wu liao

Thursday, August 31, 2006

長子嫡孫

原本是打了英文的, 好讓我的老外朋友見識我國文化. 但是越打越發現, 英文寫出來的不夠傳神 (該是我的英文不達標, 慚愧慚愧), 唯有放棄以此作文化交流...
話說爺爺數十歲大壽 (實際數字不詳, 真慚愧, 但亦無傷大雅), 延開二席, 三代同堂 (岔開話題, 其實四代同堂應該不難, 不過, 第三代最大的就是老姐跟我, 而我倆都雲英未想嫁, 跟著的親/堂/表弟妹 又生生性性 (至少在長輩眼中), 沒有未婚生子, 否則, 延開三四席, 四代同堂, 爺爺定當笑不攏嘴, 縣在我們真不孝)
開席之前, 爺爺把第二代的子女聚在一起, 以為他要說甚麼, 原來是他已經定了平安紙. 他說, 根據他的鄉下 (也即是我的鄉下) 傳統, 女丁沒有繼承權, 所以姑姐沒得分, 但是老弟是長子嫡孫, 所以分得一份. 老姐跟我不知多高興, 取笑老弟, 以後傳宗接代的工作就交給他了... 哈哈哈!!!!!

After 3 years...

After 3 years of taking long hours of classes after work and on weekends...
After 3 years of dozing in more than half of those classes...
After 3 years of spending sterling pounds after sterling pounds...
After 3 years of using most of my annual leave for exam preparation...
After 3 years of sacrificing my annual European trips...
After 3 years of buying grandes in Kosmo or Starbucks and then studying for hours there...
After 3 years of writing hundreds of pages of notes...
My dear friends, I have passed my final-year exam and will be awarded the LLB, and even with Honours!!!!!!!!!!

Thanks all of you who have been encouraging me during the tough & rough times, supporting me when I was unsure about myself, bearing with me my nagging and complaints and sighs and blablabla... Man, I can pack ALL my LLB materials away now (yes, I did worry that I could not pass thus I still have the textbooks, notes, cases and statutes in front of me in the living room)!!!!!!!!!!

Saturday, August 26, 2006

women with career - marriable or not? (4)

再來:
一個願打, 一個願捱...
干卿底事!?

women with career - marriable or not? (3)

愚見:
有得揀口架口羊?
or
你有本事咪揀囉!

women with career - marriable or not? (2)

As Noer's article enrages A LOT OF people, in particular feminists, Forbes put in a counter-point article to 'balance-out' the argument:

http://www.forbes.com/home/2006/08/23/Marriage-Careers-Divorce_cx_mn_land.html

Don't Marry A Lazy Man By Elizabeth Corcoran
Studies aside, modern marriage is a two way street. Men should own up to their responsibilities, too.

Girlfriends: A word of advice. Ask your man the following question: When was the last time you learned something useful, either at home or work?

If the last new skill your guy learned was how to tie his shoes in the second grade, dump him. If he can pick up new ideas faster than your puppy, you've got a winner.

I'm not usually a fan of dipstick tests, particularly when it comes to marriage and relationships. But a downright frightening story written by my colleague, Michael Noer, on our Web site today drove me to it. According to the experts cited by Michael, marrying a "career girl" seems to lead to a fate worse than tangling with a hungry cougar.

OK, call me a cougar. I've been working since the day I graduated from college 20-odd years ago. I have two grade-school-aged children. Work definitely takes up more than 35 hours a week for me. Thankfully, I do seem to make more than $30,000. All of which, according to Michael, should make me a wretched wife.

In spite of those dangerous statistics, my husband and I are about to celebrate our 18th wedding anniversary. You'll see us snuggling at a mountain-winery concert this month, enjoying the occasion. I don't think I'm all that unusual--so it seemed like a good time to test Michael's grim assertions.

The experts cited in his story think that professional women are more likely to get divorced, to cheat and to be grumpy about either having kids or not having them. But rather than rush to blame the woman, let's not overlook the other key variable: What is the guy doing?

