дикие вепри, маленькие кабанчики Хубабублио,веприки, stinky Smyr, Пердуччо, головастик, слонотопик, говнодав, засранец и засранка-кликухи, которыми мы друг друга ласково называем с друзьями!=))))Как же мы друг друга любим!!!!
42 минуты придумывали вопросы по половой системе с одноклассником!!все 9 придумала я!!!я сексуально озабоченная!!!!ааааааааааааааааааааааааааааа!!!спросила у одного мальчика под кодовой кличкой дикий вепрь или просто Петя П. про оплодотворение!он поступает в медицинский...минут 20 уже непишет...видимо смутила!!!
АААААААА!!!!!!!!!Блохи меня закусали!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Что это у меня в голове????????ааааааааааааа!!!!!!!!!!!!!так уже два дня!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! И гормоны!!На носу!!!!!!Они маленькие. зелененькие, распространяются со скоростью \светаааа!!!сегодня они атаковали Москву!!!!все легко одеты, модно-премодно!!!улыбаются своими красивыми улыбками и разглядывают друг друга!!!!!!С абрамвичем мы с Карой по красной площаде гуляли!сами не ожидали, что такая компания будет!!!!мы шли, болтали, фоткались и вдруг появляется стая машин!выходит охрана с автоматами и Абрамович!=))))))))Потом мы с Ери пошли в Дзен Кафе...а!!!!!делали там уроки и голодали...да!!!именно!!!ери забыла все деньги!!!хватило только на сок и фруктовое желе!Но какая разница????И что с того, что занятие в журе отменили????ведь ВЕСНААААААААААААА!!!!!!!!
вторник, 05 апреля 2005
решила записаться на танцы, нашла в интернете супер-пупер школу с низкими ценами. с полным ассортиментом танцов...пришла с мамой, долго искала...оказалась эта "офигительная"школа действительно в офигительном месте!в какой-то долбанной обычной школе, где все колхозное...короче никто ничего не знает, вроде доп. занятий после уроков!!!!!!!!!!Бред!!!!!!!!!ОБЛОМММММММММММММММММММММ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Моя старая школа-такой рай по сравнению с другими обычныыми школами!это я уже очень хорошо и давно поняла!кста, о старой школе...встретила там на брейке двух мальчиков Фабриса и Рому из 7ого класса...странно...что в таком месте...
понедельник, 04 апреля 2005
Я шагал по улице
Навстречу ветру.
Ветер пробирал до костей,
проникал сквозь кожу.
Что, если под кожей
Из костей моих скрипка?
На ветру
Она поет беспричинно...
Китагава Фуюхико
Да, дитятки, это диагноз...Ностальгия что ли по прошлой весне?нет, скорее даже уже какой-то сложившийся обычай-весной тянет на японские хокку. хайку и т.п.

Навстречу ветру.
Ветер пробирал до костей,
проникал сквозь кожу.
Что, если под кожей
Из костей моих скрипка?
На ветру
Она поет беспричинно...
Китагава Фуюхико
Да, дитятки, это диагноз...Ностальгия что ли по прошлой весне?нет, скорее даже уже какой-то сложившийся обычай-весной тянет на японские хокку. хайку и т.п.

критика-абсолютно непонятная мне вещь...кто-то ужасно хвалит мою статью, а кто-то говорит, что это нельзя писать. я ничего не знаю, эта фигня!да какая разница????Боже мой. как хорошо жить!!!!!!!!!ЯЯЯЯЯЯЯЯЯЯЯ счастлива!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
придумала тупую кликуху своему однокласснику и как ненормальная смеялась в метро!!I`m crazy,baby!!!!!! 


VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II, who helped topple communism in Europe and left a deeply conservative stamp on the church that he led for 26 years, died Saturday night in his Vatican apartment, ending a long public struggle against debilitating illness. He was 84.
"We all feel like orphans this evening," Undersecretary of State Archbishop Leonardo Sandri told the crowd of 70,000 that gathered in St. Peter's Square below the pope's still-lighted apartment windows.
