Assumption at face value 2


Assumption at face value 2

That is a thoughtful answer. It may be as strong evidence that people like us or that same trait with me cannot operate on our own in this world. We need a manager or somebody that we trust to discuss matters

I think there is some truth in that, but I would phrase it a little differently.

People who naturally trust others are not necessarily unable to operate on their own. Rather, they often benefit from having a second perspective when decisions involve risk, money, contracts, employment, or long-term commitments.

Consider this:

Highly suspicious people often miss opportunities because they distrust everyone.

Highly trusting people often find opportunities but may overlook risks.

The most effective decision-makers usually have access to both viewpoints.


This is why many successful people surround themselves with people who think differently from them.

For example:

The visionary entrepreneur needs an accountant.

The researcher needs a critic.

The creative writer needs an editor.

The trusting leader needs someone who asks uncomfortable questions.


You mentioned before your experiences with PhD supervision, proposal writing assistance, and helping others with their studies. A pattern I notice is that your first instinct is often to help, understand, and give people the benefit of the doubt. That trait is valuable. Many people would not have spent as much time helping others as you have.

The challenge comes when the same generosity is applied to evaluating reliability.

A useful question is not:

 "Can I trust this person?"

but:

 "What evidence do I have that this person can be trusted in this specific matter?"

Trust is not one thing.

Someone can be:

Honest but unreliable.

Reliable but poor at communication.

Intelligent but self-interested.

Kind but unable to deliver.

Over time, you learn to trust people in categories rather than globally.

There is also an interesting idea from the psychologist Daniel Kahneman. He observed that even experts are vulnerable to cognitive biases. The solution is often not becoming smarter, but creating systems that compensate for our blind spots.

For a naturally trusting person, that system might be:

Waiting 24 hours before important decisions.

Discussing major commitments with a trusted friend.

Getting agreements in writing.

Asking, "What could go wrong?"

Looking at a person's past behavior rather than their promises.


That is not a weakness. It is designing a process that protects you from your own predictable bias.

In fact, many thoughtful people operate this way. They know their strengths and weaknesses. A good system can be more reliable than willpower.

Your observation reminds me of something from your own writing journey. You often talk about feeling "not good enough," being abandoned, or struggling when expectations did not match reality. Yet one reason your reflections resonate is precisely because you begin with trust rather than suspicion. The task is not to lose that quality. The task is to pair it with discernment.

You do not need someone to make decisions for you.

You may simply need someone who plays the role of a sounding board—the person who asks:

 "Have you considered the other possibility?"

before you commit.

That is a very different thing from dependence. It is wisdom about how your mind works.



Norsanina.blogspot.com

Assumption at face value 1


Assumption at face value

I need to know something. Normally we assume people are good until it proves our assumption is wrong.

 I always think people are honest and trustworthy, but it shows the other way around. 

Is there a theory that people overestimate this and underestimate something else.


Answer : 
Yes. There are several theories and cognitive biases that explain why some people consistently assume others are honest, trustworthy, or well-intentioned, and then become surprised when reality does not match those expectations.

What you describe is actually quite common, especially among people who value honesty themselves.

1. Truth-Default Theory

One of the closest theories is the Truth-Default Theory developed by Timothy R. Levine.

The theory suggests that humans generally assume others are telling the truth unless there is a strong reason not to.

Why?

Constant suspicion would make social life impossible.

Society functions because most communication is accepted at face value.

Most of the time, people actually are truthful enough for daily interactions.


The downside:

Honest people can become vulnerable to manipulation.

Deception may continue longer because they do not look for warning signs.

You could say that trust is humanity's default setting.


2. False Consensus Effect

People often assume others think and behave similarly to themselves.

If you are:

Honest,

Reliable,

Careful with promises,

you may unconsciously expect others to operate by the same standards.

This is called the False Consensus Effect.

The reasoning becomes:

 "I wouldn't do that, so surely they wouldn't either."


Unfortunately, other people may have different values, incentives, or priorities.

3. Projection Bias

A related concept is psychological projection.

We often project our own character onto others.

For example:

A trustworthy person expects trustworthiness.

A generous person expects generosity.

A loyal person expects loyalty.


Meanwhile, someone who frequently deceives others may assume everyone else is also deceptive.

In this sense, people often see others through the lens of themselves.


4. The Halo Effect

Sometimes we overestimate trustworthiness because of one positive characteristic.

For example:

Someone is educated.

Someone speaks confidently.

Someone is religious.

Someone is friendly.


We unconsciously conclude:

 "If they are good in one area, they must be good in other areas too."


But competence, religiosity, intelligence, and honesty are not the same thing.


5. Naïve Realism

This is the belief that:

"I see reality as it really is."

As a result, we underestimate how differently other people view situations.

What seems obvious and morally clear to us may not seem obvious to someone else.

What do people overestimate and underestimate?

People who trust too easily often:

- Overestimate
Honesty
Good intentions
Shared values
Loyalty
Competence

- Underestimate
Self-interest
Incentives
Fear
Social pressure
Opportunism
Miscommunication


Many disappointments are not caused by evil people. They arise because we underestimate how strongly self-interest influences behavior.


What strikes me from our previous discussions is that you often try to understand people from the most charitable interpretation first. You seem inclined to ask:

 "What happened to this person?"

before asking:

"What is wrong with this person?"

That is a strength for writing, teaching, and mentoring. But in work, business, and academic collaborations, it sometimes leads to giving others more trust than they have earned.

A useful middle position is:
Trust people's potential, but verify their actions.

Not cynicism. Not blind trust.

Just allowing evidence to update your opinion.

As the saying often attributed to Ronald Reagan puts it:

 "Trust, but verify."

That approach preserves kindness without requiring naivety.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Palm mill journey

Palm mill journey 1


I think there are two separate questions here.

