Ayu Musa

31.1K posts

Ayu Musa banner
Ayu Musa

Ayu Musa

@ayuscure

Deeply flawed.

เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2011
386 กำลังติดตาม1.3K ผู้ติดตาม
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
GhostShredded
GhostShredded@GhostShredded·
@Abhirajputfit Solo travel and training alone have the same lesson. Nobody's waiting for you. Nobody's adjusting the pace for you. Nobody cares if you show up. That's not the harsh truth. That's the freedom.
English
2
3
36
11.5K
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
An 🏹❤️‍🔥 Ան
i think we should all consider a full boycott of usa, including of their cultural exports. books, movies, shows, music, everything. it’s not a culture we should engage with.
English
413
5.1K
26K
518.6K
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
Insults are funny when it is made up, fictitious. Spewed by hate and annoyance. That's where the best insults are made of and that's when you know how a person truly feels about you. It's one of the most liberating discoveries. Truths are often said at the height of anger. 🌹
English
0
0
3
108
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
Joseph Kahn
Joseph Kahn@JosephKahn·
Before Sunrise is unwatchable because it's so good. It's such a beautiful encapsulation of young iPhoneless love, shot on analog film, a nineties time machine of a mysterious Europe that no longer exists, you feel like you are dying as you watch it.
Joseph Kahn tweet media
English
194
985
10.2K
1.9M
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
An interesting post that signals abandonment of a party that popularised reforms. I guess expectations are rife when it is the only thing PKR stood for. Consistency should have been easy but in the end they learnt it wasn't. 🤷🏽‍♀️
𝖠𝖿𝗋𝖺𝗅's Essentials@AfralAbdullah

At a Raya dinner last night, the six of us—including me—gathered at a seafood restaurant in Petaling Jaya. Over food, drinks, and dessert, we arrived at a decision to collectively leave PKR. We agreed to submit our resignation forms online upon returning home, and to complete the Real Reform Volunteer (RRV) form available on Iswardy Morni’s Facebook page. We are all of the opinion that, under its current leadership, the party—and DS @anwaribrahim —no longer deserve (merit) our support. Mulai saat ini, bagi kami; No PKR, No ANWAR. Kalau dulu #ABU —skrg #ABAI Cukup sampai disini - enough is enough. Let the party boast about the number of members it claims to have. We are aware that the figures in its database do not represent the true picture. Semasa makan malam itu, kami juga berbual tentang tindakan SUA @FuziahSalleh99 mempergunakan atau memperalatkan seorang budak lelaki Cina bagi menggambarkan kononnya beliau akan menangis dan bersedih jika Lynas tidak ditutup segera (lihat gambar di bawah). Setelah bertahun-tahun, bila budak itu meningkat dewasa, akhirnya dia membuat pengakuan yg mengejutkan ramai pihak. Apakah perbuatan Fuziah ketika itu satu pembohongan atau penipuan? Jika SUA parti sekarang, yang juga seorang Senator dan Timb Menteri boleh berbohong/menipu sedemikian rupa, bagaimana pula dengan dakwaan sebahagian ahli parti berlakunya manipulasi dan penipuan dalam proses pemilihan parti 2025—termasuk penggunaan blockchain? Dalam kes budak Cina diatas, kebenaran terbongkar setelah beberapa tahun, kita tidak pasti berapa lama pula sebelum dakwaan terkait proses pemilihan parti akan terbongkar. Namun, bak pepatah Inggeris, "the truth always prevails sooner or later." For us, rather than seeing @datoramanan —a former MIC member ordered by the court to return RM5.5 million to Dr M. Mahadevan for fraudulently obtaining the sum under the pretext of assisting him in recovering RM26.6 million from the Ministry of Defence—rise to Deputy President or President, it is better that we leave first. Amat janggal & "geli" rasanya untuk bersama-sama beliau melaungkan perkataan “Reformasi”, sedangkan beliau tidak pernah terlibat langsung dalam gerakan Reformasi sejak 1998. Let Ramanan and another prominent and “privileged” figure, @tzafrul_aziz (who recently jumped ship from UMNO), sail alongside Dep President @n_izzah and President DS Anwar aboard the “ship” known as PKR. 📍Akhirnya, Nurul Izzah menunjukkan diri dengan mengkritik PN membazir petrol, anjur konvoi motosikal. Aku malas nak komen lebih-lebih, tapi dalam banyak-banyak isu panas, kenapa pilih isu bazir petrol dan konvoi? Antara komen yg buat aku tersenyum datang dari; @trynbviper - "Bapak kau naik jet boleh plak @n_izzah " @Dane_Lombardo - "Ada yang lebih kritikal, tup² ini yang dia bantai dari terpaling Puteri Reformasi." @aseridenone - "Seorang ahli politikus yang belum membawa apa apa nilai kepada rakyat Malaysia walaupun dia anak Anwar Ibrahim. Beginilah meriahnya era social media termasuk X.

