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Hey welcome to my syt do anything here like adding me as a friend or signing my gb.



Thursday, March 10, 2005


Questions,Questions,Questions.....
Something I got of a friends site.
Ask me 4 questions. Any 4, no matter how personal, dirty, private, or random. I have to answer them honestly. In turn, you have to post this message in your own journal, and you have to answer the questions that are asked of you. However, If I don't feel the pressing need to answer them, and refuse, feel free to ask more questions.


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Wednesday, March 9, 2005


   Damn!
I got the same thing as Master Of Flames,my p.c. is limited i might not be on 4 somedays!!!!CYA till then!!
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   BORRRRRRRRRING!!!!!!!!
I'm so bored,what do u guys want to talk about????How bout' what movies do u guys like??!!
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Thursday, March 3, 2005


   Here's Profile about Jet Li's Life!!!!
Li Lian-Jie (Jet Li) was born in Beijing, China on April 26, 1963. He began to learn the fighting art of wu shu when he was eight. Because his father passed away when he was just two, Jet’s family consisted of his mother, two older sisters and two older brothers. He was the youngest. He was the smallest, so his mother never allowed him to go swimming or ride a bicycle. Any risky activity -- any kind of exercise that was even slightly dangerous -- was off-limits. While kids his age were out playing in the street, this docile little boy stayed inside. Even after Jet started going to school, he didn't know how to ride a bicycle. Everybody else was riding around, and he didn't learn until he was 14 or 15! Swimming, ice skating...these were all things that the other kids could do, but not Jet. His mother had said no, and he would never try it behind her back.
Jet Li started training in wushu during the summer of 1971. School had just adjourned for the one-month vacation and the authorities didn't want kids to run around on the streets because they had nothing to do. So they began to send the kids to what's now called the Beijing Sports and Exercise School. Students from all the primary schools in the area--there must have been 15 or so in that district alone--were sent there for a month of sports summer school. They divided the kids up randomly: 1st grade/class 1 was assigned to gymnastics; 1st grade/class 2 learned swimming, 1st grade/class 3 played soccer, 1st grade/class 4 started learning wushu, etc. Somehow Jet got assigned to the wushu class. He had no idea what wushu was--none of them did--but if the teacher told them to practice it, they had to practice it!
When school started again in the fall, almost all of the 1000 kids who had been learning wushu were "fired." That is, they were told that they didn't have to come back. For them, it was merely a fun summer experience that had come to an end. About 20 of them, Jet included, were told that they were to come back every afternoon after school to continue training. It became something of a point of pride for schools to boast how many kids had been chosen from their ranks. There were five or six from his school alone, but of them, Jet was the only first-grader. Being selected out of a thousand made a kid rather famous in his class. Everybody else might have been rejected, but that person was special!
After the novelty wore off, Jet began to realize that all of his classmates got to go home and play, but he had to go to another school for another gruelling two hours of lessons. He then began to rethink the glory of being “chosen”. Their first big assignment would be to represent China (and her 20 million wushu practitioners) on a goodwill tour of the United States. As you can imagine, it was a very significant visit. Sino-U.S. relations were still very touchy at the time.
In preparation for this visit to the West, they were put through an astonishingly detailed training course. Not just wushu training -- they were used to that by then -- but this time, they were required to learn the ins and outs of Western social etiquette. Their teachers also instructed them on the proper way to board a plane and sit quietly. They were taught the proper protocol for answering the telephone, how to listen and respond when an American asked a question, how they were expected to behave when surrounded by crowds, etc. Everything was so complicated. It took half a year, that etiquette training! And they had to learn all this in addition to all the wushu forms that they were expected to perform flawlessly.
The students were thrilled when the classes came to an end at last and they could set off on their goodwill tour. They would be visiting four cities in the United States: Honolulu, San Francisco, New York, and finally, Washington, D.C. From Beijing, they flew first to Hong Kong, then from there to Mexico, where they gave wushu demonstrations for half a month. Then they flew to Hawaii, setting foot on American soil for the first time.
At the time, Jet was growing up...and he was becoming mischievous. Lots of the other kids had been very naughty before they joined the wushu school, but gradually, the discipline had made them obedient. Jet was the opposite. He had been a very meek little boy, but as he grew older, he was becoming more playful – cheeky even. In fact, after being away from home for almost a month, he was starting to feel bolder and bolder about satisfying his curiosity.
Back in school, Jet had been educated to think: "China is good. Everything in China is good." and "The Western countries are decadent societies. Everything about America is evil." When he actually found himself walking around in this Western country however, he couldn't help but notice how different everything was from China -- and not necessarily in a bad way. None of the students dared say the words -- "Hey, it's pretty nice here!" -- but everybody was thinking it.