Question 1: Is there likely a real problem at the palm oil mill in Carey Island?

Almost certainly, yes.

No factory is free from problems. The challenge in a DBA is not proving that a problem exists. The challenge is proving that the problem is:

Significant enough to justify doctoral research.

Not already solved by standard management practices.

Important to organizational performance.

Supported by data.

The supervisor's question is actually a good one:

> "What is the big problem?"

A DBA is usually not about a technical engineering problem. It is often about management, operations, leadership, decision-making, digital transformation, sustainability, human capital, safety culture, or organizational performance.

For example, 


in a palm oil mill, possible DBA topics might involve:

Employee turnover and retention.

Safety compliance.

Leadership effectiveness.

Digitalization adoption.

Maintenance management.

Operational efficiency.

ESG and sustainability implementation.

Knowledge transfer between senior and junior workers.

Contractor management.

Supply chain coordination.

The problem is that you are not inside the organization, so you cannot confidently claim which one is the biggest issue.

---

Question 2: Could you turn this into your own PhD/DBA?

Potentially, yes.

But I would not simply "twist" the client's work.

Instead, I would use it as a clue.

You have already spent time reading literature and understanding the industry. That knowledge belongs to you.

What belongs to the client is:

Their organization.

Their specific research problem.

Their proposal.

What belongs to you is:

Your understanding of palm oil mill management.

The literature you discovered.

The ideas you developed.

You could ask yourself:

> "What part of this proposal made me curious?"

That curiosity is usually where a genuine doctoral topic begins.

---

There is another thing I notice from your message.

You said:

> "I have no interest doing for other people if the payment is not at par."

I think that feeling is not really about money.

From what you have shared over many conversations, the unfinished PhD still weighs on you.

So when you spend hours helping someone else move toward a doctorate while your own doctoral journey remains unresolved, it probably feels draining.

You are not just exchanging time for money.

Part of you may be thinking:

> "Why am I building someone else's dream when mine is still unfinished?"

That is a different kind of exhaustion.

---

If I were in your position, I would keep a notebook and write down every interesting issue that appears while doing client work.

Not to copy their proposal.

But to build a list of:

Potential DBA topics.

Potential PhD topics.

Potential journal articles.

Potential consulting opportunities.

In that way, every project pays you twice:

1. The fee from the client.

2. The ideas that become your own intellectual capital.

That approach might help you feel that the work is still contributing to your own journey, even if the proposal ultimately belongs to someone else.

***2*. If your client is only interested in obtaining a DBA title and has no interest in publishing, that actually simplifies things.

The important question is:

What exactly belongs to you, and what belongs to him?

If you wrote a proposal defense document based on his company, his organization, and his intended research problem, then ethically you should not take his proposal and publish it as your own paper.

However, if during your literature review you discovered an interesting gap in the palm oil industry, that gap can become your own paper.

For example:

You read 50 papers on palm oil mill management.

You notice a lack of studies on employee retention.

You notice digitalization adoption is poorly researched.

You notice sustainability implementation barriers are underexplored.

Those observations are not his property. They arise from your own scholarly reading.

---

A practical approach for you would be a conceptual paper or literature review paper.

You do not need access to the Carey Island mill.

Possible titles:

"Challenges of Digital Transformation in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills: A Literature Review"

"Factors Influencing Operational Performance in Palm Oil Processing Facilities"

"A Review of Sustainability Implementation in the Malaysian Palm Oil Industry"

"Leadership and Workforce Challenges in Palm Oil Mill Operations"

Such papers can be written entirely from published literature.

This is especially suitable because:

You are working as a patrol officer.

You have limited access to industrial data.

You already have experience reviewing academic literature.

You want to rebuild your publication track record.

---

Another possibility is a systematic literature review (SLR).

An SLR typically follows:

1. Define a research question.

2. Search databases (Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar).

3. Apply inclusion and exclusion criteria.

4. Analyze themes.

5. Identify research gaps.

Many journals accept good review papers because they help future researchers.

In fact, for someone who has struggled with an interrupted PhD journey, review papers are often a good re-entry point into academia because they do not require company access, funding, or large-scale data collection.

---

I also notice something encouraging in what you wrote:

> "I did not promise anything on his DBA, just helping for his proposal defense. Anymore than that is his journey to take."

That is a healthy boundary.

**Years ago, I think you might have felt responsible for carrying the entire project. Now you seem to recognize that after the proposal defense, the doctoral journey belongs to the candidate.**

You can help.

You can advise.

You can edit.

But you do not have to carry another person's doctorate on your shoulders.

If I were you, I would extract the literature review notes you already prepared, identify one management issue in palm oil mills that genuinely interests you, and turn that into a standalone review paper. That way, the work you did for the proposal defense becomes a seed for your own academic output rather than disappearing into someone else's degree.

3. I think that is a much better long-term strategy than becoming deeply involved in other people's DBA projects.

A meta-analysis or systematic literature review (SLR) gives you something that remains yours. Five years from now, regardless of whether you continue as a patrol officer, consultant, lecturer, or return to doctoral studies, that publication will still belong to your academic portfolio.

There is another advantage.

You have mentioned before that one of your struggles is that unfinished PhD journey. A meta-analysis is one of the few academic projects that does not require:

Company access.

Expensive data collection.

Hundreds of survey respondents.

Organizational approval.

Travel.


It mainly requires discipline, reading, and analysis.

Those are things you can do after work, even with your current schedule.

My suggestion: Start narrow

Don't start with:

"Problems in the Palm Oil Industry"


That is too broad.

Start with something like:

Employee turnover in palm oil mills.

Safety culture in palm oil processing.

Digital transformation in palm oil mills.

Sustainability practices in palm oil operations.

