Hello Fellow Readers,
Sorry, readers that i took a long hiatus. The reason i took the break from blogging is to reevaluated my life. I know my direction in life long time before. It was more down to the details on getting to my life long journey.
*Before we get into my details of my life career choice. I just tell you fellow readers that i still have a wishlist to make.
i believe very strongly that God is guiding me in the path of physical therapy. This line of profession is surely tough. I think for me that working with people is the fun part. Helping individuals recover from physical injures and sharing the gospel or testimony would be my greatest joy.
So yea...Physical Therapy.
As my title of this post is about my career role-model. I'm going to share my biggest role-model. She is one of the best in this business. I would love to be in her position one day. She works with one of my favorite basketball team. The Lakers. Her name is Dr. Judy Seto. I do not know where she is a Christian but she does amazing work with the basketball players. The year that the Lakers when to the NBA finals and Kobe was nursing an injure hand. She was there to do therapy. Kobe was then still able to do his greatness.
Teams wanted her during this year Olympics to their physical therapist but she went to the USA team.
Here is an article that was done on her in the Lakers website. Check it out. Click here make sure to continue reading. There is two parts to it.
I really wish that i would be a great physical therapist and be able to work in the NBA. I can just imagine myself working with one of the best players like LeBron or Carmelo or in Jordan team, Bobcats. Working with players to help them recover as possible to play the game. I can build a relationship with them and share the gospel with them.
Of course wherever God takes me to be i will do his ministry.
That is my role-model. I pray that God will continue to bless her and i also pray for myself.
Anyway, i hope to continue posting up more frequently. So do swing by here readers.
Love and God bless
the Addict Lounge
where Christianholics meet to get a dose of God in their life. Addiction to God is good
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Well Said My Friend,
Hello Readers,
Creating a wishlist is harder than i thought. It's crazy that i have so many things i wish i could have. Well, you guys have to wait some more.
In the time of your wait, you can read this article i found in the internet. I bet many of you have read it. It's really a amazing story.
By Eric Pfeiffer, Yahoo! News | The Sideshow – Tue, Oct 9, 2012
Creating a wishlist is harder than i thought. It's crazy that i have so many things i wish i could have. Well, you guys have to wait some more.
In the time of your wait, you can read this article i found in the internet. I bet many of you have read it. It's really a amazing story.
Heaven is real, says neurosurgeon who claims to have visited the afterlife
Dr. Eben Alexander claims to have visited the afterlife (Twitter)Dr. Eben Alexander has taught at Harvard Medical School and has earned a strong reputation as a neurosurgeon. And while Alexander says he's long called himself a Christian, he never held deeply religious beliefs or a pronounced faith in the afterlife.
But after a week in a coma during the fall of 2008, during which his neocortex ceased to function, Alexander claims he experienced a life-changing visit to the afterlife, specifically heaven.
"According to current medical understanding of the brain and mind, there is absolutely no way that I could have experienced even a dim and limited consciousness during my time in the coma, much less the hyper-vivid and completely coherent odyssey I underwent," Alexander writes in the cover story of this week's edition of Newsweek.
So what exactly does heaven look like?
Alexander says he first found himself floating above clouds before witnessing, "transparent, shimmering beings arced across the sky, leaving long, streamer like lines behind them."
He claims to have been escorted by an unknown female companion and says he communicated with these beings through a method of correspondence that transcended language. Alexander says the messages he received from those beings loosely translated as:
"You are loved and cherished, dearly, forever."
"You have nothing to fear."
"There is nothing you can do wrong."
From there, Alexander claims to have traveled to "an immense void, completely dark, infinite in size, yet also infinitely comforting." He believes this void was the home of God.
After recovering from his meningitis-induced coma, Alexander says he was reluctant to share his experience with his colleagues but found comfort inside the walls of his church. He's chronicled his experience in a new book, "Proof of Heaven: A neurosurgeon's journey into the afterlife," which will be published in late October.
"I'm still a doctor, and still a man of science every bit as much as I was before I had my experience," Alexander writes. "But on a deep level I'm very different from the person I was before, because I've caught a glimpse of this emerging picture of reality. And you can believe me when I tell you that it will be worth every bit of the work it will take us, and those who come after us, to get it right."
It's not really deep story. But a doctor who share that Heaven is real is really amazing.