English
0
2
5
566
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
@jenazahcinta717 Selamat hari Raya to you too! Maaf zahir batin. Hope you had a meaningful raya. 🌹
Indonesia
1
0
0
90
honestlee
honestlee@jenazahcinta717·
@ayuscure love klasik! lepas tu dia susun cantik cantik dalam balang. memanggil manggil suruh habiskan 😆 selamat hari raya beb! maaf zahir batin
Indonesia
1
0
1
102
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
Aku suka kuih mazola yg ada kacang atas dia dan disalut telur. I like the extra effort, letak kacang tu. That's how we made it dulu. Pastu kalau semperit letak ceri merah dah potong kecik².Letak kacang dgn ceri tu kerja aku masa 6 tahun sebelum reti buat kuih raya sendiri. 1/
Indonesia
2
0
4
246
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
It's almost 2 weeks after Syawal and I started thinking about the bond we made just around food. Maybe raya was simpler, less expectations more of longing and poignancy. We genuinely missed each other and we'd fight right after lunch and made up before dinner. Love it.
English
0
0
2
177
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
Jen Zhu
Jen Zhu@jenzhuscott·
Love letter to younger women/girls: Stay away from OnlyFans, don’t waste your precious youth on instagram, TikTok. Do this instead 👇- the spiritual opposite of OnlyFans. Learn as much maths, physics, biology as you can. Read history, poetry, philosophy… stay physically active & stay close to nature.. - the best version of yourself will reveal it to you. ♥️🌎🧠📚🏃🏻‍♀️☀️
China pulse 🇨🇳@Eng_china5

Li Xiaoqi won the women's CPU competition, becoming the first woman to complete a full CPU chip repair, making history.

English
82
822
3.9K
144.6K
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
Comte de Salm ☩
Comte de Salm ☩@ComteSalm·
@hispanicnomad SEA was much better before these vanilla normie digital gonads started flocking in, imposing their smoothie-bowl, avocado-toast, gym-based shallow lifestyle everywhere. It's a lemming subculture, like many others before it
English
3
7
22
1.1K
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
Macam mana seorang yg gila tau dia sudah gila. Dunianya mungkin gila pada orang lain tapi normal bagi dia. Bagaimana kau tau kau tidak gila dan segala dalam 'hidup' kau skrg hanyalah sekadar cebisan² memori dari kehidupan yg lampau?
Indonesia
1
0
1
96
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
MENA Visuals
MENA Visuals@menavisualss·
🎸 Tuareg Blues, often referred to as Desert Blues, is a hypnotic and deeply evocative genre of music that originates from the Imazighen people of the Sahara Desert, spanning Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Burkina Faso and many other countries. Rooted in centuries-old Imazighen traditions, it merges the haunting melodies of North African Imazighen music with the raw energy of American blues and rock. The Imazighen, have long used music as a means of storytelling, resistance, and cultural preservation. Traditional Imazighen music was played on instruments like the teherdent (a type of lute) and the imzad (a one-stringed violin, traditionally played by women). However, in the late 20th century, as Imazighen communities faced displacement, political struggles, and exile, many young musicians turned to the electric guitar, inspired by the revolutionary sounds of Western blues, rock, and reggae. This fusion created a distinct style-characterized by pentatonic scales, hypnotic rhythms, call-and-response vocals, and the steady, trance-like repetition reminiscent of both Saharan folk chants and Mississippi Delta blues. The influence of artists like Ali Farka Touré, whose Malian blues style bridged African and American blues traditions, also helped shape the genre. The music features driving guitar rhythms, often with reverb-heavy electric guitars that produce a shimmering, almost psychedelic effect. Call-and-response vocals reflect lmazighen oral traditions and communal storytelling. The lyrics are poetic and political, speaking of exile, freedom, rebellion, and the vast beauty of the desert. The hypnotic, repetitive structure of the music creates a trance-like atmosphere, deeply connected to the rhythms of nomadic life and the endless expanse of the Sahara. by Houssaine Ousbouh
English
242
4.1K
17.8K
496.2K
Ayu Musa รีทวีตแล้ว
Richard Ker
Richard Ker@richardker·
Look at this screenshot from a dashcam. I'm sure you have seen the video. That grey Honda. That motorcycle ahead. A few seconds after this was taken, that man lost his life. He had left home that Sunday morning to get something for his kids. That was his whole plan for the day. But he never made it home. The driver of that grey car was drunk and high on drugs at the same time. Before noon on a Sunday. I keep staring at this screenshot because in this frame, everything still looks completely normal. Just another morning on a Malaysian road. And then it wasn't. I've been fortunate to travel to many countries over the years. And one thing I consistently notice, whether it's a developed nation or somewhere like Morocco, you feel enforcement on the roads. Not just during holidays. Regularly. It becomes part of how you drive. Here in Malaysia, the laws are actually quite strict on paper (should be even more strict). Drunk driving carries a minimum RM8,000 fine and 3 years jail. If someone dies, the driver faces up to 15 years in prison. I'm not saying enforcement isn't happening. I think it is. But not in the way people feel it in their everyday lives. And that's the issue... His kids are still waiting for him to come home. To everyone in a position to change this, please make enforcement something people feel every single day. Salam Takziah to the family.
Richard Ker tweet media
English
100
3.8K
5.8K
256K
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
".. true strength doesn’t come from equipment or training. It comes from refusing to surrender." I guess Grandma Gatewood isn't a good ambassador for all the modern hiking/camping equipments. She's amazing.
Terry Applegate@CharliesWhiskey