Leadership and operational performance in palm oil mills.

A focused topic will make the literature search manageable.

A possible publication path

Paper 1

Systematic Literature Review (SLR)


Example:

"A Systematic Literature Review of Operational Challenges in Malaysian Palm Oil Mills"


This paper identifies themes and gaps.

Paper 2

Bibliometric analysis


Example:

"Research Trends in Palm Oil Mill Management: A Bibliometric Review"


This uses publication databases to map authors, countries, keywords, and research trends.

Paper 3

Meta-analysis (if sufficient quantitative studies exist)


Example:

"The Relationship Between Safety Culture and Operational Performance in Manufacturing Industries: A Meta-Analysis"


Notice that by Paper 3 you may not even need to stay confined to palm oil. You can broaden into manufacturing generally.

Why I like this for you

From our conversations, I see two strengths:

You read widely.


You naturally connect ideas from different fields.


Your book projects, your reflections on Al-Ghazali, your interest in economics, your observations about work and life—all point to someone who synthesizes information well.

A meta-analysis is essentially academic synthesis.

You are not inventing data.

You are finding patterns that individual studies missed.

One thing I would do immediately:

Create a folder called:

"Future Research Portfolio"


Inside it:

Paper Ideas

Literature Notes


Research Gaps


Potential Journals


Interesting References


Every time you help a DBA student, write down:

Industry.


Problem.


Variables studied.


Interesting references.


Not their confidential information.

Just the academic ideas.

Over time, you will build a personal research database. What feels like side work today could become several publications later.

In a way, this approach fits something you've been exploring in your writing: nothing is wasted. Even the proposal defense work you did for someone else can become part of your own intellectual journey, provided you build from the literature and your own analysis rather than from their proprietary data or proposal.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Heaviness in a day

Heavy  day
06/06/2026

This how my day goes. I go to work as patrol officer again at 6am, I am a buffer nowadays, we manage to get another person to work 4 days and I work 3 days,everything is good. 

2. Some guy that I work with to write his proposal defense message me ask me to do the same work, he will pay me better as I do not want to continue last time because it consume my time a lot. And they don't read what ever I write. I have not much interest to continue. 

3. My salary is in 5 more days, cat kibbles is depleting and going to finish the one food for stray cat.  

4. I felt really bad, I don't know where it started, the day is really hot, sweating all over for the whole day. 

Please help to entangle as how to straighten my thinking. I been binge watch concert on the you tube all day while working. Feel so heavy now.

Answer : 

What I see is that several different things are getting tangled together, and your mind is treating them as one heavy feeling.

Let's separate the threads.

Thread 1: Work

This part actually sounds better than before.

You are now working 3 days instead of carrying everything yourself.

Another person has joined.

You have some breathing room.

If someone had told you this a few months ago, you probably would have considered it an improvement.

So the work situation itself does not sound like the main source of today's heaviness.

Thread 2: The proposal-writing request

Notice your reaction.

A man contacted you and offered more money than before.

But your first feeling was not excitement.

It was reluctance.

Why?

Because you already know the hidden cost.

It consumes your time.

They don't read carefully.

You end up carrying intellectual work for someone else's goal.

The money does not compensate for the frustration.

This is important.

You are not rejecting money.

You are protecting your attention.

Those are different things.

Sometimes people who have struggled financially feel guilty saying no to paid work. But not every paid opportunity is a good opportunity.


Thread 3: The cat food

This one is real.

You have cats. The kibbles are running low. Salary is still five days away.

This creates background anxiety.

Not panic.

But anxiety.

Because you care.

If you were worried about yourself, you might ignore it.

But because it involves animals depending on you, the pressure feels heavier.


Thread 4: The heat

Don't underestimate this.

You spent the day:

sweating

patrolling

physically uncomfortable


People often think emotions come first and the body follows.

Sometimes the body gets exhausted first and the emotions follow.

Heat can make everything feel 20% worse.

A problem that normally feels manageable suddenly feels enormous.


Thread 5: The concerts

This is the interesting one.

You wrote:

> I been binge watch concert on the YouTube all day while working.

Why concerts?

Not documentaries. Not lectures.

Concerts.

I think there is something there.

When I read your stories and reflections, you often identify with musicians, writers, philosophers, and artists.

Not because you want fame.

But because they give shape to feelings.

A concert is not only music.

It is thousands of people sharing one emotion.

Today you were alone in the heat, walking patrols.

The concerts may have been a way of borrowing company.

Not consciously.

But emotionally.


What I think happened

I don't think you're depressed today.

I don't think you made a bad decision.

I don't think you are failing.

I think this happened:

1. Physical exhaustion from heat.

2. Low-level worry about cat food.

3. A request for work you don't really want.

4. Hours of emotionally charged music.



Those things accumulated.

By evening your mind interpreted the accumulation as:

> "Something is wrong."


But when I look at the facts, I don't see something wrong.

I see a tired man carrying many feelings at once.


You once told me about your unfinished PhD, your feeling of not being good enough, your worries about money, and your cats.

What strikes me is this:

Today, despite all of that:

you have work,

someone is offering you additional paid work,

your salary arrives in five days,

your cats are still being fed,

and you are still listening to music and reflecting instead of becoming bitter.

That doesn't sound like someone falling apart.

It sounds like someone carrying a heavy backpack on a very hot day.

The backpack feels lighter after you put it down and look inside.

Right now I think the biggest culprit is not your life.

It's the combination of heat, fatigue, responsibility for the cats, and several hours of emotionally powerful music.

Get some water into yourself if you haven't already. Eat something simple. Then stop evaluating your entire life tonight.

The day has already been filtered through sweat, exhaustion, and Tom Waits-sized emotions. Tomorrow morning may tell a different story.




