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  1. @[email protected] are you guys????................... MCF sibei boring lately leh................come out and play for a while leh..................inject some fun for National Day celebration lah...............after that you all can FO again................ Please dont post tiko stuff hor...............
  2. I think Sabbie is making this forum look sleazy and cheap. So at the risk of being awarded a yellowcard, I am going to use this poll to see what do the rest think.
  3. As requested by some, I have started a new Poll. Brief intro of me, I am Sabbie, I was previously banned and now Mods kindly allow me back. I am lovable and the angel of MCF as well as full of substance and contributes constructively to MCF. SCB11980 is Funner, also former banned and came back as SCB, he started boliao threads and is occasionally vulgar. Please support me. Thank you.
  4. Penis tattoo causes permanent erection for man Wednesday, Jan 11, 2012 AsiaOne An Iranian man who had the bright idea of immortalising his girlfriend's name as a tattoo on his penis was left with more than a sore organ - he landed himself a permanent semi-erection. The case was first presented to doctors in the form of a partially rigid penis of a 3-month duration, with a tattoo covering its shaft and a smaller tattoo on the glans, said an article published in the latest issue of the Journal of Sexual Medicine. Upon examination, the patient admitted that the semi-erect organ had occurred soon after he had a tattoo of a Persian script reading "borow be salaamat" (translated to good luck on your journey) and the first initial of his girlfriend's last name ("M") inked onto his penis. Putting aside the question of why would anyone subject his penis to thousands of needle pricks, how could a tattoo result in a permanent erection? The answer, as MSNBC's The Body Odd reported, lies in the traditional tattooing technique the man subjected himself to. The man told doctors that a traditional tattooist created the tattoo manually using a handheld needle. In handheld needling, a needle is first used to perforate the skin. After which, henna, ash and other natural pigments are applied on the perforated skin surface. There is no control of the depth of the needle in handheld needling, Iranian urologists wrote in the article. Prolonged erection can make your penis fall off The doctors went on to say what likely happened was that the tattooist punctured overly deep holes that damaged blood vessels in the penis, resulting in a pseudoaneurysm - the pooling of blood outside a vessel wall. The man told doctors that the tattooing process was followed by deep penile tissue bleeding for several days, which complicated the tattooing. Soon after, the man began noticing his nighttime erections were lasting unusually long, MNBC reported. A week later, he realised he had a 24/7 semi-erection. Doctors recommended that he see a specialist to have the excess blood pooling in his organ removed, but he chose to have a shunt surgery instead. A shunt procedure drains excess fluid from the inflamed areas of the body. The procedure proved unsuccessful in curing the problem. However, as the man is not in pain and is still able to achieve a normal erection and have sex, he has refused further treatments. For those out there thinking that the penile tattooing didn't turn out so bad after all - with the man coming out of it with his manhood just looking "bigger all the time" (as one reader put it) - here's a word of caution: MSBC noted that non-sex related erections lasting longer than four hours are often dangerous for penises, as the lack of fresh blood flow can starve the penile tissues of oxygen. When a body part gets cut off from its supply of oxygen, the destruction of tissues can result in impotence. Worst case scenario is: the prgan can drop off. As it is, men are advised to follow the last note Iranian doctors wrote in the medical report: "Based on our unique case, we discourage penile tattooing."
