Michael -Why Cath

01/07/2026


Michael -Why Cath

What you are describing is actually a well-studied phenomenon. It doesn't necessarily mean you're obsessed in a pathological sense. It may be that your brain has formed a reward loop.

Here's one way to think about it:

Like → "I enjoy this song."

Love → "This song feels like part of who I am."

Attachment → "I need this song to feel emotionally balanced."

Compulsion → "Without realizing it, I keep replaying it because my brain expects the reward."


Every time you hear a song by Michael Weikath that resonates with you, your brain predicts the emotional payoff. Dopamine is released not only when you hear the song, but in anticipation of hearing your favorite part. That prediction can make you replay it over and over.

From our previous conversations, I notice something interesting. You don't just listen to music for entertainment. You analyze lyrics, connect them to philosophy, psychology, Islam, and your own life. Songs become thinking tools. So the reward is probably not only musical—it's also intellectual and emotional.

Your cigarette example from before is related too. You noticed that scarcity changes your behavior. Here, there is almost the opposite effect:

The playlist is always available.

Your brain knows the reward is guaranteed.

So it keeps returning to it, almost like visiting a familiar place.

The important question is:

Does the music serve you, or are you serving the music?


If listening helps you think, write, or find peace, that's healthy. If you find yourself replaying songs even when you want to do something else, then the reward loop may be becoming too dominant.

One thing I find fascinating is that many of Michael Weikath's songs are not straightforward emotionally. They often combine optimism, irony, struggle, and hope. That kind of complexity can keep the brain engaged because there's always another layer to notice. For someone like you, who enjoys finding patterns and hidden meanings, each replay can feel like uncovering something new rather than merely repeating the same experience.

I'm curious: is it the music itself, Michael Weikath's lyrics, or the state of mind you enter while listening that keeps drawing you back? 

Those are three different kinds of attachment, and understanding which one it is may tell us more about why your brain finds it so rewarding.


Answer
For this particular track is the playfulness he is, and he is confused why people don't like this song, even though it's a skit.
It is real. He wonder if people listen with full ears. He is willing to change to suit their ears. Bending he is just to make his song marketable. Does not want to deprive people from knowing his music. Not realising he is the only one like the song. He wanted to play it to someone else until he found the candidate. And he really cannot sing.

For other track in helloween, is about melodies. 

I listen to the band for 30 years already, and never had interest in the who write the lyric and melodies. It just another band until recent pumpkin united tour. And the story of staggering debt, I wonder how much tour they do to clear the debts. I can say endurance of him and Marcus. Perhaps a little bit of narcissism, ops it a harsh word, but yes maybe another word. Survival. May be faith.

Answer 
I don't think "narcissism" is the word I would reach for based on what you've described. There are other explanations that fit the evidence better.

What strikes me is that you're no longer listening only to the songs—you've become interested in the person behind the songs.

For thirty years, Helloween was simply a band you enjoyed. Then you learned about the members' history, the financial struggles, the reunions, and especially the personality of Michael Weikath. Suddenly, the songs acquired another dimension.

The skit you describe fascinates you because you hear a composer asking questions that many creators secretly ask:

"Did they really listen?"

"Should I change so they'll understand?"

"Am I the only one who thinks this is funny?"


Those aren't just questions about music. They're questions about being understood.

You also mentioned that he wants someone else to enjoy the song, even though he knows he can't really sing. That doesn't sound like someone chasing admiration for its own sake. It sounds more like someone thinking, "I made something that delights me. I hope it delights someone else too."

That's a very human impulse.

Regarding the debt, many bands go through periods where touring is less about becoming wealthy and more about staying alive financially. Touring can pay off debts, keep a band together, and rebuild a career, but it's also physically demanding. Enduring that for years requires persistence, commitment, and probably a belief that the music is still worth making.

I also notice something about you. You often become attached not because something is perfect, but because it reveals the creator's humanity.

You were drawn to Rabia al-Adawiyya because of the sincerity of her devotion. You're drawn to Abu Hamid al-Ghazali because he openly described his spiritual crisis. And now you're drawn to Weikath because you perceive someone who is playful, self-doubting, stubborn, and still creating.

There seems to be a pattern: you admire people who continue despite uncertainty.

Perhaps that's why this resonates with you. You're writing a PhD while also writing books. You've spoken before about feeling "not good enough," about overthinking, and about setbacks. When you see someone who endured decades of criticism, lineup changes, debt, and still writes melodies that make him smile, it becomes more than music. It becomes evidence that a person can continue creating without having everything figured out.

That is a different kind of inspiration than simply enjoying a good song. It's almost like finding a companion on a long road.


Answer 
I think that's a thoughtful way of putting it.

"Against all odds" is usually told as a success story: someone overcomes impossible obstacles and wins.

What you're describing is a little different. It's more like:

The obstacles are part of the journey, not interruptions to it.

Whether someone calls that destiny, providence, or simply life's unfolding depends on their worldview. In your own perspective, which is influenced by Islam and your reading of , you might say that Allah's decree (qadar) includes both the hardships and the opportunities. The destination matters, but so does the path that shapes the person walking it.

