A Place Called Home

FRI, 29 DEC 2006

I had been living as a modern-age nomad since 1995. The day when I finished high school, as I stepped out from the comfort zone of my hometown, I knew that life is not going to be as easy as before.

Freedom that used to be a shackle with its keys guarded by my parents were then passed to me. I was on my own that day onwards.

But never in mind, I would have thought that I had to live from one rented room after another, sharing houses, apartments and flats with landlords, friends, strangers for the past 11 years; a period long enough to see Asian financial crisis, September 11, Afgan and Iraq wars, Tsunami, two general elections, jerebu (haze) once each year, friends getting married and having babies, one divorce case and the eldest daughter of a high school friend is now studying in primary school.

It is not that living in a rented place is no good. Things like you never have to worry about repainting your house, paying property tax and convervancy charges are good points, and you get to meet a lot of people too, good housemates like you, not so good ones and even some weird ones.

But since you don’t own the place, no matter how good the place is, it will never feel like a home. A place, where you can just come back from work, and shout “Honey, I’m back!”. And try to do that with your housemates around, see what you get.

A couple of days ago, the day before Chirstmas, after 16-hours packing non-stop and a mere 4 hours sleep, my wife and I moved to a place where we can finally call our home. A small flat, with one room booked for home office, open-concept kitchen, a small dining table, and a three-seater sofa. Nothing beats this feeling of having a home again after so long.

Now, I wish I can say “Honey, I’m back!” each day, but since I’m working from home, it seems like I’ll be the one hearing it from my wife more often. Either way, I’m glad that I finally find home again.

17 Comments . Comments Feed . Trackback URI
Fri, 29 Dec 06 03:51 pm . Isaak Kwok wrote:

Hi Herry,
Congrats on your new house. Felt the same way when my wife and I bought our flat about 2 years ago just before we got married.

Fri, 29 Dec 06 03:03 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Thanks Isaak, yeah it feels really great. :)

Fri, 29 Dec 06 05:05 pm . choonkeat wrote:

grats! mine is days away :-D

Fri, 29 Dec 06 05:25 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Oh ya, what a coincidence, congrats and have fun moving as well.

Sat, 30 Dec 06 12:33 am . Joe wrote:

Congrats Herry! I really admire your courage and your determination leaving your native country to make Singapore your new home.

Cheers!

Sat, 30 Dec 06 01:31 am . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Thanks Joe, and I’m thankful to be able to live here, n make it my new home. :)

Sat, 30 Dec 06 04:38 pm . Ivan Chew wrote:

Congrats, Herry. Yeah, I know that feeling of calling an apartment “my own”.

Mon, 1 Jan 07 09:13 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Seems like we all share the same excitement for our first owned home. :D

Fri, 5 Jan 07 01:02 pm . JasonOng wrote:

hey! i’m looking forward to my own home down the road too! :)

Sat, 6 Jan 07 04:13 pm . Casey Chiang wrote:

Lovely. Now u need to work hard to fill up the rooms with little ones :) Congratulations!

Sat, 6 Jan 07 09:59 pm . DT wrote:

Hi Herry,

CONGRATS on your home. I know how you feel when I bought my own home. However I have sold it!

Also please email me, I’m looking for a software architect and was wondering if you are avalaible?

Thanks
DT

Sun, 7 Jan 07 10:49 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Jason, think we buy at the right time, property prices may go up soon.

Casey, now I’m stressed….

DT, upgrading huh…:D Will do mail you on my availability. Thanks for the offer!

Tue, 9 Jan 07 05:30 pm . carven wrote:

first of all, congratulations herry!

i happened to come across this webby after my lecturer showed me your bookjetty project. i was then told to do something similar (except its much more simple and very much less useful).

just wanted to tell you how inspiring (at least to me :) )your work was. its functions are simple yet very powerful to use. it truly made me understand what web services are all about.

so..erm… ya. thats pretty much it. haha..ha..h..a… >

Tue, 9 Jan 07 06:01 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Carven, thanks for stopping by. I think I know which lecturer you are referring to. He’s a good chap. :)

I never expect BookJetty to inspire anyone, anyway, glad to hear that. :D All the best with your project.

Wed, 10 Jan 07 04:27 pm . Irena wrote:

I’m sooo sleepy at work now, and so here am I and voila! I see a webpost on your blog I can understand!! woohoo!!

sorry la, i’m no pluit techie, so you must pardon this IT suaku girl. anyway, I drool at your post. Not because I have seen how nice your home is (I’m sure it will be!). But because… a real home is something I don’t have since age 6. That’s more than 20 years ago, and doesn’t look like something that will happen any time soon either. Surrogate families are not bad… better than nothing I say, but a real home… now that’s what makes a heaven of difference, in my humble wanderer’s opinion. =) congrats my friend, we shall have to compare notes as to whose new homes are homier =)

Wed, 10 Jan 07 10:25 pm . Herryanto Siatono wrote:

Pardon me Irena, I should not have state 11 years so loudly.

Hope you will find your own home soon, a place called home indeed a heaven on earth. Comparing notes hehe…r u sure? =)

Sun, 14 Jan 07 11:32 pm . Irena wrote:

of course i’m sure… i trust a man of good taste like yourself will have good taste in home decor too! hahahaha

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