  5. Sabbie, if you become a successful person I would have done my job I wish you well I cant criticise you because when i was younger I spent more than i earn now i realised that having to spend without needing to know how much i have is so important learn from other people mistake and NOT from your own have a good week end Safe bets pay off for ad agency boss 5 Feb 2012 Straits Times For six years until recently, Mr Stephen Mangham, 50, was the group chairman of Ogilvy & Mather Singapore, and busy managing 600 people. Today, he runs a 12-man outfit called Mangham Gaxiola, which he started with his former creative partner Robert Gaxiola. Small as it is, so far, it has been 'hugely rewarding and fun', he says, because the business is his and starting his own firm was something that he had thought about on and off over the past 15 years. His firm has got off to a flying start, having secured a founding client in CIMB bank. Mr Mangham graduated with a law degree from Oxford University, but chose to be in advertising. 'At university, I edited the uni newspaper, which made me think that I would enjoy working in an industry which is also about the art of persuasion and communication,' he says. 'I have never regretted the decision.' Mr Mangham and his wife Helen have four boys, aged 10, 15, 19 and 21. Q: Are you a spender or saver? I don't like to owe money, so I have always tried to make sure that I spend less than I earn. I try to strike a balance between making sure that we enjoy life now, and putting away enough for our old age. I don't spend much on myself. Most of my monthly income is spent (other than pension savings and mortgage payments), but I have saved all my bonus payments over the years. I spend the most on my family, on my kids' education, their swimming lessons, rugby lessons and so on. Four boys don't come cheap, but I wouldn't have it any other way. Q: How much do you charge to your credit cards every month? Probably about $5,000. I try to use debit cards rather than credit cards. Q: What financial planning have you done for yourself? A good chunk of our money is invested in property. I have a pension fund and some money in shares. And my wife has a trust in her name. But we also keep quite a lot on short-term deposit, just in case we need it, in Singapore and Britain. I'm quite conservative when it comes to investing. I don't like to take risks, and I have an aversion to managed unit trusts where agents take large commissions upfront. I invested in unit trusts which charge a 7 per cent fee and it hardly grew. It was because what little gains there were went to the fees. I have two life insurance policies, which are enough to look after my family should anything unfortunate happen. I have three properties in Europe and none here. First, I invest only in what I know well, which is my business. Second, I like to keep a lot of money in very safe schemes. I believe housing should be long-term investments. If you don't know where you are going to be in the next 10 years, investing in a market that you don't know very well is very risky. I don't believe in taking a blind gamble that prices will rise all the time. I know an expat who bought a property at the peak and was made redundant two months after that. Q: Moneywise, what were your growing-up years like? I am the oldest of three children. I have a brother and sister. My father was an aeronautical engineer and my mother a nurse. I had a comfortable, happy upbringing - a typical lower middle class one. Money was sometimes tight, but I never went without it. I grew up realising that you had to earn money before you could spend it. Q: How did you get interested in investing? My first investment was in an apartment in London when I was 22. It just seemed more sensible to buy my own place rather than pay someone else the rent. The apartment cost
  6. UROLOGIST APPOINTMENT Sabbie went to his appointment with the urologist. In the examining room he told the doctor, 'Don't laugh!' 'Of course I won't laugh,' the doctor said. 'I'm a professional. In more than twenty years I've never laughed at a patient.' 'Okay then,' Sabbie said, and proceeded to drop his trousers, revealing the tiniest 'willie' the doctor had ever seen. It wasn't any bigger than a triple A battery. Unable to control himself, the doctor started giggling, then fell to the floor laughing hysterically. Ten minutes later he was able to struggle to his feet and regain his composure. ' I'm so sorry,' he said. 'I really am. I don't know what came over me. On my honor as a doctor and a gentleman, I promise it won't happen again. Now, what seems to be the problem?' 'It's swollen,' Sabbie replied.
  7. Business Times - 24 Dec 2011 What should I do with my life? Most people have good instincts about their calling in life, but they make poor choices and waste years By TEH HOOI LING SENIOR CORRESPONDENT I HAD dinner with a reader some months back. During dinner, I lamented how the modern economy is compensating people in the finance industry. 'Because of that, all the bright brains are flocking to the financial sector. The other more productive sectors of the economy suffer as a result,' I said. The reader countered. 'The market has a way of adjusting itself. Back in '80s, the shipbuilding, the marine sector was very lucrative. It attracted a lot of talent. Then there was a downturn, and wages plunged. In the '90s, the semiconductor industry was the place to be. In the early 2000s, it was the information technology sector. Now we have the banking sector which is drawing in the big bucks. But already we are seeing signs that the banking sector is set to shrink in the years ahead.' That conversation lingered in my mind. And a few days ago, a friend posted a link on Facebook to an article titled 'What should I do with my life?'. The article wasn't new. It was published in 2007 but I found it still offers a lot of good insights and it's timely that we be reminded of them. Written by Po Bronson, and adapted from his book 'What Should I Do with My Life? The True Story of People who Answered the Ultimate Question', the article said instead of focusing on what's next, let's get back to what's first. 'People don't succeed by migrating to a 'hot' industry ... They thrive by focusing on the question of who they really are - and connecting that to work that they truly love (and, in so doing, unleashing a productive and creative power they never imagined). 