Eye Candy.
http://english.people.com.cn/200608/23/eng20060823_296090.html
Chinese Flight Attendants. Pretty good looking. Sure beats the
pneumatic oversexed underdressed Britney Spears types. Not that I
would kick out Britney at any day.
>> Eye Candy.
>> http://english.people.com.cn/200608/23/eng20060823_296090.html
>> Chinese Flight Attendants. Pretty good looking. Sure beats the
>> pneumatic oversexed underdressed Britney Spears types. Not that I
>> would kick out Britney at any day.
>>
> And those aren't even the prettiest ones - I've had the good fortune of seeing the pretty ones. Wow! I'd give my computer for one of those.
> As for Britney, yes, you would kick her out of your bed. Have you seen her lately? But Nicole Kidman - now you're talkin'!
I find more pleasure and inspiration looking at a garden full of
beautiful blossoms than seek in an Eden the perfect flower. My
appreciation of flowers is that they be whole and in context with
their environment, in this case growing on a beautiful shrub in a well
tended garden or in their natural habitat I don't need to touch them
or to possess them.
I had never sought the beauty of cut flowers in a vase.* My attitude
is this is a very selfish and cruel attitude to cut down a living
thing of beauty in its prime just for my own enjoyment. Of course
people like me will be the death of the cut flowers industry. I make
no claim to moral superiority. The flower growing industry has a
living to make and they satisfy a demand. To each his own.
My preference is for Chinese blossoms. They have that delicate
feminine quality I find extremely attractive. In the same issue of
Peoples Daily are photos of a Miss Bikini Contest in Guangxi
http://english.people.com.cn/200608/23/eng20060823_296068.html
While, as you so delicately put it, I won't kick them out of my bed, I
am not particularly attracted by them either.
*Come to think of it I don't recall seeing in Chinese paintings, in
porcelain or in sculptures cut flowers in a vase. The best Chinese
vases may have paintings of flowers but the base often has a hole and
is never meant to hold water for cut flowers. Can anyone share his/her
views on this.
This reminds me of this story.
A white family and a Chinese family were both paying their respects at
their respective parents' graves. The White family brought a gorgeous
bouquet of flowers. The Chinese family made sacrifices with fruits
and a feast in cooked food. So the white guy asks "When are your
ancestors coming out to eat all that?" The Chinese guy replies, "The
same time yours come out to smell the flowers."
I used to follow my parents to the ancestral graves on all souls day.
I recall seeing just about every family bringing food and fruits but
no flowers. Cut flowers didn't appear until the 60s and of course
this became more popular and displaced the traditional food and
incense sticks. The point here is that cut flowers were not part of
Chinese home decorations. Will anyone else back me on this statement?
The United Airline counter at Beijing Airport has the best looking
girls.
> *Come to think of it I don't recall seeing in Chinese paintings, in
> porcelain or in sculptures cut flowers in a vase. The best Chinese
> vases may have paintings of flowers but the base often has a hole and
> is never meant to hold water for cut flowers. Can anyone share his/her
> views on this.
>
A simple Google search on Chinese paintings will produce quite a few results. Here's one:
http://www.chinese-arts.co.uk/images/th_LFL-4 (35).jpg
J.
> A simple Google search on Chinese paintings will produce quite a few results. Here's one:
>http://www.chinese-arts.co.uk/images/th_LFL-4 (35).jpg
>J.
For some reason I can get the main page by triming back to
http://www.chinese-arts.co.uk but its links to specific categories are
blocked. What I am looking for is a picture of the inside of a house
where it shows cut flowers in a vase or basket being part of the home
decoration. In a traditional Chinese home there are/were potted
shrubs that were kept for their blooms. I don;t recall seeing any
that had their blooms cut off and displayed separately.
I am easy. All female airline staff at the airport and on flights
look wonderfully good and were so friendly and helpful. I am so proud
to be Chinese.
>your flight attendants look like young, naive village girls.
>
Aaah. The allure of innocence of the soul is so visible in the
sparkle of their eyes and in the brightness of their smiles. These
are precious qualities that will melt any one's hearts. I am smitten
and willingly so.
are you john mark carr?!