Monday, December 06, 2010

split personality

Dissociative identity disorder is a psychiatric diagnosis that describes a condition in which a person displays multiple distinct identities or personalities (known as alter egos or alters), each with its own pattern of perceiving and interacting with the environment.

wow alter personalities? imagine how cool it will be to have one or more, and be able to choose which one is in control!

i want a split personality!!, its name will be lacus.
lacus will be the violet, rebellious, arrogant, sly, cunning, mysterious alternate personality.
it has long sharpened pointy shoulder length hair, gold/yellow in color.
has a luffy scar on it cheek.
it has enhanced senses, increased physical strength, seemingly control over nature.
but lacus will usually suppressed and hidden.
however both of my personalities would have a weakness for games!
lacus only bares its fangs in games, and it knows more than what other thinks it knows because it has telepathetic powers!

Monday, November 22, 2010

ARTICLE ON THE 6 GIRLS GOING TO ASIAN GAMES -STRAIT TIMES

well because of some unknown reason, i cant link you to the straits time web article directly so i just copied and pasted it here :) smart rite.

the article is by Lin Xinyi.
the site i tried to link is "http://admpreview.straitstimes.com:90/vgn-ext-templating/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=7e6e23c71713c210VgnVCM100000430a0a0aRCRD&vgnextchannel=35b0758920e39010VgnVCM1000000a35010aRCRD"
well here it is:

Steady hands on the canoe

Today, The Straits Times' countdown to the Asian Games switches focus to athletes making their debut at the quadrennial Asiad

Some young Singapore team members show swift progress

Singapore's Asian Games-bound canoeing team members (from left) Suzanne Seah, 20, Irene Chua, 22, Annabelle Ng, 27, Andrea Chen, 25, Stephanie Chen, 19, and Lee Wei Ling, 23. -- ST PHOTO: CAROLINE CHIA

THE last time an Asian Games took place, Stephanie Chen, 19, and Suzanne Seah, 20, had not yet picked up canoeing.

Now, they are preparing to compete in the women's K2 500m at the quadrennial event - a milestone neither had expected when they took up the sport in 2008 and 2007 respectively.

'I was really nothing - just horrible,' said Seah, a second-year sports science and management student at Nanyang Technological University.

'I can't imagine how slow I must have been. I don't even want to remember.'

But she can. Her K2 - or two-man kayak - 500m timing then never went under 2min 10sec - something she can now achieve in a single boat.

Chen, a social science freshman at the Singapore Management University, was critical of herself too: 'Before joining the national team last year, I really couldn't move the boat.'

Much has changed since.

In January, the duo were paired together for the first time. They won the women's K2 500m title in 1:59 at the South-east Asia Canoeing Championships.

And, just last month, they did a personal best 1:55 - just off the 1:54.997 effort that earned Iran sixth place at the last Asiad. China's Zhu Minyuan and Yu Lamei won gold in 1:46.901.

Their Hungarian coach Balazs Babella, a two-time world champion in the four-man kayak K4 200m, has been credited for improving their technique and times.

Taking time off from school to train full-time has also helped their cause.

'I thought I was training hard but I didn't know what hard training was,' said Seah. 'Last time, I trained five times a week. Now it's 11 times. In the past, being able to do 10 chin-ups was a great achievement. Now, if you can't do that, you should go hide in a corner and cry.'

As a result of the work they have put in both on and out of the water, confidence is not something they are lacking.

'It's good to know that you're stronger than half the guys in Singapore. That's cool,' said the 1.59m tall and 52kg Seah, showing few signs of nerves ahead of her first multi-sport Games.

Their target is to rewrite their personal best in Guangzhou - which will hopefully be good enough for a top-six finish.

In an event which requires speed, raw power and synchronised strokes, they know that they are not training just for themselves. Said Chen: 'You can't let yourself be slower than your partner or you'll be dragging her down.'

Teamwork will be vital. As the front rower, Chen sets the pace, and Seah has to follow - not too fast, not too slow.

They have worked on developing telepathy, too.

'She knows I like to conserve energy and win at the last part. I like to hold back till the last 30 seconds of the race,' explained Seah. 'It's important that we put in our power at the same time.'

At the Singapore Canoe Federation, there is a belief that no individual is more important than the other - regardless of the event they are in.

Asian Games team manager Zason Chian insisted that all six sun-baked, Guangzhou-bound athletes be interviewed, or none at all.

And, if the squad resemble a family, it is because there are blood ties.

Chen's elder sister Andrea, 25, is part of the women's K4 - or four-man kayak - 500m team with Irene Chua, 22, Geraldine Lee, 23, and Annabelle Ng, 27.

Even though the sisters feature in different events, their presence at training is enough to push each other on.

'I know I can't slack when all my sisters are going for training,' said Stephanie, who also has two other sisters in the national team - Abigail, 23, and Sarah, 17. 'It becomes a team effort as a family.'

Andrea, too, acknowledges that there is a friendly rivalry. But few would have been more proud when Stephanie qualified for her first Asiad. 'For her to be able to go to an Asian Games in three years is a great achievement,' Andrea said.

linxinyi@sph.com.sg



EDIT meh i found out why i couldent link the site...
The site :)