May 11

1、一个人炫耀什么,说明内心缺少什么。
2、一个人越在意的地方,就是最令他自卑的地方。
3、人都有以第一印象定好坏的习惯,认为一个人好时,就会爱屋及乌,认为一个人不好时,就会全盘否认。
4、人越是得意的事情,越爱隐藏,越是痛苦的事情越爱小题大作。
5、这个世界既不是有钱人的世界,也不是有权人的世界,它是有心人的世界。
6、婚姻的杀手有时不是外遇,而是时间。
7、当你再也没有什么可以失去的时候,就是你开始得到的时候。
8、学习要加,骄傲要减,机会要乘,懒惰要除。
9、童年的无知可爱,少年的无知可笑;青年的无知可怜;中年的无知可叹,老年的无知可悲。
10人允许一个陌生人的发迹,却不能容忍一个身边人的晋升。因为同一层次的人之间存在着对比、利益的冲突,而与陌生人不存在这方面的问题。
11、一个女人喜欢一个男人时,她希望听到谎言;当一个女人厌恶一个男人时,她希望听到真理。
12、如果你借太多的钱给一个人,你会令此人变成坏人。
13、现代的婚姻是情感的产物,更是竞争的结晶。
14、敌人变成战友多半是为了生存,战友变成敌人多半是为了金钱。
15、有所得是低级快乐,有所求是高级快乐。
16、天才失败了就是蠢才!
17、世界上1%的人是吃小亏而占大便宜,而99%的人是占小便宜吃大亏。大多数成功人士都源于1%

18、人如果靠吃饭活着,那饭不叫饭,叫饲料。
19、中国人学美国人容易,中国人学中国人难。
20、一个人幸运的前提,其实是他有能力改变自己。
21、人的成长要接受四个方面的教育:父母、老师、书籍,社会。有趣的是,后者似乎总是与前面三种背道而驰。
22、经营自己的长处,能使你人生增值;经营你的短处,能使你人生贬值。
23、生命犹如一片绿叶,随着时间的流逝,慢慢变的枯黄,但他的叶脉还是那么清晰可见。
24、把事情变复杂很简单,把事情变简单很复杂。
25、如果是棵小草,即使在最好的企业里,你也长不成大树。果真如此,不如历经风雨,把自己培养成名贵花卉。
26、二十一世纪工作生存法则就是:建立个人品牌,把你的名字变成钱。
27、怕爹是孝顺,怕老婆是爱情。
28、没有不合格的学生,只有不合格的家长。
29、地球是运动的,一个人不会永远处在倒霉的位置。
30、我们可以躲开大家,却躲不开一只苍蝇。生活中使我们不快乐的常是一些芝麻小事。

31、有一种人只做两件事:你成功了,他妒嫉你;你失败了,他笑话你。
  32、笨男人 笨女人=结婚;笨男人 聪明女人=离婚;聪明男人 笨女人=婚外情;聪明男人 聪明女人=浪漫爱情。
33、任何一个傻瓜都会引诱一个姑娘;但是知道怎样离开她只有成熟男人才能做到。
34、人有两只眼睛,全是平行的,所以应当平等看人;人的两只耳朵是分在两边的,所以不可偏听一面之词;人虽只有一颗心,然而有左右两个心房,所以做事不但要为自己想,也要为别人想。
35、企业一定要有偷不去、买不来、拆不开、带不走,溜不掉的独特资源。
36、失言就是一不小心说了实话。
37、真诚并不意味着要指责别人的缺点,但意味着一定不恭维别人的缺点。
38、人的本性就是贪婪,但没有贪婪社会就不会进步。
39、恋爱是想一个人的心,婚姻是拴一个人的心,爱情是吞一个人的心。
40、最好的进攻就是进攻自己。
41、人生的意义不在于拿一手好牌,而在于打好一手坏牌。
42、成功是一种观念,致富是一种义务,快乐是一种权利。
43、竞争,其实就是一种友谊,在对手的帮助下提高你的聪明度,害怕竞争的人已经输给了对手。
44、钱可以帮穷人解决问题,却帮富人制造问题。
45、把爱情投资在一个人身上,冒险;把爱情投资在许多人身上,危险。
46、世界上只有想不通的人,没有走不通的路。
47、真正的财富是一种思维方式,而不是一个月收入数字。
48、一个人想平庸,阻拦者很少;一个人想出众,阻拦者很多。不少平庸者与周围人关系融洽,不少出众者与周围人关系紧张。
49、婚后的男女莫不喜出“”望外
50、三流的化妆是脸上的化妆;二流的化妆是精神的化妆;一流的化妆是生命的化妆。

 51危机两个字,一个意味着危险,另外一个意味着机会,不要放弃任何一次努力。
 52、是英雄表现出来,是人才体现出来,是蠢才显现出来。
 53要为爱人着想,得起爱人唠叨,应对爱人谦让,男人应当总经理
 54、三人行,必有我师,三剑客,必有一强,三角恋,必有一伤。
May 5

this is a timeless and priceless sound, always give us something to remember in the past and something to look for in the future…

May 5

this is an article from Yahoo! Sports about last night’s Rockets win over Lakers in the first game of the second round of NBA final, a good read…

LOS ANGELES – Yao Ming crumpled to the court, grabbed his right knee and, well, no one needed to tell Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey how this was going to end. They all knew. Rockets coach Rick Adelman rubbed his hand over his forehead and sighed. Les Alexander, the franchise’s owner, watched anxiously from his baseline seat.

The worry on their faces said enough: Not again.

“I feared the worst,” Morey would later say, and why wouldn’t he? These Rockets were built on a shaky foundation. Yao’s brittle feet. Tracy McGrady’s weak back and sore knees. Whenever the Rockets looked ready to stand among the NBA’s elite, someone had to be wheeled back into the doctor’s office.

