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此时此刻无法不抒发自己的感情。作为一名在海外的在中国留学生,对这件事如今有了更深的感触。。
2008年5月12日,我正坐在执信中心高二15班的课室里昏昏欲睡。哪曾想到,在那一刻有多少人失去了生命。他们中的许多人,都是和我一样正在课堂里的孩子。我难以想象那些幸存者们是如何度过这一年的。。。他们如何度过那些悲痛与绝望,如何忍受那些妻离子散,骨肉分离?我记得在那个初夏,有多少人放下手中的工作和生活奋不顾身奔赴地震灾区参与援助。。。我也记得新闻中那些残忍的画面,那些忍不住失声痛哭的记者。。我还记得连续举办了一个月赈灾义演的香港艺人们。。来到加拿大的这一段时间,见到了许多人许多事。也的确存在这样的人,尽管身上流着炎黄子孙的血却根本不配当中国人。但是。大多数的中国人都包含着一颗赤子之心,热爱我们的祖国和同胞,无论在哪里都为自己是一个中国人而骄傲!依然记得我们温家宝总理的名言:“

再大的困难除以十三亿,都会变的渺小,再小的力量乘以十三亿,就会变成爱的海洋!”中国终归是会越来越强大的,我坚信这一点,并且正在为祖国的未来而努力着!在今天这个特殊的日子,表达我对四川灾区同胞们的哀悼和祝福,以及对祖国深深的思念。。。最后写下著名诗人艾青的一句诗:“为什么我总是饱含热泪?因为我对这土地爱得深沉!” -
关于房子:这个你们已经在照片上见到,就不说了。
反正就是木头的房子,view还是很好的,也很方便。
关于吃饭:早餐的话会是煎蛋,火腿Or熏肠,牛奶麦片等等,然后每天早上都自己拿袋子装午餐带走。有水果,果汁,各种饼干,加上一个三明治。也可以在学校买,学校有hotdog之类的东西,还有一种叫portie的东西,是薯条上面淋一种酱,很好吃,但是要5$,很贵,所以我只买过一次。。晚餐就有很多,会有汉堡啦,意粉啦,或者各种snack,比如昨天吃了meatball。通常会加一个salad,水果是随便拿的,我一般都吃orange。很多人觉得什么面包很硬不习惯之类,到现在都吃酱油拌饭。。。我基本上都习惯,虽然我还是很想吃中国饭。。
关于学习:至今我没有什么学习上的困难。。。这边上课是这样的:老师话大概十多分钟讲,然后就开始做作业,从来不拖堂。。作业从来不会是明天交,只有后天交或者下星期交。。教学设备都极其先进,老师用那种触摸屏点击每个人的头像来登记迟到,早退,请假等等,特别是数学课,老师画图都是用触摸屏,每人有一个小机器把课堂练习的答案send给老师,然后电脑统计每种答案的百分比。。总之就一个词:先进。
PE就是体育课。是很好玩的。大概有三十种东西给你选,每节课的项目都不一样,除了传统的运动例如篮球游泳hocky之类的,还有很多不知名的小游戏。。。很好玩。
这里没有班的概念,每个人选课都不一样,所以我估计大家都是在社团里认识朋友的。。
关于生活:上周末我去了一次warmart,以现在的天气,要在0度左右走四十五分钟。。中国女生lu说我们是"没爹没娘没车"的"三无人员"。。。我非常迫切地想要一部车T-T
去warmart一共买了差不多165$的东西,我已经所有东西都买最便宜的了。。。果然跟老妈说的,这边的沐浴露和洗发液很好用,味道很香,但都有一股奶油味。。洗衣粉最贵的是汰渍的,我没买,我买了最便宜的,但也很好用。还有烘干布,出国前听多伦多的学生说他们用的牌子叫bounce,结果我到这一看,妈呀这是最贵的。。所以我又买了最便宜的。。还有台灯,吹风机都是。。不过虽然便宜但都很好用。我很想买一个榨汁机,但要差不多60$。。。T-T
麦当劳和肯德基都吃过了,麦当劳和国内味道完全一模一样,就是中可乐比我们大可乐还大,怎么喝都喝不完。。肯德基味道就差远了。我们上次是去买了一桶炸鸡,刚开始我还觉得少,这么多人不够吃,结果到最后你推我我推你都没人吃。。
昨天我们还去游泳了,是那种室内的温室游泳馆,还有waterlide,steamroom等等,虽然跟国内比也不算很好玩啦,但是在这个鸟不生蛋的地方已经很好了。
至于我的英文,说实话上课基本上没有我听不懂的。不过听鬼佬同学说话大概只有60%能懂吧。。。说实话我觉得他们不值得交往,首先他们基本上智商很低,然后他们说的英文也离不开那几个脏话,很无聊。。。我在这认识了一个白人女孩子,其他基本上都是跟国际学生或者ABC玩。不过我们课都不一样,只有午餐时间才能见面。。。
关于去卡尔加里:来回一趟要30$很贵。。。宿舍会带我们去,但很久才有一次,而且我来之前不久他们去过,所以短期内我是不能去了。。宿舍有一个男生,他爸爸的同事在卡尔加里,所以他每个周末都能去T-T真好,卡尔加里有大mall可以shopping,最重要的是有asian mart。。。
基本就这样了,其他的以后再汇报。。 -
2009-01-18
My 2008。Say Goodbye - [.火星日志.]
好像有些晚了呵。
其实这些东西不能完整地代表我的这一年,只是以前的一些影像都已经无法寻回。
怎么说呢,这算是2008年底的我。

