tetiba teringat,
semi-professional bleep hole
11.1.11
remixes
tetiba teringat,
9.1.11
creating passion with movement
there comes a day where dajjal will rule the world like one year or one heavenly year. that equates to 1000 earthly years, there comes a day where dajjal will rule the world like one month, equates to 1 heavenly month that is approximately 83 years, and lastly there comes a time where dajjal will rule the world like one week, that equates to 21 years.
5.1.11
expenses
29.6.10
kalau malaysia camni, aku bet kau player malaysia hebat
“I would put on all my clothes to keep warm at night and curl up the best I could,” said Valdez, who now plays club soccer with Borussia Dortmund in the German Bundesliga and earns a seven-figure salary.
Valdez’s impoverished family lived in a tiny village called San Joaquin and could not afford to support him between the ages of 15 and 17 as he chased a professional soccer career. He moved hours away to join Atletico Tembetary, yet the meager trainees’ wages of $20 a week made rented accommodation out of the question.
So, unbeknownst to everyone at the club except for a kind-hearted security man, Valdez trained on the club’s fields during the day and slept in the bowels of its stadium by night.
“Everything I have in life and I owe to football,” he said. “That I can live somewhere nice and provide for my family, that is football. That I don’t have to sleep outside or under some concrete. That I don’t have to be cold or hungry or worried about the most basic things.
“I don’t regret the journey I have taken. It is different, far different to most people and most players. But it makes me appreciate things better and makes me proud and committed.”
Valdez was not the most talented youngster at Tembetary, but his work ethic and desperation to attain a better way of life drove him. At 17, he abandoned the cardboard boxes once and for all thanks to a senior contract. A year later, financial problems were a thing of the past when German club Werder Bremen spotted his ability and transformed his life.
“It was a bit of a shock when I first went to Germany,” Valdez said. “It was winter time and I have never felt it so cold. But I knew I had been given a special opportunity that I was fortunate to have and I knew I had to take it.
“There were times when I was homesick for my country but every time I look back at where I came from and how I lived it makes me appreciate this game and this life.”
seryes terharu dengar cerita nelson herueluo valdes of borussia dortmund and paraguay international.
23.6.10
climate change my arse
seems the world now is saying all bout climate change, sebenarnye baru bukak najib tun razak nye page at fb and tengok his blabbering about climate change. well heres something for you mr prime minister mister eco-mentalist, mr president.
21.6.10
to dad(might be a lil late)
hey dad,