I continue to hope and pray would stay up for your faith. Trust in the Lord Jesus Christ no matter what. Let him be your guide in this world.
God loves you. Check back to this blog for more interesting post and hopefully the wishlist would be up. Till then nighty night.
tag
Chrisitan,
Doctor,
Dr. Eben Alexander,
Heaven,
Real
Saturday, October 6, 2012
More In-Betweeners...
Hi Readers,
I have been thinking about my wishlist a lot and will post it up soon-ish.
Anyway, there is so much going on in today's world. And there is much to be shared. So...i found a pretty hype up view of Blake Griffin 75 feet long shot. Check it out.
Cool huh?
I have been thinking about my wishlist a lot and will post it up soon-ish.
Anyway, there is so much going on in today's world. And there is much to be shared. So...i found a pretty hype up view of Blake Griffin 75 feet long shot. Check it out.
He is more of a dunk-a-holic, but you don't see that many long shots.
Cool huh?
Stick around for my updatedd wishlist. If not there will be more in-between post till i figure out my wishlist.
Till then nighty night. God loves you
tag
75 feet,
America,
Basketball,
Blake Griffin,
LA Clippers,
Long shot,
NBA
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
In-Between Post Part 2
Hey,
emm....lol...right?
I know i'll be putting up my wishlist soon. I have to make the right decision for the wonderful things i could want.
Anyway, I just have to put up these places that people should go while they are in America. This is not from me. I found an article that seems very interesting to me and i think every person who is here in the big USA do visit those places. Check it out...
So why not map out a detour to one of these spots the next time you hit the road? Who knows—you might never think of this country in quite the same way again.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyo.Yellowstone National Park (Photo: Hugoht / Dreamstime.com)
Wide-open space is a unique inheritance for every American, and Yellowstone is the most dramatic example of what "wide-open space" really means. In 1872, two-million-acre Yellowstone debuted as America's first national park, and visitors began flocking to soak in its hot springs, see elk and bison roam its grasslands, gawk at its geyser known as Old Faithful, and hear gray wolves sound chill-inducing howls at dawn. Amazingly, visitors can get the same thrills today for nearly no cost. For the fullest experience, stay the night. The lack of light pollution in northwest Wyoming's Big Sky country reveals an astonishing canopy of stars that is virtually unchanged from the time of native tribes, fur trappers, and pioneer explorers.
French Quarter (Photo: Lawrence Weslowski Jr / Dreamstime.com)French Quarter, New Orleans, La.
No other American neighborhood provides as much eye candy as the cobblestone streets of New Orleans' French Quarter—known as "the Quarters" to locals—and we're not referring to the annual Mardi Gras parades, with their thousands of taffeta-draped harlequins strutting to funk, R&B, and Dixie. No, it's the architecture that's intriguing.
Stroll this district, which is bounded by the Mississippi River, Rampart Street and Canal and Esplanade, and you'll glimpse nightclubs lit up in neon, French colonial townhouses draped in ivy, Creole cottages built on stilts, and antebellum mansions whose balconies are laced with intricate ironwork.
Highway 1, CaliforniaHighway 1 (Photo: Wangkun Jia / Dreamstime.com)
Considering that the United States has more miles of paved roads (over 2.5 million) than any other country on earth, is it any wonder thatroad trips are practically a rite of passage here? One of the most meditative—and celebrated—drives you can take in the States is the 135-mile stretch of California's Pacific Highway 1 between San Luis Obispo and Monterey. Expect view after astonishing view of land meeting sea, as the road snakes and swerves high above the Pacific, past bright-green grasslands and redwood-forested canyons.
Times Square (Photo: Paul Hakimata / Dreamstime.com)Times Square, New York City
Sure, the crowds can be pushy, but Times Square—the stretch of Broadway between Manhattan's 42nd and 47th streets—delivers the most intense straight-up celebration of round-the-clock visual stimulation in the free world. Three-hundred sixty-five days a year, it's all lights, cameras, and action. And in summer, when the city sets out a slew of lawn chairs in its pedestrian-only core, you can take a seat and gaze southward, imagining the scene every New Year's Eve when a million revelers watch the ball drop—an all-American tradition for 105 years.