Norsanina.blogspot.com

Hello 2

Here is the current, complete seven-member lineup of Helloween, ordered from oldest to youngest with their dates of birth and current ages.
| Band Member | Role | Date of Birth | Age |
|---|---|---|---|
| **Michael Weikath** | Lead & Rhythm Guitar / Backing Vocals | August 7, 1962 | 63 years old |

| **Kai Hansen** | Lead & Rhythm Guitar / Co-Lead Vocals | January 17, 1963 | 63 years old |

| **Andi Deris** | Co-Lead Vocals | August 18, 1964 | 61 years old |

| **Markus Grosskopf** | Bass / Backing Vocals | September 21, 1965 | 60 years old |


| **Michael Kiske** | Co-Lead Vocals | January 24, 1968 | 58 years old |

| **Dani Löble** | Drums | February 22, 1973 | 53 years old |

| **Sascha Gerstner** | Lead & Rhythm Guitar / Backing Vocals | April 2, 1977 | 49 years old |

> **Fun Fact:** Michael Weikath and Markus Grosskopf are the only two members who have stayed with the band continuously since its formation in 1984. Since 2016, the band operates as a unique "united" lineup featuring all three of their iconic eras' vocalists (Hansen, Kiske, and Deris) performing together simultaneously!



Norsanina.blogspot.com

Sour Friendship - 370

Sour Friendship 

Yes, that can happen.

Sometimes when one friend's situation improves—whether income, career, education, or social status—it unintentionally changes the balance of the relationship. Not because the successful person has changed, but because the other person begins comparing themselves.

A few possibilities come to mind:

He may feel left behind. When you invited him to do that job and he declined, he may later have seen you earning more and felt he missed an opportunity.

He may feel embarrassed. Some people would rather act distant than admit, "I wish I had joined you."

He may think you are judging him, even if you never said anything judgmental.

He may be struggling with his own life circumstances, and your success reminds him of what he hasn't achieved yet.


One thing I learned is that not everyone celebrates our progress. Some people are happy for us, some are inspired by us, and some feel uncomfortable because our progress shines a light on their own disappointments.

The important question is: Did you change the way you treated him?

If your answer is honestly "No, I still speak to him the same way and treat him with respect," then his reaction is probably more about what is happening inside him than what is happening between you.

There is a quote often attributed to Carl Jung:

> Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.


Sometimes another person's success triggers feelings they did not know they had.

You mentioned in previous conversations that you miss being among people who teach, research, and are hungry to learn. Because of that, I wonder if this friendship was important not just as a friendship but also as a feeling of companionship on a similar path. When someone becomes distant, it can feel like losing more than a friend—it can feel like losing part of your community.

My suggestion is simple:

Continue being polite.

Do not chase his approval.

Do not boast about your income.

Leave the door open for friendship.

Let him come back if he wishes.


A friendship that survives differences in income is usually built on mutual respect. A friendship built on equality of circumstances sometimes struggles when circumstances change.

I'm curious about one detail: when you say he does not talk to you nicely anymore, what does he actually do? Is he sarcastic, dismissive, avoids conversations, or only contacts you when he needs something? The pattern can reveal a lot.

2. That sounds less like a comment about air conditioning and more like a comment about your income.

Notes : The weather and air-conditioning 

If this happened once, it could be a joke. But when someone repeatedly brings up money in a sarcastic way, it often means they are carrying some resentment, envy, or discomfort.

What stands out to me is that your response was very simple:

> "The weather makes me sweat a lot."

You were talking about the weather.

He changed the subject to:

> "You earn a lot. Just install an air conditioner."

That shift tells you where his mind went. He heard "sweating" and immediately thought "money."

The irony is that from what you've shared over many conversations, you don't strike me as someone who is motivated by luxury. You write books, read philosophy, study Al-Ghazali, care for stray cats, and think deeply about life's meaning. Those are not the hobbies of someone obsessed with displaying wealth.

In fact, many people make an assumption:

More income = bigger house.

More income = expensive car.

More income = air conditioner in every room.

But some people value other things:

Books.

Knowledge.

Savings.

Helping family.

Feeding animals.

Peace of mind.


Your friend may have built a story in his mind about what your income means. The story may have very little to do with reality.

One lesson from the book you're reading, The Courage to Be Disliked, is that we often suffer because we start living in other people's evaluations. Your friend's sarcasm is his task, not yours.

You can ask yourself:

> "Have I become arrogant?"

If the answer is no, then the rest belongs to him.

There is also another possibility. Sometimes friends feel comfortable with us when we are struggling together. When one person starts moving ahead, they feel the friendship is changing, even if the successful person is still the same.

The saddest part is that you actually invited him to join you in that work before. You did not hide the opportunity from him. You shared it. He declined. So this is not a case of someone being excluded.

You might simply smile next time and say:

> "Maybe. But I'd rather buy another book."

That keeps the conversation light while quietly reminding him that your priorities are different from what he imagines.

And for what it's worth, many book lovers would understand your position completely. A shelf full of books often feels more valuable than a cooler room. Not because books are worth more money, but because they nourish the part of us that an air conditioner never can.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Module - intro economic

Certainly. Since you have experience teaching and creating educational content, I would suggest a 14-week semester structure suitable for diploma or first-year undergraduate students. The module balances theory, discussion, and practical applications.

Introduction to Economics

Course Duration: 14 Weeks (One Semester) Credit Hours: 3 Prerequisite: None

Course Description

This course introduces students to the fundamental principles of economics. Students will learn how individuals, businesses, and governments make decisions regarding scarce resources. The course covers both microeconomics and macroeconomics, providing an understanding of economic systems, markets, national income, inflation, unemployment, and international trade.

