Wind's profile记忆中有着很多东西PhotosBlogListsMore ![]() | Help |
|
记忆中有着很多东西Have no fear of losing!!Youth ambition and never-ending challenge!! October 07 Because of you~Do you believe in love at first sight? Do you believe in love that lasts forever? Sometimes I am sceptical, but sometimes I do When I think of you suddenly, wandering youth wandering love wandering In the places we used to visit, I see someone in the crowd who looks like you Tears drench my sadness Why would I kiss him with closed eyes? And hope that he was you Why whenever I see something beautiful I do hope that you are by my side Perhaps one day I will forget you, in the next century when I run into you again Who will be singing? No matter how beautiful it once was, it now looks broken and ruined Not knowing who is in the mood for love now And all of a sudden I think of you again May 20 Yesterday was 520男人想成为女人最初的爱人 女人想成为男人最后的爱人 真的是这样的么? 不到失去最爱的人的那一瞬间,每个人都不会有自己的答案。 原来以为什么都不在乎,其实当爱情走的时候,每个人都一样。 有很多事是难以用文字形容的。 比如说爱的快乐。 比如说失去的痛苦。 记忆一直在倒流。本不该逆流的思绪却被拉着走。 其中也有自作自受的成分。 仿佛就像为了重写那段让我最痛苦的回忆,自己让自己陷入其中。 你笑了,我的天晴了, 你沉默了,我的心灰了。 我捕捉你的任何眼神,判断你是否还如以前一般热情, 我收集你的所有短信,衡量你是否还如以前一般眷恋, 却实际上完全没有任何意义。 我假装不爱你,所以你要假装很幸福。 November 15 有些人我们一直在错过(ZT)有些人一直没机会见,等有机会见了,却又犹豫了,相见不如不见。 June 22 点名了
QUOTE
June 16 ...有喜欢的人吗?
那个人现在还有联系么?
是否还在一个城市?
交往过么?
分手了么?
是因为太小所以喜欢得太短暂?
还是因为根本不懂而无意伤害?
当初牵着的手如今握紧了谁?
偶尔还会想念么?
偷偷发过誓么?
实现了么?
还是……已经全部忘了? June 08 昨天的梦有缘无份是人生的无奈:能相识,或许只是1个邂逅,大家都想认识对方,就没这个份,没有这个机会.就如同擦肩而过.所以无奈.
有份无缘是人生的悲哀:可以有机会在一起,只是身边发生的事情,让2人无法在一起,明明有这个机会,却没有办法去实现,也无法挽回,所以悲哀. 无缘无分又是什么? June 05 曾经的你十年前,因为大家的单纯和羞涩,见面形同路人。
十年后,当一切都解开的时候,才发觉人生中总是会有些遗憾是你想躲都躲避不了得。
十年前,因为你是班花,我却不是班草。我放弃了追求。
十年后,你却成为了我的智囊诸葛,但我却心里不是滋味。
十年前,因为流言蜚语,我们永远都保持着距离。
十年后,我们在时差12个小时的国度,距离只是两个屏幕。
十年前,不知道被喜欢是种幸福。
十年后,知道被爱是种幸福。
June 04 ......
January 24 stars reveal about your dating success in 2007Aries 2007 is the year of 'getting on with it' for sometimes-stubborn Aries, so no more procrastinating about your love life. With Mars in your sign in January you're destined for all sorts of fun flings this winter -- and, you'll be pleased to know, with people who are only too happy to pay their own way. If you're looking for something semi-serious, say with a likeminded Leo or Sagittarius, you'll do well to avoid hookups in June. Taurus For optimum success this coming year, Taureans are advised to play the field. Make hay this May when Mars hits your sign's sweet spot, showering your world with hotties just ripe for a summer romance. And if you're after something more lasting (perhaps with an intuitive Cancer or sexy Scorpio), hang in there 'til late autumn when someone who's real relationship material will make an appearance. Gemini Ever-guilty of flirting up a storm, playful Gemini takes a step back from the limelight in 2007. Bide your time recharging your batteries -- and entertaining the odd casual encounter -- because come May, you'll be feeling an almighty tug at your heartstrings with a prospective partner who shares your (sometimes warped) sense of humour. A warm-hearted Aquarius or Libra could fit the bill nicely. Cancer Cancerians need to come out of their shells this year, in order to explore the big wide world of dating. Trust your instincts in February when there's a good chance you'll be swept off your feet (by a headstrong Pisces or Taurus, no doubt). And while the person doing the sweeping is not your usual type, you'll have the most fun you've had in ages if you just go with it. August sees you meeting your match with someone who'll really satisfy you sexually -- finally! Leo A long-awaited up-turn is in store for Leo this year. Shifting your focus from the superficial will yield some excellent results if you're looking for love, so when that flirty someone (an ambitious Aries or Gemini, perhaps?) enters your life in June, don't disregard them because they aren't your ideal date. Make 2007 the year to break the mold and you'll be experiencing all sorts of sensory thrills that will have Leos purring like a kitten. Virgo Virgos who have been patiently lusting after someone from a distance will be rewarded in early 2007, when a secret crush gives you the green light. And don't be surprised if a fling with an intense Scorpio or curious Capricorn turns into something more this winter. Meanwhile, Jupiter's influence over your sign in November will help lower your inhibitions and boost your confidence, just the thing to break your dating drought and end the year with a big bang. Libra Paying attention to the physical will pay off for Libra in 2007, so if you've been meaning to lose a few pounds or invest in a new wardrobe, do it. These things will help boost your dating prowess mid-year. This summer Jupiter in your sign adds an element of play to your romantic life, and an adventurous thrill-seeker (a daredevil Aquarius or up-front Aries) could take your breath away. Those seeking something sexually charged will not be disappointed come fall. Scorpio Your intuition will serve you well this year; listening to your gut feelings will also save you from falling for a fool when Saturn enters your sign in April. But don't let this potential dating disaster throw you. Come July, lusty Venus in your sign will restore that legendary Scorpio sting in the tail and you'll be pulling fabulous (Pisces or Taurus) babes left, right and centre. Sagittarius The