Grand Canyon, Ariz.Grand Canyon (Photo: Radkol / Dreamstime.com)
Many American landmarks inspire people to think big, but none can match the leviathan scale of the Grand Canyon. As with anything worthwhile, a mind-melting view of the fire-hued, half-mile-long rock faces at the Grand Canyon must be earned. Take a half-day or overnight mule trip, which involves a guided ride along the canyon rim and down to the Colorado River.
Your souvenir—aside from a newfound appreciation for more comfortable forms of transportation—will be the vivid sense of timelessness that you can only get from observing a geological wonder more than a million years in the making.
Taos Pueblo (JTB Photo / SuperStock)Taos Pueblo, N.M.
At the northern edge of the artist colony of Taosand a couple hours' drive north of Santa Fe, Taos Pueblo is a set of adobe dwellings, ranging from two to five stories tall, whose walls gleam in the sun of the high desert. Some of the 2,000 Tiwa-speaking people who live on an adjacent reservation continue to use this six-century-old settlement for ceremonial rites, such as for the Deer and Matachines Dances, which are usually performed to the sound of heavy drum beats. The Taos Pueblo contains the largest collection of multi-story pueblo dwellings in the country—well worth its UNESCO World Heritage status—and provides an uncommon insight into the culture of the first Americans.
South Beach, Miami, Fla.South Beach (Photo: Richard Cummins / SuperStock)
Even in typically overstated Miami terms, no place in the country captures Latin-tropical chic like South Beach, with its 23 pastel-hued blocks of hotels, shops, restaurants, and cocktail bars south of Dade Boulevard. Glamorously restored art deco and art moderne hotels dominate Ocean Drive and Collins Avenue, which run parallel to the Atlantic. Check out the high-rise Raleigh, with its curvaceous swimming pool; the Delano, a glossy white Philippe Starck confection; and the Mondrian, with its super-sized chess pieces standing guard near an ebony staircase. Given an average year-round temperature of 75 degrees, SoBe always draws a pretty crowd for people-watching along its ocean promenade.
Gettysburg Park (Photo: Ken Cole / Dreamstime.com)Gettysburg National Military Park,Gettysburg, Pa.
Compelling battlefield tours are difficult to pull off, as there's often little to see. But Gettysburg, the most visited of Civil War battlefields, manages the trick. At the four-year-old, $135 million visitor's center, a 20-minute film narrated by Morgan Freeman explains how the three-day fight unfolded, while an 1884 Cyclorama depicts an infantry assault in a 359-foot-long-by-27-foot-high wraparound oil painting. Once you're oriented, drive the park's paved roads (a rented audio guide enhances the experience).
The landscape you'll see is close to what the blue and grey saw, as the park service is slowly restoring tracts of land and forest to how they would have looked during the battle. Be sure to stop at Little Round Top, where 1,600 soldiers died in just a few hours of fierce fighting—a small portion of the overall grim death toll.
Pearl Harbor, O'ahu, HawaiiPearl Harbor (Photoquest / Dreamstime.com)
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the USS Arizona Memorial, which honors the men who died on the famous battleship sunk in 1941's Pearl Harbor air raid. A scale model of the ship inside the monument's museum gives a sense of what it must have been like to be on the vessel while it was under attack, and public tours include a 22-minute movie presentation, followed by a visit to the Memorial itself. Nearby, a nonprofit group maintains the Battleship Missouri Memorial, which was the site of the formal Japanese surrender, while a preserved World War II submarine can be explored at the adjacent USS Bowfin Submarine Museum and Park, run by another independent group.
National Mall, Washington, D.C.Washington, D.C. (Photo: Shairad / Dreamstime.com)
There's no place in America where you get more historical bang for your buck than the National Mall—fitting, since two of its most famous memorials (to Lincoln and Jefferson) are stamped on our smallest coinage. This less-than-two-mile stretch of our capital city packs in those memorials, plus the Washington Monument, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, among others, and it's lined with Smithsonian Institution museums—none of which cost a dime to enter.
Oh different fonts here. Once again i want to say that this article is not from me. I just agree with the person who made this list of places.
Enjoy
God loves you,
emm....lol...right?
I know i'll be putting up my wishlist soon. I have to make the right decision for the wonderful things i could want.
Anyway, I just have to put up these places that people should go while they are in America. This is not from me. I found an article that seems very interesting to me and i think every person who is here in the big USA do visit those places. Check it out...