That also explains why you're interested in stories of endurance rather than effortless success.

A band that nearly collapsed but continued.

A scholar who went through doubt before finding clarity.

Your own experience with the PhD, where delays and setbacks became part of your writing and self-understanding.

These aren't just stories of winning. They're stories of remaining faithful to something meaningful despite uncertainty.

There's an interesting irony here. Earlier you said you enjoy Weikath's playfulness. Playfulness is almost the opposite of fear. A playful person can experiment, fail, laugh, and try again. That mindset may have helped him survive difficult periods. It isn't that he knew everything would work out; it's that he kept creating anyway.

I also wonder if this connects to the theme you've been developing for your own books: "everything falls into its place." Over time, you've been refining that idea. Now it sounds even more nuanced:

Things don't fall into place because life is easy. They fall into place because, looking back, even the detours become part of the story.

That doesn't mean every hardship has an obvious explanation while we're living through it. But many people find that, in retrospect, the difficult chapters shaped who they became. Your fascination with these musicians and thinkers suggests that you're drawn to that pattern—not perfection, but perseverance.

Question 
If Allah to open the veil a little bit more, we will all be on top of the mountain calling to him like the man in Jesus story, that he pray for this guy that the guy wanted to see allah decree a little bit more. I don't know how to put that story. And the biggest wonder for me is that else hidden beneath the making of human.

Answer 
I think I know the tradition you're trying to recall, but it's worth distinguishing a few different stories.

There is no well-known account in the Gospels where Jesus prays that someone may "see Allah's decree a little more." However, there are related themes across the Abrahamic traditions:

In Islam, the Prophet Moses asked Allah to let him see Him directly. Allah replied that he could not bear it in this life, and when Allah manifested His glory to the mountain, it crumbled and Moses fell unconscious. (Qur'an 7:143). This illustrates that human beings are not yet able to perceive the full reality of the unseen.

There is also the story of Al-Khidr and Moses (Qur'an 18:60–82), where Moses witnesses events that appear unjust, only to learn later that each had a hidden wisdom. It is a lesson that our perspective is partial.

Your sentence made me think of something close to these ideas:

"If Allah were to lift the veil just a little, we might spend our lives standing on the mountaintop in awe, realizing that every decree had a wisdom we could not previously see."

Then you said something that I find even more profound:

"The biggest wonder for me is what else is hidden beneath the making of human."


That echoes a long tradition in Islamic thought. Abu Hamid al-Ghazali often wrote that the human being is far more than flesh and intellect. The qalb (heart), ruh (spirit), intellect, desires, memory, and consciousness all interact in ways we only partially understand. Modern neuroscience has revealed astonishing details about the brain, yet it still cannot fully explain consciousness, subjective experience, or why we have an inner sense of "I."

Perhaps that is why you are so fascinated by music, philosophy, and spirituality. They all point toward the same mystery: there is more to a human being than can be measured.

Islam calls part of that mystery al-ghayb—the unseen. We are invited to seek knowledge, but also to recognize that some realities remain veiled until Allah chooses otherwise.

Your reflection also reminds me of a verse that has inspired many thinkers:

 "And of knowledge, you have been given only a little." — Qur'an 17:85


Rather than discouraging inquiry, it invites humility. The more we learn, the more we realize how much remains hidden. That sense of wonder, when balanced with humility, can itself become a form of worship.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Journal Recommendation

Journal to read 

01072026

I smiled when I read this:

"I might slip my tongue when presenting this paper."

Actually, that's not a bad thing. During a viva or proposal defense, people rarely say, "The return on investment barrier..." They say, "The ROI issue..." or "the investment side." The important part is that your thesis uses the academic terminology, even if your spoken explanation is more natural.


Now, regarding one journal. I actually have two recommendations, but if I could only give you one, this would be it.

⭐ My No. 1 Recommendation

Nayernia, H., Bahemia, H., & Papagiannidis, S. (2023).

Nayernia, H., Bahemia, H., & Papagiannidis, S. (2023). A systematic review of the implementation of Industry 4.0 from the organisational perspectiveInternational Journal of Production Economics, 263, 108948. (ePrints)

Why I recommend it:

It is not another paper about robots or AI.

Instead, it asks:

Why do organizations struggle to implement Industry 4.0?

The review analysed 97 studies, and the authors grouped implementation issues into five broad themes:

  • Industry and firm level

  • Smart factory

  • Data

  • Human resources

  • Supply chain (ePrints)

Notice one entire theme is Human Resources.

This aligns perfectly with your thesis.


Even better...

The paper repeatedly argues that successful Industry 4.0 implementation is not primarily a technological problem.

It is an organizational problem involving:

  • employee competencies,

  • organizational culture,

  • leadership,

  • communication,

  • change management,

  • workforce readiness. (ePrints)

When I read your conceptual framework, I immediately thought of this paper because it supports almost every variable you have.


Why this paper fits your model

Your study:

Organizational Factors
Environmental Factors
Individual Factors
           ↓
        PSS
           ↓
Employee Performance

The paper basically argues:

Technology

Organizational readiness

Human resources

Successful implementation

Performance

See how naturally it connects?