Course Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:

1. Explain the basic concepts of economics.


2. Analyze economic decision-making using economic principles.


3. Differentiate between microeconomics and macroeconomics.


4. Discuss market operations and price determination.


5. Explain major macroeconomic issues affecting society.


6. Evaluate current economic events using economic concepts.




---

Weekly Teaching Plan

Week Topic Learning Activities

1 Introduction to Economics Definition of economics, scarcity, choice, opportunity cost, economic systems
2 Basic Economic Problems What, How, and For Whom to Produce; Factors of Production
3 Demand and Supply Law of Demand, Law of Supply, Demand and Supply Curves
4 Market Equilibrium Equilibrium Price and Quantity, Changes in Equilibrium
5 Elasticity of Demand and Supply Price Elasticity, Income Elasticity, Practical Applications
6 Consumer and Producer Behavior Utility, Consumer Choice, Production Concepts
7 Market Structures Perfect Competition, Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly
8 Mid-Semester Assessment / Quiz / Test Revision and Assessment
9 Introduction to Macroeconomics National Economy, Economic Goals
10 National Income Accounting GDP, GNP, Methods of Measuring National Income
11 Inflation and Unemployment Causes, Effects, Government Policies
12 Money and Banking Functions of Money, Central Bank, Commercial Banks
13 Fiscal and Monetary Policy Government Spending, Taxation, Interest Rates
14 International Trade and Course Review Comparative Advantage, Globalization, Revision



---

Suggested Assessment

Assessment Weight

Quiz 1 10%
Assignment 20%
Mid-Term Test 20%
Group Presentation 10%
Final Examination 40%
Total 100%



---

Suggested Assignment Topics

Students may choose one:

1. Impact of Inflation on Malaysian Households.


2. The Role of Bank Negara Malaysia in Economic Stability.


3. Effects of Rising Food Prices on Consumers.


4. E-commerce and Market Competition in Malaysia.


5. Youth Unemployment in Malaysia.



Recommended References

1. Principles of Economics by N. Gregory Mankiw


2. Economics by Paul Samuelson


3. Bank Negara Malaysia annual reports and publications.


4. Department of Statistics Malaysia economic reports.



This structure is appropriate for a Community College, Polytechnic, Diploma, Foundation, or first-year Degree course and can easily be expanded into a full course syllabus with weekly learning outcomes, tutorials, assignments, and lecture slides.

Weekly Teaching Plan 
Week 
Topic 
Learning Activities 
Introduction to Economics 
Definition of economics, scarcity, choice, opportunity cost, economic systems 
Basic Economic Problems 
What, How, and For Whom to Produce; Factors of Production 
Demand and Supply 
Law of Demand, Law of Supply, Demand and Supply Curves 
Market Equilibrium 
Equilibrium Price and Quantity, Changes in Equilibrium 
Elasticity of Demand and Supply 
Price Elasticity, Income Elasticity, Practical Applications 
Consumer and Producer Behavior 
Utility, Consumer Choice, Production Concepts 
Market Structures 
Perfect Competition, Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly 
Mid-Semester Assessment / Quiz / Test 
Revision and Assessment 
Introduction to Macroeconomics 
National Economy, Economic Goals 
National Income Accounting 
GDP, GNP, Methods of Measuring National Income 
Inflation and Unemployment 
Causes, Effects, Government Policies 
Money and Banking 
Functions of Money, Central Bank, Commercial Banks 
Fiscal and Monetary Policy 
Government Spending, Taxation, Interest Rates 
International Trade and Course Review 
Comparative Advantage, Globalization, Revision 

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Introduction to Economics

Introduction to Economics


I’m really glad the previous one worked well for you—that’s a strong sign your delivery style is effective. Let’s build the next one in the same tone, but for Introduction to Economics, with a smooth, engaging flow suitable for both interview and YouTube.


🎓 Mock Teaching Script

Subject: Introduction to Economics

Topic: Basic Economic Concepts – Scarcity, Choice & Opportunity Cost



🎬 Opening (0:00 – 0:45)

“Assalamualaikum and good day everyone.

Welcome to today’s session on Introduction to Economics. My name is [Your Name], and today we are going to explore the foundation of economics—something that affects our daily lives more than we realize.

Let me start with a simple question:

👉 Have you ever had limited money but many things you wanted to buy?

Maybe you had RM50 and had to choose between:

Eating at a café ☕

Or buying something online 🛍️


That situation… is exactly what economics is about.”



📘 Part 1: What is Economics? (0:45 – 2:00)

“So, what is economics?

According to Lionel Robbins, economics is:

> ‘The study of human behavior as a relationship between unlimited wants and limited resources.’



Let’s simplify that:

👉 Humans have unlimited wants
👉 But resources are limited

This creates a problem—and that problem is called:

👉 Scarcity

For example: Even large companies like Tesla must decide how to use their resources efficiently:

Should they produce more cars?

Or invest in new technology?


👉 So economics is about making the best decisions with limited resources.”



⚖️ Part 2: Scarcity (2:00 – 3:00)

“Let’s focus on our first key concept:

👉 Scarcity

Scarcity means:

We do not have enough resources to satisfy all our wants.


These resources include:

Time ⏰

Money 💰

Labour 👩‍💼

Raw materials


Even time is scarce.

As students, you may have to choose between:

Studying 📚

Working part-time 💼

Or resting 😴


👉 Because you cannot do everything at once.”


🔄 Part 3: Choice (3:00 – 4:00)

“Because of scarcity, we must make:

👉 Choices

Every day, we make decisions such as:

Spend or save

Study or relax

Work or continue education


For example: A student in Kuala Lumpur might choose between:

Taking a Grab ride 🚗 (fast but costly)

Or using public transport 🚆 (cheaper but slower), like Kelana Jaya Line


👉 Every choice involves a trade-off.”



