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				<publisherName>ZIBELINE INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING</publisherName>
				<title type="subject" xml:lang="en" sort="INWASCON Technology Magazine">INWASCON Technology Magazine</title>
				 <abbrev_title>I. tech. mag.</abbrev_title> 
				 <issn type="online">2710-5873</issn>
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			<titleGroup>
				<title type="title">WHEN A TOWER VANISHES AND REAPPEARS IN EVER-CHANGING CLOUDS: PERSONAL REFLECTIONS ON MOTHER NATURE, RESILIENCE, AND HOPE</title>
			</titleGroup>
			<copyright ownership="publisher">Copyright © 2017 Zibeline International Publishing</copyright>
			<doi origin="ZIBELINE INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING" registered="yes">http://doi.org/10.26480/itechmag.07.2025.93-96</doi>
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				<event type="publication_date" date="01-12-2025"/>
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			<creators>
				<creator xml:id="CKY" creatorRole="editor">
					<personName>
				<editorNames>Chee Kong Yap</editorNames>
					</personName>
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        <citation_keywords>
		    <keyword>Kuala Lumpur Tower; nature exposure; psychological resilience; hope; urban resilience.</keyword>
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		     <pdf_url>https://itechmag.org/paper/volume7/93-96.pdf</pdf_url>
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	         <xml_url>http://itechmag.org/xml/volume7/vol-7-2025-93-96.xml</xml_url>
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	       <volume>7</volume>
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	   <year>2025</year>
	   <citation_pages>
	      <pages>93-96</pages>
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	       <fulltext_html>https://www.itechmag.org/research-article-vol-7-2025-93-96/</fulltext_html>
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			<title type="main">Summary</title>
			
					<p>On 4 September 2025 a 7-minute sequence in Kuala Lumpur saw the Kuala Lumpur (KL) Tower slip behind fast moving cloud and reappear within minutes. This autoethnographic reflection uses the event to read mother nature’s volatility through resilience and hope. Drawing on research on mother nature exposure, cultural and community accounts of resilience, and higher education models of hope, this paper synthesizes observation with scholarship. The insights of this reflection are: (1) perception is contingent; the tower never vanished, my view was occluded, suggesting that crises may be transient veils; (2) resilience is more than bouncing back; it is adaptive, relational, and culturally situated, cultivated by acceptance, community support, and situated practices; (3) hope is dynamic, coupling goals, agency, and pathways that can be recomposed under constraint. The implications are: educators can scaffold reflective encounters with nearby mother nature to support student well-being and perseverance; urban planners can pair mother nature based solutions with inclusive engagement to deepen social legitimacy and readiness for extremes; policymakers should design for redundancy and multiple response pathways. The vignette demonstrates how ordinary weather can serve as a laboratory for meaning making, connecting sky, city, and self. This note closes by arguing that noticing such moments is a teachable habit that strengthens both individual and urban resilience today, all due to the power of mother nature.</p>
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