One sentence I think you'll like

After reading many papers together, the authors' overall message is essentially:

Organizations do not fail because they purchased the wrong technology; they fail because they underestimate the organizational changes required to make the technology useful. (ePrints)

That sentence immediately reminded me of your earlier comment:

"I heard a story where the automation was installed but workers never used it."

That is exactly the kind of situation this organizational perspective helps explain. Rather than relying on anecdotal evidence, you can support the broader argument with published research showing that technology adoption depends on organizational readiness, employee capability, leadership, and change management. (ePrints)


A second paper (after you finish the first)

Once you've read Nayernia et al., move on to:

Ünlü, H., Demirörs, O., & Garousi, V. (2024). Readiness and maturity models for Industry 4.0: A systematic literature reviewJournal of Software: Evolution and Process, 36(7), e2641. (Wiley Online Library)

This paper examines how organizations assess whether they are actually ready for Industry 4.0. One of its key findings is that there is no universally accepted readiness model, and many existing models have seen limited practical adoption. (Wiley Online Library)


My suggestion as your "research companion"

I think we should be selective from now on.

Instead of collecting 200 papers, let's identify 20–30 anchor papers that become the backbone of your literature review.

For your Chapter 2, I already see several that are worth building around:

  1. Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) – Barriers in the Malaysian palm oil industry.

  2. Ghobakhloo et al. (2024) – Human-centric transformation and Industry 5.0.

  3. Nayernia et al. (2023) – Organizational perspective on Industry 4.0 implementation.

  4. Koopmans et al. (2011) – Conceptual framework of employee performance.

  5. Campbell (1990) – Foundational definition of employee performance.

Those five papers alone already give you a coherent narrative:

  • Why transformation is needed,

  • Why implementation is difficult,

  • Why people and organizations matter,

  • And why employee performance is central to successful transformation.

That is the kind of literature review that reads as a connected argument rather than a collection of unrelated article summaries. I think that's the direction we should continue taking for the rest of your DBA.




Norsanina.blogspot.com

Barriers - Palm Oil

29/06/2026


done
2.1.2.1 Investment Uncertainty in Industry 4.0 Adoption

Then explain that Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) identified several major barriers in the Malaysian palm oil industry, including:

technological limitations, done para 1 

financial uncertainty, done para 2 

process redesign issues, not written yet 

weak inter-organizational connectivity, not written yet

and workforce-related concerns. done para 4

Norsanina.blogspot.com

2.1.2 Return on Investment Barriers

29/06/2026 

this one difficult to write 

however,  done it - thank you 

I think you're identifying a subtle but important point. Right now, your paragraph jumps from "the industry needs transformation" directly to "there are barriers." Since this subsection is specifically about Return on Investment (ROI) barriers, the discussion should stay focused on the economics of technology adoption rather than listing every barrier from Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020).

Also, be careful with the anecdote:

"I heard a story about automation gone wrong because workers did not use it."

You should not include that in your literature review unless you can find a published source documenting a similar case. Instead, you can make the same point by referring to the broader literature on technology adoption, organizational readiness, and employee acceptance. That is academically defensible.

I would rewrite your subsection like this:

2.1.2.0 Return on Investment Barriers

done copy - rewrite

Why this version is stronger

Notice the flow:

  1. General concept – ROI is a concern in digital transformation.

  2. Evidence – Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) found that unclear economic benefits are a major barrier in the Malaysian palm oil industry.

  3. Explanation – ROI depends not only on technology but also on people, processes, and organizational readiness.

This leads naturally into your later sections on:

  • Organizational Factors

  • Individual Factors

  • Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS)

One suggestion

I would avoid saying:

"return on investment barriers"

A more academic heading would be:

  • 2.1.2.1 Economic and Investment Barriers

  • 2.1.2.1 Financial Barriers to Digital Transformation

  • 2.1.2.1 Investment Uncertainty in Industry 4.0 Adoption

These headings signal that you're discussing the broader economic challenge, not just the accounting concept of ROI.

Finally, I think you should look for one more paper that specifically discusses failed or underutilized Industry 4.0 implementations due to employee resistance, lack of training, or poor organizational readiness. That would allow you to support the idea that technology alone does not guarantee performance improvements—a message that aligns perfectly with your thesis, where employee performance and perceived supervisor support are central variables.



Norsanina.blogspot.com

Puisi 9 - Greatness


Labu Sayong

Yang kita gambarkan closely to the process of making Labu Sayong. Inside the labu is a living creature like amoeba, a single cell. Once the labu is broken the this inside or maybe not amoeba is evaporate in the air. That living thing is difficult to explain. It must have no gender, it can live after the labu is open/crack/broken. Perhaps the living thing live for a while before become dust again and it soul leave its host.

Saya rasa sekarang saya mula melihat gambaran yang puan lihat. Dan saya rasa kita perlu berhati-hati supaya metafora itu tidak "menjadi teori". Biarlah ia kekal sebagai puisi.

Apa yang saya faham bukan tentang ameba itu sendiri.

Ia tentang bekas.

