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about you hereee! like how you can't stand your mother who has such a big mouth you can't even tell her anything! or the stupid sister who bosses you around? or even the angel father who does nothing.
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title:
date: Sunday, June 15, 2008
time:9:39 PM
heyheyy(:
posting here // .
s'posed to be ban from com de -.-

Mum lo. said wat nvr brush up other sub.
later term3&4 fail .
ARGGHHH;
;x

but i nvr hear take her advice
seriously. really afraid failing ):
D;

howw ? D:
ARGHHH; sienn la.

nvmms;
my eng damn lan ler . OHGOSH.
if fail then die la. Mum sure scold .
thens, lvl&class position
sure behind behind de.

OMG; howw.
hais.

Btw, tuition gt this really nice compre.
nt really compre but fill in the blanks de.
my English tuition.

Real nice. let me type out for you :


In the office where I work, one of my colleagues said
, " Yesterday, my three-year-old grandson was building
up his Legos, and then he pretended that he crashed a
plastic plane into the little building he had just buit. "

How do we, as adults, explain to children the images of
evil they have been seeing these past weeks after the
September 11 plane crash that destroyed the two towers
in New York?

Perhaps by doing what we have done since the beginning
of our human existence : by telling them stories. Stories
of courage and didnity in the face of all that has been lost
help us to discover our sense of hope and goodness in the
grip of adversity.

Many years from now, children will be studying the events
of September 11, 2001. Let them read about a young fireman
climbing up the stairs of the World Trade Centre because he
thought he might be able to save someone.

Let them hear about the suburban couple who, after learning
of the need for help at Ground Zero, bought $700 worth of
shovels and drove through the night of New York to deliever
them to rescue workers, in the hope that this small act will
make a difference in someone's life.

Above all, teach the children the story of Jeremy Gick, who
helped overpower the terrorists on Flight 93. Speaking to his
wife by phone, he told her, "Do not be sad. "

We will go to our deaths with lives lived. with regrets and joys,
with sorrows and victories. So what do we say to those we loved
when our lives are done?

We say to our children, "Do not be sad." Those are the words of a
human and spiritual hope that there is a place of joy either in the
memories of a life well-lived, or in the promise of a life still to come.

Let's teach the children to feel the words of William Faulkner, one of
America's greatest storytellers: "I believe that man will not merely
endure: he will prevail. He is immortal , not because he along among
creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a
spirit capable of compassion, sacrifice and endurance. "

Do not be sad.

(Adapted from Reader's Digest, December 2001,
Christopher De Vinck in The Record)


Nice? ;D

hehes .
& oso i gt this quote from the 'lao shi jia lao da'
the movie that ah long married a sissy teacher.
LOL.

the quote goes :
Before God can entrust you in a mission , you would
be tested your endurance,spiritually and physically.

:D
nice right.
it just motivate someone in its' life.
i guess that what's quote goes.
(:

ALRIGHT.
goodnight.
Gna go slp now (:



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