执信中学,我的高中,令我疲惫却也骄傲的地方,我将要离开这里,去寻找新的人生。
这是某一个周二下午体锻课的阳光。

手机里储存最多的图片,是这样的,
每天的作业内容,有几百张。
已经全部删除了,我和这些,再无任何关联。

银记肠粉店的爸爸妈妈。
也许有很多年,我会想念这样的场景,
热腾腾的鸡蛋肠牛肉肠艇仔粥及第粥,还有爸爸妈妈的样子。

08年的我有很多改变。
不在喜欢把自己弄得怪模怪样,那些嚣张的十五六岁被留在了昨天。
尝试变得成熟和懂事,虽然依旧路途遥远,呵呵。

08年认识了R姐,还有很多很多可爱的东叉饭,与你们在饭否上热烈地谈话让我感到幸福。
Thx you all。


大概是从东叉四辑开始,我会经常弄这样的“作品”出来。
在严肃的学习中寻找乐趣,哈哈。



08圣诞给自己的礼物,我想没有别人我也可以过得很快乐。

所以见到这个的时候,我真的很感动。
Dandy,我见过最有礼貌最温柔的男生,给我送了这样的离别礼物。
在执信最后的时刻能有你这样的同桌,我无比幸福。
原来还有人在关心着我。


于是我想我可以带着这些温暖去追寻我的未来,在2009.
即使在大洋彼岸,也有你们的爱。
那样温暖而宽阔,就像广州冬日的天空。

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2009-01-06
NPR之特别篇—“一篇来自太空的NPR essay” - [.火星日志.]
非常有意思。
An Optimistic View of the World
Looking down from the International Space Station, astronaut Dan Tani says he can't help feeling hopeful about the future of the planet. 'I am stunned by the intense colors of the Earth,' he says, 'The intricate patterns and textures, and sheer beauty of our home.'
【电信用户1】 下载【电信用户2】 下载
【网通/教育网用户】 下载
I believe in mystery.
I believe in family.
I believe in being who I am.
I believe in the power of failure.
I believe in normal life is extraordinary.
This I believe.
Astronaut Dan Tani estimates that he has taken some six to seven thousand photographs while circling the Earth. He's the flight engineer on the International Space Station and has taken four space walks on this mission. Tani also found the time to contribute an essay for This I believe. Here's our series curator, independent producer Jay Allison.
Dan Tani has an unusual perspective on the world, to say the least. And he's had that perspective longer than he’s expected. Shuttled delays kept him from returning to the Earth to spend Christmas with his wife and children. He’s been up there for four months now. And it has time to reflect on his personal beliefs. Here’s astronaut, Dan Tani recorded in the space station with his essay for This I believe.
Like many people, I have a job that requires me to take a business trip every now and then. I'm on one right now. As I write this, I'm flying over New Zealand; it looks so beautiful out the window. Unlike most people, however, I'm traveling over 200 miles above the Earth, and I'm going 17,500 miles an hour.When I look down, I am stunned by the intense colors of the Earth, the intricate patterns and textures, and sheer beauty of our home planet. When I watch the Earth roll by, I realize I believe in optimism.
It would be hard to believe that there is no hope for Earth from up here. The International Space Station is a collaboration of 16 nations — and one of our primary partners was our sworn enemy only a few decades ago. The space station itself is the embodiment of where we can go as a global society.
My own optimism is rooted in two very different ideas: statistical probability and trust.
First, I accept the statistical probability that I am not likely to be killed by a terrorist or contract some horrible disease. It's not that I think that everything will work out OK; it's that I think that everything will probably work out OK.
And second, trust. I learned trust from my mother, and in a way, this essay is for her. Two months ago, while I was up here, she died in an accident and of course I have been unable to return to honor her. I have been thinking about her life, which was not an easy one. She was born into poverty, forcibly relocated during World War II, survived the premature deaths of her husband and a son — and yet, her outlook was so life-affirming. She felt that people were good and well-meaning. Sometimes I felt that she trusted too easily, and I was afraid that that stranger she talked to on the street or the airplane might not be as nice as she thought. But I was almost always proven wrong, and I'm so grateful for her example.
I came to believe, like her, that most people want to live their lives without conflict. They care about the other people in their house, their neighborhood, their country and their planet.
I am an astronaut, and I cannot imagine doing what I'm doing, seeing what I'm seeing, and not being an optimist. We climb aboard extremely complex machines which hurl us into space, and we have to trust that every engineer, every technician and every manager has done their job, and that we have a high statistical probability of success.
And once we are here, we get to look back and see the Earth as a thing of stunning beauty. Of course, I know there are awful things going on down there, that people are in pain, wars are raging, poverty and hunger are taking far too many lives — but from here, I can only see the whole.
I wish that everyone could see the world from my perspective; I believe that more people would be optimistic about our future.
Dan Tani with his essay for This I believe. Tani is scheduled to return to earth and his family in Houston, Texas this week. To see a video of Dan Tani recording his This I believe essay in the space station. Visit NPR. Org. We'll also find instructions for submitting your own essay. Wherever you are. For This I believe. I’m Jay Allison.
Jay Allison is co-editor with Dan Gediman, John Gregory and Viki Merrick of the book, This I believe, The personal philosophies of remarkable men and women.
Support for This I believe. Comes from prudential retirement.
You’re listening two week edition from NPR News.---------------------------------------
以上转自putclub
Dan Tani--美国宇航员,American born Japanese,MIT毕业。
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Tani#Expedition_16
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好像是荒废了很久。
总之,写东西的习惯要捡起来。







