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Cynthia

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大路朝天,我走中间!

There is a place

今やらなきゃ...
Foto 1 di 10
12 settembre

转载,搞笑标语搭配

1、汉口有座立交桥上写着一标语:“高举邓小平理论伟大旗帜”,立交桥横梁上写:“限
高4.5米”;
2、京珠高速湖北段路边,竖着“紧密团结在以胡锦涛同志为核心的党中央周围”,后面紧
跟一指示路牌:“保持距离200米”;
3、广西兴业高速广州方向出口公路旁一左一右有两大标语:左:“在建设有中国特色的社
会主义道路上奋勇前进”,右:“限速60公里”;
4、广西百隆在建高速公路有一标语:“坚持走中国特色社会主义道路!”再往前走不远,
有一个牌子:“此路不通,请绕行!

05 agosto

人生完整了

有生以来第一次坐上了120急救车。
其实原因很囧啦,周日和小熊猫一起去动物园,玩尽兴后出来遇上无偿献血的采血车。小熊猫积极要去献血,我琢磨自己也有三年多没献过血了,于是也跟去
凑热闹。体检填表相安无事,本准备只献200cc,坐上椅子准备抽血的时候却被医生力劝改献400cc,曰年龄合适身体健壮,不献400简直是暴殄天物,
大囧,想我也曾经是低血压贫血一个不少,何时升格为健壮一级了。又曰只献200病人不好用,度之有理。想我辈献血即为治病救人,若不得则献血有何意义。
于是诺,遂抽血400cc。
下了采血车就感觉轻度头晕,尚可。于是和小熊猫去转320,还yy呷哺不已。上车倍感疲倦,车上人多天热,感到恶心不已,想要跟小熊猫说下车却已无半点力气。之后便是一片黑暗人事不省。幸好上车的时候因为无座,小熊猫怕我累着一直从后面抱着我,得以没有一头栽倒,最后也只是晕倒在小熊猫怀里而已。
悠悠醒来时已然被小熊猫抱下了320,躺在在不知何处的路边便道上,最后记得的就是小熊猫满头大汗地打120,然后喂我喝水。之后又差不多晕过去了。再醒来时已在120上且已经挂上了液体插上了氧气。事后听说当时血压低到测不到,那时挂的是紧急升血压用的多巴胺。
到了医院又被一堆医生护士各种折腾,那时意识淡薄,不记得太多了,只记得连心电图都作了。
急救完毕输液,很长时间小熊猫一直不离左右,能看出来他很难过,其实不是他的错的。sigh.
唯一的好事就是最后小熊猫去交费的时候医生曰“小姑娘也是为社会做贡献才晕倒的,给你省几百块钱买点营养品补补吧”,于是将急救监控等诸项费用尽皆免掉,交款数目是触目惊心的30余元,我和小熊猫都相当意外,当然对好心的医生感恩戴德不已,世上还是好人多啊。
当天晚上就被小熊猫接到他家去了,小熊猫要赶早上班必须走,于是我就被拜托给他父母。两天里二老简直快把我宠上天了,乌鸡、红枣、花生、红糖等等铺天盖地。两天就让我喝掉了一整瓶阿胶浆。过了两天不劳而获游手好闲吃现成饭的天堂般的日子,临走时还硬给塞了一堆好东西,我简直成了连吃带拿的强盗典型。不过话说小熊猫他妈妈做的牛肉干真是好吃啊~~~
今天开始重新上课8小时,明显体力不如从前,累,真累啊,我甚至觉得我的记忆力都变差了,5555。
今早天桥上买了相当娇美的一盆茉莉,开花甚香。不过我不认为我有能力把它养活,下次等小熊猫放出来的时候让他拿回家给他老爸去种好了。老人家闲来无事种花养鱼颇惬意,想来这盆茉莉应该会受到不错的待遇。
总结:下次献血只能献200cc(小熊猫说以后谁再敢撺掇我献血他就揍谁,汗……),这次总体来说多亏有小熊猫,不然我一个人晕倒在公车上的话会发生什么事情就只有天知道了。非常感谢小熊猫父母的悉心照顾~
人生完整了。不过我当时晕过去了,所以没能怎么好好打量急救车的内部构造……
日渐恢复中……
11 gennaio