In the massive piazza that stretches from St. Peter's Basilica, the assembled flock fell into a stunned silence before some people broke into applause — an Italian tradition in which mourners often clap for important figures. Others wept. Still others recited the rosary. A seminarian slowly waved a large red and white Polish flag draped with black bunting for the Polish-born pontiff, the most-traveled pope in history.
At one point, prelates asked those in the square to stay silent so they might "accompany the pope in his first steps into heaven."
But as the Vatican bells tolled in mourning, a group of young people sang, "Alleluia, he will rise again." One strummed a guitar, and other pilgrims joined in singing the "Ave Maria."
"The angels welcome you," Vatican TV said after papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls announced the death of the pope, who had for years suffered from Parkinson's disease and came down with fever and infections in recent weeks.
In contrast to the church's ancient traditions, Navarro-Valls announced the death to journalists in the most modern of communication forms, an e-mail that said: "The Holy Father died this evening at 9:37 p.m. in his private apartment." The spokesman said church officials now would be following instructions that John Paul had written for them on Feb. 22, 1996. A precise cause of death was not given.
In the last two days of the pope's life, after it had become clear he would not recover, the tide of humanity near the Vatican had ebbed and flowed, swelling again Saturday night.
"He was a marvelous man. Now he's no longer suffering," Concetta Sposato, a pilgrim who heard the pope had died as she was on her way to St. Peter's to pray, said tearfully.
"My father died last year. For me, it feels the same," said Elisabetta Pomacalca, a 25-year-old Peruvian who lives in Rome.
"I'm Polish. For us, he was a father," said pilgrim Beata Sowa.
Death came as the pope was staring at his window which looked out over the crowds gathered in St. Peter's Square, a Polish priest told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica.
According to the newspaper, Rev. Jarek Cielecki said the pope raised his right hand as if to offer a blessing to those reciting the rosary in the square.
"Once the faithfuls' prayer ended the pope made a huge effort and pronounced the word 'Amen'," he said. "An instant later he died."
It was unclear how Cielecki learned of the details.
A Mass was scheduled for St. Peter's Square for 10:30 a.m. (4:30 a.m. EDT) Sunday. The pope's body was expected to be taken to the basilica no earlier than Monday afternoon, the Vatican said.
It said the College of Cardinals — the red-robed "princes" of the Roman Catholic Church — would meet at 10 a.m. (4 a.m. EDT) Monday in a pre-conclave session. They were expected to set a funeral date, which the Vatican said probably would be between Wednesday and Friday.
Karol Joseph Wojtyla was a robust 58 when the last papal conclave stunned the world and elected the cardinal from Krakow, the first non-Italian pope in 455 years.
In his later years, John Paul was the picture of frailty. In addition to Parkinson's, he survived a 1981 assassination attempt, when a Turkish gunman shot him in the abdomen, and had hip and knee ailments. His anguished struggle with failing health became a symbol of aging and, in the end, death with dignity.
People in John Paul II's hometown in Wadowice, Poland, fell to their knees and wept as the news reached them at the end of a special Mass in the church where he worshipped as a boy.
Church bells rang out after the announcement, but it took several minutes for people inside the packed church to find out as they continued their vigil into a second night.
Then the parish priest, the Rev. Jakub Gil, came to the front as the last hymn faded away. "His life has come to an end. Our great countryman has died," he said. People inside the church and standing outside fell to their knees.
John Paul's passing set in motion centuries of tradition that mark the death of the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, whom he led into the faith's third millennium.
The Vatican chamberlain formally verified the death and destroyed the symbols of the pope's authority: his fisherman's ring and dies used to make lead seals for apostolic letters.
The Vatican did not say if the chamberlain followed the other ancient practice of verifying death by calling the pope's name three times and tapping his forehead three times with a silver hammer.
The Vatican has declined to say whether John Paul left instructions for his funeral or burial. Most popes in recent centuries have asked to be buried in the crypts below St. Peter's Basilica, but some have suggested the first Polish-born pope might have chosen to be laid to rest in his native country.
As John Paul's death neared, members of the College of Cardinals were already headed toward the Vatican to prepare for the secret duty of locking themselves in the Sistine Chapel to elect the next pope. Tradition calls for the process to begin within 20 days of death.
