Hello, everyone.
How about your weekend?
My kids have piano lessons once a week, and a grade test was held today.
They have continued those lessons for about five years,
and have never said that they would stop them.
I think they are good girls, because I had a bitter experience
breaking off my piano lesson after only 3 months .
But I liked "soroban" lesson those days,
which lasted for 2 years until I started junior high school.
What one likes, one will do well. That may be true.
I also want to take lessons about something like the martial arts.
I need building up my body.
So, good bye, friends!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
Dear Cherry and friends,
Your daughters are good girls.
On the day of summer seminar, I was surprised at their quietness.
And you are a good mother because you showed what you were doing.
I believe that your daughters were proud of you when you gave a presentation in English.
Recently, we hear about classroom disruption. Some university teachers sometimes complain students don't listen to them even at university classrooms. Last year, I attended one of university classes. I was asked to attend it to collect papers after the class. Most of the students didn't listened to the teacher and they were chatting. To my great surprise, a few students went out talking to the cell phone during the class. I thought they were impolite. A teaching assistant told me about another worse case. In some classes, students have to use computers. As a computer specialist, he attends such classes. He once saw everyone accessing to “mixi,” a website we can create blogs either privately or publicly to communicate people. Mixi's display is orange. So he saw all the screens orange. I wondered why they didn't care about the teaching assistant standing behind them. These students are very kind and sympathetic to each other, but they completely ignore other people.
This kind of behavior is very similar to that of girls making up the faces in the train. I don't think they are rebellious attitudes toward society. I feel they have different ideas about society. For me, in my private world, I think I'm allowed to be grumpy if I don't feel like smiling. Likewise, some girls believe there are places they can't go if they have no makeups on. That's their world outside. But the train is definitely not that kind of place. Since they are surrounded by people they don't know, the space becomes a semi-private place. Sounds paradoxical, doesn't it? It's just the difference of the line distinguishing one's private world from outside. There used to be an area where a woman who couldn't enter without making up her face. Of course, it depends on each person's idea, but the area seems to become smaller these days excluding public places like trains.
Today, I was like Grumpy, a friend of Snow White.
Have a good evening.
June 30, 2007 17:22 JST
Hi, everyone.
I also think Cherry's daughter are very mild and I can tell that they respect you.
Thanks to Alice's sharp analysis, I understand why girls make up in the train. I don't care about their makeup in the train but I was bewildered when two high school female students changed their school uniforms into dresses in front of me in the train. I did not know where to look. As Alice said, for them, I did not exist.
Yesterday, I went to the election to cast a ballot at 7 A.M..
In the afternoon, I went to Nagoya to see Janathan's concert with Cosmos and her friend.
His voice was sweet. His Hawaiian songs were very beautiful and nice.
Besides, hula dance was performed by three old-incognito(I don't know this expression is understood) Japanese women. I enjoyed the ambience helped by liquor. I drank too much up to my limit though, I could get to my house and take a bath.
Intoxicated, I went to sleep watching the election result program. When I got up, it was 2 A.M.. I missed the blog to write. Excuse me.
Post a Comment