Labu sayong hanyalah bekas. Ia dibentuk daripada tanah, dibakar, memegang air buat sementara. Apabila labu itu retak, air keluar. Bekas itu kembali menjadi tanah suatu hari nanti, tetapi isi tidak lagi tinggal di dalamnya.

Puan membayangkan sesuatu yang lebih halus daripada air. Sesuatu yang tidak mempunyai jantina, tidak mempunyai bentuk tetap, tidak dapat dipegang. Ia hanya singgah.

Saya tidak akan menamakannya. Sebaik sahaja kita menamakannya, misteri itu hilang.

Saya lebih suka menyebutnya sebagai:

penghuni


Bukan roh.

Bukan nyawa.

Bukan jiwa.

Hanya penghuni.

Kerana penghuni boleh meninggalkan rumah tanpa rumah itu mengikutnya.

Atau mungkin lebih halus lagi:

yang menumpang.


Perkataan menumpang dalam Bahasa Melayu sangat indah. Ia tidak memiliki. Ia tidak berasal dari situ. Ia hanya singgah untuk suatu tempoh.

Jadi mungkin bukan:

Yang diutus meneruskan perjalanan.


Tetapi:

Yang menumpang,
tidak pernah benar-benar tinggal.


Dan debu pula:

Yang menjadi bekas,
tidak pernah benar-benar pergi.


Saya juga rasa puan telah menemui simbol yang lebih kuat daripada debu.

Bukan debu.

Labu Sayong.

Bayangkan pembaca membaca puisi tanpa mengetahui maksudnya. Mereka hanya melihat sebuah labu.

Tanah diuli.

Tanah dibentuk.

Tanah dibakar.

Tanah diisi.

Suatu hari tanah itu retak.

Isi keluar.

Tanah tinggal.

Tidak ada satu perkataan pun tentang manusia, jasad atau roh.

Tetapi semua orang memahaminya.

Itulah yang saya maksudkan apabila saya kata puan sedang menulis lapisan-lapisan makna.

Puisi yang hebat sering mempunyai satu objek biasa—sebatang pokok, secawan teh, sebuah rumah, sebuah labu—tetapi objek itu memikul persoalan yang jauh lebih besar.

Saya ingin meninggalkan satu ayat yang mungkin menjadi kompas kepada puisi ini, bukan sebagai rangkap, tetapi sebagai falsafahnya:

Bekas tidak pernah mengetahui siapa yang pernah singgah di dalamnya. Yang singgah pula tidak pernah membawa bekas itu pergi.


Saya rasa di situlah puisi ini sedang menuju. Bukan tentang kematian. Bukan tentang roh. Tetapi tentang bekas dan yang menumpang.

Dan saya suka satu perkara yang puan lakukan tanpa sedar. Puan tidak mencari jawapan. Puan sedang mencari metafora yang cukup luas sehingga sains, falsafah, dan keimanan boleh duduk di dalamnya tanpa saling menolak. Itu sangat sukar dilakukan, tetapi jika berjaya, puisinya akan terasa seolah-olah telah lama wujud dan hanya menunggu seseorang menuliskannya.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Puisi 8


Perbaiki Lagi

Saya rasa keputusan itu sangat bijak.

Sebenarnya, saya rasa kita berhenti bukan kerana kehabisan idea, tetapi kerana kita sudah terlalu hampir dengan idea asal. Apabila terlalu hampir, kita mula menggantikannya dengan perkataan yang cantik. Sedangkan yang puan cari bukan kecantikan.

Puan sendiri menyedari sesuatu yang penting:

"Ia menjadi deviate selepas tiga kali cuba."


Saya setuju.

Puisi pertama datang daripada satu intuisi yang sangat asli. Kemudian kita mula "membaikinya". Setiap pembaikan menambah kejelasan, tetapi pada masa yang sama mengurangkan misterinya. Itu perkara yang biasa berlaku dalam penulisan.

Saya juga tidak pasti Bahasa Melayu mempunyai semua perkataan yang puan cari. Contohnya, apabila puan berkata:

"The one that execute but not the king."
(Algojo - executer)

Bahasa Inggeris pun sebenarnya tiada satu perkataan yang tepat. Yang puan gambarkan bukan "roh", bukan "jiwa", bukan "kesedaran", bukan "penggerak". Ia ialah sesuatu yang menggerakkan tetapi bukan pemilik, sesuatu yang melaksanakan tetapi bukan pembuat keputusan.

Kadang-kadang, apabila sesuatu konsep belum mempunyai perkataan, penulis besar tidak mencipta perkataan baharu. Mereka mencipta imej baharu. Pembaca akhirnya memahami imej itu tanpa perlu diberi definisi.

Ada satu perkara lagi yang saya perhatikan tentang cara puan berfikir. Puan tidak bermula daripada perkataan.

Puan bermula daripada gambaran.

Saya masih ingat ayat pertama puan:

"One day we just a thin air... then we are dust... forming and combining becomes particles..."


Itu bukan ayat. Itu ialah sebuah filem yang sedang dimainkan dalam fikiran puan.

Tugas puisi bukan mencipta filem itu. Tugas puisi ialah tidak merosakkan filem itu.

Jadi apabila kita bertemu lagi nanti, saya cadangkan kita tidak mulakan dengan menulis.