What makes a place essentially American? Besides being within our borders, of course? When the Budget Travel editors set out to compile a list of can't-miss destinations in the United States, we knew there was no one answer.
A place couldn't be just historic, or only very beautiful, or merely iconic. But in the best cases, it might be all three. For days (and weeks), ideas were floated, debates were had, some favorites were voted down and others prevailed. The list we arrived at is no American-history textbook quiz—although historic sites are there, along with a sampling of cultural, nostalgic, and guilty-pleasure spots that, we think, evoke the kaleidoscopic American experience.
So why not map out a detour to one of these spots the next time you hit the road? Who knows—you might never think of this country in quite the same way again.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyo.Yellowstone National Park (Photo: Hugoht / Dreamstime.com)
Wide-open space is a unique inheritance for every American, and Yellowstone is the most dramatic example of what "wide-open space" really means. In 1872, two-million-acre Yellowstone debuted as America's first national park, and visitors began flocking to soak in its hot springs, see elk and bison roam its grasslands, gawk at its geyser known as Old Faithful, and hear gray wolves sound chill-inducing howls at dawn. Amazingly, visitors can get the same thrills today for nearly no cost. For the fullest experience, stay the night. The lack of light pollution in northwest Wyoming's Big Sky country reveals an astonishing canopy of stars that is virtually unchanged from the time of native tribes, fur trappers, and pioneer explorers.
French Quarter (Photo: Lawrence Weslowski Jr / Dreamstime.com)French Quarter, New Orleans, La.
No other American neighborhood provides as much eye candy as the cobblestone streets of New Orleans' French Quarter—known as "the Quarters" to locals—and we're not referring to the annual Mardi Gras parades, with their thousands of taffeta-draped harlequins strutting to funk, R&B, and Dixie. No, it's the architecture that's intriguing.
Stroll this district, which is bounded by the Mississippi River, Rampart Street and Canal and Esplanade, and you'll glimpse nightclubs lit up in neon, French colonial townhouses draped in ivy, Creole cottages built on stilts, and antebellum mansions whose balconies are laced with intricate ironwork.
Highway 1, CaliforniaHighway 1 (Photo: Wangkun Jia / Dreamstime.com)
Considering that the United States has more miles of paved roads (over 2.5 million) than any other country on earth, is it any wonder thatroad trips are practically a rite of passage here? One of the most meditative—and celebrated—drives you can take in the States is the 135-mile stretch of California's Pacific Highway 1 between San Luis Obispo and Monterey. Expect view after astonishing view of land meeting sea, as the road snakes and swerves high above the Pacific, past bright-green grasslands and redwood-forested canyons.
Times Square (Photo: Paul Hakimata / Dreamstime.com)Times Square, New York City
Sure, the crowds can be pushy, but Times Square—the stretch of Broadway between Manhattan's 42nd and 47th streets—delivers the most intense straight-up celebration of round-the-clock visual stimulation in the free world. Three-hundred sixty-five days a year, it's all lights, cameras, and action. And in summer, when the city sets out a slew of lawn chairs in its pedestrian-only core, you can take a seat and gaze southward, imagining the scene every New Year's Eve when a million revelers watch the ball drop—an all-American tradition for 105 years.
Grand Canyon, Ariz.Grand Canyon (Photo: Radkol / Dreamstime.com)
Many American landmarks inspire people to think big, but none can match the leviathan scale of the Grand Canyon. As with anything worthwhile, a mind-melting view of the fire-hued, half-mile-long rock faces at the Grand Canyon must be earned. Take a half-day or overnight mule trip, which involves a guided ride along the canyon rim and down to the Colorado River.
Your souvenir—aside from a newfound appreciation for more comfortable forms of transportation—will be the vivid sense of timelessness that you can only get from observing a geological wonder more than a million years in the making.
Taos Pueblo (JTB Photo / SuperStock)Taos Pueblo, N.M.
At the northern edge of the artist colony of Taosand a couple hours' drive north of Santa Fe, Taos Pueblo is a set of adobe dwellings, ranging from two to five stories tall, whose walls gleam in the sun of the high desert. Some of the 2,000 Tiwa-speaking people who live on an adjacent reservation continue to use this six-century-old settlement for ceremonial rites, such as for the Deer and Matachines Dances, which are usually performed to the sound of heavy drum beats. The Taos Pueblo contains the largest collection of multi-story pueblo dwellings in the country—well worth its UNESCO World Heritage status—and provides an uncommon insight into the culture of the first Americans.
