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    2006-12-12

    好朋友是一辈子的事 - []


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    我的好朋友,
    在我面前说我坏话,
    在我背后说我好话,
    在我发牢骚时不说话。

    我的好朋友,
    有的陪我长大,
    有的教我长大,
    共同志趣是喜欢成长不想发达。

    我的好朋友,
    从小朋友变老朋友说:
    希望我们两家的小朋友将来也成为像我们这样的朋友。

    好朋友就是当你抱头痛哭的时候,
    扶着你肩膀的那个人,
    好朋友就是当你面对人生挫折时,
    一直紧握你的那双手,
    好朋友就是喜欢你,也了解你的人。
    我觉得好朋友是一辈子的事。

    很幸运,我有那么多好朋友!爱你们永远!!


    2006-11-27

    哎~真不想写些不开心的事 - []


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    时间过的还真快,上次还信誓旦旦的要在这开辟新大陆。一晃竟过了快大半个月了,还不见我有进展。
     
    一直都想在这留些开心的事,可以似乎开心的事,在心里件件都一样,一高兴就乐的冒泡,精神亢奋,充满活力,满眼的光明世界,看到的都是好人。心里满了,干吗还要用文字来发泄呢。而不开心的事就不一样了,各有各的导火线,各有各的委屈与抱怨,可以不停的刨根问底,是什么?为什么?怎么办?并由此总结一长串的结论也未必。至于今后能不能灵活运用,则视不同人的勇气和定力如何了。这么看,留下点不开心的事也在情理之中,希望今天用掉点quota,能留出更多的地方给快乐。
     
    自从好朋友离开了公司,一直都不是很舒心。为什么有些事总是在你已经开始努力地学着真的去相信的时候,它却立刻从你的手里滑走。由于奇怪的性格,使得我的朋友本来并不多。很偶然的,发现了一个像是认识了很久的朋友。可能我们都是A型血吧~让我们在很多事上都有着相同的看法,又由于都是太阳水瓶,让我们即使有分歧也能宽容的接受对方。我们一见如故,几乎快到了形影不离的地步,即使到了家还会电话打个不停,像热恋中的情侣,让人错觉我们有什么倾向呢~~哈~~当然不可能。生活似乎就会像这么平淡而快乐的流逝着,直到永远。也许是我害怕改变,潜意识里总不想去想今后的事(除了盼发薪日拉)。可是现实总能在你舒服的昏昏欲眠时,一棍子把你打醒。哎~~为什么要这么狠,可以把我推醒么!还用我最讨厌的方式。也许什么方式我都讨厌。
    哎~~又不想写了~~实在抱歉了各位!


    2006-11-15

    徘徊中的必然 - []


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           最近看了几个朋友的空间,写的都可谓是绘声绘色、文采熠熠,很是羡慕。不觉的也莫名冲动地想提指记录点东西。
           写点什么呢?这是我心里比较大的困惑。犹豫了好几天,实在是心痒,管它呢,想哪写哪吧。似乎朋友们写BLOG前都会在写与不写之间徘徊一阵,虽然情况不同,但想来我这也属于正常吧。既然已在徘徊,即心中早有答案,只是等待勇气的到来。于是放胆点了“ADD”,又大又白的输入框撞入了视线。那么的空,那么的白,好慎人。。。
           坦白说,本人的表达能力真的很有限,之所以用“有限”这个词,其实是实在不愿承认自己表达有问题。。。哈哈。从初中后就再也没对自己的语文水平有什么认同感,渐渐地也就成了对自己的一种默认或暗示---哈,当然这也是我十分乐意看到的事,也可能只是借口。当初开这个空间的初衷只是把它当作我自己的一个网上仓库,存放那些喜欢的文章、图片和音乐,有幸哪位朋友喜欢则可共同分享更是乐事一桩。还真是没想过在这留下点什么心迹。并且随着工作的转换,在网上搜罗的热情也急速下降至零。看我这荒废了多久就大致能猜出我的工作年份了吧,羞愧~呵呵。时隔这么久,再次翻看这些当年的库存,再较之朋友们精心耕耘的田地,真的觉得很是难为情呀。三思之下,决定用我的手指化解内心对“表达力”的矛盾想法。
           文笔粗糙,型无神散,若:
           不知所云,多包涵---我检讨
           会心一笑,知己也---我努力
          


    2005-07-29

    The Best Kind of Love - []