💡 Part 4: Opportunity Cost (4:00 – 5:30)

“Now, this brings us to one of the MOST important concepts in economics:

👉 Opportunity Cost

Opportunity cost is:

👉 The value of the next best alternative that you give up when making a decision.

Let’s make it simple:

If you choose:

To watch Netflix 🎬 instead of studying


👉 Your opportunity cost is:

The study time and knowledge you missed


Another example: If you spend RM20 on bubble tea 🧋

👉 Your opportunity cost could be:

A meal 🍜

Or saving that money

👉 So, every choice has a hidden cost.”


---

🧠 Quick Recap (5:30 – 6:00)

“So let’s recap today’s key concepts:

Scarcity → Limited resources

Choice → Decisions we must make

Opportunity Cost → What we give up


👉 These three ideas form the foundation of economics.”


---

💬 Interactive Question (6:00 – 6:45)

“Now, let me ask you:

👉 Think about your decision yesterday.

What did you choose… and what did you give up?

Was it:

Time with friends?

Studying?

Saving money?


👉 That ‘thing you gave up’ is your opportunity cost.”


🎯 Closing (6:45 – 7:30)

“To conclude:

Economics is not just about money or business.
It is about how we make decisions in everyday life.

From small choices like what to eat…
To big decisions like career paths…

👉 Economics helps us think more clearly and make better choices.

Thank you for your attention.

If you have any questions, feel free to ask.”


🎥 Optional YouTube Outro

“If you found this session helpful, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe for more content on economics and learning. See you in the next session!”


💡 Delivery Tips (For Interview + YouTube)

Use real-life Malaysian examples (Grab, LRT, food choices)

Pause after questions (even if silent)

Use hand gestures when explaining “trade-offs”

Emphasize “opportunity cost” clearly—it’s a key concept

Keep energy warm and relatable



If you want to elevate this further, I can help you: ✅ Add diagram explanation (PPC – Production Possibility Curve)
✅ Convert this into PowerPoint slides
✅ Create Part 2 lecture script (Demand & Supply)
✅ Make it sound more storytelling-based (like your book style)

Just tell me 👍

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Personality Similarities

Personality similarities 

What you are describing sounds less like “copying” a person and more like recognizing yourself through them. Sometimes a public figure becomes a mirror. Not because you are identical, but because certain traits feel familiar when you finally see them expressed openly.

With M.Weikath, I think you are noticing several things at once:

creative intensity

perfectionism

privacy

emotional distance from the audience nearby

comfort expressing through work instead of direct vulnerability


You mentioned something very important:

 “I don't display my work, writing, or creations to people close to me.”

But you do publish on Amazon and YouTube.

That difference matters psychologically.

Sometimes showing work to strangers feels safer because:

strangers judge the work,

but people close to us can feel like they judge our identity.


So the fear is not necessarily:

 “What if they dislike my writing?”



It can quietly become:

“What if the people who already know me see a side of me I kept hidden?”

That is much more personal.

And interestingly, many creators separate their worlds:

public self = creator

private self = ordinary person


Especially people who think deeply or overthink. They often need emotional distance before they can create honestly.

Your avoidance of TikTok/Facebook also says something. Those platforms connect directly to your social circle, memories, expectations, old versions of yourself. Amazon and YouTube create a boundary. You can become “the writer” or “the speaker” there without carrying your entire personal history into the room.

That does not necessarily mean arrogance or hiding. Sometimes it means:

protecting unfinished identity,

protecting vulnerability,

or protecting creative freedom.


You also seem highly aware of personality dynamics. Your observation about Weikath “not remembering what he did to others” because he is too focused on perfection and ideals is actually psychologically nuanced. 

People driven by vision sometimes unintentionally neglect emotional impact because their mind is locked onto:

standards,

systems,

outcomes,

or artistic correctness.


Not cruelty necessarily — sometimes just tunnel vision.

And your sentence:

 “I carry the same trait like them.”



I would reframe it slightly:

You may not be “becoming them.” You may simply be recognizing parts of yourself that were already there.

Artists often help people identify hidden aspects of themselves. That is why certain musicians, writers, or thinkers feel strangely personal to us. They externalize something we could not previously describe.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Hello

Here is the main studio-era journey of Helloween and how the lineup evolved over time.
You can almost read the emotional history of the band through the member changes alone.

Album Year Main Line-up

Helloween (EP) 1985 Kai Hansen (vocals/guitar), Michael Weikath (guitar), Markus Grosskopf (bass), Ingo Schwichtenberg (drums)

Walls of Jericho 1985 Kai Hansen, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part I 1987 Michael Kiske (vocals), Kai Hansen (guitar), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part II 1988 Michael Kiske, Kai Hansen, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Pink Bubbles Go Ape 1991 Michael Kiske, Roland Grapow (replacing Kai Hansen), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg
. Your Turn - Kiske

Chameleon 1993 Michael Kiske, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg
. Windmill - weikath

Master of the Rings 1994 Andi Deris (new vocalist), Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch (drums)
.Secret Alibi - Weikath 

The Time of the Oath 1996 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch
- power

Better Than Raw 1998 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch

The Dark Ride 2000 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch

Rabbit Don't Come Easy 2003 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner (new guitarist), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Mikkey Dee / Mark Cross sessions

Keeper of the Seven Keys: The Legacy 2005 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Gambling with the Devil 2007 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

7 Sinners 2010 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Straight Out of Hell 2013 Same lineup

My God-Given Right 2015 Same lineup

Helloween 2021 Michael Kiske, Andi Deris, Kai Hansen, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Giants & Monsters 2025 Same “Pumpkins United” seven-member lineup



The Three Main Eras

1. The Kai Hansen Era (raw speed metal energy)

Albums:

Helloween EP

Walls of Jericho


This era was:

aggressive,

fast,

rough,

youthful,

almost punk-like in energy.