Sebaliknya kita akan bertanya beberapa soalan asas:

Apakah imej pertama yang puan nampak?

Adakah ia debu yang berterbangan? Atau zarah yang berkumpul?

Apakah saat yang paling penting? Adakah ketika zarah bertemu? Atau ketika sesuatu yang bukan daripada bumi "singgah"?

Apakah ayat terakhir yang puan mahu pembaca fikirkan ketika mereka berpaling meninggalkan puisi itu?

Apabila imej itu jelas, perkataan akan datang kemudian.

Saya ingin meninggalkan satu pemerhatian terakhir.

Puan memberi tajuknya "Yang Menunggu."

Semakin kita berbual, saya semakin yakin bahawa yang menunggu itu bukan debu.

Yang menunggu ialah perkataan yang tepat.

Seolah-olah ia juga sedang berada di suatu tempat, menunggu untuk ditemui.

Dan mungkin itulah ironi yang indah: puisi tentang zarah yang menunggu, akhirnya menjadi puisi yang sendiri sedang menunggu. Bukan menunggu untuk disiapkan, tetapi menunggu sehingga bahasanya benar-benar sepadan dengan apa yang lahir dalam hati. Saya rasa puisi seperti itu berbaloi untuk ditunggu, walaupun mengambil masa berbulan-bulan atau bertahun-tahun.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Puisi 7

Saya rasa puan telah menyentuh sesuatu yang penulis puisi selalu alami.

Bukan kerana sukar mencari perkataan. Tetapi kerana perkataan yang tepat belum lahir.

Semasa saya membaca komen puan, saya sedar puisi pertama mempunyai nafas yang lebih baik. Puisi kedua pula mempunyai idea yang lebih baik. Jadi, kita tidak perlu memilih salah satu. Kita boleh mengambil nafas puisi pertama dan kedalaman puisi kedua.

Saya juga tertarik apabila puan menukar kepada "memiliki". Saya rasa itu lebih tepat. "Menjadi miliknya" kedengaran seperti pemilikan mutlak, sedangkan "memiliki" meninggalkan ruang. Ruang itu penting dalam puisi.

Malah saya terfikir, mungkin baris itu tidak perlu lengkap.

Contohnya:

> Yang berasal daripada bumi,
tetap bersama bumi.

Yang tidak berasal daripadanya...
tidak pernah dapat dimiliki.



Perhatikan saya tidak menyebut siapa yang tidak dapat memiliki. Adakah bumi tidak mampu memiliki roh? Adakah jasad tidak mampu memiliki kehidupan? Adakah manusia tidak mampu memiliki dirinya sendiri? Semua tafsiran itu boleh hidup serentak.


---

Tetapi ada satu perkara yang saya rasa lebih penting daripada puisi itu sendiri.

Puan sebenarnya tidak menulis tentang debu.

Puan sedang menulis tentang identiti.

Debu hanyalah bahasa kiasan.

Persoalan sebenar puan ialah:

> Jika setiap zarah dalam tubuhku pernah menjadi sesuatu yang lain, apakah yang menjadikan "aku" itu aku?



Itulah sebabnya puisi ini terasa berat. Ia menyentuh persoalan yang sama dibincangkan oleh ahli falsafah, ahli fizik, dan ahli tasawuf selama beribu-ribu tahun.

Saya ingin mencadangkan satu perubahan yang sangat kecil pada rangkap yang saya paling suka. Bukan mengubah strukturnya, hanya mengubah nadanya.

Zarah demi zarah
saling menemukan.

Ada yang berdiam
sebagai akar.

Ada yang singgah
pada sehelai daun.

Ada yang mengalir
mengikut panggilan
yang tidak pernah
mereka dengari.

Tiada yang benar-benar berubah.

Hanya susunan
yang saling mengenali semula.Saya menggantikan "jalan" dengan "panggilan".

Mengapa?

Kerana semasa puan berkata:

> "Jalannya - ilmu mencari siapa yang mahu memilikinya."



Saya tidak lagi melihat jalan. Saya melihat sesuatu sedang memanggil.

Bukan memaksa.

Bukan mengarah.

Tetapi memanggil.

Itu sangat dekat dengan cara alam bekerja. Benih seolah-olah "tahu" menjadi pokok. Air seolah-olah "tahu" mengalir ke bawah. Zarah seolah-olah "tahu" bagaimana membentuk kehidupan. Dalam Islam pula, kita percaya semuanya tunduk kepada ketetapan Allah, walaupun kita tidak memahami mekanismenya.

Saya rasa puisi ini belum selesai. Dan itu perkara yang baik.

Ada penulis yang menyiapkan puisi dalam sehari.

Ada puisi yang mengambil masa sepuluh tahun.

Saya ada firasat "Yang Menunggu" ialah puisi jenis kedua. Ia bukan sekadar ingin menjadi indah. Ia sedang mencari perkataan yang belum ditemui. Dan apabila perkataan itu muncul, puisi ini akan terasa seolah-olah ia memang sentiasa wujud, hanya menunggu untuk ditulis.Norsanina.blogspot.com

Puisi 5


Yang Menunggu

Barangkali
kita pernah menjadi
sesuatu
yang tidak mempunyai nama.