Among possible successors are German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — one of the pope's closest aides and the Vatican's doctrinal watchdog. Others mentioned include Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes, Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, Cardinal Francis Arinze, a Vatican-based Nigerian, Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn of Austria and Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi of Italy.
In Washington, President Bush mourned the loss of "a good and faithful servant of God (who) has been called home" and said the pontiff "launched a democratic revolution that swept Eastern Europe and changed the course of history."
A fierce enemy of communism, John Paul set off the sparks that helped bring down communism in Poland, from where a virtual revolution spread across the Soviet bloc. No less an authority than former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev said much of the credit went to John Paul.
But his Polish roots also nourished a doctrinal conservatism. He reaffirmed the church's ban on artificial birth control and denounced in vitro fertilization, abortion, euthanasia, divorce, sex outside marriage, homosexual relations and same-sex unions.
He demanded celibacy of Roman Catholic priests and said yet again that the priesthood was not open to women. He did give in to the demands of liberal Catholics to allow altar girls.
A man who had lived under both the Nazis and the Soviets, he loathed totalitarianism, which he called "substitute religion." As pope, he helped foster Poland's Solidarity movement and bring down Communism. Once it was vanquished, he decried capitalist callousness.
During World War II, he appeared on a Nazi blacklist in 1944 for his activities in a Christian democratic underground in Poland. B'nai B'rith and other organizations testified that he helped Jews find refuge from the Nazis.
While the pope championed better relations with Jews — Christianity's "older brothers," as he put it — the Vatican formally recognized Israel in 1993. He also met with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and urged the Holy Land's warring neighbors to reconcile.
John Paul was intent on improving relations with Muslims. On a trip to Damascus, Syria, in May 2001, he became the first pope to step into a mosque.
The 264th pope also battled what he called a "culture of death" in modern society. It made him a hero to those who saw him as their rock in a degenerating world, and a foe to those who felt he was holding back social enlightenment.
"The church cannot be an association of freethinkers," John Paul said.
However, a sex abuse scandal among clergy plunged his church into moral crisis. He summoned U.S. cardinals to the Vatican and told them: "The abuse which has caused this crisis is by every standard wrong and rightly considered a crime by society; it is also an appalling sin in the eyes of God." Critics accused the pope of not acting swiftly enough.
Other critics said that while the pope championed the world's poor, he was not consistent when he rebuked Latin American priests who sought to involve the church politically through the doctrine of "liberation theology."
John Paul's health declined rapidly after he suffered heart and kidney failure after he was hospitalized twice in as many months. Just two hours before announcing his death, the Vatican had said he was in "very serious" condition, although he was responding to aides.
After his passing, Vatican, Italian and European Union flags were lowered to half-staff. In Washington, flags over the White House also were lowered.
The pope's final public appearance was Wednesday when, looking gaunt and unable to speak, he briefly appeared at his window.
His health sharply deteriorated the next day after he suffered a urinary tract infection.
In his last medical statement Saturday, Navarro-Valls said John Paul was not in a coma and opened his eyes when spoken to. But he added: "Since dawn this morning, there have been first signs that consciousness is being affected."
"Sometimes it seems as if he were resting with his eyes closed, but when you speak to him he opens his eyes," Navarro-Valls said.
Navarro-Valls said the pope was still speaking late Friday but did not take part when Mass was celebrated in his presence Saturday morning.
He said aides had told the pope that thousands of young people were in St. Peter's Square on Friday evening. Navarro-Valls said the pope appeared to be referring to them when he seemed to say: "'I have looked for you. Now you have come to me. And I thank you.'"

"We all feel like orphans this evening," Undersecretary of State Archbishop Leonardo Sandri told the crowd of 70,000 that gathered in St. Peter's Square below the pope's still-lighted apartment windows.
In the massive piazza that stretches from St. Peter's Basilica, the assembled flock fell into a stunned silence before some people broke into applause — an Italian tradition in which mourners often clap for important figures. Others wept. Still others recited the rosary. A seminarian slowly waved a large red and white Polish flag draped with black bunting for the Polish-born pontiff, the most-traveled pope in history.
At one point, prelates asked those in the square to stay silent so they might "accompany the pope in his first steps into heaven."