Thanks to everyone

一番きれいな色ってなんだろう
一番ひかってるものってなんだろう
僕は探していた、最高のGIFTを
君が喜んだ姿をイメージしながら
「本当の自分」を見つけたいって言うけど
「生まれた意味」を知りたいって言うけど
僕の両手がそれを渡す時 ふと謎が解けるといいな
受け取ってくれるかな
長い間、君に渡したくて
強く握り締めていたから
もうグジャグジャになって
色は変わり果て
お世辞にもきれいとは言えないけど
「白か黒で答えろ」という
難題を突きつけられ
ぶち当たった壁の前で
僕らはまた迷っている 迷っているけど
白と黒のその間に
無限の色が広がってる
君に似合う色探して
優しい名前をつけたなら
ほら 一番きれいな色 今 君に贈るよ
地平線の先に辿り着いても
新しい地平線が広がるだけ
「もうやめにしょうか」
自分の胸に聞くと
「まだ歩き続けたい」と返事が聞こえたよ
知らぬ間に増えていった荷物も
まだなんとか背負っていけるから
君の分まで持つよ だから傍にいてよ
それだけで心は軽くなる
果てしない旅路の果てに
「選ばれる者」とは誰
たとえ僕じゃなくたって
それでもまた走っていく 走っていくよ
降り注ぐ日差しがあって
だからこそ日陰もあって
その全てが意味を持って
互いを讃えているのなら
もうどんな場所にいても
光を感じれるよ
今 君に贈るよ
気に入るかな? 受け取ってよ
君とだから探せたよ
私の方こそありがとう!
28 dicembre