Take, for instance, the claim that professional women are more likely to get divorced, because they're more likely to meet someone in the workforce who will be "more attractive" than that old squashed-couch hubby at home.

Women have faced this kind of competition squarely for years. Say you marry your college heartthrob. Ten years later, he's working with some good-looking gals--nymphets just out of college, or the more sophisticated types who spent two years building houses in Africa before they went to Stanford Business School. What do you do? A: Stay home, whine and eat chocolate B: Take up rock climbing, read interesting books and continue to develop that interesting personality he fell in love with in the first place.

Note to guys: Start by going to the gym. Then try some new music. Or a book. Or a movie. Keep connected to the rest of the world. You'll win--and so will your marriage.

There is, of course, the continual dilemma of who does the work around the house. But if both spouses are working, guess what? They've got enough income to hire someone else to fold laundry, mop floors, etc.

Money is a problem? Honestly, the times money has been the biggest problem for us have been when we were short of it--not when one of us is earning more than the other. When we have enough to pay the bills, have some fun and save a bit, seems like the rules of pre-school should take over: Play nice, be fair and take turns.

In two-career couples, Michael frets, there's less specialization in the marriage, so supposedly the union becomes less useful to either party. Look more closely, Mike! Any long-running marriage is packed full of carefully developed--and charmingly offsetting--areas of expertise.

For us, the list starts with taxes, vacation planning and investment management. My husband likes that stuff, and it leaves me yawning. Bless him for doing it. Give me the wireless Internet system, the garden or just about any routine home repairs and I'm suddenly the savant. Tear us apart, and we'd both be pitiful idiots trying to learn unfamiliar routines.

Michael is right that longer work hours force two-career couples to try harder to clear out blocks of family time. When we do, though, we get to enjoy a lot more. We understand each other's career jokes and frustrations. We're better sounding boards on what to do next. And at dinner parties, we actually like to be seated at the same table.

The essence of a good marriage, it seems to me, is that both people have to learn to change and keep on adapting. Children bring tons of change. Mothers encounter it first during the nine months of pregnancy, starting with changing body dimensions. But fathers have to learn to adapt, too, by learning to help care for children, to take charge of new aspects of a household, to adapt as the mothers change.

So guys, if you're game for an exciting life, go ahead and marry a professional gal.

women with career - marriable or not? (1)

There has been heated discussion over this article in forbes:

http://www.forbes.com/home/2006/08/23/Marriage-Careers-Divorce_cx_mn_land.html

Don't Marry Career Women By Michael Noer
How do women, careers and marriage mix? Not well, say social scientists.

Guys: A word of advice. Marry pretty women or ugly ones. Short ones or tall ones. Blondes or brunettes. Just, whatever you do, don't marry a woman with a career.

Why? Because if many social scientists are to be believed, you run a higher risk of having a rocky marriage. While everyone knows that marriage can be stressful, recent studies have found professional women are more likely to get divorced, more likely to cheat, less likely to have children, and, if they do have kids, they are more likely to be unhappy about it. A recent study in Social Forces, a research journal, found that women--even those with a "feminist" outlook--are happier when their husband is the primary breadwinner.

Not a happy conclusion, especially given that many men, particularly successful men, are attracted to women with similar goals and aspirations. And why not? After all, your typical career girl is well-educated, ambitious, informed and engaged. All seemingly good things, right? Sure…at least until you get married. Then, to put it bluntly, the more successful she is the more likely she is to grow dissatisfied with you. Sound familiar?

Many factors contribute to a stable marriage, including the marital status of your spouse's parents (folks with divorced parents are significantly more likely to get divorced themselves), age at first marriage, race, religious beliefs and socio-economic status. And, of course, many working women are indeed happily and fruitfully married--it's just that they are less likely to be so than non-working women. And that, statistically speaking, is the rub.

To be clear, we're not talking about a high-school dropout minding a cash register. For our purposes, a "career girl" has a university-level (or higher) education, works more than 35 hours a week outside the home and makes more than $30,000 a year.