The last stop and climax of their U.S. tour was Washington D.C., where a select few from their team performed their wushu routines on the White House lawn. After the performance, they were introduced to the American dignitaries and posed with them for official pictures. As Jet remembers, President Richard Nixon stood with one of his female teammates, and Jet stood next to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. At one point, Nixon turned towards him and said, "Young man, your kung fu is very impressive! How about being our bodyguard when you grow up?"
"No, " Jet blurted out. "I don't want to protect any individual. When I grow up, I want to defend my one billion Chinese countrymen!"
People were stunned. There was an uncomfortable silence. Nobody had expected him to give that kind of an answer-least of all Jet. Kissinger was the one who finally broke the silence. "Heavens, such a young boy and he already speaks like a diplomat!" It wasn't until a few days later, when they were wrapping up their visit in the States with a dinner at the embassy that somebody showed them that their visit to the White House had made the New York Times, complete with picture and headline. The article described the entire exchange, and went on to wonder what kind of educational methods they were using in Red China if even the youngest representatives were trained to reply with such nationalist fervor.
The Chinese government, naturally, had no problems with the answer Jet had given President Nixon. They praised him highly. What a clever boy to give such a patriotic answer! Once again, he'd earned a perfect score.
The next year, China began preparations to stage its Third National Games. The National Games are like a domestic version of the Olympics; they include all competitive sports: swimming, gymnastics, track and field, and so on. They're held every 4 years – at least that was the theory. In the 25 years since the founding of New China, they'd only managed to hold it twice back in the 50's before the Cultural Revolution put everything on hold. So the 1975 National Games were only the third since Liberation - and the first since the Cultural Revolution. For the government, it was an extremely important event with great symbolism. The entire nation felt that way as well.Again, Jet started to notice a shift in his training. The pressure began to increase. People had higher expectations of him because he'd just won the youth championship. Personally, he didn't think too much of it. He knew that there were plenty of other athletes who trained a lot harder than he did, especially the adults. But winning the youth championships had allowed him to "skip a grade" - that is, he became eligible to compete in the 18-and-over category. There he was, a 12-year old competing against people in their twenties and thirties. He started to feel intense pressure to represent himself well.
As the National Games approached, though, his coach suddenly stopped teaching him, and Jet didn't understand why. He began to seek out other distinguished wushu experts from all over China and ask them to instruct him. It was like being taught by a series of guest lecturers, and none of them were as strict as his own coach.
The mere sight of his coach could make him shivver. And not just Jet - all of the other students were very frightened of him. But these other masters weren't nearly so frightening. They worked with him very seriously, and explained things very clearly - why one should move like this, how to do this - but they didn't really punish him at all. It was definitely a change of pace. And he was the only one who was getting these special tutors. Everybody else still had to practice as usual.
In May of 1975, an important invitational tournament was held in Kunming, Yunnan Province, for participants from eight big cities. Essentially, it was an invitational for prominent athletes to test their skills against each other, a kind of prelude to the National Games. There were five events and Jet managed to win first place in each category. Things were going well.
But everybody's main focus was the National Games, which were being held in Beijing. You might say that they had entered their most anxious phase. Three days before the official start of competition, Jet was at the arena for the final qualifying round. Even though it was a preliminary round, he still had to take it seriously. That performance would prove to be a fateful one.
He stepped onto the carpet to start his sabre form. The very first move he made was an accident. He sliced himself with his broadsword and cut a big gash on the side of his head. Funny thing was, he had no idea...

His head felt very warm and wet, and he seemed to be perspiring heavily. The more he jumped and kicked, the more he seemed to sweat. Drops were running into his eyes, flying everywhere. “How strange,” he thought.
From a very young age, it had been drilled into him that he could not use physical pain as an excuse to affect his performance. Not even a broken bone could justify it - and under that logic, a little blood was no reason at all. The drive to continue performing was automatic. Years of inflexible training builds will; when you're truly tested, it serves you well. On the other hand, if you are always allowed to stop training whenever you feel discomfort, you will find it too easy to give yourself permission to quit.
So he finished his form, saluted, and ran off the platform. Three or four of his female teammates were standing there, and they were all crying. Somebody clapped a towel on his head. When he looked down, he saw that half of his uniform had been dyed red with blood. He was crimson from the shoulder down to the pant leg. When he saw all that blood, he let out a surprised little yelp. Almost fainted! They rushed him to the hospital, where he got stitched up. Then they took him back to the sports school to recuperate. His coaches told him that the final round was coming up in three days. But the doctor had warned him that under no circumstances could the stitches be removed before a full week had passed.
The day of the competition arrived. The doctor asked if they planned to keep his bandages on during his performance? No, he couldn't do that - it would affect his balance. Did he want to forfeit the competition? No, he didn't want to do that either. So he wore his bandages all the way to the competition arena. When he arrived, everybody was watching him very carefully.
At this point, the lessons he had learned three years earlier from training on the broken ankle served him well. He focused deep down. Nothing mattered except his form.
He walked up to the platform and ripped off the bandage. A nurse was standing by with disinfectant and a syringe. "Immediately after you finish," she told him, "come over here so he can clean your wound and cover it up again." The cut hadn't healed yet, and they were all afraid that the exposure to sweat and dirt might get it infected. Sure enough, as soon as he finished the form, he ran down, pulled down his pants to get an injection, then let the nurse sponge and re-bandage him!
His winning first place caused quite a sensation, because he was so young. He was only 12 years old, and the other two medallists were in their mid- to late twenties. During the awards ceremony, as he stood on the top step of the podium, he was still shorter than the 2nd and 3rd place medallists. It must have been quite a sight. The national anthem began to play. As he stood there, listening, he began to feel overcome with emotion. He hadn't really realized the impact of winning a national title the year before, when he was 11. This time, though, he suddenly wanted to start crying.
"This medal is for you, mom! You didn't raise me in vain! Without your sacrifices, I couldn't have made it to this point!" he thought. The events of the last few days - the injury, his mom's reaction, competing against the adults - all started swimming in the ocean of his mind, and his eyes filled with tears. Jet says he doesn’t remember ever feeling that way again, standing on a podium, but he certainly did that time.
He won a total of five gold medals in the national championships for 5 consecutive years, from 1974 to 1979. In 1979, Li received his highest achievement in martial arts when he was crowned Gold Champion at the Chinese National Martial Arts Competition. To this date no other man has won more titles. During this stage of his life, he acquired the nickname "Jet" for his blazing speed.


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