But as the Vatican bells tolled in mourning, a group of young people sang, "Alleluia, he will rise again." One strummed a guitar, and other pilgrims joined in singing the "Ave Maria."
"The angels welcome you," Vatican TV said after papal spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls announced the death of the pope, who had for years suffered from Parkinson's disease and came down with fever and infections in recent weeks.
In contrast to the church's ancient traditions, Navarro-Valls announced the death to journalists in the most modern of communication forms, an e-mail that said: "The Holy Father died this evening at 9:37 p.m. in his private apartment." The spokesman said church officials now would be following instructions that John Paul had written for them on Feb. 22, 1996. A precise cause of death was not given.
In the last two days of the pope's life, after it had become clear he would not recover, the tide of humanity near the Vatican had ebbed and flowed, swelling again Saturday night.
"He was a marvelous man. Now he's no longer suffering," Concetta Sposato, a pilgrim who heard the pope had died as she was on her way to St. Peter's to pray, said tearfully.
"My father died last year. For me, it feels the same," said Elisabetta Pomacalca, a 25-year-old Peruvian who lives in Rome.
"I'm Polish. For us, he was a father," said pilgrim Beata Sowa.
Death came as the pope was staring at his window which looked out over the crowds gathered in St. Peter's Square, a Polish priest told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica.
According to the newspaper, Rev. Jarek Cielecki said the pope raised his right hand as if to offer a blessing to those reciting the rosary in the square.
"Once the faithfuls' prayer ended the pope made a huge effort and pronounced the word 'Amen'," he said. "An instant later he died."
It was unclear how Cielecki learned of the details.
A Mass was scheduled for St. Peter's Square for 10:30 a.m. (4:30 a.m. EDT) Sunday. The pope's body was expected to be taken to the basilica no earlier than Monday afternoon, the Vatican said.
It said the College of Cardinals — the red-robed "princes" of the Roman Catholic Church — would meet at 10 a.m. (4 a.m. EDT) Monday in a pre-conclave session. They were expected to set a funeral date, which the Vatican said probably would be between Wednesday and Friday.
Karol Joseph Wojtyla was a robust 58 when the last papal conclave stunned the world and elected the cardinal from Krakow, the first non-Italian pope in 455 years.
In his later years, John Paul was the picture of frailty. In addition to Parkinson's, he survived a 1981 assassination attempt, when a Turkish gunman shot him in the abdomen, and had hip and knee ailments. His anguished struggle with failing health became a symbol of aging and, in the end, death with dignity.
People in John Paul II's hometown in Wadowice, Poland, fell to their knees and wept as the news reached them at the end of a special Mass in the church where he worshipped as a boy.
Church bells rang out after the announcement, but it took several minutes for people inside the packed church to find out as they continued their vigil into a second night.
Then the parish priest, the Rev. Jakub Gil, came to the front as the last hymn faded away. "His life has come to an end. Our great countryman has died," he said. People inside the church and standing outside fell to their knees.
John Paul's passing set in motion centuries of tradition that mark the death of the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics, whom he led into the faith's third millennium.
The Vatican chamberlain formally verified the death and destroyed the symbols of the pope's authority: his fisherman's ring and dies used to make lead seals for apostolic letters.
The Vatican did not say if the chamberlain followed the other ancient practice of verifying death by calling the pope's name three times and tapping his forehead three times with a silver hammer.
The Vatican has declined to say whether John Paul left instructions for his funeral or burial. Most popes in recent centuries have asked to be buried in the crypts below St. Peter's Basilica, but some have suggested the first Polish-born pope might have chosen to be laid to rest in his native country.
As John Paul's death neared, members of the College of Cardinals were already headed toward the Vatican to prepare for the secret duty of locking themselves in the Sistine Chapel to elect the next pope. Tradition calls for the process to begin within 20 days of death.
Among possible successors are German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — one of the pope's closest aides and the Vatican's doctrinal watchdog. Others mentioned include Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes, Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga of Honduras, Cardinal Francis Arinze, a Vatican-based Nigerian, Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn of Austria and Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi of Italy.