If a host of studies are to be believed, marrying these women is asking for trouble. If they quit their jobs and stay home with the kids, they will be unhappy (Journal of Marriage and Family, 2003). They will be unhappy if they make more money than you do (Social Forces, 2006). You will be unhappy if they make more money than you do (Journal of Marriage and Family, 2001). You will be more likely to fall ill (American Journal of Sociology). Even your house will be dirtier (Institute for Social Research).

Why? Well, despite the fact that the link between work, women and divorce rates is complex and controversial, much of the reasoning is based on a lot of economic theory and a bit of common sense. In classic economics, a marriage is, at least in part, an exercise in labor specialization. Traditionally men have tended to do "market" or paid work outside the home and women have tended to do "non-market" or household work, including raising children. All of the work must get done by somebody, and this pairing, regardless of who is in the home and who is outside the home, accomplishes that goal. Nobel laureate Gary S. Becker argued that when the labor specialization in a marriage decreases--if, for example, both spouses have careers--the overall value of the marriage is lower for both partners because less of the total needed work is getting done, making life harder for both partners and divorce more likely. And, indeed, empirical studies have concluded just that.

In 2004, John H. Johnson examined data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation and concluded that gender has a significant influence on the relationship between work hours and increases in the probability of divorce. Women's work hours consistently increase divorce, whereas increases in men's work hours often have no statistical effect. "I also find that the incidence in divorce is far higher in couples where both spouses are working than in couples where only one spouse is employed," Johnson says. A few other studies, which have focused on employment (as opposed to working hours) have concluded that working outside the home actually increases marital stability, at least when the marriage is a happy one. But even in these studies, wives' employment does correlate positively to divorce rates, when the marriage is of "low marital quality."

The other reason a career can hurt a marriage will be obvious to anyone who has seen their mate run off with a co-worker: When your spouse works outside the home, chances increase they'll meet someone they like more than you. "The work environment provides a host of potential partners," researcher Adrian J. Blow reported in the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, "and individuals frequently find themselves spending a great deal of time with these individuals."

There's more: According to a wide-ranging review of the published literature, highly educated people are more likely to have had extra-marital sex (those with graduate degrees are 1.75 more likely to have cheated than those with high school diplomas.) Additionally, individuals who earn more than $30,000 a year are more likely to cheat.

And if the cheating leads to divorce, you're really in trouble. Divorce has been positively correlated with higher rates of alcoholism, clinical depression and suicide. Other studies have associated divorce with increased rates of cancer, stroke, and sexually-transmitted disease. Plus divorce is financially devastating. According to one recent study on "Marriage and Divorce's Impact on Wealth," published in The Journal of Sociology, divorced people see their overall net worth drop an average of 77%.

So why not just stay single? Because, academically speaking, a solid marriage has a host of benefits beyond just individual "happiness." There are broader social and health implications as well. According to a 2004 paper entitled "What Do Social Scientists Know About the Benefits of Marriage?" marriage is positively associated with "better outcomes for children under most circumstances," higher earnings for adult men, and "being married and being in a satisfying marriage are positively associated with health and negatively associated with mortality." In other words, a good marriage is associated with a higher income, a longer, healthier life and better-adjusted kids.

A word of caution, though: As with any social scientific study, it's important not to confuse correlation with causation. In other words, just because married folks are healthier than single people, it doesn't mean that marriage is causing the health gains. It could just be that healthier people are more likely to be married.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Aquascutum (2)

Source: https://www.proidee.co.uk/shop/SID_0123456789_02_GB/F=produkt_formular/P=02_GB_HPN420372/K=02_GB_120060

Aquascutum: over 150 years of wet weather experience.
In the mid 19th century, after years of painstaking work, London tailor John Emary made an amazing discovery. He discovered that the oil in sheep’s wool is more water-repellent than an umbrella. Under the name Aquascutum (aqua means water and scutum means shield) he launched clothing onto the market that was exceptionally water-repellent, but at the same time was breathable, soft and pliable. Since then generations of the Royal Family have had their all-weather clothing made by Aquascutum. In 1897 the first raincoat was made for the then Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII. In 1917 Aquascutum designed its first trench coat, which was a worldwide success! And it is that very coat which was worn by the stars in times gone by and is worn by stars today.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As I'm getting older and older, I look for clothes/bags/shoes/wathces that last, both in terms of quality, and style... so after 10 years, you may still see me in the same coat, wearing the same watch, carrying the same bag...

