You will never “find” time for anything. If you want time, you must make it.
-Charles Buxton, English Author (1823-1871)-
It had happened again…
This morning when I woke up.
The same spot, same time, same person, same eye…
What is happening to me???
No, you are wrong… I am far away from being psychotic.
I suspect it’s some evil work of “déjà vu“…
Will keep a close eye on it.
Well anyway, with that swollen eye, I can hardly open it either.
As a small kid, I was constantly in a state of high spirit… Wanting to gain everything in my sight, I learned calligraphy for a few years and arts for numerous months. Both masters or ’sifus’ in their respective fields are utmost talented and I would have had quite an achievement in both if I were not that inconsistent and insouciant.
I had jumped from one thing to another with little achievement in anything at all. Guess my maths was bad back then (and probably now as well). How on earth could I gain “profit” if I kept on changing my “products”?
Guess I was and am a lousy writer. How an excellent piece of “composition” can be written if the “theme” is constantly on a shift? I was being naive back then. There’s no doubt about it.
Regrets… Looking back, my sorrows can only be founded on it.
Similar to a rolling stone, that was me. Now, that stone has no where to fall anymore. It lays at the hillside… static and silent.
Dear moss,
Worry not…;
Please do grow gracefully on the stone;
For he has made the choice of his life;
To lie here for as long as he can;
With perseverance;
And a little sense of dignity;
So that life can once again exist on it.
-ZhaoMing-
WAL-MART’s YEARLY IMPORT FROM CHINA IS ABOUT 10 PER CENT OF USA’s.
WAL-MART’s ECONOMY OR BUYING POWER IS EQUIVALENT TO MALAYSIA’s.
FOR YEARS, THE GOVERNMENT HAD TRIED TO STOP THIS GIANT COMPANY FROM ENTERING MALAYSIA’s MARKET, BUT WE CAN’T HOLD IT FOR LONG.
WAL-MART IS COMING SOON… I WONDER CAN DOING-WELL MARTS, SUCH AS MYDIN, JUSCO OR GIANT, COPE WITH THIS CALLOUS TORRENT.
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Most importantly, can we not just grumble but learn the way Wal-Mart climbed the ladder of success… the way it fully utilises technology… and the way it handles business.
This should serve as an awakening call for all local businessmen. It’s time for a change.
Had watched….
Alien 1
Alien 2
Alien 3
Alien 4
Heroes Season 2
Wild Hogs
Ghost Rider
End of Days
Constantine
Bleach 1-…… AND THE LIST GOES ON.
Everyone, please wish me GAMBATE and all the best ya.
Well, that’s post-exam syndrome obviously… Geez..
A 12-year-old student died after the recent Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah results.
Not too long ago, a student of a university took her own life for a similar reason, but after a while, the attention faded.
What’s going on with the Asians? Since when do we learn the Japanese suicidal style…? Is the way of reducing stress really constructed on the correct basis, rightfully and lawfully? Or it is just a game of mere ill mental health among students…?
Certainly, now is not the time to point fingers at anyone. However, if the blame game did start, the first one to be hit should well be the education system itself.
Our education system has become too examination-orientated. I can understand how stressful it is because one’s future depends on how well one performs during the examination though I personally doubt both are closely related. Should one fall sick, one may not perform well even though one may have had ample preparation.
Should we use examination results as the sole yardstick to measure a student’s success in life? Why are we so wedded or disillusioned to the idea that everyone has to achieve something to be someone?
Every child is special in his or her own way. He or she may not be the smartest student in his school or the most talented sportsman,but if the child has an excellent character, that is by itself worth much more than any number of distinctions. There is no need to compare or compete.
There just needs to be a change in perspective in the way we view success and failure.
As the saying goes, “the difference between a stumbling block and a stepping stone is the way we view it”.
More importantly, we need to realise that it is the process, not the result, that matters most. How much a child learns and grows from his educational experiences is far more important than what he gets in examinations.
PUTRAJAYA: Newly-qualified doctors will have to undergo two years’ compulsory housemanship from next year. Currently, they only have to do a year of housemanship. Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek, who announced the Cabinet decision yesterday, said the move was considered important to increase the knowledge, skills and experience of graduate medical officers. “This will improve the quality of services and healthcare standards,” he said. A rotation system of four months in six departments will be implemented. With the newest inclusion being the accident and emergency department, the rest are medical, paediatric, general surgery, orthopaedic, obstetrics and gynaecology. “We have observed that in the past few years, about three to five per cent of graduate medical officers do not get full registration because they have weaknesses in knowledge or skills,” he told reporters before chairing his ministry’s post-Cabinet meeting. “We cannot let this continue. We hope the move is seen as a positive one by future graduates and we are confident the rakyat (people) will support us.” After the two-year housemanship, the doctors would have to serve their three years’ compulsory service with the Government or its agencies, he said. Dr Chua said the ministry would apply to the Government to place them under the U43 grade upon completing the two years’ housemanship compared to the current U41. The U43 pay scale is RM500 more than U41. He said the doctors would be able to pursue their specialist courses or Master’s after serving two years’ compulsory service compared to the current situation whereby they can only apply to further their studies after three years. About 1,200 local medical students graduate annually. Dr Chua also announced the Cabinet’s decision to disallow the future setting up of private cord blood banks because while it was a new service with huge potential to treat specific diseases, there were still ethical issues to be scrutinised. He said the existing centres would have to apply for a licence from the ministry within the next two months and would be registered under the Private Healthcare Facilities and Services Act 1998.
This is the last day of my attachment. No hard feelings or anything… Just mere enlightenment into the career as a medical practitioner.
A boring day….
Went to Ward 8
Practically, it caters for aged women.. So, not much of learning could be made, but the need for patience was dire.
-ZhaoMing-