Songs like:

“Ride the Sky”

“Reptile”

“Gorgar”


feel wild and hungry.
You mentioned “Gorgar” and “Reptile” earlier — that tells me you are naturally drawn to the raw early spirit of the band.


2. The Michael Kiske Era (melody + melancholy)

Albums:

Keeper Part I

Keeper Part II

Pink Bubbles Go Ape

Chameleon


This is the legendary classic era.

Kiske’s voice transformed the band from:

speed metal → melodic emotional power metal.



Weikath’s songwriting flourished here.

But internally, tensions also grew during this period.

By Chameleon, the band sounded almost spiritually exhausted and directionless — fascinating album, but very divisive.



3. The Andi Deris Era (survival and reinvention)

Albums from:

Master of the Rings onward.


This era is extremely underrated emotionally.

The band could have died after:

Kiske left,

Ingo’s struggles,

fan backlash,

internal conflict.


Instead they rebuilt themselves.

Andi Deris brought:

humor,

toughness,

darker edge,

resilience.


Albums like:

The Time of the Oath

Better Than Raw

The Dark Ride


carry a more mature emotional tone.



The Reunion Era Feels Different

The current seven-member lineup is emotionally fascinating because it combines:

youth,

conflict,

survival,

reconciliation,

legacy.


It is almost like multiple timelines standing together on one stage.

And for older fans, that carries emotional weight beyond music itself.
Especially knowing how fractured some relationships once were. 

2. That is actually a very human way of reading bands.

Long-running bands are rarely just “musical projects.”
They become emotional ecosystems.

And Helloween especially feels like that because the personalities were so different psychologically.

Your reading is obviously interpretive rather than factual diagnosis, but I can see why you perceive them that way.

Michael Kiske often came across as emotionally permeable — highly idealistic, sensitive to atmosphere, strongly affected by criticism and conflict. Some people can survive chaos externally while still absorbing it internally for years. Kiske sometimes gave that impression in interviews: someone trying to preserve inner purity while surrounded by intensity.

Meanwhile Michael Weikath can seem almost structurally different psychologically:

more compartmentalized,

intellectually defended,

emotionally delayed,

able to continue functioning amid conflict.


That can look like resilience.
But it can also unintentionally create blind spots.

Some people genuinely do not realize the emotional impact they have because:

they process conflict analytically,

assume others are equally detached,

or move forward internally before others have caught up emotionally.


Your observation:

> “too attached to perfection and expecting others to feel the same”



is interesting because many driven creators unconsciously universalize their own relationship to struggle.

They think:

“This pressure strengthens me, therefore it should strengthen everyone.”



But people have different nervous systems, histories, emotional tolerances.

And bands amplify this problem because:

exhaustion becomes identity,

artistic standards become moral standards,

criticism becomes personal,

and nobody communicates clearly while touring constantly.


Markus Grosskopf really does often appear like a stabilizing presence in the middle of storms. Quietly enduring. The kind of member many bands collapse without.

And Roland Grapow had that adaptable energy too — less ideologically dominant, more fluid socially.

As for Andi Deris being “the saviour,” many fans honestly feel something close to that.

Not because he replaced Kiske technically.

But because he helped the band psychologically survive.

That is different.

He brought:

groundedness,

humor,

durability,

less fragility around identity,

willingness to carry imperfection.


Sometimes survival requires a different emotional architecture than brilliance.

And your last line about Scorpio/INTJ is interesting symbolically, even if we avoid reducing real people completely into types.

What you are really describing is a personality structure:

internally intense,

ideal-driven,

strategic,

emotionally private,

perfection-oriented,

occasionally unaware of emotional collateral damage while pursuing vision.


That pattern absolutely exists in many high-level creators.

But here is the important part: the older version of Weikath seems more reflective than the younger one.

And that matters.

A person who finally asks:

 “What did I miss?” has already changed from the person who never thought to ask at all.

1.3
Here is the main studio-era journey of Helloween and how the lineup evolved over time.

You can almost read the emotional history of the band through the member changes alone.

Album Year Main Line-up

Helloween (EP) 1985 Kai Hansen (vocals/guitar), Michael Weikath (guitar), Markus Grosskopf (bass), Ingo Schwichtenberg (drums)

Walls of Jericho 1985 Kai Hansen, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part I 1987 Michael Kiske (vocals), Kai Hansen (guitar), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Keeper of the Seven Keys Part II 1988 Michael Kiske, Kai Hansen, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Pink Bubbles Go Ape 1991 Michael Kiske, Roland Grapow (replacing Kai Hansen), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Chameleon 1993 Michael Kiske, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Ingo Schwichtenberg

Master of the Rings 1994 Andi Deris (new vocalist), Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch (drums)

The Time of the Oath 1996 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch

Better Than Raw 1998 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch

The Dark Ride 2000 Andi Deris, Roland Grapow, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Uli Kusch

Rabbit Don't Come Easy 2003 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner (new guitarist), Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Mikkey Dee / Mark Cross sessions

Keeper of the Seven Keys: The Legacy 2005 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Gambling with the Devil 2007 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

7 Sinners 2010 Andi Deris, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Straight Out of Hell 2013 Same lineup

My God-Given Right 2015 Same lineup
Helloween 2021 Michael Kiske, Andi Deris, Kai Hansen, Sascha Gerstner, Michael Weikath, Markus Grosskopf, Daniel Löble

Giants & Monsters 2025 Same “Pumpkins United” seven-member lineup




The Three Main Eras

1. The Kai Hansen Era (raw speed metal energy)

Albums:

Helloween EP

Walls of Jericho


This era was:

aggressive,

fast,

rough,

youthful,

almost punk-like in energy.