South Beach, Miami, Fla.South Beach (Photo: Richard Cummins / SuperStock)
Even in typically overstated Miami terms, no place in the country captures Latin-tropical chic like South Beach, with its 23 pastel-hued blocks of hotels, shops, restaurants, and cocktail bars south of Dade Boulevard. Glamorously restored art deco and art moderne hotels dominate Ocean Drive and Collins Avenue, which run parallel to the Atlantic. Check out the high-rise Raleigh, with its curvaceous swimming pool; the Delano, a glossy white Philippe Starck confection; and the Mondrian, with its super-sized chess pieces standing guard near an ebony staircase. Given an average year-round temperature of 75 degrees, SoBe always draws a pretty crowd for people-watching along its ocean promenade.
Gettysburg Park (Photo: Ken Cole / Dreamstime.com)Gettysburg National Military Park,Gettysburg, Pa.
Compelling battlefield tours are difficult to pull off, as there's often little to see. But Gettysburg, the most visited of Civil War battlefields, manages the trick. At the four-year-old, $135 million visitor's center, a 20-minute film narrated by Morgan Freeman explains how the three-day fight unfolded, while an 1884 Cyclorama depicts an infantry assault in a 359-foot-long-by-27-foot-high wraparound oil painting. Once you're oriented, drive the park's paved roads (a rented audio guide enhances the experience).
The landscape you'll see is close to what the blue and grey saw, as the park service is slowly restoring tracts of land and forest to how they would have looked during the battle. Be sure to stop at Little Round Top, where 1,600 soldiers died in just a few hours of fierce fighting—a small portion of the overall grim death toll.
Pearl Harbor, O'ahu, HawaiiPearl Harbor (Photoquest / Dreamstime.com)
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the USS Arizona Memorial, which honors the men who died on the famous battleship sunk in 1941's Pearl Harbor air raid. A scale model of the ship inside the monument's museum gives a sense of what it must have been like to be on the vessel while it was under attack, and public tours include a 22-minute movie presentation, followed by a visit to the Memorial itself. Nearby, a nonprofit group maintains the Battleship Missouri Memorial, which was the site of the formal Japanese surrender, while a preserved World War II submarine can be explored at the adjacent USS Bowfin Submarine Museum and Park, run by another independent group.
National Mall, Washington, D.C.Washington, D.C. (Photo: Shairad / Dreamstime.com)
There's no place in America where you get more historical bang for your buck than the National Mall—fitting, since two of its most famous memorials (to Lincoln and Jefferson) are stamped on our smallest coinage. This less-than-two-mile stretch of our capital city packs in those memorials, plus the Washington Monument, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, among others, and it's lined with Smithsonian Institution museums—none of which cost a dime to enter.
Oh different fonts here. Once again i want to say that this article is not from me. I just agree with the person who made this list of places.
Enjoy
God loves you,
Monday, September 17, 2012
In-Between Post
Hi,
Just want to share an article that i found online that really caught my attention. It's good to read that the NBA players (some) are morally sounded. And that the NBA hold to a high standard in character wise.
I think all sports players should be a huge role-model to everyone from having good character, attitude and smart.
Click here for the article.
God loves you,
Just want to share an article that i found online that really caught my attention. It's good to read that the NBA players (some) are morally sounded. And that the NBA hold to a high standard in character wise.
I think all sports players should be a huge role-model to everyone from having good character, attitude and smart.
Click here for the article.
God loves you,
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Tight Corners...Opps!
Hi my wonderful readers,
I have quite a week. I can for sure say that my school year is lot more harder. I have to stay on top of so many things which is crazy. However, i have some really good classes which i learn so much. From Nutrition to Weight Workouts and Body systems.
All my studies really show the wonderful engineering from God. The smallest of details to the biggest details. He really took his creation seriously. Amazing stuff.
Besides all this craziness from school life, i have to take time for myself. I have been thinking that i have quite a wishlist of things i just got to have. Like really want and need. I will post my wishlist on the next post. So swing-by to check it out. ;)
Anyway, let's just move along to somethings found on the big wide web. Check out this guys from Hot Wheels. Pretty amazing stuff.
Cool huh?
So emm....catch me next post about wishlist. hehe.
