My HEALTHY Castle
心理学学太好是件痛苦的事
瘋子公主 发表于 2008-02-21 19:17:11
我还没有找到可以放下的契点
所以我会这么难过
你所有的行为举动在我看来
都那么一目了然
分手并不会令你难过
所以我很难过
I am just the substitute.
瘋子公主 发表于 2008-02-21 01:18:45
可是你都无所谓统统都无所谓
不平等厄爱情总归是一场悲剧
我一直觉得自己是在那个走钢丝的人
再往前走就要掉下去了
回头回头
虽然回头也会很难
但是总好过掉下去摔得粉身碎骨
喜欢的 不喜欢
不喜欢的 喜欢
一定也是上辈子被谁下了一个诅咒
这辈子就这样哭啊哭啊的
把眼泪都流尽了
我觉我的小孩也一定逃不出这样一个诅咒的
可怜的BB
怎么会谈得这么辛苦
我终于知道那个善良的孩子当初是多么多么多么难过了
而且他一定一定一定比我难过百倍
我是一个一个一个罪人
然后用后半生飘渺厄生活来补偿
我们
这样
浪迹于天涯
而携手的那个
终究无处可觅
an open letter to iphone customers from Steve Jobs
瘋子公主 发表于 2007-10-22 23:45:17
To all iPhone customers:
I have received hundreds of emails from iPhone customers who are upset about Apple dropping the price of iPhone by 0 two months after it went on sale. After reading every one of these emails, I have some observations and conclusions.
First, I am sure that we are making the correct decision to lower the price of the 8GB iPhone from 9 to 9, and that now is the right time to do it. iPhone is a breakthrough product, and we have the chance to 'go for it' this holiday season. iPhone is so far ahead of the competition, and now it will be affordable by even more customers. It benefits both Apple and every iPhone user to get as many new customers as possible in the iPhone 'tent'. We strongly believe the 9 price will help us do just that this holiday season.
Second, being in technology for 30+ years I can attest to the fact that the technology road is bumpy. There is always change and improvement, and there is always someone who bought a product before a particular cutoff date and misses the new price or the new operating system or the new whatever. This is life in the technology lane. If you always wait for the next price cut or to buy the new improved model, you'll never buy any technology product because there is always something better and less expensive on the horizon. The good news is that if you buy products from companies that support them well, like Apple tries to do, you will receive years of useful and satisfying service from them even as newer models are introduced.
Third, even though we are making the right decision to lower the price of iPhone, and even though the technology road is bumpy, we need to do a better job taking care of our early iPhone customers as we aggressively go after new ones with a lower price. Our early customers trusted us, and we must live up to that trust with our actions in moments like these.
Therefore, we have decided to offer every iPhone customer who purchased an iPhone from either Apple or AT&T, and who is not receiving a rebate or any other consideration, a 0 store credit towards the purchase of any product at an Apple Retail Store or the Apple Online Store. Details are still being worked out and will be posted on Apple's website next week. Stay tuned.
We want to do the right thing for our valued iPhone customers. We apologize for disappointing some of you, and we are doing our best to live up to your high expectations of Apple.
Steve Jobs
Apple CEO
U
瘋子公主 发表于 2007-10-05 10:29:26
忘記
然後回到正常生活軌道
留下遺憾
該是一個很好的結局呢
我們是異元次空間生活的孩子
怎麽可能在這個世界進行踫撞
Anita Roddick, Body Shop Founder, Dies at 64
瘋子公主 发表于 2007-09-13 23:37:29
LONDON, Sept. 11 — Anita Roddick, the crusading entrepreneur who used the Body Shop chain of cosmetics stores she founded to promote causes like ending animal testing and supporting the environment, died in Chichester, England, on Monday. She was 64. The cause was a brain hemorrhage, her family said.
A woman of fierce passions, boundless energy, unconventional idealism and sometimes diva-like temperament, Ms. Roddick was one of Britain’s most visible business executives, and not just because of the ubiquitous and instantly recognizable Body Shop franchises. Working on behalf of numerous causes — the rain forest, debt relief for developing countries, indigenous farmers in impoverished nations, whales, voting rights, anti-sexism and anti-ageism, to name a few — Ms. Roddick believed that businesses could be run ethically, with what she called “moral leadership,” and still turn a profit.
At times, her anti-establishment philosophy seemed to clash with her stature as a successful businesswoman. She joined the front lines of protesters at the World Trade Organization talks in Seattle in 1999, for instance.