start of the year will be packed with social engagements and ample dating opportunities, but be mindful of sending mixed messages in March or you run the risk of ruining what could be a great friendship. An engagement of a different kind could be on the cards when Mercury impacts your sign in October -- Leos and Libras are your best bet. The following months will be all about bodily pleasure, perfect for those looking for some sizzling flings. Capricorn Starting the year with a positive outlook helps channel the right people your way in early 2007, and those seeking romance and affection will see the results of their optimistic approach to dating when April rolls around. And when the weather heats up, Capricorn's sexy side really heats up, their seriously hot flirting antics attracting all sorts of bad guys and girls (like fired-up Virgos and feisty Scorpios) in June and July. Aquarius One of the hottest signs of the zodiac this year, Aquarians will be practically beating dates back with a big stick from January to March. Being upfront with a seemingly off-limits date will result in a scorching encounter early in the year, and those looking for a romantic partner will be pleasantly surprised at how a seemingly unlikely match with an Aries or Sagittarius pans out later in the year. Pisces Sensitive Pisces will feel the unsettling tug of the Moon's influence in February; dating in this turbulent time will only lead to heartbreak. May is a much more successful time for those looking for love (and lust), and Pisceans will do well to take a few risks this winter, particularly with an Aquarius. August heralds the arrival of a new love interest (an intriguing Capricorn, perhaps?) who shares your secret passion and is the key to a hot love life this year. January 22 Future China(ZT)WHAT CHINA WANTS--AND FEARS If you ever feel mesmerized by the usual stuff you hear about China--20% of the world's population, gazillions of brainy engineers, serried ranks of soldiers, 10% economic growth from now until the crack of doom--remember this: China is still a poor country (GDP per head in 2005 was $1,700, compared with $42,000 in the U.S.) whose leaders face so many problems that it is reasonable to wonder how they ever sleep. The country's urban labor market recently exceeded by 20% the number of new jobs created. Its pension system is nonexistent. China is an environmental dystopia, its cities' air foul beyond imagination and its clean water scarce. Corruption is endemic and growing. Protests and riots by rural workers are measured in the tens of thousands each year. The most immediate priority for China's leadership is less how to project itself internationally than how to maintain stability in a society that is going through the sort of social and economic change that, in the past, has led to chaos and violence. And yet for all their internal challenges, the Chinese seem to want their nation to be a bigger player in the world. In a 2006 poll conducted jointly by the the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and the Asia Society, 87% of Chinese respondents thought their country should take a greater role in world affairs. Most Chinese, the survey found, believed China's global influence would match that of the U.S. within a decade. The most striking aspect of President Hu Jintao's leadership has been China's remarkable success in advancing its interests abroad despite turmoil at home. Surprisingly for those who thought they knew his type, Hu has placed himself at the forefront of China's new assertiveness. Hu, 64, has never studied outside China and is steeped in the ways of the Communist Party. He became a party member as a university student in the early 1960s and headed the Communist Youth League in the poor western province of Gansu before becoming provincial party chief in Guizhou and later Tibet. Despite a public stiffness in front of foreigners, Hu has been a vigorous ambassador for China: the pattern was set in 2004, when Hu spent two weeks in South America--more time than George W. Bush had spent on the continent in four years--and pledged billions of dollars in investments in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Cuba. While Wen Jiabao, China's Premier, was visiting 15 countries last year, Hu spent time in the U.S., Russia, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Nigeria and Kenya. In a three-week period toward the end of 2006, he played host to leaders from 48 African countries in Beijing, went to Vietnam for the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, slipped over to Laos for a day and then popped off for a six-day tour of India and Pakistan. For someone whose comfort zone is supposed to be domestic affairs, that's quite a schedule. "Look at Africa, look at Central America, look at parts of Asia," says Eberhard Sandschneider, a China scholar who is head of the German Council on Foreign Relations. "They are playing a global game now." As it follows Hu's lead and steps out in the world, what will be China's priorities? What does it want and what does it fear? The first item on the agenda is straightforward: it is to be left alone. China brooks no interference in its internal affairs, and its definition of what is internal is not in doubt. The status of Tibet, for example, is an internal