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    I have a friend who is falling in love. She honestly claims the sky is bluer. Mozart moves her to tears. She has lost 15 pounds and looks like a cover girl. "I’m young again!" she shouts exuberantly.As my friend raves on about her new love, I’ve taken a good look at my old one. My husband of almost 20 years, Scott, has gained 15 pounds. Once a marathon runner, he now runs only down hospital halls. His hairline is receding and his body shows the signs of long working hours and too many candy bars. Yet he can still give me a certain look across a restaurant table and I want to ask for the check and head home.  When my friend asked me "What will make this love last?" I ran through all the obvious reasons: commitment, shared interests, unselfishness, physical attraction, communication. Yet there’s more. We still have fun. Spontaneous good times. Yesterday, after slipping the rubber band off the rolled up newspaper, Scott flipped it playfully at me: this led to an all-out war. Last Saturday at the grocery, we split the list and raced each other to see who could make it to the checkout first. Even washing dishes can be a blast.  We enjoy simply being together. And there are surprises. One time I came home to find a note on the front door that led me to another note, then another, until I reached the walk-in closet. I opened the door to find Scott holding a "pot of gold" (my cooking kettle) and the "treasure" of a gift package. Sometimes I leave him notes on the mirror and little presents under his pillow.  There is understanding. I understand why he must play basketball with the guys. And he understands why, once a year, I must get away from the house, the kids—and even him-to meet my sisters for a few days of nonstop talking and laughing.  There is sharing. Not only do we share household worries and parental burdens—we also share ideas. Scott came home from a convention last month and presented me with a thick historical novel. Though he prefers thrillers and science fiction, he had read the novel on the plane. He touched my heart when he explained it was because he wanted to be able to exchange ideas about the book after I’d read it.  There is forgiveness. When I’m embarrassingly loud and crazy at parties, Scott forgives me. When he confessed losing some of our savings in the stock market, I gave him a hug and said, "It’s okay. It’s only money."  There is sensitivity. Last week he walked through the door with that look that tells me it’s been a tough day. After he spent some time with the kids, I asked him what happened. He told me about a 60-year-old woman who’d had a stroke. He wept as he recalled the woman’s husband standing beside her bed, caressing her hand. How was he going to tell this husband of 40 years that his wife would probably never recover? I shed a few tears myself. Because of the medical crisis. Because there were still people who have been married 40 years. Because my husband is still moved and concerned after years of hospital rooms and dying patients.  There is faith. Last Tuesday a friend came over and confessed her fear that her husband is losing his courageous battle with cancer. On Wednesday I went to lunch with a friend who is struggling to reshape her life after divorce. On Thursday a neighbor called to talk about the frightening effects of Alzheimer’s disease on her father-in-law’s personality. On Friday a childhood friend called long-distance to tell me her father had died. I hung up the phone and thought, This is too much heartache for one week. Through my tears, as I went out to run some errands, I noticed the boisterous orange blossoms of the gladiolus outside my window. I heard the delighted laughter of my son and his friend as they played. I caught sight of a wedding party emerging from a neighbor’s house. The bride, dressed in satin and lace, tossed her bouquet to her cheering friends. That night, I told my husband about these events. We helped each other acknowledge the cycles of life and that the joys counter the sorrows. It was enough to keep us going.  Finally, there is knowing. I know Scott will throw his laundry just shy of the hamper every night; he’ll be late to most appointments and eat the last chocolate in the box. He knows that I sleep with a pillow over my head; I’ll lock us out of the house at a regular basis, and I will also eat the last chocolate.  I guess our love lasts because it is comfortable. No, the sky is not bluer: it’s just a familiar hue. We don’t feel particularly young: we’ve experienced too much that has contributed to our growth and wisdom, taking its toll on our bodies, and created our memories. I hope we’ve got what it takes to make our love last. As a bride, I had Scott’s wedding band engraved with Robert Browning’s line "Grow old along with me!" We’re following those instructions. If anything is real, the heart will make it plain.


    2005-06-17

    就让我睡了也爱她 - []


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                就让我睡了也爱她
    梦里和梦外同样的情话
    早一点醒
    把礼物藏在她的枕头下

    就让我老了也爱她
    接吻和搀扶同样的笔划
    晚一点睡
    爱情也不会有什么变化

    就让我死了也爱她
    今生和来世同一个家
    求一秒钟
    看我们坟前那怒放的花


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