'Companies don't grow because they represent a particular sector or adopt the latest management approach. They win because they engage the hearts and minds of individuals who are dedicated to answering that life question,' he wrote. Now that we've come to the end of what has generally been regarded as a terrible year, I thought it's a good time for us to pause and reflect on who we really are, and how one goes about finding that answer. As part of the research for his book, Mr Bronson interviewed more than 900 people 'who have dared to be honest with themselves'. Below are what he gleaned from them. Except for a select lucky few, for most of us, our calling is not something that we inherently know. Far from it. Almost all of the people he interviewed found their calling after great difficulty. 'They had made mistakes before getting it right. For instance, the catfish farmer used to be an investment banker, the truck driver had been an entertainment lawyer, a chef had been an academic, and the police officer was a Harvard MBA. Everyone discovered latent talents that weren't in their skill sets at age 25.' Most of us don't get epiphanies. We only get a whisper, a faint urge. That's it. It's up to us to make the discovery. 'This lesson in late, hard-fought discovery is good news. What it means is that today's confused can be tomorrow's dedicated. The current difficult climate serves as a form of reckoning. The tougher the times, the more clarity you gain about the difference between what really matters and what you only pretend to care about.' The thing is, most people have good instincts about where they belong. But they make poor choices and waste productive years on the wrong work because of a number of basic assumptions we have about the work we are supposed to have. 'These are stumbling blocks that we need to uproot before we can find our way to where we really belong,' said Mr Bronson. Money and meaning One common false assumption is that I would make my money first, and when I have enough money, I'd walk away and use my savings to fund my dreams. It turns out that people hardly walk away even after they have achieved financial independence. 'Making money is such hard work that it changes you. It requires more sacrifices than anyone expects. You become so emotionally invested in that world - and psychologically adapted to it - that you don't really want to ditch it.' Money is not the shortest route to freedom. 'The shortest route to the good life involves building the confidence that you can live happily within your means. It's scary to imagine living on less. But embracing your dreams is surprisingly liberating. Instilled with a sense of purpose, your spending habits naturally reorganise, because you discover that you need less.' Next, 'What am I good at?' is the wrong starting point. People who attempt to deduce an answer usually end up mistaking intensity for passion. To the heart, they are vastly different. Intensity comes across as a pale busyness, while passion is meaningful and fulfilling, said Mr Bronson. A simple test: Is your choice something that will stimulate you for a year or something that you can be passionate about for 10 years? But stimulating work is not an end in itself. In the past decade, the working world has become a battleground for the struggle between the boring and the stimulating, he noted. We think that work should not only be challenging and meaningful, but also invigorating and entertaining. 'But really, work should be like life: sometimes fun, sometimes moving, often frustrating, and defined by meaningful events.' Those who have found their place don't talk about how exciting and challenging and stimulating their work is. Their language invokes a different troika: meaningful, significant, fulfilling. And they rarely ever talk about work without weaving in their personal history, he said. Place defines you Every industry has a culture. And every culture is driven by a value system. One of the most common mistakes is not recognising how these value systems will shape you, said Mr Bronson. 'People think that they can insulate themselves, that they're different. They're not. The relevant question in looking at a job is not 'What will I do?' but 'Who will I become?' ' Once you're rooted in a particular system, it's often agonisingly difficult to unravel yourself from its values, practices, and rewards. Ultimately, the answers to who we are, what our callings are, are very individual. On his journey, Mr Bronson met people in bureaucratic organisations and bland industries who were absolutely committed to their work. That commitment sustained them through slow stretches and setbacks. They never watched the clock, never dreaded Mondays, never worried about the years passing by. They didn't wonder where they belonged in life. They were phenomenally productive and confident in their value. In places unusual and unexpected, they had found their calling, and those callings were as idiosyncratic as each individual. Asking 'What should I do with my life?' is the modern, secular version of the great timeless questions about our identity, said Mr Bronson. 'Asking The Question aspires to end the conflict between who you are and what you do. Answering The Question is the way to protect yourself from being lathed into someone you're not. What is freedom for if not the chance to define for yourself who you are?' Mr Bronson said he spent two years in the company of people who have dared to confront where they belong. They didn't always find an ultimate answer, but taking the question seriously helped get them closer. 'We are all writing the story of our own life. It's not a story of conquest. It's a story of discovery. Through trial and error, we learn what gifts we have to offer the world and are pushed to greater recognition about what we really need. The Big Bold Leap turns out to be only the first step.'
  8. The SlutWalk event (left) at Speakers' Corner yesterday drew participants such as (above, from left) odd-job worker Ruzanna Kamal, 21, one of the event organisers; retiree Tricia Leong, 55, and artist Marla Bendini, 25; and fitness instructor Vanessa Lee, 23. -- ST PHOTOS: NURIA LING Hey, SABBIE, did not see you there.....
