Saturday, July 31, 2010

I Hate.. But Love You

I hate the way you make me feel,
I hate that you can read my mind,
And that you’re always right.
I hate the way you make me smile,
even when I wanna cry.
I hate your thoughts that haunt me.
I hate the way you pass by me,
and not even talk.
I hate the way you left me hurt,
And now that you don’t even care.
I hate that I can’t be angry,
I hate crying over you.
I hate it when you lie,
I hate the fact that I fell for you,
And that I’ll never get over you.
I hate that I don’t hate you,
not even a bit,
not even at all.
I hate so many things,
But the thing I hate the most is,
I hate myself for NOT hating you!
©Apurv
I have written this poem after watching  Hollywood Movie "10 things I hate about you" 

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

5 Question Women Ask

Generally when a girl coming in a relationship they ask some Question from a guy to whom she is going to be in Relationship.
 
The five questions Which Woman's Generally ask to a guy ,are:
1 - "What are you thinking?"
2 - "Do you love me?"
3 - "Do I look fat?"
4 - "Do you think she is prettier than me?"
5 - "What would you do if I died?"


Think twice than answer properly...,If you Give Smart Answer than You will Win her Heart.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Leaders of the fee world

How much a country's leader is paid compared to GDP per person
ON MONDAY July 5th Raila Odinga, Kenya's prime minister, rejected the pay increase he was awarded by the country's parliament last week. MPs had granted Mr Odinga a rise to nearly $430,000 a year, while giving themselves a 25% increase to $161,000. This boost would place Mr Odinga among the highest-paid political leaders in the world. More worryingly, his salary would be some 240 times greater than the country's GDP per person (measured on a purchasing-power parity basis). Lee Hsien Loong, the prime minister of Singapore, tops our list of selected leaders' salaries. He is paid more than 40 times the city-state’s GDP per person. At the other end of the scale, Manmohan Singh, the prime minister of India, reaffirms his reputation for saintliness by taking a modest sum from Indian taxpayers.


Correction: We originally understated the salary of the prime minister of Canada. This was revised on July 6th 2010.
Sources:- The Economist