Aquascutum (1)

Bought several items from aquascutum this month. It's always been a classic label to me, good quality, long-lasting style, and low profile. Went to its website www.aquascutum.com and saw this ethos:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
STYLE IS NEVER OUT OF FASHION

The British weather is famed for its inclemency and unpredictability. Aquascutum invented the first waterproof cloth in 1853 and created the raincoat to protect English gentlemen and ladies from the elements and preserve their stylish appearance.

This understated approach to solving a perennial fashion problem (how to look elegant in the hustle and bustle of city life) has continued for over 155 years.

Fine craftsmanship, luxurious tailoring and attention to detail have been applied to all matters sartorial, creating a company with a quintessentially British point of view for whom the pursuit of style as a way of life.
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It's just a typical value or culture statement of a fashion brand / company, but I'm mildly wondering, is it a reasonable expectation that students in HK (Form 5, Form 7, University level) know all these words?

Saturday, August 19, 2006

restructure

a lot of restructuring is going on... i'm holding my breath on two things:
1. my coming work scope
2. my raise
They will affect my direction after Sep exam...

Sunday, August 13, 2006

小時了了...

看著今年的畢業生, 想起當年還是黃毛丫頭, 拿著6科30分去叩門, 為著中六可以讀心理學, 離開看著我14年成長的原校... 在原校, 我的公開試成績是歷屆最好的; 到了新校, 也是他們非理科班有史以來拿得最多'甲'的...

看看現在... 人過中年, 只希望自己不要應驗這句老話: 小時了了, 大未必佳...

Sunday, August 06, 2006

日本包裝韓國貨

原來 EDO 是來自韓國的... 還以為是日本貨...
想深一層, 又有何奇怪?

Dr. Seuss



Source: http://www.universitygames.com/ugitem.asp?itemno=01447TIN&brand=UG

Bought this for my godkids... my thought is even if the cardboard games can't last for long, the tinbox can...

I grew up with Dr. Seuss... I still remember the two pop-up Dr. Seuss books my parents got me when i was really really small...

So I was more than glad when I learnt from Queen that godkids have been exposed to Dr. Seuss series, so they are familiar with Cat in the Hat and bumblebee... :)

Pictionary

口甘大個女第一次玩Pictionary, 非常有趣...
地點在契仔契女家, 參加者包括男主人家, 女主人家, 契媽J及其摯愛, 契媽M及其摯愛, 與我...
加起來過百歲, 玩起來也不亦樂乎... 弄得不夠四歲的契女要不斷勸諭這些長輩們不要那麼鬧哄哄的...

車欠石更

Long Time No See...
Delay No More...

老人苑時間...
整蠱電話...
塘福鬼故...

最佳損友...
男子組...
好兄弟...

笑得好開心...
感觸亦良多...

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Watch List (2): Patek's Officer











This is the rare version my dream watch... I certainly don't mind this, but will be happy to get the basic vision.
Source: http://www.aaronfaber.com/Merchant2/merchant.mv?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=1&Product_Code=mba175&Category_Code=PHG

The rare platinum ”Officer’s” watch from Patek Philippe, ref. 3960. This model was manufactured in a limited edition of only 50 pieces in 1989, for the 150th anniversary of Patek Philippe. The three part case is solid polished platinum, hinged, with sapphire crystal, white enamel dial with Breguet numerals and black oxidized gold “Breguet” hands, 18K, and platinum Patek buckle.