http://afemaleguest.blogs.friendster.com/afemaleguestblog/2008/01/not_knowing_.html
   
    I sometimes think that not knowing something is better than knowing. Or, 
not knowing makes someone’s life more peaceful.
  In Javanese culture, in general, and in Central Java (or Semarang) in 
particular, people suggest that when someone is hospitalized, he or she is to 
leave the hospital (after getting cured) NOT on Saturday. Why? Javanese people 
believe that when someone leaves the hospital on Saturday, he or she is 
“doomed” to be back to the hospital, to be hospitalized again not long after 
that. 
  Although my family don’t have Javanese blood in our bodies, we somewhat 
believe in that so-called “myth”. It is easily understood because we have been 
living in Java for decades. Therefore, when my youngest sister was hospitalized 
last December (from the Christmas’ eve until the New Year’s eve), and the 
doctor let her go home on Saturday (December 29), my family chose to bring her 
home on Sunday December 30. (Un)fortunately, on that Saturday morning December 
29, her temperature increased again and she got chilled terribly. This made the 
doctor ask us to let her stay in the hospital longer. We ourselves didn’t dare 
to bring her home. 
  Two days after that, Monday December 31 she seemed much better. She also 
started to feel bored of the situation in the hospital while her elder sisters 
felt exhausted attending her days and nights. My younger sister proposed an 
idea to bring the youngest home. Around 1pm when the doctor came to check her 
condition, I asked him that possibility. To our heart’s relief, he let us to 
bring her home.
  Meanwhile, at the administration office, I met a guy who paid his sister’s 
expense. He was so in a hurry that he didn’t wait for the hospital to give him 
the computerized receipt. He simply said that he would come back afterwards to 
take the receipt and the change. (He didn’t live far from the hospital.) When 
asked by one of the nurses, he said, “We want to bring her home as soon as 
possible since tomorrow is Tuesday. We’ve got to do it before 4pm.” While 
giving you-know-what-I-mean look toward the nurse as well as to bewildered me. 
  I was dumbfounded. I didn’t ask him to explain what he meant. My being wise 
guy made me draw a conclusion—or a rhetorical question—whether the Javanese 
also treat Tuesday the same as Saturday as a “bad day” to go home from the 
hospital. Since that out of the blue made me uneasy, I called my mom (I was at 
the hospital attending my youngest sister together with Angie at that time) to 
pick us up before 4pm. ((NOTE: although it was still Monday, Javanese people 
believe that after 4pm, it could be considered to “have entered” or “to be 
counted” Tuesday already.)
  (FYI, we left the hospital after 4pm because of some things. I didn’t tell my 
family about my “new finding” that Tuesday is not a good day to leave the 
hospital, not different from Saturday.)
  *****
  Friday January 11 my youngest sister’s temperature increased again. 
  Sunday January 13, her body was very weak and the temperature was still high 
although we already took her to one doctor whose house was close to our 
dwelling place. The medicine that particular doctor gave didn’t work at all to 
decrease her temperature. Consequently, we decided to take her to the (same) 
hospital again. She had to be hospitalized due to dengue fever. Two weeks 
before, it was due to typhoid. 
  My mom commented, “We’ve avoided bringing home from the hospital on Saturday 
before this. However God “destined” that she had to be hospitalized again, what 
can we do? This is obviously out of our power.”
  I kept quiet. I remembered the guy giving me you-know-what-I-mean look to 
explain why he brought her sister home in a hurry around two weeks before. This 
made me think that I had better not hear such a “rubbish myth” than I made 
myself sound so ridiculous and silly. 
  (I wrote this on January 18, 2008. My youngest sister was let go home on the 
day believed as the best day for Muslims. Since the doctor came to check her 
condition early, around 10.30—compared to the previous doctor who was 
responsible to treat her last December—I could ask my Mom to pick us up before 
12, to make sure that it was STILL FRIDAY.
  PT56 21.00 180108



Minds are like parachutes, they only function when they are open. 
  (Sir James Dewar)
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http://afemaleguest.blog.co.uk
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THANK YOU
Best regards,
Nana


       
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