亨廷顿大师千古

谨在此沉痛缅怀文明冲突论代表人物,伟大的政治学,外交学,社会学,战略学,政策学大师亨廷顿教授。大师千古……
Samuel Huntington, 81, political scientist, scholar
'One of the most influential political scientists of the last 50 years'
By Corydon Ireland
Harvard News Office
Samuel P. Huntington - a longtime Harvard University professor, an influentia
l political scientist, and mentor to a generation of scholars in widely diver
gent fields - died Dec. 24 on Martha's Vineyard. He was 81.
Huntington had retired from active teaching in 2007, following 58 years of sc
holarly service at Harvard. In a retirement letter to the President of Harvar
d, he wrote, in part, "It is difficult for me to imagine a more rewarding or
enjoyable career than teaching here, particularly teaching undergraduates. I
have valued every one of the years since 1949."
Huntington, the father of two grown sons, lived in Boston and on Martha's Vin
eyard. He was the author, co-author, or editor of 17 books and over 90 schola
rly articles. His principal areas of research and teaching were American gove
rnment, democratization, military politics, strategy, and civil-military rela
tions, comparative politics, and political development.
"Sam was the kind of scholar that made Harvard a great university," said Hunt
ington's friend of nearly six decades, economist Henry Rosovsky, who is Harva
rd's Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor, Emeritus. "People all
 over the world studied and debated his ideas. I believe that he was clearly
one of the most influential political scientists of the last 50 years."
"Every one of his books had an impact," said Rosovsky. "These have all become
 part of our vocabulary."
Jorge Dominguez, Harvard's vice provost for International Affairs, described
Huntington as "one of the giants of political science worldwide during the pa
st half century. He had a knack for asking the crucially important but often
inconvenient question. He had the talent and skill to formulate analyses that
 stood the test of time."
Huntington's friend and colleague Robert Putnam, the Peter and Isabel Malkin
Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, called him "one of
the giants of American intellectual life of the last half century."
To Harvard College Professor Stephen P. Rosen, Beton Michael Kaneb Professor
of National Security and Military Affairs, "Samuel Huntington's brilliance wa
s recognized by the academics and statesmen around the world who read his boo
ks. But he was loved by those who knew him well because he combined a fierce
loyalty to his principles and friends with a happy eagerness to be confronted
 with sharp opposition to his own views."
Huntington, who graduated from Yale College at age 18 and who was teaching at
 Harvard by age 23, was best known for his views on the clash of civilization
s. He argued that in a post-Cold War world, violent conflict would come not f
rom ideological friction between nation states, but from cultural and religio
us differences among the world's major civilizations.
Huntington, who was the Albert J. Weatherhead III University Professor at Har
vard, identified these major civilizations as Western (including the United S
tates and Europe), Latin American, Islamic, African, Orthodox (with Russia as
 a core state), Hindu, Japanese, and "Sinic" (including China, Korea, and Vie
tnam).
"My argument remains," he said in a 2007 interview with Islamica Magazine, "t
hat cultural identities, antagonisms and affiliations will not only play a ro
le, but play a major role in relations between states."
Huntington first advanced his argument in an oft-cited 1993 article in the jo
urnal Foreign Affairs. He expanded the thesis into a book, "The Clash of Civi
lizations and the Remaking of World Order," which appeared in 1996, and has s
ince been translated into 39 languages.
To the end of his life, the potential for conflict inherent in culture was pr
ominent in Huntington's scholarly pursuits. In 2000, he was co-editor of "Cul
ture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress." And just before his health de
clined, in the fall of 2005, he was beginning to explore religion and nationa
l identity.
"His contributions ranged across the whole field of political science, from t
he deeply theoretical to the intensely applied," said Putnam, author of a len
gthy appreciation of Huntington in a 1986 issue of the journal PS: Political
Science and Politics. "Over the years, he mentored a large share of America's
 leading strategic thinkers, and he built enduring institutions of intellectu
al excellence."
And Putnam added a personal note. "What was most rare about Sam, however, was
 his ability to combine intensely held, vigorously argued views with an engag
ing openness to contrary evidence and argument. Harvard has lost a towering f
igure, and his colleagues have lost a very good friend."
Timothy Colton, the Morris and Anna Feldberg Professor of Government and Russ
ian Studies at Harvard, remarked on his old friend's breadth of intellectual
interests. He used the American political experience as a pivot point (Huntin
gton's doctoral dissertation was on the Interstate Commerce Commission), but
soon deeply studied a globe-spanning range of topics.
"He was anchored in American life and his American identity, but he ended up
addressing so many broad questions," said Colton, who had Huntington as a Ph.
D. adviser at Harvard in the early 1970s. "His degree of openness to new topi
cs and following questions where they take him is not as often found today as
 when he was making his way."
Huntington's first book, "The Soldier and the State: The Theory and Politics
of Civil-Military Relations," published to great controversy in 1957 and now
in its 15th printing, is today still considered a standard title on the topic
 of how military affairs intersect with the political realm. It was the subje
ct of a West Point symposium last year, on the 50th anniversary of its public
ation.
In part, "Soldier and the State" was inspired by President Harry Truman's fir
ing of Gen. Douglas MacArthur - and at the same time praised corps of officer
s that in history remained stable, professional, and politically neutral.
In 1964, he co-authored, with Zbigniew Brzezinski, "Political Power: USA-USSR
," which was a major study of Cold War dynamics - and how the world could be
shaped by two political philosophies locked in opposition to one another.
Brzezinski, a doctoral student at Harvard in the early 1950s who was befriend
ed by both Huntington and Rosovsky, was U.S. National Security Adviser in the
 Carter White House from 1977 to 1981. In those days, said Rosovsky, the yout
hful Huntington, though an assistant professor, was often mistaken for an und
ergraduate.
According to his wife Nancy, Huntington was a life-long Democrat, and served
as foreign policy adviser to Vice President Hubert Humphrey in his 1968 presi
dential campaign. In the wake of that "bitter" campaign, she said, Huntington
 and Warren Manshel - "political opponents in the campaign but close friends"
 - co-founded the quarterly journal Foreign Policy (now a bimonthly magazine)
. He was co-editor until 1977.
His 1969 book, "Political Order in Changing Societies," is widely regarded as
 a landmark analysis of political and economic development in the Third World
. It was among Huntington's most influential books, and a frequently assigned
 text for graduate students investigating comparative politics, said Domingue
z, who is also Antonio Madero Professor of Mexican and Latin American Politic
s and Economics. The book "challenged the orthodoxies of the 1960s in the fie
ld of development," he said. "Huntington showed that the lack of political or
der and authority were among the most serious debilities the world over. The
degree of order, rather than the form of the political regime, mattered most.
"
His 1991 book, "The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century
" - another highly influential work - won the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Impr
oving World Order, and "looked at similar questions from a different perspect
ive, namely, that the form of the political regime - democracy or dictatorshi
p - did matter," said Dominguez. "The metaphor in his title referred to the c
ascade of dictator-toppling democracy-creating episodes that peopled the worl
d from the mid 1970s to the early 1990s, and he gave persuasive reasons for t
his turn of events well before the fall of the Berlin Wall."
As early as the 1970s, Huntington warned against the risk of new governments
becoming politically liberalized too rapidly. He proposed instead that govern
ments prolong a transition to full democracy - a strand of ideas that began w
ith an influential 1973 paper, "Approaches to Political Decompression."
Huntington's most recent book was "Who Are We? The Challenges of America's Na
tional Identity" (2004), a scholarly reflection on America's cultural sense o
f itself.
Samuel Phillips Huntington was born on April 18, 1927, in New York City. He w
as the son of Richard Thomas Huntington, an editor and publisher, and Dorothy
 Sanborn Phillips, a writer.
Huntington graduated from Stuyvesant High School, received his B.A. from Yale
 in 1946, served in the U.S. Army, earned an M.A. from the University of Chic
ago in 1948, and a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1951, where he had taught nearly wit
hout a break since 1950.
From 1959 to 1962, he was associate director of the Institute of War and Peac
e Studies at Columbia University. At Harvard, he served two tenures as the ch
air of the Government Department - from 1967 to 1969 and from 1970 to 1971.
Huntington served as president of the American Political Science Association
from 1986 to 1987.
Huntington was director of Harvard's Center for International Affairs from 19
78 to 1989. He founded the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, and
was director there from 1989 to 1999. He was chairman of the Harvard Academy
for International and Area Studies from 1996 to 2004, and was succeeded by Jo
rge Dominguez.
Huntington applied his theoretical skills to the Washington, D.C., arena too.
 In 1977 and 1978, he served in the Carter White House as coordinator of secu
rity planning for the National Security Council. In the 1980s, he was a membe
r of the Presidential Commission on Long-Term Integrated Strategy.
Huntington is survived by his wife of 51 years, Nancy Arkelyan Huntington; by
 his sons Nicholas Phillips Huntington of Newton, Mass. and Timothy Mayo Hunt
ington of Boston; by his daughters-in-law Kelly Brown Huntington and Noelle L
ally Huntington; and by his four grandchildren.
There will be a private family burial service on Martha's Vineyard, where Hun
tington summered for 40 years.
In the spring, there will be a memorial service at Harvard. Details are pendi
ng.
 