God loves you,
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Chapter #
Hey Readers,
It seems like yesterday that i blog. I think i'm just getting myself into blogging rhythm. Okay, let's start rolling on this post.
My school life has dramatically change as now i do not live on campus. I still do not understand how living off-campus can be more cheaper than on-campus. Weird. I still do miss the on-campus living. Easy to make friends, be in community, and easier to get to class.
I really do miss all my on-campus friends. I love you and hope to see you in the school semester.
This year school too is much harder than other semesters. Well, as you get deeper into your degree things get harder.
All i want to say is do pray for me and help me too like financially. I really want to finish my degree and move on in doing my masters.
As all always, i end my blog post with a video to share. I think many people has seen this before. However, i'm truly amaze as the similarity among this two great players. The moves, the jumper and style is just so same. haha. Check it out.
It seems like yesterday that i blog. I think i'm just getting myself into blogging rhythm. Okay, let's start rolling on this post.
My school life has dramatically change as now i do not live on campus. I still do not understand how living off-campus can be more cheaper than on-campus. Weird. I still do miss the on-campus living. Easy to make friends, be in community, and easier to get to class.
I really do miss all my on-campus friends. I love you and hope to see you in the school semester.
This year school too is much harder than other semesters. Well, as you get deeper into your degree things get harder.
All i want to say is do pray for me and help me too like financially. I really want to finish my degree and move on in doing my masters.
As all always, i end my blog post with a video to share. I think many people has seen this before. However, i'm truly amaze as the similarity among this two great players. The moves, the jumper and style is just so same. haha. Check it out.
Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant.
I really respect these two players mentality. They are so driven and confident in their game. The big thing is they work hard at their game. Great players.
Hope you enjoy the post. See you next blog post. Peace.
God loves you,
tag
23,
24,
Basketball,
Championships,
Finals,
Identical plays,
Kobe Bryant,
Michael Jordan,
NBA
Friday, September 7, 2012
Sought of Starts
Hi my fellow readers,
It has been a very long while i log-on to this blog. I was on summer break. The hot holiday was quite enjoyable. I did not spend to much time with technology as i was trying to be more involve with people around me.
The long break was just a great reminder that i have a God that loves me. He set up my world around me and just bless me. I cannot ask for more.
Many of you readers already know (i don't know if you know me) that i might not come back home for Winter or Summer. I have to start a new life some way or another. However, there's small possibility that i would be coming back home during the late summer for a month (hope you guys are praying already, haha).
The reason for me not coming back during the winter or summer break because i need to prepare myself for the working world. I have to start being more involve in my degree by finding internships, the right job and more focus on it. If these is God's path for me to take i should be a faithful servant and follow His will in my life. I want my work life to be living example of his great glory. Anyway, we will see God will do for me.
Okay, as the school semester has started (been two weeks already, lol) i will start blogging again.
Here is a clip that i found in the internet. Many of you might know that yo-yo has been around for years even centuries. I used to play with yo-yo even tried to be good at it. But did not really get into as much than Basketball. I found this video of the yo-yo completion in Florida. Check it out. Pretty amazing stuff.
It has been a very long while i log-on to this blog. I was on summer break. The hot holiday was quite enjoyable. I did not spend to much time with technology as i was trying to be more involve with people around me.
The long break was just a great reminder that i have a God that loves me. He set up my world around me and just bless me. I cannot ask for more.
Many of you readers already know (i don't know if you know me) that i might not come back home for Winter or Summer. I have to start a new life some way or another. However, there's small possibility that i would be coming back home during the late summer for a month (hope you guys are praying already, haha).
The reason for me not coming back during the winter or summer break because i need to prepare myself for the working world. I have to start being more involve in my degree by finding internships, the right job and more focus on it. If these is God's path for me to take i should be a faithful servant and follow His will in my life. I want my work life to be living example of his great glory. Anyway, we will see God will do for me.
Okay, as the school semester has started (been two weeks already, lol) i will start blogging again.
Here is a clip that i found in the internet. Many of you might know that yo-yo has been around for years even centuries. I used to play with yo-yo even tried to be good at it. But did not really get into as much than Basketball. I found this video of the yo-yo completion in Florida. Check it out. Pretty amazing stuff.
Another one, this pretty funny and creative.
Hope you enjoy this blog post. See you next time. God bless.
love,
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