mysweetpectus.wordpress.com
The Decision | Pectus Excavatum & The Nuss Procedure - Adult Correction of Pectus Excavatum
https://mysweetpectus.wordpress.com/the-decision
Pectus Excavatum and The Nuss Procedure – Adult Correction of Pectus Excavatum. The First Six Weeks. SODOMA Il, Saint Sebastian (1525) - Galleria Palatina, Florence. I remember the day that I finally crumbled under the strain of living this sort of half-life. It was in early March 2009, three weeks after my 42nd birthday. One of my friends invited me to a party at his beautiful new house. Sounds good, right? Pectus wins yet again! Sexual Intimacy and Relationships. I am now lucky to be in a relationship ...
eliseinkorea.wordpress.com
December | 2009 | Elise in Korea
https://eliseinkorea.wordpress.com/2009/12
Daily life in my second home. December 29, 2009. My New Chinese Books. Posted by Elise under Daily Life. My New Chinese Books. Originally uploaded by Elise in Asia. For anyone who’s learning Mandarin, you know how hard it is to acquire new vocabulary, and specially remember it for more than a week. Finding the right material for your needs is also a challenge. Here in Seoul, there are tons of nice textbooks to learn Chinese, the only problem for me is: they are written in …. Korean! What works for you?
eliseinkorea.wordpress.com
February | 2010 | Elise in Korea
https://eliseinkorea.wordpress.com/2010/02
Daily life in my second home. February 14, 2010. Posted by Elise under Daily Life. Tiger by Dury Luong. Originally uploaded by Elise in Asia. Happy year of the tiger to all! I hope it brings you plenty of happiness and prosperity. Like last year, I chose an illustration by Dury Luong, a designer from Toronto who does great work. Deux frogs 3/4 en Oz. Japonica d’une gaijin. Stuff Korean Moms Like. Tanguy Verraes’ Blog. Daniel Wu's blog. Japan Now and Then. La Chine a notre porte. My mom’s art.
eliseinkorea.wordpress.com
October | 2009 | Elise in Korea
https://eliseinkorea.wordpress.com/2009/10
Daily life in my second home. October 26, 2009. Posted by Elise under Daily musings. Originally uploaded by Elise in Asia. Last Saturday was a nice sunny afternoon so Diana and I braved the yellow dust (yep, in fall this year, aren’t we lucky! The contrast of old and new is interesting and I’ll try to go back there when the sky is nice and blue, like it usually is in autumn. It would also look good with a bit of snow! What is your favorite historical neighborhood in your city? October 18, 2009. 8211; wal...
eliseinkorea.wordpress.com
January | 2010 | Elise in Korea
https://eliseinkorea.wordpress.com/2010/01
Daily life in my second home. January 31, 2010. Posted by Elise under Trips. Originally uploaded by Elise in Asia. Malaysia is a bit like South East Asia, China and India rolled into one! And almost everybody speaks English, so going around is very easy and pleasant! Deux frogs 3/4 en Oz. Japonica d’une gaijin. Stuff Korean Moms Like. Tanguy Verraes’ Blog. Daniel Wu's blog. Japan Now and Then. La Chine a notre porte. My mom’s art. Une fille comme moi. National Museum of Contemporary Art.
blog.penelopetrunk.com
How to make business travel manageable | Penelope Trunk Careers
http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/2009/11/11/the-cynics-guide-to-business-travel
How to make business travel manageable. Posted in: No image. November 11th, 2009. Last year I traveled. Some weeks I traveled to three. If you are excited about business travel, thinking it's a free ticket to see the world, you should stop reading now. But if you are having trouble maintaining your personal life in the face of tons of travel, these tips from a cynical traveler will make life easier for you. 1 Stick with your priorities. 2 Eat really well. 3 Think of balance in terms of weeks, not days.
blog.penelopetrunk.com
When you’re feeling lost, don’t hide | Penelope Trunk Careers
http://blog.penelopetrunk.com/2010/08/16/when-youre-feeling-lost-dont-hide
When you’re feeling lost, don’t hide. Posted in: Finding a career. August 16th, 2010. Feeling lost is part of being great. If you are forging your own path then you are often lost. Because you have not seen this route before. I wrote my book because I did not have a road map and I am wanted other people to have a road map to do a career like I did. Another good thing is that he lets me do whatever I want with the house. See? I would show you a whole photo of the hutch, but I don’t have a camera....
thelocaldialect.wordpress.com
We’re Back! | The Local Dialect
https://thelocaldialect.wordpress.com/2010/08/10/were-back
August 10, 2010. After nearly a month on the road, we’re back in Beijing! Three train rides ended up being involved — one mammoth 45 hour trip from Beijing to Kunming, a shorter jaunt of 18 hours from Beijing to Guilin, and then a medium sized journey from Guilin back to Beijing. A few bus rides between Kunming and Yiliang and then again between Guilin and Yangshuo were also involved. Well it is extremely late here so I’m headed for bed, but just wanted to make a quick post first. Goodnight all! Get ever...
exusexen.blogspot.com
Exploits of a U.S. Expat in England: November 2005
http://exusexen.blogspot.com/2005_11_01_archive.html
Exploits of a U.S. Expat in England. Sunday, November 13, 2005. Take away the chips. It's true that many US folk know English folk call French fries chips. Now I'm here to tell you that isn't quite true. The English call French fries, get this, French fries. Maybe occasionally they're called pommes frites. What the English call chips is what Americans call steak fries. In a Chinese fish and chip shop? But back to chips, so the question is, what are chips here? Are there salted ones that aren't ready?
exusexen.blogspot.com
Exploits of a U.S. Expat in England: October 2005
http://exusexen.blogspot.com/2005_10_01_archive.html
Exploits of a U.S. Expat in England. Monday, October 10, 2005. Drive on the left. The title is taken from the statement my husband always makes when he first gets in the rental car at Heathrow after 11 hours of flying (overnight), a few more hours in the airports, and not having driven in the UK for 6-12 months. It is not a reassuring statement. But that's not where the difficulty lies. After all, in Sweden they switched from driving on the left to the right all at once. And then there are the pedestrian...