longer than expected to paintโnot because I had a plan, but because I didnโt. I loved how the waves and surfer side looked at first, but I thought, โMaybe just a tiny touch more detail…โ and, well, chaos followed. I ended up repainting the whole thing.
Lesson learned: donโt fix what isnโt broken.
But hereโs the thingโthis snail is perfectly imperfect. The shell isn’t a perfect circle. The neck has a few bumps and uneven textures. And Iโm okay with thatโI love that, actually. These small flaws give each piece a kind of soul. They remind me that handmade art isnโt about precisionโitโs about feeling. About being human.


turning cement into tiny adventures. Hereโs a sneak peak at my snail statue – just completed painting one side with surfer riding the wave. Who says snails canโt be wild? ๐