13 agosto

意外之喜

早上去院里看NHK的国际放送,看了好长时间的sepcial节目,就是讲怎样打绳结,怎样打捆包结,甚至还有怎样系鞋带,orz不已。正无聊到准备收兵回营的时候突然耳边一亮。真的是“一亮”哦。关先生的天籁之音响起,大惊,赶紧去看节目名称,是什么森の贈り物,讲如何利用森林里的一种树来做和纸。内容是很囧啦,那做出来的和纸也丑的可以。但是那些都不重要哦。重要的是……啊,那是关先生的声音。
于是我索性把眼一闭,自我催眠到“这是高耶在说话,是高耶在说话”,于是顿觉五感清明,神清气爽啊哈哈哈哈哈。
再show一下我最近新开发出来的饭食——中华风炒面。(对于煎蛋我可是非常挑剔的,必须是正好5分熟),视觉效果不错吧啊哈哈哈哈。实在混不下去俺还可以去开一家炒面铺子,说不定也是一条生路。
话说荷兰的维C真是贵啊,一瓶1000mg的维C片居然要3块多欧……画像-0006画像-0008
28 luglio

看shaman king的发现

目前看到42集,出现的名声优有
小西克幸
林原めぐみ
子安武人
小山茉美
高木涉
关俊彦
水树奈奈
堀江由衣
绿川光
朴璐美
上田祐司
井上喜久子
高山みなみ
根谷美智子
还有20多集没看,继续发掘中,虽然是部老作品了,但是意外的还比较合我的胃口
记得上一次发现合胃口的作品还是大四时候的最游记。比较了一下两者试图总结归纳我的口味类型,发现似乎二者没有什么相似之处,orz之。
事实证明我是一个口味不定的人。
22 maggio