matter; the Dalai Lama is not a spiritual leader but a "splittist" whose real aim is to break up China. As for Taiwan, China is prepared to tolerate all sorts of temporary uncertainties as to how its status might one day be resolved--but not the central point that there is only one China. Cross that line, and you will hear about it. This defense of its right to be free of interference has a corollary. China has traditionally detested the intervention by the great powers in other nations' affairs. An aide to French President Jacques Chirac traces a new Chinese assertiveness to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, saying, "They felt they can't allow that sort of meddling in what they see as a nation's internal affairs." But the same horror of anything that might smell of foreign intervention was evident long before Iraq. I visited Beijing during the Kosovo war in 1999, and it wasn't just the notorious bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade that year that outraged top officials; it was the very idea of NATO's rearranging what was left of Yugoslavia. Wasn't the cause a good one? That didn't matter. China's commitment to nonintervention means that it doesn't inquire closely into the internal arrangements of others. When all those African leaders met in Beijing, Hu promised to double aid to the continent by 2009, train 15,000 professionals and provide scholarships to 4,000 students, and help Africa's health-care and farming sectors. But as a 2005 report by the Council on Foreign Relations notes, "China's aid and investments are attractive to Africans precisely because they come with no conditionality related to governance, fiscal probity or other concerns of Western donors." In 2004, when an International Monetary Fund loan to Angola was held up because of suspected corruption, China ponied up $2 billion in credit. Beijing has sent weapons and money to Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, whose government is accused of massive human-rights violations. Most notoriously, China has consistently used its place as a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council to dilute resolutions aimed at pressuring the Sudanese government to stop the ethnic slaughter in Darfur. A Chinese state-owned company owns 40% of the oil concession in the south of Sudan, and there are reportedly 4,000 Chinese troops there protecting Beijing's oil interests. (By contrast, despite the noise that China made when one of its soldiers was killed by an Israeli air strike on a U.N. post in Lebanon last summer, there are only 1,400 Chinese troops serving in all U.N. peacekeeping missions worldwide.) "Is China playing a positive role in developing democracy [in Africa]?" asks Peter Draper of the South African Institute of International Affairs. "Largely not." Human Rights Watch goes further: China's policies in Africa, it claimed during the Beijing summit, have "propped up some of the continents' worst human-rights abusers." China doesn't support unsavory regimes for the sake of it. Instead China's key objective is to ensure a steady supply of natural resources, so that its economy can sustain the growth that officials hope will keep a lid on unrest at home. That is why China has reached out to resource-rich democracies like Australia and Brazil as much as it has to such international pariahs as Sudan and Burma, both of which have underdeveloped hydrocarbon reserves. There's nothing particularly surprising about any of this; it is how all nations behave when domestic supplies of primary goods are no longer sufficient to sustain their economies. (Those Westerners who criticize China for its behavior in Africa might remember their own history on the continent.) But China has never needed such resources in such quantities before, so its politicians have never had to learn the skills of getting them without looking like a dictator's friend. Now they have to. WORKING WITH CHINA Assuming a bigger global presence has forced Beijing to learn the art of international diplomacy. Until recently, China's foreign policy consisted of little more than bloodcurdling condemnations of hegemonic imperialism. "This is a country that 30 years ago pretty much saw things in zero-sum terms," says former Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick. "What was good for the U.S. or the West was bad for China, and vice versa." Those days are gone. Wang Jisi of Beijing University, one of China's top foreign policy scholars, says one of the most important developments of 2006 was that the communiqué issued after a key conference on foreign affairs for top officials had no reference to the tired old terms that have been standard in China's diplomatic vocabulary. Washington would like Beijing to go further. In a speech in 2005, Zoellick invited China to become a "responsible stakeholder" in international affairs. China's national interest, Zoellick argued, should not be narrowly defined, but would be "much better served by working with us to shape the future international system," on everything from intellectual-property rights to nuclear nonproliferation. Says Zoellick: "I'm not sure anyone had ever put it quite in those terms, and it clearly had a bracing effect." That would imply that China's behavior has changed of late. Has it? A U.S. policymaker cautions, "It's important to see the 'responsible stakeholder' notion as a future vision of China." In practice, this official says, "They've been more helpful in some areas than others." When the stars align--when China's perception of its own national interest matches what the U.S. and other international powers seek--that help can be significant. Exhibit A is North Korea, long a Chinese ally, with whom China once fought a war against the U.S. As North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il developed a nuclear-weapons program in the 1990s, China had to choose between irking the U.S.