Chia sẻ về kinh nghiệm của bán hàng, cảm xúc về cuộc sống gia đình hoặc chỉ là một quyển sách đã từng đọc
Chiến Phan
Thứ Ba, 11 tháng 6, 2013
TẾT ĐOAN NGỌ
Thứ Bảy, 8 tháng 6, 2013
YÊU ANH VÌ KHÁT VỌNG ANH MANG
( Ảnh: Sưu Tầm)
Shed decided to quit the job—simple, quick, but not gentle.
Because...It's a girl living with constant plans in her mind. All plans serve one purpose: money; and the frequent question it poses is: how to get money?
If someone asks it that question (sometimes without asking), it will answer: because it's afraid of poverty!
...She needs money to avoid hardship, living a miserable life she experienced in childhood, which has become a haunting memory until now. It started detesting poverty when it saw its father, a brave warrior returning from the battlefield with gifts for its mother—hair soaked in mist and wounds on the chest, restarting life after the scent of smoke.
The smell of fish and the smell of the sea.A fishy smell during the times its father returned from the open sea with buckets full of fresh fish, a smell clinging to clothes, body, and the entire house afraid of storms stealing its roof.
One of the smells it hated the most, witnessing the difference between classmates, with friends. It could only play with a few kids from the neighborhood, those whose families also sent men to the sea to return with buckets full of fresh fish.
She often sat, looking at the sea with its mother, occasionally playing with a few kids similar to its home, looking towards the sea. Waiting.A sea smell with the gifts of the sea from its father, the vast land as its mother described, a scent carrying a salty and bitter taste that it couldn't understand why its father considered it a gift. She also couldn't understand why the woman found something, often sitting waiting on the white sandy beach every evening, and always beside its father on days selling faces for land, selling its back to the sky, listening to every expense its father allocated to the family, writing meticulously on the discolored pages.
Childhood. She only remembers one image. She remembers its father standing before the sea, releasing smoke into the sky, and seeing its father's hair turn into a few strands that turned into clouds in the sky. Pure white. Seafoam kept advancing to the shore. She sat next to its father on an old buoy, and she no longer thought of herself as a girl at that moment. She wanted to shoulder its father, sitting and gazing at the sea for a day like that. Releasing smoke into the sky, merging black and white hair, and shadows stretching under the sand. Pure white. Seafoam advancing to the shore.
She needs money to avoid the control of money in a struggling and deprived life, lacking dreams.
She distances herself from the sea, from the shore, from the white sand hills to come to a region where sea foam is rare. The salty scent becomes bitter in the evening it departs, a drop of water rolling down the face of the woman often waiting and the man with no rolling water, only sparkling eyes. Deep darkness.
She feels inferior to friends when stepping into a new horizon with many changes, and novelty. Burning desire. She starts writing on the calculator, analyzing, and planning to achieve a money-making goal. The schedule during the time spent on the school bench, all just consecutive extra work sessions and the money earned, counting and recounting at night, feeling gradually relieved as the money starts accumulating in the account. Seeing the dancing numbers in an increasing direction, She feels lightened. She limits trips home because now the sea seems distant, even though it has memorized how the sea smells.
Since it left the family. All plans serve one purpose: money; and the frequent question she poses is: how to get money?
Even when she meets him.A man who doesn't speak the same mother tongue but has things to exchange for her life. Different. At least, he can be a brother, a teacher, and a lover in her eyes.A brother guides it in times when she dives into earning money. Crazy. No silence. She finds the comfort of his shoulder in times when it's tired, frustrated, and preparing to burst if not held by his arms. Foolish. She doesn't think of him as a lover at that time. He has never known that, and it will never let him know. She keeps that for herself. She doesn't want to appear weak in front of him.A teacher with storytelling sessions, nurturing its language skills and the times he painstakingly corrects every word in essays written for a finished course. It admires him intoxicated and respects him after each time he leaves some comments during the editing process. She sees him aging entirely. Aging gracefully. Graceful aging.A lover during the urban chaos. Lonely. However, at the end of the road, it and he disappear when nowhere can be found, with the sound of a child's cry when his life is defined by his father molding a definition: women and loyalty don't go together. So, he decides he can love, he can marry, and childish matters are for a time to talk about sometime shortly. She searches through books, but can't find a suitable future in his words. She remains silent after arguments. From his passion for vague and impractical things, life needing money, and the sound of a child's cry. In every argument, it is the one who loses. Arguments revolve around money & the sound of a child's cry.
She doesn't want to appear weak in front of him. After the drunkenness, she calls him again.
Don't know why. She thinks about what he said. She has a stable job and a master's degree for herself to reach a higher position. Money no longer controls her. So, what is its next value?...
She decided to quit the job—simple, quick, but not gentle. It decided to take him back to the sea. Don't know why....The train station bids farewell and the train starts rolling when the night lights have faded under the drizzling curtain. Its eyes are also wet, lost at some point. Rain or tear. Indistinguishable.The train whistles a longhorn, saying she should sleep, don't dream with thoughts. Tired forever. It snuggles into him to find warmth. He laughs. She turns back to its bed to lie down. Don't know why.
She looks out through the window like a prison with the tightly packed roofs of the city receding. Night sinks as deeply as lowering a curtain over its eyes again. Drenched. Don't know why.
She flinches with each passing train beat. A strip of the Milky Way glows. She wipes her eyes to look more closely after a long time without a chance to return, she looks up at the Milky Way. The bright rays sparkle in intervals, not shifting like the stars in the constellation always changing. The sparkling rays shine in intervals along the wrapped shapes. He wakes up in the middle of the night, it sits explaining to him how people in his hometown warm themselves, and protect trees during the season, laden with fruit.
The station arrives, and people come in the middle of the night. The station has only one, or two taxis. She and he take a taxi, the remaining one dwindles away because it knows it's the last train. The car runs along the coastal area in the middle of the night. It sits beside him on the back seat without leaning.
How long will we be there, baby? 5 minutes. He tells the taxi to stop. The sea breeze is dizzying when the door opens. The sound of the engine and the reversing lights disappear into the darkness.
https://doisales.com.vn/index.php/2024/02/02/yeu-anh-vi-khat-vong-anh-mang/
Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 6, 2013
Buâng Khuâng Trường Sa
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( Ảnh: Internet)
Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 6, 2013
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