Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Hair straightening

Hello, everyone!

Cosmos, welcome to our blog!
I'm sorry for your struggling to come here.

I tried hair straightening (syukumo-kyosei) today.
My hair was so twisted that I couldn't control my style,
specially in such a rainy season.
Now I had a smooth touch and felt good.
I hope to keeping this condition until our seminar.

So, see you again!

7 comments:

wansmt said...

Dear Cherry and friends,

Talking about hair dressers, my hair dresser became our customer today.
Our business is making signboards.
We call the hair dresser Kei san. It’s the size of mom and pop shop. It is actually run by a mother and her daughter.

Their sign hanging from the wall dropped for some reason last week. They gave us an order to make the new one.

While we had tea this morning, we saw the picture of the beauty parlour without the sign and nobody remembered what kind of signboard was there.
Our employees are both Kei san's relatives and they visit K san quite often. But they don't remember, either.
How inattentive we are!

July 4, 2007, 17:02 JST

Plum said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Plum said...

Hi, Cherry!!! Hi, Cosmos!!!
Hi, everyone!!!

I like your hair style, Cherry. But I would like to see your new hair style also.
Is it easier to do your hair now? Hair is very important in our life, isn’t it? On my bad hair day, I feel so uneasy all day.

I went to work today. (I have two classes for mature students at the university library and teach seven times in spring and autumn semesters each.) There is a middle-aged gentleman who is extremely funny, but friendly and open-minded. He is always cracking jokes and gets the other students, who are all ladies, to laugh. He said that his wife didn’t like him to study English and complained about his learning English in my class.

I used to have an elderly man student in my library class. He was far behind the other students but was tremendously eager to learn. He never missed class. Nonetheless it was extremely hard for him to learn English, and the lady students helped him to understand what was going on in class. He was, sort of, the center of attention. But toward the end of the last semester, he gave me a long letter (he said that it was his love letter to me, oh, funny old man!), saying that he enjoyed my English class but was unable to continue since he could not keep up with the other students. I was very happy to have him in my class for three years.

I have another gentleman student in my another class. He is the vice president of a certain company which runs chain stores well-known to us. He is over 70 and is amazingly knowledgeable about not only English but also other subjects. Really, he is a walking dictionary. He sent me an email today and then I replied to him. It appeared that he just wanted to let me know his determination to study English hard. Seriously funny guy!!!

I have seen different kinds of male human species, but he appears to be a brilliant English learner. The best male English speaker, other than Matsumoto Michihiro, I have met so far, is Mr. Yokoi. (Of course, I am talking about Japanese English learners who grew up and were educated in Japan.) I really like his personality. He has a very beautiful Swiss wife who is much younger than him and they often open a party at their place. A few times I was invited and met some interesting foreigners living in Nagoya. Ms. Mizoguchi is one of his friends.

I think I talked too much.
Good night, Cherry and Cosmos. Sweet dreams, all my dear friends.

Anonymous said...

Hi, everyone!!

The word 'Hypothermia' is new to me, too. Thank you, Sunflower. If you know how to adjust this hypothermia, please tell me. If I arbitrarily write about it, I think metabolism is low, thermal efficiency is bad, hence those who suffer from hypothermia easily get fat??

If you know how to listen to number in English efficiently, please tell me.

sunflower said...

Hello, everyone. Welcom,Cosmos.

I'm going to stay overnight at "Shiawaseno mura " in Kobe with my parents tomorrow. It is a comprehensive welfare and leisure land managed by Kobe city. It has a variety of facilities, such as lodging, a hot spring, sports center, a camping site and so on. My tiny little idea of just dropping by and see my parents has expanded into this overnight plan. My mother is itching to go out somewhere with me. She is going to be 80 on July 11. She has some difficulty in walking because her left leg is 2 centimeters shorter than the other one. But she is completly healthy except the bent knee. So I'm happy I could make her earnest wish to come true.

On this weekend I'm going to Osaka. I'll be back to Nagoya on Sunday.
Have a nice weekend, everyone.

sunflower

sunflower said...

Hello, Azalea.
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia said that hypothermia is serious when body temperature is below 35 degrees Celsius and an emergency below 32.2 degrees Celsius at which poit shivering stops. Pulse, respiration, and blood pressure are depressed. Even when the victim appears dead, revival may be possible with very gradual passive rewarming such as with bankets.

I read an article about a municipal employee who was in a state of sever hypothermia when he was rescued after he tumbled from a 10-meter cliff and fell unconscious for 20 days. Luckily, he made a full recovery without any after-effects.

I don't want to be in a state of hypothermia.

goodnight!

cosmos said...

I had posted my comments,but failed. I might make a mistake to write my password.
I am a late-comer and I spent much time to read exciting your comments of before. And I wrote a little bit of my daily life. But it disappeared somewhere. I7ll try to send this again.