  9. http://vimeo.com/29632448
  10. A song for Sabbie Monday morning feels so sian, Everybody seems to nag me Comin' Tuesday I'll feel better, Even my old dick looks good Wednesday just won't go, Thursday goes too slow I've got Friday on my mind I'm gonna have fun in MCF, I'll be with my bu, she's so chio n hot She looks fine tonight, She is out of sight to me Tonight, I'll paint my friend, Tonight, I'll lose my head, Tonight, I've got to get tonight, Monday, I have Friday on my mind I'm gonna have F in my city, I'll be with my girl, she's so pretty I'm gonna have F in my city, I'll be with my girl, she's so pretty I'm gonna have F in my city, I'll be with my bu http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBJLoYd8xak
  11. Parole,ammassi di parole parole come merce,come potere come rito,parole senza senso. Vicini in silenzio non evocare l'inferno lo vivi tutti i giorni si muore un pezzo al giorno. In silenzio sui pullman coi muri dietro gli occhi non ti lamentare
  12. Sabbie

    FR from Sabbie

    Some of you may be wondering where did Sabbie disappear to from 3pm to 7pm today??? Well he went for his virgin MU!!! To make time for the MU, he was rushing to finish his work from 3 to 5pm and at 5pm sharp he turned up at rendevous point. HoneyBee turned up first and boy was she a sweet and sosphicated lady, I was immensely shy at meeting a gal like her and dared not go over to say hi to her, luckily she was a nice lady and came over after we established who we are. Next Rviolet turned up and she's cute and a syt....are you listening JJ5599? Very outgoing and nice girl, exactly like her online persona! Finally 20G turned up after his afternoon nap, and he's really a good looking guy! I was thinking to myself how come all the forummers so pretty and yandao one!!?? We shook hands and 4 of us had a nice chat. It was damn funny, I didn't know that they suspected me to be belle_femme and funner! However I assured them that there is only 1 Sabbie which incarnerated back after Chemmie78 was banned, that's all! All in all, it was a nice meet up although I left early as I was having a stomachache, and nose bled after seeing Rviolet. Please upz me for more details!
  13. As I've aged, I've become kinder to myself, and less critical of myself. I've become my own friend.. I have seen too many dear friends leave this world too soon; before they understood the great freedom that comes with aging. Whose business is it if I choose to read or play on the computer until 4 AM or sleep until noon? I will dance with myself to those wonderful tunes of the 60 &70's, and if I, at the same time, wish to weep over a lost love .. I will. I will walk the beach in a swim suit that is stretched over a bulging body, and will dive into the waves with abandon if I choose to, despite the pitying glances from the jet set. They, too, will get old. I know I am sometimes forgetful. But there again, some of life is just as well forgotten. And I eventually remember the important things. Sure, over the years my heart has been broken. How can your heart not break when you lose a loved one, or when a child suffers, or even when somebody's beloved pet gets hit by a car? But broken hearts are what give us strength and understanding and compassion. A heart never broken is pristine and sterile and will never know the joy of being imperfect. <1E971883.gif> I am so blessed to have lived long enough to have my hair turning gray, and to have my youthful laughs be forever etched into deep grooves on my face. So many have never laughed, and so many have died before their hair could turn silver. As you get older, it is easier to be positive. You care less about what other people think. I don't question myself anymore....I've even earned the right to be wrong. So, to answer your question, I like being old. It has set me free. I like the person I have become. I am not going to live forever, but while I am still here, I will not waste time lamenting what could have been, or worrying about what will be. And I shall eat dessert every single day(if I feel like it).. MAY OUR FRIENDSHIP NEVER COME APART ESPECIALLY WHEN IT'S STRAIGHT FROM THE HEART!
  14. Michael Palmer nominated for Speaker of Parliament Posted: 06 September 2011 1625 hrs SINGAPORE: Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on Tuesday nominated Mr Michael Palmer to be elected as the next Speaker of Parliament when Parliament opens on October 10. A statement from the Prime Minister's Office said Mr Lee has briefed PAP MPs on his nomination and received their full support. - CNA/fa if each MP adds together their directorship, advisor, speaker of parliment their total salary will definitely come up more than just $15000 so SABBIE work harder to be a politician so you dont need to post "how to make money" I hope this helps
  15. you have demonstrated how people in any forum can be misunderstood but once MU, the "ice" can be broken and barriers breakdown in the end, generally, the outcome is good lets make love and peace less hate and anger afterall this like any forum is a place to hang-out
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