tt's the "sai kang" my dearest brother made me do for him on tuesday
for those that dont know
my brother was considered relatively new in the company
n as national day is drawing near
each team were made to "personalize" their punch card
me: wa best, how many cards are there
brother: 12
me: this kind of thing see also know is girl do one what
brother: tt's y i ask u ma
-.-"
what a lovely brother i have
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Nepalese Twin Gango Dies
just in case u havent heard about it
(n since im so free at work
i shall type out the whole advert on the papers
*note: im typing each n every single work MYSELF okay
so appreciate im sharing)
One of the conjoined Nepalese firls who underwent a lengthy operation here seven years ago to separate her from her twin died yesterday in a Kathmandu hospital.
Gango Shrestha, eight, fell ill on Monday and was admitted to intensie care. Diagnosed with meningitis, or an inflammation of the brain lining, she was given antibiotics, but the treatment failed to quell the bug.
The girl and her tiwn, Jamuna, born joined at the head, touched all of Singapore when they came here for treatment in late 2000, months ahead of the 2001 operation.
Singaporeans responded to their plight with overwhelming generosity - more than $660,000 was raised from public donations, and the doctors who were on the surgical team waived their charges.
During the surgery - a 97 hour effort by more than 100 doctors and nurses - Singaporeans and Nepalese rallied behind Mr and Mrs Shrestha.
The surgery, which involved separating the girls' entwined brains and major blood vessels, also made news around the world, not least because some doctors overseas said it could not be done.
The operation - which left Ganaga, originally the chirpier of the two, with brain damage and Jamuna unable to walk - stirred debate here.
Some argued that public sympathy was misplaced and that it would have been better to let the girls die; others accused the Shresthas of coming here to milk donations from the public, a charge the family refuted.
For years, the girls survived in Nepal, thought with some difficulty.
In 2005, they returned to East Shore Hospital, where neurosurgeon Keith Goh, a lead surgein in the first operation, practises.
Fluid has accumulated in Ganga's head, doubling its size. To drain it and ease the pressure on her brain, a tube called a shunt was put in. Jamuna's weak right leg was also treated, and the girls returned to Nepal.
But on MOnday, Ganga was admitted to hospital by Dr Basant Pant, the neurosurgeon who has accompanied her and her sister home after their operation.
A saddened Dr Goh, who told The Straits Times he know of her illness, said: "In Singapore, we often forget children in developing countries really struggle to live. I will always remember her feisty sprit... At least, her spirit is free of her disabled body."
Neabwgukem Jamuna, the surviving twin, still cannot walk and drags herself around using her arms.
Schools in Kathmandu have refused to enrol her because part of her brain is still unprotected by bone, and principals fear playground accidents.
Jamuna, who was always very caring towards her sister, is distraught, said her grandfather. The firl finds it hard to accept her twin is gone and cannot stop crying, he added.
Neither can Ganga's mum. Madam Sandhya Shrestha, 31, kept repeating between sobs oer the phone: "ganga is gone."
~there seems to be so many of people passing away these days
on a happier note
ballet was good on tuesday
n i think my toes are having serious problem
=(
DKS + fireman date on this saturday
*ps. fireman's got a crush
*wink
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