Jesus make our hearts Your home.
Kent Ridge People
Chairwoman: Mrs Faith Seah
NUH HR executive

Financial Analyst: tan rou'en
NUS 3rd year EL major
Operations Specialist: ivan koh
NSF
Professional Birthday Planners: ben por
econs graduate
& christy!!
2nd year Archi undergrad
web specialists: sharon lim
4th year Theatre Studies major
& eunice tan
St Luke's Hospital HR executive & uniSIM student
Welfare Specialists: dawn neo shihui
3rd year psych major
lee mei zhen
3rd year social work major
& patrick lin han sheng
3rd year econs major
Image Consultant: hong enlin
3rd year political science major

Resident Worship Director: derrick zhuang
HY graduate
Resident Artists: carrick ang
3rd year Soci major
IT Specialist: Sindu
the fabulous chef Phebe
life science graduate
our yummy queen/ food hunter Kimberly
4th year soci major on exchange from Canada!
our dear KR idol Carynl!
3rd year psych major
& our big friendly giant Chong Ken!!!
NUS History Graduand
& our freshie Kai Xin!
NUS Arts year 1
& Jasmine~!
NUS Real Estate
& our spikey haired Wei Jin!!
NUS computational finance 4th yr student
our Masters scholar Joshua~!
All under the guidance & care of our Resident Advisors Wei Guang & Rui Lin (plus little Ashlyn...)
official ice-cream being Ben & Jerry's
and our zone pastor- Pastor Edwin!
anddddd our cell pet Eli~!
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Solar Energy: Power of the Son
"Packed" is a very meaningful word at the moment. Especially when said with both palms pressing an imaginary ball of objects in between them. A gigantic stress ball in the form of an eyeball, perhaps?
Everything seems to be happening at the same time. It challenges my way of segmenting my life. How should I put this? An effective analogy would be to view my life as a circuit. The amount of bulbs present at any point of time is reflective of the amount of tasks or responsibilities or worries at hand. It's a parallel circuit. When I when wake up in the morning the circuit is switched on. Depending on my voltage supply for the day, each bulb gets the same 400V, 500V or 100V. Sometimes, a bulb gets burnt, but that should not affect the circuit because a parallel circuit is built such that every bulb gets the maximum amount of voltage and no individual bulb gets to affect another.
But now I think in this circuit there must be elements of both parallel and series circuits. And there is a bulb that is positioned such that it is serially linked to every other bulb. It, of all the bulbs, must not burn.
Then, comes the greater role of the battery, me. If I am the power source of this circuit I need to maintain a constant power supply all the time. There are two possibilities: if I were dry, power will soon be cut; if I were liquid, I'd need to be recharged soon, and there'll be a tentative blackout. And you know, the thing about charging the battery is: at the end of recharge, it always feels great, but in between it could feel like so much rubbish is building up inside, clogging your system; and it's such a repetitive process to go through: charge, recharge.
So, at this point, the best analogy of a wonderful life the writer can come up with, would be me being the dumb switch of the circuit. To my right is a gigantic solar-powered, ever-power-supplying Power Supply. To my left a million bulbs for all I care. He can handle it.
It will be an all-or-none activation. For an electrifying life, I just need to "click".
Phil 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me"
-silentL-
Jesus loves us@ 12:25 AM
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