“Anita did more than run a successful ethical business: she was a pioneer of the whole concept of ethical and green consumerism,” Tony Juniper, director of Friends of the Earth, wrote in The Evening Standard on Tuesday. “There are quite a few business people today who claim green credentials, but none came anywhere near Anita in terms of commitment and credibility.”
Anita Lucia Perilli was born in Littlehampton, England, in 1942, to Italian immigrants who ran a cafe and who put their four children to work there after school and on weekends. Her parents divorced when she was a child, and her mother married her husband’s cousin Henry, who died of tuberculosis several years later. When Anita was 18, her mother told her that Henry was, in fact, her father; she had been the product of a passionate extramarital affair.
Ms. Roddick said later that she had always felt closer to Henry than to the man she had thought was her father, and that the news made her feel “as if an enormous weight of guilt had been lifted from my shoulders.”
After her application to drama school was turned down, Ms. Roddick worked for a time as a secondary school teacher and then quit to travel to Tahiti, Australia and South Africa, among other places, where she absorbed customs and ideas she would later apply to the Body Shop.
“When you’ve lived for six months with a group that is rubbing their bodies with cocoa butter, and those bodies are magnificent, or if you wash your hair with mud, and it works, you go on to break all sorts of conventions, from personal ethics to body care,” she once said.
She married Gordon Roddick, a Scottish poet, in 1970, when she was pregnant with their second daughter. When her husband later announced that he wanted to fulfill his dream of traveling on horseback from Buenos Aires to New York (and that, by the way, it might take a couple of years), Ms. Roddick took out a modest loan and in 1976 opened the Body Shop, her first, in Brighton.
The shop sold just a handful of creams and hair-care products; its walls were painted green, to cover the damp spots. But it proved an unexpected success and the business began to grow, helped, too, by Mr. Roddick, when he came back from his trip. “He’s the doer, I’m the dreamer,” she once said. Within 15 years, Body Shop stores had blanketed Britain and moved beyond, eventually numbering more than 2,000 in about 50 countries.
Ms. Roddick, who rejected conventional marketing, was so recognizable with her wild hair, wild public pronouncements and unbusinesslike demeanor that she was probably her own best advertisement. She used her stores to spread her philosophy and promote causes, and urged franchise owners and customers to join in.
In 1990, she helped establish the magazine The Big Issue, produced and sold by homeless people. She also set up Children on the Edge, a charity for children in Europe and Asia, and said she planned to give away most of her fortune.
More recently, she had been campaigning to raise awareness of hepatitis C, which she contracted from a blood transfusion while giving birth to her younger daughter.
The Body Shop went public in the mid-1990s, and the company was sold to the French cosmetics giant L’Oréal for about .14 billion last year. Although the Roddicks had stepped down from managing the company in 2002, they remained on as nonexecutive directors and reportedly made about 7 million from their 18 percent stake.
The sale drew criticism from environmentalists who said that, among other things, L’Oréal had yet to ban animal testing. But Ms. Roddick said she hoped that the Body Shop would spur L’Oréal to behave more ethically.
In 2003, she was made a Dame of the British Empire. She is survived by her husband and their two daughters, Samantha and Justine.
Among the great contradictions in a woman whose life was full of them was her tendency to scoff at the kinds of products her company sold.
“I have never felt that beauty products are the body and blood of Jesus Christ,” she once said. “Nothing the Body Shop sells pretends to do anything other than it says. Moisturizers moisturize, fresheners freshen and cleansers cleanse. End of story.”
C'est la vie
瘋子公主 发表于 2007-08-29 13:19:57
Choose Life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose a fucking big television, choose washing machines, cars, compact disc players and electrical tin openers. Choose good health, low cholesterol, and dental insurance. Choose fixed interest mortgage repayments. Choose a starter home. Choose your friends. Choose leisurewear and matching luggage. Choose a three-piece suite on hire purchase in a range of fucking fabrics. Choose DIY and wondering who the fuck you are on a Sunday morning. Choose sitting on that couch watching mind-numbing, spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing fucking junk food into your mouth. Choose rotting away at the end of it all, pishing your last in a miserable home, nothing more than an embarrasment to the selfish, fucked up brats you spawned to replace yourself. Choose your future. Choose life. But why would I want to do a thing like that?
NEVER GOODBYE
瘋子公主 发表于 2007-08-29 12:50:18
遇見另一個你
站在陽臺上空氣新鮮
已經看不到貓
前方黑暗一片
在最後一刻我該前行還是撤退
