@porcelain
kartu sailormoon-nya masih bagus gak? ;D
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@porcelain
kartu sailormoon-nya masih bagus gak? ;D
ntar deh, jadi bahan pertimbangan
lagian mau dilanjutin nanti tahun depan
sori OT ::hihi::
gw rekomen kok Yuki,
Popo itu orangnya rapiiihhhhhhhhh banget, semua kolprinya disimpen xtra telaten ::up::
ikutan OT ;D
Transkrip percakapan dg hoarder, serta seorang ahli (kykny ini diambil dari film dokumenter):
It's hard. I can't describe. It's like I fight with myself. I wish I could just pick up a tray full of stuff and just..and not look at it. Throw it out and not look at it. But there's something inside me that says, "There might be something in here that I might need."
ALEX CULLEN: Before hoarding consumed her life, Lee Farrer was a secretary.
Lee Farrer: Well, this is a room that I call the 'crying room'. I want to cry when I come in to it because there's so much stuff and it's very depressing.
ALEX CULLEN: She believes the reason for all this is because her mother sold all her toys when she was a child.
Lee Farrer: When I was 12, my mother picked up all my toys and dolls and things that I treasured and took them up to the white elephant stall and dumped them there. Everything. And I was just devastated.
When my mother died, my father basically just got rid of everything of hers and I think that had a really big impact on me.
Jocelyn Wheatley: Hello.
ALEX CULLEN: Hello, Jocelyn.
Jocelyn Wheatley: Welcome to my nightmare.
ALEX CULLEN: OK. Jocelyn Wheatley doesn't let many people inside her world. Jocelyn, you have a lot of stuff.
Jocelyn Wheatley: I have a lot of stuff, yes.
ALEX CULLEN: Wow-wee.
Jocelyn Wheatley: And my house is a reflection of my brain.
ALEX CULLEN: Do you like having lots of stuff?
Jocelyn Wheatley: Not like this, no. I'm actually so trapped by my house.
ALEX CULLEN: Jocelyn is a mother of four but lives alone. The clutter is pushing her to breaking point.
Jocelyn Wheatley: I might as well be dead and I can't be dead 'cause of my children. And that's the only reason I'm here is because.....I promised them that I would be. So I have to survive for now.
ALEX CULLEN: Sorry.
Jocelyn Wheatley: That's OK. Very overwhelmed. And that, I think, is why I don't deal with it very well. I'll wake up in the morning and look around and think, "Oh, my God." The house is so daunting for me. Books and magazines and all sorts of things. Excuse me.
ALEX CULLEN: A lot of what Jocelyn buys is on the internet.
Jocelyn Wheatley: Hello?
ALEX CULLEN: While we're filming, a delivery arrives.
Jocelyn Wheatley: That is one of my biggest downfalls, Catch of the Day. A new thing every day.
ALEX CULLEN: Online shopping has made it even easier for hoarders to feed their cravings. Even though Jocelyn knows she has a problem, she can't stop.
Jocelyn Wheatley: I don't even know what's in that box. Same as the ones at the front door. I can't even remember what it is that I ordered. That's how...um...compulsive that acquiring stuff is. Empty boxes on the shelf where books are supposed to be going. Things that are supposed to go in my new linen cupboard but my new linen cupboard is around there and I can't get to it.
Professor Michael Kyrios: There are no services because the needs of people who have these difficulties, they fall between the cracks.
Jocelyn Wheatley: Empty boxes, I think. And then my container room in there.
Professor Michael Kyrios: This is a huge problem and it is unrecognised.
ALEX CULLEN: Professor Michael Kyrios from Melbourne's Swinburne University is Australia's leading authority on hoarding. He's found that
simply removing the possessions can make a bad situation far worse.
Professor Michael Kyrios: There have been instances of people having suicide attempts or actually successfully suiciding after all their things were thrown out.
ALEX CULLEN: I never thought it would go that far. Well, if the very thing that makes you feel safe in the world is ripped out of your control, how do you think people are going to feel?
Paul Monteit: I've stood on balconies 15 storeys up and really questioned why I shouldn't step off them.
ALEX CULLEN: Paul Monteith is 61, a builder and mechanic. He's separated from his wife and family because of his obsession.
Paul Monteit: This is the ninth property that I've filled up with my stuff. I fight with myself on a daily basis not to collect any more items.
Peter Walsh: Something has happened in their life that has flicked a switch in their head that they no longer see stuff in the way that you or I see it.
Swallowed up by lots.....and lots of stuff.
sumber : http://au.news.yahoo.com/sunday-nigh...s-transcript/#
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Hadeh .... pemicunya itu kok sederhana banget .... tapi bikin ruwet seumur hidup.