Hey people! Nothing of much interest happened today...Just like any other Mondays...Oh yeah, Mrs Lam didn't come, but that studpid Mr Lim just had to come over and take over her lessons. Add that to the fact that we ere to have another two periods of Physics later in the day, that makes three periods of Physics in a day! Its so boring...Really feel like sleeping...
Today, we had our audition for our teacher's day celebrations. I wonder how the teams are faring...In any case, all the best to everyone taking part! Just do your best. It does not matter if you are choosing or not, the important thing is to have fun. That sound like something an old person would tell you, doesn't it? I don't know, I find that it is a good philosophy to live by...
BTW, here is something interesting I've read...Hope you like it too:
"The seasons, in fact, teach us two lessons that both steady and chastise: all things must pass, and all things shall return. They tell us that every new beginning brings us closer to an end, and every elegy has withing it the echo (and the promise) of a future celebration. They say that love that seems eternal now may soon be a distant memory; and that a new love may come along to revive our sense of eternity. They teach us that suffering is inevitable, and in that inevitability is a constancy that helps take the edge off suffering. We cherish flowers more than evergreens, precisely because they do not last.
Season instruct us, then. In a subtler way of being; they initiate us into a process more universal than the New Year and more flexible than moons. All of us have our own calendars, and all of us think in terms of spring cleaning or fall fashions, But seasons induct us into a world of divisions that are never hard and fast (soft and slow, rather); they offer lessons about constancy and flux, and show us that there are some things- for all our fears of global warming and a nuclear winter- we cannot much affect. Seasons teach us about transitions, for winter elides into spring as gently as remorse into regret, or adolescence into youth. And just when we assume that winter is gone, an unseasonable blizzard will come down to remind us we were wrong."
There, that's it. Quite a long piece. Those Lit pupils should be able to understand it better, I suppose. Anyway, its time for the quote of the day:
People have believed for hundreds of years that newts in a well mean that the water's fresh and drinkable, and in all that time never asked themselves whether the newts got out to go to the lavatory.
-- (Terry Pratchett, Reaper Man)
lolz. Nothing to type anymore. Till next time.
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