In Washington, President Bush mourned the loss of "a good and faithful servant of God (who) has been called home" and said the pontiff "launched a democratic revolution that swept Eastern Europe and changed the course of history."
A fierce enemy of communism, John Paul set off the sparks that helped bring down communism in Poland, from where a virtual revolution spread across the Soviet bloc. No less an authority than former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev said much of the credit went to John Paul.
But his Polish roots also nourished a doctrinal conservatism. He reaffirmed the church's ban on artificial birth control and denounced in vitro fertilization, abortion, euthanasia, divorce, sex outside marriage, homosexual relations and same-sex unions.
He demanded celibacy of Roman Catholic priests and said yet again that the priesthood was not open to women. He did give in to the demands of liberal Catholics to allow altar girls.
A man who had lived under both the Nazis and the Soviets, he loathed totalitarianism, which he called "substitute religion." As pope, he helped foster Poland's Solidarity movement and bring down Communism. Once it was vanquished, he decried capitalist callousness.
During World War II, he appeared on a Nazi blacklist in 1944 for his activities in a Christian democratic underground in Poland. B'nai B'rith and other organizations testified that he helped Jews find refuge from the Nazis.
While the pope championed better relations with Jews — Christianity's "older brothers," as he put it — the Vatican formally recognized Israel in 1993. He also met with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and urged the Holy Land's warring neighbors to reconcile.
John Paul was intent on improving relations with Muslims. On a trip to Damascus, Syria, in May 2001, he became the first pope to step into a mosque.
The 264th pope also battled what he called a "culture of death" in modern society. It made him a hero to those who saw him as their rock in a degenerating world, and a foe to those who felt he was holding back social enlightenment.
"The church cannot be an association of freethinkers," John Paul said.
However, a sex abuse scandal among clergy plunged his church into moral crisis. He summoned U.S. cardinals to the Vatican and told them: "The abuse which has caused this crisis is by every standard wrong and rightly considered a crime by society; it is also an appalling sin in the eyes of God." Critics accused the pope of not acting swiftly enough.
Other critics said that while the pope championed the world's poor, he was not consistent when he rebuked Latin American priests who sought to involve the church politically through the doctrine of "liberation theology."
John Paul's health declined rapidly after he suffered heart and kidney failure after he was hospitalized twice in as many months. Just two hours before announcing his death, the Vatican had said he was in "very serious" condition, although he was responding to aides.
After his passing, Vatican, Italian and European Union flags were lowered to half-staff. In Washington, flags over the White House also were lowered.
The pope's final public appearance was Wednesday when, looking gaunt and unable to speak, he briefly appeared at his window.
His health sharply deteriorated the next day after he suffered a urinary tract infection.
In his last medical statement Saturday, Navarro-Valls said John Paul was not in a coma and opened his eyes when spoken to. But he added: "Since dawn this morning, there have been first signs that consciousness is being affected."
"Sometimes it seems as if he were resting with his eyes closed, but when you speak to him he opens his eyes," Navarro-Valls said.
Navarro-Valls said the pope was still speaking late Friday but did not take part when Mass was celebrated in his presence Saturday morning.
He said aides had told the pope that thousands of young people were in St. Peter's Square on Friday evening. Navarro-Valls said the pope appeared to be referring to them when he seemed to say: "'I have looked for you. Now you have come to me. And I thank you.'"

11:54
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11:00
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10:50
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суббота, 02 апреля 2005
"Нам не принадлежит прошлое друг друга. Главное, есть ли у нас будущее."
Юстейн Гордер
Юстейн Гордер
пятница, 01 апреля 2005
Над Рио-де-Жанейро взойдет луна. Звезды загорятся как сотни лампочек на темном небосводе, на Копакобана откроются лавки с бразильскими майками, гамаками и прочими туристическими сувенирами, которыми торгуют хиппи в своих смешных разноцветных шапочках, как у Боба Марли. А девушки в замысловатых платьях вывалят на улицу, чтобы заработать себе этой ночью денег на оплату квартиры и на еду, бразильские мачо в поисках горячих ощущений будут сигналить из своих стареньких машин и сетовать на судьбу за то, что очередная цыпочка оказалась мужиком в юбке. В Рио все будет, словом, как обычно. Лишь толпа людей на пляже в белых костюмах и со свечами в руках будут провожать меня. Не будет слез, просто потому, что никто не поверит в смерть. Весь город на минуту замрет, завороженный людьми в белых одеяниях у океана. И ради этого момента я умру, ради этого момента я буду еще долго-долго жить, чтобы на рассвете, когда город будет дремать у себя в теплой постели, случайный прохожий или молодые ребята, возвращающиеся из ночного клуба, невольно остановились около тысячи свечей на песку и улыбнулись океану, небу, восходящему солнцу с мыслями о том, как чертовски приятно жить, хотя бы ради этих звезд на желтом песке=).