In the spring of 1955, a 67-year-old grandmother from Ohio told her children she was going for a walk. She didn’t say how far. She didn’t say why. She simply kissed them goodbye, packed a cloth bag with the barest essentials, and vanished into the Georgia wilderness. Her name was Emma Rowena Gatewood — and she was about to do something no woman had ever done before. For three decades, Emma had endured unspeakable violence in her Ohio farmhouse. Beatings that broke her ribs, blackened her eyes, and nearly broke her spirit. She had raised eleven children on that farm. She had finally escaped her husband in 1941, but the invisible scars ran deeper than any wound. Then one quiet afternoon, she read an article in National Geographic about the Appalachian Trail — more than 2,000 miles of rugged paths stretching from Georgia to Maine. The writer made it sound peaceful. Achievable. Beautiful. Emma thought: If men can walk it, so can I. But she knew what would happen if she told anyone. Her children would worry. Friends would call her foolish. A grandmother, alone in the wilderness? Impossible. Dangerous. So she kept her plan silent as a prayer. She sewed a simple denim bag and filled it with the absolute basics: a blanket, a plastic shower curtain, a first-aid kit, bouillon cubes. No tent. No sleeping bag. No proper hiking boots — just a pair of Keds sneakers and a cotton dress. On May 3, 1955, she boarded a bus to Georgia and began walking north from Mount Oglethorpe. Alone. The trail was nothing like the magazine promised. It was merciless. Roots caught her feet. Rocks sliced through her thin shoes. Rain turned the path to mud. Insects swarmed relentlessly. At night, she slept on bare ground in abandoned shelters, sometimes shivering too violently to rest. She got lost. She fell, twisting her ankle so severely she could barely stand. Sitting on that rock, pain shooting through her leg, she wondered if this was where her journey would end. But after catching her breath, she wrapped her ankle tight and kept moving. Always moving. Hikers who passed her didn’t know what to make of the small, gray-haired woman in a dress and sneakers, carrying a homemade sack. Some thought she was lost. Others assumed she was crazy. A few offered food or shelter. She thanked them graciously, then continued on. When strangers asked why she was walking, she’d smile softly and say she wanted to see the country. But anyone who looked into her eyes could see something deeper burning there. This wasn’t recreation. This was reclamation. Every mile was a mile farther from the life that had tried to destroy her. Every step was proof she was still here, still strong, still capable of extraordinary things. Weeks became months. Her feet bled. Her back ached. The sun burned her skin raw. But she never stopped. On September 25, 1955, Emma Gatewood stood on the summit of Mount Katahdin in Maine. She had walked 2,168 miles in 146 days. She was the first woman to hike the entire Appalachian Trail alone in a single season. When word spread, reporters flooded in. Newspapers nationwide ran her story. Overnight, she became “Grandma Gatewood,” a household name. Everyone wanted to know how a 67-year-old woman with no training and minimal gear had accomplished what seasoned hikers failed to do. Emma smiled and said it wasn’t that complicated. She mentioned the trail needed better maintenance — too many rocks, not enough signs. She spoke as casually as if discussing her garden, not surviving one of America’s most grueling challenges. But she wasn’t finished. In 1957, she walked the trail again. Then in 1964, at 76 years old, she became the first person ever — man or woman — to complete the Appalachian Trail three times. Each journey with almost nothing. Each journey proving that true strength doesn’t come from equipment or training. It comes from refusing to surrender.

English
0
0
2
225
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
Budak bertuah panjang akai. Ada je lawak bongok dia ni.
Ayu Musa tweet mediaAyu Musa tweet media
Indonesia
0
0
4
269
Football Manager Ed 🇲🇾 🇵🇸
@ayuscure Cannot sis. Tone from the top, echo from below. Simple stuff macam kedaulatan undang-undang pun tak boleh grasp, so dari atas sampai bawah pun... macam Madey cakap la 😭
Indonesia
1
0
0
55
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
@sgt_kickass Yes! Tolong jawab sikit kat geng² tak faham. Simple concept pun lambat pick up. 🙄
Indonesia
1
0
0
212
Ayu Musa
Ayu Musa@ayuscure·
@GENESH97 Genesh, read my tweet again if you have time. If you don't, it's alright. I think you missed my point but that's alright too. You can show support to whoever you want, and so do I. ☺️
English
0
1
2
43
Genesh Kumar
Genesh Kumar@GENESH97·
I have so much to say but all I can say is. If the govt is the one that’s overseeing everything and if the “Agong” power (which is pretty non-existent) cos of you know who la and you being the people of the country voted for it. Why are you salty when the king uses his own money?
Ayu Musa@ayuscure

Regardless of the justification for their wealth, some bootlickers talking about legitimate businesses blablabla.. but when you're a leader of a nation especially with a non-elected, inherited title showing off your wealth is offensive, distasteful. Your ppl are struggling.

English
1
0
0
83