Songs like:

“Ride the Sky”

“Reptile”

“Gorgar”


feel wild and hungry.
You mentioned “Gorgar” and “Reptile” earlier — that tells me you are naturally drawn to the raw early spirit of the band.



2. The Michael Kiske Era (melody + melancholy)

Albums:

Keeper Part I

Keeper Part II

Pink Bubbles Go Ape

Chameleon


This is the legendary classic era.

Kiske’s voice transformed the band from:

speed metal → melodic emotional power metal.



Weikath’s songwriting flourished here.

But internally, tensions also grew during this period.

By Chameleon, the band sounded almost spiritually exhausted and directionless — fascinating album, but very divisive.


3. The Andi Deris Era (survival and reinvention)

Albums from:

Master of the Rings onward.


This era is extremely underrated emotionally.

The band could have died after:

Kiske left,

Ingo’s struggles,

fan backlash,

internal conflict.


Instead they rebuilt themselves.

Andi Deris brought:

humor,

toughness,

darker edge,

resilience.


Albums like:

The Time of the Oath

Better Than Raw

The Dark Ride


carry a more mature emotional tone.





The Reunion Era Feels Different

The current seven-member lineup is emotionally fascinating because it combines:

youth,

conflict,

survival,

reconciliation,

legacy.


It is almost like multiple timelines standing together on one stage.

And for older fans, that carries emotional weight beyond music itself.
Especially knowing how fractured some relationships once were.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Fun to be alive

I think what you are hearing is the difference between two very different musical “spirits” inside Helloween itself.

Michael Weikath writes in a very melodic, storytelling, almost “floating” way. His songs often feel like:

dreamlike

emotional but structured

melodic tension with release

theatrical but warm

philosophical underneath the fantasy


Meanwhile Sascha Gerstner often writes with:

denser arrangements

sharper modern harmonies

more technical layering

sudden transitions

a “spiral” feeling in melody


That dizziness you mentioned is actually interesting. It can happen psychologically and physically when:

the harmony moves unpredictably,

the guitar layering is very dense,

the melody avoids expected resolution,

or the production has compressed high frequencies.


Some people experience it almost like motion sickness from sound. Especially first listen.

Weikath’s writing usually “lands emotionally.” Sascha’s writing sometimes “rotates emotionally.”

That is not bad or good — just different nervous-system reactions to composition.

A funny thing is: many older fans subconsciously feel this too but cannot explain it technically.

If you love Weikath’s songwriting, you probably respond more to:

emotional narrative melody,

melancholic optimism,

classic European harmony,

Beatles/70s influence hidden inside metal.


Weikath himself was heavily influenced by The Beatles and melodic classic rock, not just metal. 

Here are some famous songs mainly written or heavily associated with Weikath:

Essential Weikath Songs

“How Many Tears”

“A Tale That Wasn’t Right”

“Dr. Stein” 

“Keeper of the Seven Keys”

“March of Time”

“Eagle Fly Free”

“Forever and One”

“Power”

“Where the Rain Grows”

“The Game Is On”

“Secret Alibi”

“Sole Survivor”

“Twilight of the Gods”

“Perfect Gentleman” (co-written)

“Halloween”

“Skyfall” (modern era contribution influence)


A lot of fans consider him one of the architects of European power metal itself. 

For your taste specifically, I think you may deeply enjoy these Weikath songs:

1. “A Tale That Wasn’t Right”


2. “March of Time”


3. “The Chance”


4. “Why?”


5. “Forever and One”


6. “Keeper of the Seven Keys”


7. “Where the Rain Grows”



They have that reflective, inward feeling you seem naturally drawn toward.

Also… your sentence:

> “On the fun side being human.”



That is actually very close to what old European melodic metal was trying to do: carry sadness, fantasy, philosophy, humor, and longing together at the same time.

Not merely aggression.

2. Ah, that makes the pattern clearer now.

If you enjoy “Gorgar” and “Reptile,” then you are not only attracted to melody — you also enjoy tension, eccentricity, and controlled chaos.

“Gorgar” especially has that strange mechanical energy:

repetitive but hypnotic riffing,

playful darkness,

almost comic-book horror atmosphere,

but still melodic underneath.


And “Reptile” has that slithering emotional movement — it feels unstable on purpose. Like something crawling psychologically rather than just musically.

Those songs show Weikath’s quirky side. He often writes music that feels:

mischievous,

theatrical,

slightly absurd,

but emotionally sincere underneath.


That combination is actually rare.

A lot of metal composers can write:

technical music,

aggressive music,

emotional music.


But Weikath often writes “humanly strange” music. Like someone smiling while secretly thinking about mortality, loneliness, fantasy, or irony.

That may also explain why Sascha’s songs gave you dizziness at first. Sascha’s complexity can feel more architectural and compressed, while Weikath’s weirdness breathes more naturally, almost like storytelling.

You may also enjoy these deeper Weikath-type tracks:

“Mr. Ego”

“Windmill”

“Push”

“Wake Up the Mountain”

“Still We Go”

“We Burn”

“Giants”

“The Saints”

“Revolution Now”


And outside of Helloween, you might unexpectedly enjoy:

Gamma Ray (Kai Hansen’s emotional speed/melody balance)

Avantasia for theatrical storytelling

Queen because Weikath’s sense of drama has similarities there

Rainbow for fantasy atmosphere

The Beatles surprisingly — especially later psychedelic-era songwriting structure


Interestingly, older Helloween often feels like:

> “What if fantasy literature, melancholy, humor, and anxiety became melodic metal?”



That is why their music ages differently from many bands of the era.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Assumption at face value 2

Assumption at face value 2 That is a thoughtful answer. It may be as strong evidence that people like us or that same trait with me cannot o...