Feb 22, 2008

what i love most

always ,i ask myelf what you love most and what you really want to gain and where you wnt to go ,which kind of life you really need .i made me husal in past two years .

i will have a cup of coffe and enjoy the taste .it is misable after the 8 hours working in the office .
think about your life now .life just like the water under the old bridge ,if you do not cherish it .even you do not know where it came from when turn your head back.
so the time is ensential a man in youth .

cherish your life and do what you like as soon as possible .

have a apace on google

think that one about '#4: taking over the world' may need to be qualified; really, was there such a suggestion? China could have taken over the world if she had wanted to.....back in 1421. I wonder what's the beef of those so quick to cast doubt and suspicion on China. Is it because memories of their old crimes are raising some psychological spectre of potential retribution now that China is emerging? Or, is it because they have personal agendas to make sure that China doesn't rise any faster so that they can continue to sow and reap their ill-gotten gains from others who were once weak? Back to the thread - i think the suggestions in general by others make sense. I would just like to add a couple of points:- the ability to build up learning curves and the means to acquire useful knowledge as quickly as possible: this is a key national success factor; it saves money, resources and time for not trying to do things done wrong by others; it creates an integrative and holistic approach to solving complex problems requiring diverse inputs; it armours against deflection tactics;- foster innovativeness and inventiveness as a key to harness product and service attractiveness: precision combined with aesthetics are the twin pillars of market share creation; whatever is the enterprise, these are the key endposts which are admired by the world's customers, anywhere;- help as many as possible to achieve the socratic 'examined life'; this is the centre of the harmonious society; much wisdom from China's uniquely rich cultural past in all its aspects should be tapped for insight on how to proceed and make the quantum-leap transitions;- retention of socialist attributes where they contribute to efficiency and stabilty in nation-building and national development in all aspects;One of northwest's points re: the middle-class recalls me to a recent survey on over 1,000 middle-income households done in almost 60 cities. The findings are interesting, to say the least, but i'll just list some of its salients:they are fiscal conservatives, saving 20% of their income;excluding cars, the big tiicket item they bought last year averaged RMB 3,740;65% own a pc;60% own their homes but only 17% took a mortgage;40% plan to refurbish it in the next five years;local brands lead in home appliances;30% have credit cards;20% bought equities in the past 12 months;44% plan to travel outside their home province next year;it costs RMB800K to raise a child in the top cities.