So as Yao lay on the court late Monday, his face filling with pain, his Rockets only five minutes from beating the Los Angeles Lakers for the biggest upset of these playoffs, Morey had reason to fear the worst. They all did, and that’s why what happened next says something about these Rockets, too.

This time, they didn’t stay down.

These aren’t T-Mac’s Rockets anymore. They know how to take a punch, and Monday night’s 100-92 series-opening victory over the Lakers proved that more than ever.

Having finally escaped the first round for the first time in a dozen years, supposedly just happy to be in the Western Conference semifinals, the Rockets outplayed the heavily favored Lakers through three quarters. After L.A. rallied to take the lead with about eight minutes left in the game, the Rockets answered with their own run – only to watch Yao collapse in a collision with Kobe Bryant.

“There were a lot of people gasping – 4 billion people gasping,” said Rockets guard Brent Barry. “I think it took a lot of oxygen out of the whole nation of China.”

Yao stayed on the floor for a few minutes before being helped to his feet. He took one step, nearly collapsed, took another, and nearly went down again before finally limping off the court toward the locker room. He never made it.

Yao stopped in the tunnel, squatted to flex his knee, then pushed himself against the wall to stretch some more. Within a few minutes, the Rockets looked up to see their giant center walking back toward them.

“It was like Rocky coming back out there,” Adelman said.

Yao promptly floored the Lakers with a 20-foot jump shot. He would go on to add six more free throws, scoring eight of his 28 points in the final 3½ minutes to keep the Lakers at bay.

Afterward, Yao sounded embarrassed about the scare he gave the Rockets, refusing to call his sore knee an injury. Bryant had collided with him, banging knee on knee hard enough that Yao told the team’s medical staff it felt like a hammer hitting him. But he also knew he wasn’t seriously hurt. Once the Rockets – Morey included – saw the replay on the overhead scoreboard, their own fears melted.

“Nothing to worry about,” Yao said.

With the Rockets, there’s always reason to worry. Nothing has ever been simple for them. Midway through last season, they looked like the West’s top challenger to the Lakers but then lost Yao to a stress fracture in his left foot. Two seasons ago, Yao missed six weeks after fracturing the bone under the same knee he hurt Monday.

Yao held up well this season, missing only five games, but his teammates couldn’t say the same. Shane Battier was out for the season’s first month. McGrady and Ron Artest seemingly traded games; when one played, the other couldn’t or wouldn’t. T-Mac finally shut himself down in February to undergo microfracture surgery on his left knee.

McGrady’s will-he-will-he-not routine had worn on teammates and coaches alike, and his departure – coupled with Rafer Alston’s trade to Orlando – helped the Rockets settle into their roles. With McGrady as their guide, the Rockets were never more than frontrunners. When the going got tough, T-Mac usually got his vacation itinerary.

Once McGrady declared himself done, Adelman made sure of this much: The Rockets would grow around Yao. He knew they would miss McGrady’s playmaking skills in the fourth quarter, as they have at times. But he also knew these young Rockets would defend and play hard.

“Every night, I knew we were going to get an effort,” Adelman said. “I never, ever thought we weren’t going to get an effort. We may not play well, but we were going to get an effort.”

The Rockets delivered another on Monday. Aaron Brooks helped splinter the Lakers’ defense. Artest shot well enough to score 21 points. Battier hounded Bryant long enough, Barry said, to know “what flavor of gum he was chewing.” Bryant scored 32 points but needed 31 shots to get them.

Battier sets the tone for these Rockets, as much in the locker room as on the court. After Lakers guard Sasha Vujacic cracked him with an elbow, Battier walked off the floor with blood streaming down his face. He needed four stitches to close the gash over his eye. Earlier, Bryant had tried to hogtie him during a scramble for the ball.

The Rockets had lost all four of their previous games with the Lakers this season, collapsing in the final quarter of the past three. After Monday, however, it was the Lakers who were answering questions about their toughness. Andrew Bynum played only six minutes in the first half because of foul trouble. Pau Gasol delivered an uninspired game that looked like it had come straight from last season’s NBA Finals.

“I don’t know if we can play much worse, to be honest with you,” said Lakers coach Phil Jackson.

Jackson didn’t seem all that worried about his team’s performance. Neither did Bryant. The Lakers remain the deeper, more talented team in the series. Maybe Bryant, who had missed practice on Sunday with a sore throat, feels better in Game 2. Maybe Bynum stays out of foul trouble. Maybe the Lakers simply used Game 1 to shake off their week’s worth of rust.

“I don’t think you’ll see that tentativeness there Wednesday,” Bryant said.

They better hope so. The Rockets walked into their building and beat them, playing like they belonged on this stage, like they didn’t know they aren’t supposed to win this series.

“ ‘Underdog,’ that’s a word I just learned a couple days ago,” Yao said.

He smiled.

“It’s like NBA say: ‘Where amazing happens.’ ”

For one night, at least, amazing happened. Yao limped back into the game and into the series. Maybe these Rockets aren’t so fragile anymore.

And maybe everyone should feel a little less certain how this is going to end.

May 5

it was a great game and Rockets out lasted the lakers in the second round match up. not many people think Rockets will win but it just happened.

100-92!

Yao ming scared every rockets fans with a late game knee knock down by kb. but he came back to the game and scored 8 points in the last few minutes and contribute big to the win.

After the game, kevin and chris all had a good idea about the tall guy with the number 11 on his back and start to chanting, go-yao-yakee-go

The post game interview by Yao ming is pretty fun too:

-Q: Did you think your team is underdog before the game?
-A: I dont know. I just learned that word couple of days ago.

-Q: How do you feel of the win?
-A: NBA says everything is possible.

哈哈

May 1