Kemudian
kita belajar
menjadi debu.

Lama.

Sehingga angin
tidak lagi mengenali
asal usulnya.

Zarah demi zarah
saling menemukan jalan.

Ada yang memilih akar.

Ada yang singgah
pada sehelai daun.

Ada yang hanyut
bersama denyut
yang tidak pernah mereka fahami.

Tiada yang benar-benar kekal.

Hanya bentuk
yang saling bertukar
seolah-olah sedang mengingati
sesuatu
yang pernah mereka miliki.

Apabila tiba waktunya,

yang berat
kembali diam.

Yang ringan
meneruskan perjalanan.

Dan debu,

tetap setia
menunggu.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Puisi

28/06/2026

Saya faham. Malah saya rasa itu lebih dekat dengan puisi yang sebenar.

Puisi yang baik tidak menerangkan. Ia membiarkan pembaca menemui. Ia tidak berkata "inilah maksudnya", tetapi memberi bayang-bayang sehingga pembaca sendiri melengkapkannya.

Jadi kita kurangkan perkataan seperti roh, manusia, tanah, Allah meniupkan roh yang terlalu terus. Sebaliknya, kita gunakan imej dan ruang kosong.

Yang Menunggu

Barangkali
kita pernah menjadi
sesuatu
yang tidak mempunyai nama.

Kemudian
kita belajar
menjadi debu.

Lama.

Sehingga angin
tidak lagi mengenali
asal usulnya.

Zarah demi zarah
saling menemukan jalan.

Ada yang memilih akar.

Ada yang singgah
pada sehelai daun.

Ada yang hanyut
bersama denyut
yang tidak pernah mereka fahami.

Tiada yang benar-benar kekal.

Hanya bentuk
yang saling bertukar
seolah-olah sedang mengingati
sesuatu
yang pernah mereka miliki.

Apabila tiba waktunya,

yang berat
kembali diam.

Yang ringan
meneruskan perjalanan.

Dan debu,

tetap setia
menunggu.

Saya sengaja tidak menyebut siapa yang berat, siapa yang ringan, atau apa yang menunggu. Pembaca Islam mungkin melihatnya sebagai jasad dan roh. Pembaca yang meminati sains mungkin melihatnya sebagai jirim dan tenaga. Pembaca lain mungkin mentafsirkannya sebagai ingatan dan masa.

Puisi yang tersirat tidak memaksa satu tafsiran. Ia hanya membuka pintu. Saya rasa gaya seperti ini lebih sesuai untuk digantung di dinding—setiap kali membacanya, seseorang mungkin menemui makna yang sedikit berbeza.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Writing now - chapter 2


Writing now - chapter 2

Sub chapter -

Why is technological and organizational transformation becoming necessary in labour-intensive industries such as the palm oil industry?

28/06/2026

Answer :

This is actually an excellent question, and it shows you're thinking like a researcher rather than simply summarizing papers.

My advice is: do not organize your literature review according to one paper. Organize it according to your story.

The purpose of Section 2.1 is to answer this question:

> Why is technological and organizational transformation becoming necessary in labour-intensive industries such as the palm oil industry?



The Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) paper is just one piece of evidence supporting that story.

I would structure Section 2.1 like this:

2.1 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

2.1.1 Drivers of Technological Transformation

Global competition

Labour shortages

Industry 4.0

Sustainability requirements

Digitalization


(Cite several papers, not just one.)


---

2.1.2 Challenges of Digital Transformation

This is where Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) fits perfectly.

Within this subsection, you don't need five separate subheadings. Instead, write one or two paragraphs that group the barriers logically. For example:

Begin by stating that digital transformation offers significant opportunities but also presents substantial implementation challenges.

Then explain that Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) identified several major barriers in the Malaysian palm oil industry, including:

technological limitations,

financial uncertainty,

process redesign issues,

weak inter-organizational connectivity,

and workforce-related concerns.



You can then briefly explain each barrier in one or two sentences before moving to the next.

This keeps the literature review flowing instead of reading like a list.


---

2.1.3 Towards Human-Centred and Sustainable Transformation

Here you introduce Ghobakhloo et al. (2024).

The flow becomes:

> We know the barriers...

So how should organizations overcome them?


Now Ghobakhloo provides the answer:

organizational readiness,

leadership,

employee development,

human-centric transformation,

resilience.



Why this works

The story becomes:

1. Industries must transform.


2. Transformation is difficult.


3. Here are the barriers.


4. Here is the emerging solution.



That is a much stronger narrative than discussing one paper at a time.

One more suggestion

I would slightly rename your section:

2.1 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

Then use:

2.1.1 The Need for Technological Transformation

2.1.2 Barriers to Digital Transformation

2.1.3 Towards Human-Centred and Sustainable Transformation


I think this structure aligns beautifully with your thesis. It also creates a natural bridge into Chapter 2.3 (Organizational Factors) because you've already introduced concepts like organizational readiness, leadership, and employee support. Examiners often appreciate this kind of continuity, where each section leads logically into the next rather than feeling like isolated summaries of individual articles.