--which would have implied doing little to rein in Pyongyang--or stiffing its former protégé. Hu's personal preferences seem to have helped shape the choice. He is known to have been stingingly critical of Kim in meetings with U.S. officials. Michael Green, senior director for Asian affairs at the National Security Council until December 2005, says Hu had long indicated to visiting groups of Americans his skepticism about Kim's intentions. When the North finally tested a nuke last fall, China joined the U.S. and other regional powers in condemning Kim and supported a U.N. Security Council resolution sanctioning Pyongyang. Says a senior U.S. official: "If you asked experts several years ago, Could you imagine China taking these actions toward a longtime ally in cooperation with us and Japan? Most people would have said no." But nobody in Washington is getting carried away. Beijing has been helpful on North Korea because it's more important to China that Pyongyang not provoke a regional nuclear arms race than it is to deny the U.S. diplomatic support. Contrast such helpfulness with China's behavior on the dispute over Iran's nuclear ambitions. In December, China signed a $16 billion contract with Iran to buy natural gas and help develop some oil fields, and it has consistently joined Russia in refusing to back the tough sanctions against Tehran sought by the U.S. and Europe. "It's hard to say China's been helpful on Iran," says a senior U.S. official, and there is little sense that such an assessment will change any time soon. Within its own neighborhood, there are signs that China's behavior is changing in more constructive ways. China fought a war with India in 1962 and another with Vietnam in 1979. For years, it supported communist movements dedicated to undermining governments in nations such as Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia. Yet today China's relations with its neighbors are nothing but sweetness and light, often at the expense of the U.S. Absorbed by the arc of crisis spreading from the Middle East, the U.S. is simply less visible in Southeast Asia than it once was, and China is stepping into the vacuum. While American exports to Southeast Asia have been virtually stagnant for the past five years, Chinese trade with the region is soaring. In the northern reaches of Thailand and Laos, you can find whole towns where Mandarin has become the common language and the yuan the local currency. In Chiang Saen, signs in Chinese read CALL CHINA FOR ONLY 12 BAHT A MINUTE. A sign outside the Glory Lotus hotel advertises CLEAN, CHEAP ROOMs in Chinese. It is not aid from the U.S. but trade with China--carried on new highways being built from Kunming in Yunnan province to Hanoi, Mandalay and Bangkok, or along a Mekong River whose channels are full of Chinese goods--that is transforming much of Southeast Asia. Nor is China's smiling face visible only to its south. In a cordial state visit last year, Hu reached out to India--an old rival with which it still has some disputed borders. The two countries pledged to double trade by 2010 and agreed to bid jointly for global oil projects on which they had previously been competing. Hu has also sought to mend ties with Japan, another longtime rival, with whom China's relations have deteriorated in recent years. Last October, Hu met the new Japanese Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, in Beijing just days after Abe took office, a visit Hu called a "turning point" in frosty relations between the two countries and which Premier Wen described as a "window of hope." January 21 Beyond beliefArsenal 2 United 1,reds missed opportunity to gain a nine point advantage over Chelsea!14 games left!Go united! January 02 Movie shown in 200702月16日 Ghost Rider 03月09日 300 03月23日 TMNT 05月04日 Spider Man 3 05月18日 Shrek 3 05月25日 Pirates of the Caribbean 3 06月08日 Ocean's 13 06月15日 Fantastic Four 2 06月29日 Die hard 4 07月04日 Transformers 07月13日 Harry Potter 5 07月27日 The simpsons October 21 When a man love a womanWhen a man loves a woman October 17 TireThree midterm tests left! Two of them will kill my whole semester! Every course cost $1100, god! October 14 TruthToday, 2006 Oct 14, thank for god let me knew what the truth was or I was just ...... August 24 NEED FOR SPEED 10(UPDATED)Corvette Z06 ![]() Mercedes-Benz SL65 AMG ![]() Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 ![]() Mitsubishi Eclipse GT ![]() Renault Clio V6 ![]() MAZDA RX7 ![]() BMW M3 GTR ![]() Nissan 350Z ![]() Toyota Supra ![]() Mercedez-Benz CLK500 ![]() Lamborghini Murciélago ![]() Audi Le Mans quattro ![]() Volkswagen Golf R32 ![]() Porsche Cayman S ![]() Alfa Romeo Brera ![]() Ford GT ![]() |
|||||
|
|