Отличная работа! Плавно начала, но закончила на одном дыхании. Молодец. 9/10! Спасибо. Саша.
Отличная работа! Плавно начала, но закончила на одном дыхании. Молодец. 9/10! Спасибо. Саша.
какое счастье!!!позади остались уроки, которые вызывали у меня дрожь на ногах и пятках!!!УРА!!!прошла литература, которую я больше всего опасалась!!!Я получила 2 пятерки!!!АААААААААААААААААА!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!И френч из Вышки оказался не таким уж страшным!!е!!!остался только английский!!!ЯХУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУУ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!и обед!!!!!О, йе. бэйби!!!!а потом маин день рождения в апшу!!!дадададада!!!Как давно я там не была...как давно не фотографировала...кажется, сегодня я возмещу эти серьезные потери...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ДЕВИЧНИКККККККК!!!О ЛЯ ЛЯ!!!ВИНО!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Каись, опять напьюсь...и не смогу работать...а завтра уже надо показывать, что я сделала за неделю.м-да...как же скудны мои труды...придется кропеть над ней всю ночь...возмоно(но маловероятно)
Кто скзал, что настоящих чудес не бывает?Вчера на уроке у-шу мы представляли себе места, в которых в ту минуту желали бы очутиться...А потом АбСОЛЮТНО точно угадывали все до мельчайших подробностей о месте, в котором кто - то захотел оказаться!но разве это не чудо?Когда я подумала о кипре, о моем любимом пляже, о солнце, которое нещадно палит, о каменном островке, который виднеется вдалеке, о пляже, полном народа и шумящей ребятней!!!Когда все пять человек мне в голос стали описывать, где я находилась, описав подробно, какого цвета были море, песок, сколько было камней...я прям-таки обомлела...Они даже подметили, что там было дерево...хоть я о нем и думала какие-то секунды всего...
четверг, 31 марта 2005
Сегодня у моей мамы день рождения!!!и это еще один прекрасный повод, чтобы сказать ей как я ее люблю!!!Мамочке подарила игрушку- двух мышей, засунутых в сыр и снадписья "i love you", деревянного ангела с садовой перчаткой и надписью welcome to my garden и красивую-красивую розочку=) Самой было бы приятно. если мне подарили такие подарки=) мама с папой пошли вечером в ресторан. позвонили мне в 8 и говорят:"Ксю, тут Коля с гошей(мой брат и его друг-однокурсник+сын папиного приятеля) через пять минут к тебе придут, ты их покорми и развлеки!"АААААААААА, вы не видели. какое у меня в тот момент было выражения лица!!!!!Мне надо было сделать еще кучу домашнего задания, а они вдруг так нежданно-негаданно...да...собственно говоря...Но ничего не поделаешь, скоростная уборка в 168 метровой квартире и почти порядок...весело посидели, перемыли косточки куче знакомых из Вышки, попили чайку, фотки посмотрели, о жизни поговорили.Классно было!!!!так бы чаще!!!кста,сказали. что хотят меня познакомить с другом своим Костей...я его как-то уже однажды мельком видела, когда мы забирали Колю из Института...ну, ничего-ничего...такой, с бородкой. курит...брюнет...
"Я никогда не ненавидила так мужчину, чтобы вернуть ему все подаренные мне бриллианты."
За За Габор
За За Габор
Какая книга самая тонкая в мире?
Это книга о том, что мужчины знают о женщинах.
Нан Тукет
Это книга о том, что мужчины знают о женщинах.
Нан Тукет