Never feel that you are good enough, keep doing good deeds. We will never know when we will die.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Exammmmmm !!
Malam ni balas dendam, dah lama xpost, sekali post 3, tu diaaa..
ehem3.. ok, back to normal.
Dear friends,
my VERY BIG EXAMINATIONs are around the corner.
I have my SAT on this Saturday, 3rd December 2011
and TOEFL on next Saturday, 11th December 2011
So, please..
I need your doa, friends.
Please pray for my success.
p/s I still have 6 exercises to do in 7 days! oh Allah, please help me..
I loike this! :)
uia vs intec
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childish kan? aha, biaq la. tu mksud xsnggup berpisah, berat ati nak berpisah, tu la mungkin ukhwah fisabilillah.
tp, mau struggle gila2 la.. gila sgt2.. nk fight dgn budak2 pandai. susah tp xmustahil [pndai la nasihat org, diri sendiri tuu... ehehehe]

entah la, aku doa ja Allah bg hidayah dan kesenangan kt depa supaya berubah. aku doa bg Allah tetapkan hati2 kami semua dalam jalan Allah ..
Language isn’t the problem
Posted on 25 November 2011 - 05:08amAFTER five years of living and working in Malaysia, I am returning to my home country. I have had many amazing experiences here, have felt connected to the local communties and have not been living in the expatriate fish bowl.
There is one huge issue, however, that stands out as a negative for the people of Malaysia and its future. While the use of certain languages has been for years the focus in the media and the community, it shouldn’t be an important one. The big focus should be the major lack of civilities in public.
Whether I am in the local convenience store in my suburb of KL, or in the queue to have my fruit and vegetables weighed in the supermarket, I rarely hear a Malaysian say please or thank you. Mostly, they don’t even acknowledge the shop assistant.
Whether the language is Bahasa Malaysia, Cantonese, Mandarin, Hokkien, Tamil or English, these are two very important words. This lack of civility covers all walks of life from the rich to the poor, all races and creeds.So Malaysia, while I have loved living here and contributing to your society in the form of education, I have always been astounded at the stern faces and lack of manners. The shop assistants you so readily don’t engage with deserve the same respect you would offer your boss. Smile and say please or thank you. It makes a huge difference.
Gordon Reid
Kuala Lumpur

Sunday, November 20, 2011
randomly ..
It just I have no time to on9. (ini tipuuuu ;p)
I don`t know what other people think, it is my opinion. It is mine , okay.
