Runaway Love
12:35 PMAssalamualaikum w.b.t,
Yesterday, while driving back home I was listening to my old mp3 collections song.
Suddenly this song strike my ears. Listening to those words make me cry.
Why?
I was thinking about nowadays generation. Our youth. Even us a parents and community especially.
Try to understand every phrases below....
Lisa's stuck up in a world on her own
In the lyrics simple action to make when we are facing a problem is to R.U.N.A.W.A.Y...
But how far we can run?..When it's attached to us...
We can't runaway...nor we can't hide....We have to gather all strength and fight back or face it...Figure out a solution...
Hopefully 2014...I will be strong enough to face the challenge. Not to runaway....
1 baby's note!
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ReplyDeleteFarming is the only profession where you can work 16-hour days, get sunburned in the middle of winter, and still be told you’re “living the simple life.” It’s a magical world where weather forecasts are more suspenseful than a thriller movie—will it rain, or will you just stand outside shaking your fist at the sky in frustration? Either way, Mother Nature is in charge, and she has a sense of humor.
Let’s talk about farm animals—those adorable, fluffy creatures that turn into rebellious hooligans the moment you turn your back. Chickens? Escape artists with no respect for fences. Cows? The real CEOs of the farm, casually blocking roads like they own them. And don’t even get me started on goats—those four-legged acrobats will climb on anything, including your patience.
Farming is also where advanced technology meets good old-fashioned stubbornness. Farmers can program GPS-guided tractors, monitor soil health with satellite imagery, and still fix a broken fence with nothing but baling wire and sheer determination. If farmers ever went to space, NASA would be amazed at how they could fix a rocket with duct tape and a hammer.
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Then there’s the joy of growing crops, a process that requires backbreaking labor, endless weeding, and an optimistic spirit. You plant seeds with hope, nurture them with love, and then watch in horror as a single rabbit undoes three months of work in one afternoon. If farming teaches anything, it’s patience—and the importance of having a dog that actually chases pests instead of sleeping on the job.
At the end of the day, despite the unpredictable weather, mischievous animals, and never-ending work, farming is a life filled with humor, adventure, and a deep appreciation for the land. Sure, you might spend more time talking to your tractor than to actual people, but nothing beats the feeling of harvesting a field you nurtured from the ground up—except maybe a nap in the hay after all that hard work. 🌾🚜😆