Monday, October 17, 2011

Quoting Tina Seelig -- WU, are you listening?

Time is the great equalizer… Each day has only 24 hours - nobody has any more than anyone else. Everyone, from poets to presidents, fills those hours, one after the other, until they are all filled up. Every single minute is unique, and once gone, can never be regained.

When you look at someone who has accomplished a lot, you can be pretty sure that he or she has spent considerable amounts of time mastering the required skills, filling hours upon hours with hard work. There are those who look at others’ accomplishments and say, “I had that idea, “ or “I could have done that.” But ideas are cheap and intentions are just that. If you don’t invest the time needed to achieve those goals then all you have are empty ambitions.

People often say, “I don’t have the time to…” Fill in the blank with whatever you like: exercise, make dinner, write a book, start a company, run for political office. What makes these people think that they have less time than anyone else? Of course they don’t. We all have the same 24 hours in each day and make real decisions about how we spend them. If you really want to get in shape, then carve out time to exercise. If you want to write a book, then pick up a pen and do it. And, if you want to run for president, then get started. It isn’t going to happen if you plan your day around your favorite TV shows or spend hours updating your Facebook page. These are entertaining distractions that eat up your irreplaceable time.

Link to the original blog post. Rest of the site has interesting bits from the book as well! I think I enjoy the writing more in Japanese though.

A lecture given on the creation of the book and etc
List of her online clips at Stanford

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And one guy picking up on some of the same points I did:
If you throw gasoline on a log all you get is a wet log. If you throw gasoline on a small flame you get an inferno. Are you putting your energy into something that's going to pay off?
Lao-Tzu, Chinese Taoist philosopher:
"The master in the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his information and his recreation, his love and his religion. He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence at whatever he does, leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him he's always doing both."

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Today

Finally read "Paper Tiger" in anticipation of Amy Chua (can't believe they funded her... to talk about the book and raising kids. Get some foreign policy and legal questions in, please!)

It was ok. The only thing I really liked/felt was ground breaking was the "Love the world twice as hard" thing.

http://nymag.com/news/features/asian-americans-2011-5/

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Super close to finishing the J translation of What I wish I knew when I was 20. Pretty good read, especially once it gets out of the entreprenurial stuff and into practical advice for navigating the adult world, being respectful, thankful and curious, not making enemies, etc.

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"I don’t imagine the English version of this book is for everyone. In fact, most people who read the English translation will probably say, “He won the Nobel Prize for Literature for that??” But if you enjoy highly symbolic writings, have had experiences with a Japanese girlfriend who left you puzzled, or wish to reflect on experiences you may have had in Japan then Snow Country is certainly worth a quick read." (I laughed pretty hard at that)
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Will probably start a new blog soon.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Quotes

I got a hard shell. When a dame turns me down, she may as well be reading me a transcript of the day's weather forecast -- and a little rain never hurt nobody.

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And in nearly every RPG, you'll encounter the same problem: Eventually, you'll wind up with an item just as overpowered as it is rare. It's almost too good to use. So what do you do with it?

The answer, as every gamer out there has just quietly realized, is "nothing." You save it. Forever.

Every game of Left 4 Dead ends with an untouched First Aid Kit, every Pokemaster is left still clutching the Master Ball as the credits roll, and after Necron falls, poor Zidane has to make a few calls and see if the local thrift stores accept Dark Matter. If you've ever ended a Square-Enix game without an Imperial Fuckton of Megalixirs cluttering up your inventory, then you were likely either drunk or suffering from severe head trauma to the part of your brain that manages impulse control.

And now you will never again be apart.

So how does that help you in real life? Simple: All you have to do, as a gamer, is apply this logic to your savings account. Every paycheck is a Megalixir, and somewhere out there is a boss so tough that you'll eventually need it, so you'd better hang on to it for now. And if you never end up using it, so what? You just proved you were too badass to ever require it in the first place.

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Wanna see this movie just because of this quote...

Hey listen, gimme a kiss.
Really?
Yeah, why not, because we're just gonna go home later, right, and then there's gonna be all that tension, we've never kissed before and I'll never know when to make the right move or anything. So we'll kiss now and get it over with, and then we'll go eat. We'll digest our food better.

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If you want to find your issues really fast, make a list of all the characteristics you hate in other people. Then make a list of all the characteristics you admire in other people. Hold up the two lists in front of you; the ones you hate the most are most likely the ones you hate the most about yourself, and the ones you admire the most are ones you’re not giving yourself permission to develop.

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https://www.mint.com/ might start using this, and ask men has a chinese version hahaha, kinda wish some of the newsstands in Shanghai had sold this... http://mh.trends.com.cn/
Also Lena Chen! hmmm actually maybe I should take that exclamation point back...

Monday, October 10, 2011

Goodness

"It's when people realize how lonely it is being on their own... that they start to become kind. You know that really, don't you?"
Mirajane, Fairy Tail, Ch. 118

Saturday, October 8, 2011

RAhhhhh I've been reading Fairy Tail... it's pretty good

Months of stalking the interwebs are finally starting to pay off! Another link dump...





"Little known Tokyo facts: The Tokyo Police Hospital is open to the general public. They have one of the best neurology departments in Japan."
(Need to read this guy, Jake Adelstein, 's yakuza book sometime. Maybe Heisei can bring him next year...)






Kinda baller... and I wanna read his book...

Big Bird in China and Japan!!!!!!!!!!!


Wanna download 13 assassins... apparently it's a good j movie. Along with that cold fish one up above.


Another not so productive day.... need to reply to people. Remember to chill with Noku for a bit tomorrow, call Rando, email lady...