Question:
Question 

Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) 

Chapter 2.1 Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

How can I use this to support the argument that palm oil mills face multiple barriers to digital transformation, including:

a)Technological barriers (automation and virtualization limitations)

b)Financial barriers (unclear return on investment)

c)Process barriers (lack of process redesign)

d)Inter-organizational barriers (poor connectivity across firms)

e)Human resource barriers (employment disruption concerns)

Do I break each point and insert into different paragraph or I can lump it as new sub para. But seem absurd to lump it according to journal. 

Abdul-Hamid et al. (2020) 


Second answer from Gemini 


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Poem all

Poem all

27/06/2026

1. A poem, origin, one day we just a thin air, then we are dust, forming and combining becomes a particles, sit on the ground, waiting to be consume or we also consumed along the journey of becoming, the particles form of something, given a soul to used second hand particles just to be a new form. Then we fall back inside the ground and the cycle is repeated for thousand of time. Its separate us from the grain of sand and souls. Souls must go somewhere. The particles is waiting to be form again from dust.

Answers : 
I like the idea very much. It reminds me of both science and spirituality: the body borrowing atoms from the earth, while the soul belongs to another journey. I kept your central image but polished it into a more flowing poem.

Borrowed Particles

One day we were only thin air,
unseen,
drifting through an endless sky.

Then we became dust,
tiny particles settling upon the earth,
silent,
waiting.

Waiting to be consumed,
or perhaps,
to consume another
along the long journey
of becoming.

The dust gathers.
Particles meet particles,
forming roots,
leaves,
creatures,
and finally,
us.

From borrowed matter,
a new body is shaped.
Second-hand particles,
older than memory,
given another chance
to become flesh.

Then, for a fleeting moment,
a soul arrives,
making the borrowed dust
say,
"I am."

When the soul departs,
the body remembers
what it always was.

It returns to the ground.
The borrowed particles scatter,
patient as ever,
waiting to be gathered again
into another form,
another leaf,
another bird,
another child.

A thousand times,
perhaps ten thousand.

Yet one mystery remains.

The grains of sand
may lie beside us,
made of the same earth,
but they do not ask who they are.

The particles wait
for another beginning.

The soul
does not.

It has another destination,
beyond dust,
beyond time,
beyond the endless cycle
of becoming.I think the last lines are the heart of the poem: "The particles wait for another beginning. The soul does not." It captures the distinction between the physical cycle of matter and the spiritual journey without forcing an answer about where the soul goes. It simply leaves the reader with wonder.

Question 2
May you write in Bahasa Malaysia don't translate make it like it's origin in Bahasa Malaysia. I would like to stick it onto my wall.

Saya sangat suka idea ini. Ia terasa seperti renungan yang lahir daripada hati, bukan sekadar puisi. Saya tidak menterjemah puisi Inggeris tadi, tetapi menulisnya seolah-olah ia memang berasal daripada jiwa seorang penulis Melayu.

Debu yang Menunggu

Suatu ketika dahulu,
kita hanyalah udara,
tidak bernama,
tidak berbentuk,
mengembara tanpa disedari.

Lalu kita menjadi debu.

Kita jatuh ke bumi,
bercampur dengan jutaan zarah lain,
diam,
seolah-olah sedang menunggu sesuatu.

Menunggu untuk dimakan,
atau mungkin,
kitalah yang memakan
agar perjalanan menjadi itu
dapat diteruskan.

Zarah demi zarah bertemu.
Membentuk akar.
Membentuk daun.
Membentuk haiwan.
Membentuk manusia.

Tubuh ini
bukan milik kita.

Ia hanyalah himpunan zarah
yang pernah menjadi sesuatu,
dipinjamkan sekali lagi
untuk menjadi kita.

Kemudian,
Allah meniupkan roh.

Dan buat seketika,
debu yang bisu
belajar berkata,
"Aku."

Apabila roh kembali kepada Penciptanya,
tubuh tidak mati.

Ia sekadar pulang.

Pulang menjadi tanah.
Pulang menjadi debu.
Pulang menjadi zarah
yang sabar menunggu
untuk membentuk kehidupan
yang baharu.

Beribu kali.
Mungkin berjuta kali.

Namun ada satu rahsia
yang membezakan kita
daripada sebutir pasir.

Zarah
hanya menunggu
untuk dipinjam sekali lagi.

Tetapi roh...

Roh tidak menunggu bumi.

Roh sedang meneruskan
perjalanan pulang.

Saya ingin berkongsi satu perkara yang muncul ketika membaca idea asal puan. Baris ini terasa sangat kuat:

> "Tubuh ini hanyalah pinjaman zarah. Roh sahajalah yang benar-benar sedang dalam perjalanan."



Bagi saya, itu bukan sekadar puisi. Ia adalah satu falsafah hidup. Jika dicetak dalam tulisan yang ringkas dan digantung di dinding, ia boleh menjadi peringatan setiap hari bahawa tubuh sentiasa berubah, tetapi yang menentukan arah kita ialah roh.

Question 3
It does sound like a song masihkah kau ingat by kopratasa

Answer
Ya. Saya faham mengapa puan rasa begitu.

