��ying
Paste HTML code and press Enter.
- Posted by maya on 09/29/2011. ying commented once.Thank you for posting the link--I found some very enlightening passages here filled with great wisdom, such as his talks in LA in 1900. I learned from them. I bookmarked the wiki page for further reading. BTW, I enjoyed your site, and posted here briefly several years ago (2007?), and then the beloved motherland blocked it. Now I'm on a trip to the US and can finally visit this site again. But alas, I will need to fly back next week, and your cafe will be off limits again. sigh.
- Posted by fanghuzhai on 11/04/2007. ying commented once.
- [RE:] ¼¸¸öСÎÊÌâ...Posted by ying on 11/03/2007. ying commented 3 times.Haha, so funny :) Thanks for the info, everybody--I learned a lot, and had some good laughs... Ah, so THAT's what LM means...LOL! The only question unanswered is ¶«¶«. I knew what it meant, guessing from the contest, but I was asking where it came from. Like maybe someone who first said it on T.V. or in a film or something? Anyone?
- Posted by touche on 10/29/2007. ying commented once.
- Posted by WOA on 10/26/2007. ying commented 2 times.Ok, 81 is right about the job part, considering what the real world is like... so I stand corrected. But I don't agree with the idea of intelligence as the only criteria. I mean, what if someone is intelligent but mean? After thinking more about it, I decided to scratch the sense of humor part, as this trait may be trainable, I hope. Also scratch the mature part--I keep forgetting that men are all big babies anyway, regardless of age, and that can be charming, too, sometimes. But I disagree with WOA abou
- Posted by old fang on 10/16/2007. ying commented once.This is so ridiculous that it is actually quite funny...especially the paradox in this quote: 'It's me, but it couldn't be me.' :) It's a sad human fact that not everyone perceives fiction as fiction. Problems arise when people start taking fiction as fact (like taking the Bible too literally; or, ¿´Ï·Ê±, ±ÈÈç¿´"°×ëŮ"--¿´µ½»ÆÊÀÈÊÐÐÐ×ʱ±ã°Î³öÊÖǹ,ǹ±ÐÕ⻵µ°;»òÔÚ¶ÁС˵/¿´µçӰʱ½«ÈËÎï¶ÔºÅÈë×ùÖ®Àà). Those who equate a fictional character to a real life person, and those who take metaphors literally shou
- [RE:] xw: ÕâÊÇʲô¹û×Ó£¿Ð»Ð»£¡Posted by lucy on 10/15/2007. ying commented once.
- [RE:] ²»ÉÏÀÏÕÕƬ²»ºÃÒâ˼Posted by fanghuzhai on 10/14/2007. ying commented 2 times.
- Posted by sands on 10/12/2007. ying commented 5 times.
- [RE:] ²ØÃμǣ¨ÂÃÐÐÕÕƬ£©Posted by СÂü on 10/12/2007. ying commented once.Great pictures! Just like the ones I should have taken :) I was in Tibet from August to September, and didn't even take any camera with me. I figured there are tons of good photos out there already anyway, taken by professionals who can do it much better than me, so why bother--and therefore have stopped taking pictures, for many years (Except for my mental albums) :) Your photos are further evidence of my above theory, heh heh, so, thanks for posting them.
- Posted by ÊØÍû¹Åµä on 10/10/2007. ying commented once.
- Posted by fanghuzhai on 10/08/2007. ying commented once.Very interesting story. All the pumas and tigers made me laugh. Too bad I never got a chance to meet this tiger (fictionally speaking), as I lived not very far from Baylor U--about one-hour drive, and I have been there a few times. BTW, I also enjoyed your subway piece. It brought back nice memories... µ±ÄêÔÚ±±¾©Ê±ºÜ°®µØÌú: Ã÷ÁÁ,¸É¾»,³©Í¨ÎÞ×è. ÄÇʱ³£°Ñ×ÔÐгµËøÔÚÈë¿Ú´¦,ÓÐʱ¼¸Ììºó´ÓÍâµØ»ØÀ´,³µ»¹ºÃºÃµØËøÔÚÄÇÀï, ´Óû¶ª¹ý. ÄãµÄ±ÊÃûºÜÓÐȤ. ÎÝÀïÕæÓз½Ð͵ĺø? :)
- Posted by July on 10/07/2007. ying commented once.
- [RE:] ÔÙÒëÊ«£º¾øÍûµÄ¸èPosted by WOA on 10/04/2007. ying commented once.Wow, it's nice to see my prospective new neighbor has good taste in poetry, heh heh. You seem to have a very condensed, compact translation style. I enjoyed reading it. One question about the 4th "couplet:" "In you the wars and the flights accumulated. From you the wings of the song birds rose." I wonder what the Spanish original uses for the word "flights," but judging from the context of the English version, it seems "flights" here refers to fleeing, running away (out of fear or terror) inst
- [RE:] ¹í×ÓÃæÇ°Ë£»¨Ç¹ Ay Si SiPosted by ÃÎÔó on 10/04/2007. ying commented 3 times.Your humorous account of prayers made me laugh, heh heh. Oh, and the text about a puma at large from "New Concept English" brings back memories of college days from eons ago. I still remember how it begins: "Pumas are large, cat-like animals which are found in America. When reports came to London Zoo that a ..." Anyone else still remember that story? :)
- [RE:] ÏìβÉß & Mission PeakPosted by lucy on 10/02/2007. ying commented 2 times.
- [RE:] ¡¾³¤»°¶Ì˵¡¿±ªPosted by ±¿±¿ on 09/28/2007. ying commented 4 times.It's really sad to observe caged wild animals... How cruel it is to cage wildness??? I recently watched "Planet Earth" (narrated by David Attenborough), of which one episode shows snow leopard Ñ©±ª from the Himalayas, chasing their prey on steep mountain slopes. The beauty, agility, speed, strength, mysteriousness of this mythical animal is simply breath-taking! Wild in the wild...in harmony with nature, at their best in their natural habitat...THAT is what those caged animals in the poem dream of but ca
- Posted by July on 09/26/2007. ying commented 5 times.
(c) 2010 Maya Chilam Foundation