他们来过

不知什么原因08年成了多事之秋。不平静的日子里,有些人走了,但是抹不去他们来过的痕迹。

在东京的时候有一次上完夜班筋疲力尽地坐上电车,却意外地没有立刻靠在椅背上睡着,脑子里异常清晰地映出外婆的模样。想着外婆的好,外婆的病还有外婆长时间遭受的病痛,不知怎么地就泪流满面。对面坐着的一个穿制服的高中女生用奇怪的眼光看我,我却连控制眼泪都做不到。

那时候不知道是不是预感到了什么。我在东京的时候遭遇弹尽粮绝的绝地,被绝望包围着的时候也未曾掉过一滴眼泪。全部家当只剩54日元的时候咬紧牙关用白糖水当午饭度日的时候也没有感觉到悲哀。可是那天在电车上我不知为什么伤心地无以复加。

一个星期以后,我得知外婆病逝,在那个50年不遇的寒冬大雪中。

等我回国的时候看到的只有外婆的遗像和一座新坟。上坟的时候在坟前听着孝男孝女们的哭声,我的声音却似乎卡在喉咙里,一丝都发不出来,只觉得周围的声音渐渐远去,觉得我快被自己的声音窒息了。只有泪水不停地掉落,一滴一滴掉落在地上的草木灰里,一点痕迹都没有。老坟的坟头上都长满了迎春花,只是今年的迎春花似乎开的特别晚。

说外婆其实是从长久的病痛中解脱了……心里却清楚地晓得那只不过是自我安慰。无论多少好听的借口理由都遮掩不了一个事实:外婆走了。

其他的弟妹们和我年龄相差太大,从他们的反应中也很明显地看出外婆对他们来说只是一个长辈,他们记事没多久外婆就卧床不起了。但是外婆对我来说,却是所有的童年和最好的避难所。小时候太调皮以致经常被老妈打得遍体鳞伤,只有外婆身边才是安全的。还有外婆的汤汤面,永远是最好的味道,外婆的送来的炒馍团,永远都是温热的;外婆蒸的馒头和包子永远是最漂亮的。还有和外婆一起种的南瓜,和外婆一起爬的土坡,和外婆一起晒的被子……外婆的孙子孙女外孙子外孙女总共有5个,却只有我有和外婆的合影。我和外婆合影的时候,我底下最大的表弟,应该还没有出生。

我升大二的那个暑假外婆还骑着自行车送炒馍团过来,而大二下半期的时候外婆就卧床不起了。大学毕业后我很快出国,回家的日子也越来越少。虽然每次回国都会去看望外婆,但是外婆能记得的事情越来越少,经常握着我的手叫着别人的名字,要解释很长时间外婆才能认出我来。而最后一次见外婆的时候,她已经完全不认识我了,握着她的手,她也没有回握过来,我不知道应该说些什么。对一个得了绝症并且几乎完全失去记忆,生活无法自理连说话能力都失去了的人说“保重身体,祝你早日康复”之类的话除了讽刺什么都不是,所以我只能坐在她身边,握着她的手,就那么握着,看着她发灰空洞的眼睛。

而从此以后,我回国能看到的,只有外婆的坟了。

外婆就这么走了,但是却在我记忆深处刻下了抹不去的痕迹,那是我的童年,我的幸福和我的满足。

今天又得知小兽走了,一个在马刷队伍中永远是风驰电掣的男生,一个永远是一脸坏笑但是善良乐观爱唱歌的男生,一个永不放弃梦想,从埃及到US,迂回作战绕了半个地球这么大的圈终于达到目的的根性十足的男生。在一个清早死于车祸,唯一欣慰的是,他走的很快。

于是再也没有人高唱“为什么你爱我背着别人”了,再也没有人在cc一边喝啤酒一边跑圈了,再也没有人一手10个鸡翅一路奔清华了。

日子一天一天过去了,身边的人有的来了,有的走了,有的只是走到其他城市,国家,行业中去,而有的人却走到遥不可及的另一个世界去了。其实也不是完全遥不可及,总有一天我也要去到那个世界。

我的人生已经走过很大一段,这么长时间,我有没有在某个人或者某些人的记忆里,留下一点痕迹呢?

人间四月芳菲尽,山寺桃花始盛开——to unicorn