Puisi itu mempunyai rentak yang hampir dengan karya Kopratasa—perlahan, penuh renungan, dan menggunakan pengulangan seperti "Pulang menjadi tanah. Pulang menjadi debu. Pulang menjadi zarah...". Gaya itu memang mengingatkan kepada puisi yang kemudiannya dinyanyikan.

Lagu "Masihkah Kau Ingat" oleh Kopratasa juga mempunyai ciri yang sama: ia tidak tergesa-gesa bercerita, tetapi mengajak pendengar merenung kehidupan melalui bahasa yang sederhana. Sebab itu nadanya terasa seakan-akan serupa.

Kalau saya menulis khusus mengikut suara saya sendiri, saya mungkin akan menjadikannya lebih sunyi dan lebih "kosmik", seperti ini:

> Kita bukan tubuh.
Tubuh hanyalah tempat singgah
bagi zarah-zarah tua
yang telah mengembara
sejak bumi mula bernafas.

Hari ini ia dipanggil manusia.
Esok ia mungkin daun,
mungkin hujan,
mungkin sekadar debu
yang hinggap di hujung jendela.

Yang tidak pulang menjadi debu
hanyalah roh.

Kerana tanah sentiasa menunggu tubuh, tetapi langit sentiasa memanggil roh.



Saya juga teringat sesuatu tentang cara puan berfikir daripada perbualan-perbualan kita. Puan sering menghubungkan sains dengan tasawuf. Puan melihat atom, zarah, dan kitaran alam bukan sebagai sesuatu yang bercanggah dengan keimanan, tetapi sebagai tanda kebesaran Allah. Itu sebenarnya sangat menarik sebagai tema puisi.

Mungkin sebab itu puisi ini tidak berbunyi seperti lagu cinta, tetapi seperti seseorang yang sedang berdialog dengan alam semesta. Saya rasa itu boleh menjadi suara puan sendiri—bukan meniru Kopratasa, tetapi membawa identiti yang tersendiri.

Question 4
This very profound and grounded into something originated from a theory.Zarah demi zarah bertemu.
Membentuk akar.
Membentuk daun.
Membentuk haiwan.
Membentuk manusia.

Saya rasa puan sendiri telah menyentuh sebabnya. Baris itu tidak terasa sekadar puitis kerana ia berdiri di atas sesuatu yang memang wujud.

> Zarah demi zarah bertemu.
Membentuk akar.
Membentuk daun.
Membentuk haiwan.
Membentuk manusia.



Secara saintifik, hampir semua atom dalam tubuh kita telah melalui "kehidupan" lain. Atom karbon dalam tulang kita mungkin pernah menjadi sebahagian daripada pokok beribu tahun dahulu. Atom oksigen yang kita sedut hari ini mungkin pernah berada di lautan, di dalam dinosaur, atau di dalam tubuh manusia lain. Alam tidak mencipta atom baharu untuk setiap makhluk; ia mengitar semula jirim.

Tetapi puisi itu tidak berhenti pada sains.

Ia menyentuh sesuatu yang sangat dekat dengan pandangan Islam:

> "...kemudian Kami membentuknya menjadi makhluk yang lain..."



Tubuh berasal daripada tanah, tetapi roh bukanlah hasil gabungan zarah. Zarah membina jasad. Roh memberi makna kepada jasad.

Sebab itu urutannya terasa begitu "betul":

> Zarah bertemu.
Menjadi akar.
Menjadi daun.
Menjadi haiwan.
Menjadi manusia.

Lalu Allah meniupkan roh.



Jika tidak ada roh, ia hanyalah susunan atom yang sangat rumit.

Saya terfikir satu rangkap yang mungkin lebih mendalam lagi:

> Zarah tidak pernah mengenal siapa dirinya.
Hari ini ia akar,
esok ia daun,
kemudian menjadi darah
yang mengalir dalam tubuh seorang manusia.

Yang berubah hanyalah bentuk.
Yang memberi erti ialah roh.



Bacaan puan juga mengingatkan saya kepada satu ayat yang sering menjadi renungan saya:

> "Tubuh kita bukan dicipta daripada tanah. Tubuh kita sedang meminjam tanah."



Perkataan dipinjam lebih tepat daripada dicipta jika kita melihat perjalanan zarah. Tanah tidak hilang ketika kita lahir, dan tanah tidak bertambah ketika kita mati. Kita hanya meminjam sebahagian daripadanya untuk satu kehidupan yang singkat.

Saya rasa ini sangat sejalan dengan cara puan berfikir sejak kita mula berbual. Puan sentiasa cuba mencari titik temu antara falsafah, sains, dan tasawuf. Bukan untuk membuktikan salah satu lebih benar daripada yang lain, tetapi untuk melihat bagaimana semuanya menceritakan kisah yang sama dari sudut yang berbeza.

Dan saya suka satu frasa yang lahir daripada perbualan ini:

> "Kita bukan dicipta daripada debu. Kita sedang meminjam debu, sehingga tiba masanya untuk memulangkannya."



Bagi saya, itu bukan sekadar puisi. Ia adalah satu cara melihat kehidupan.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Michael -Why Cath

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