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(, Sun 1 Apr 2001, 1:00)
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I don't think I've ever been The Happiest Ever, although I've had very enjoyable experiences.
One of my favourite memories was being in a hotel in Hong Kong and waking up thinking it was day because of all the noise, but it was 4am and the markets were still going just as strong as if it had been 4 in the afternoon. It was pretty cool watching everyone bustling around. Other people usually write about how they were on top of a mountain or whatever and it was all tranquil and serene, but I love cities.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 9:58, 3 replies, latest was 15 years ago)
I don't think I have a happiest moment ever, but if I had to choose one, it'd be the first time I slept with Mark. Nothing happened, as we both had partners, but both of us were working in Brussels and had a horrible cold (hi called his man flu), and I couldn't bear sleeping on my own again, in that cold hotel, so he let me sleep with him. I spent the night hugging him and feeling super happy, but I didn't sleep much. I was crap next morning.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:07, Reply)
You've been in Hong Kong? I thought you'd never gone out of the UK, for the way you talk about never going visiting places. HK is quite far away. I loved the place, specially the little tiny islands, as busy as the main one, but in the middle of the jungle!
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:08, Reply)
I just haven't travelled much around England, hence my London virginity being broken on Friday!
I went to Hong Kong a year before it was handed back to China, it was an amazing place, really interesting.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:12, Reply)
Details please! I'm so jealous of people who live in exotic places.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:25, Reply)
Lived in Happy Valley, worked in Times Square. Spent a lot of time in Shanghai and Shenzen with work. Used to love going to Lamma island on a Sunday to relax and Friday nights in Lan Kwoi Fong.
It's expensive there but I was lucky not to pay tax as an ex-pat and my company paid for the flat, maid, driver etc.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:28, Reply)
I'd love to do something like that, but my skills aren't really in demand anywhere else!
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:31, Reply)
First time there I went for a drink in Felix at the Peninsula. Sounds odd but the toilets are what I remember most about the place. The urinal was set into the window so you had the feeling of peeing on Hong Kong from a very great height.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:40, Reply)
They were designed by Phillipe Starck, who's doing the interior design for the Virgin Space Station.
I'm excited because I've learned something from my studies.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:49, Reply)
56th floor, with amazing views of the harbour.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:50, Reply)
I've been mistaken for a long time.
I'd love to live in HK, we tried to find a job there, but things are not very good at the moment, Chinesse people are happy with salaries much lower than ours, and we can't speak Chinesse. Nobody replied to our emails. :(
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:22, Reply)
Apartments are very expensive. Live on HK rather than Kowloon. I lived in Happy Valley which I really liked, however the mid levels and Stanley are nice too. Avoid living in Wanchai.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:25, Reply)
I still need to find a job there before I start thinking where to live.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:32, Reply)
I am sure there are specialist recruitment companies in the UK that handle jobs in Asia.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:34, Reply)
We've been told that with the crisis as it is there's no way they'll be paying European salaries to work there; and even if we go for a good cut, they'd probably won't pay for flat and expenses either. We've been recommended to keep our jobs here and wait a year or so and then try again. In the meantime we're learning Mandarin (I know they do Cantonese, but we don't mind working anywhere in China, so Mandarin seems better)
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:37, Reply)
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:26, Reply)
I'm not up to 12h/day, 6day/week working time.
Mark was working there for a while too, and it was very "funny". They are very misoginist (?) and don't accept women can work like man. He was there with a female collegue; Mark was doing one bit of the job and she was doing the other. When she'd send documents for the client to review, they'd come back with the comments to Mark, and tried for him to explain what it meant, ignoring the woman completely. Same for team buildings and going out.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:35, Reply)
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:39, Reply)
I'd always wanted to visit Japan, but that was mainly because I heard that they have gin and tonic vending machines.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:40, Reply)
I know a few people who've gone there teaching English and some who've gone there on fellowships to do research and none of them really had difficulties with language. Although as Aberaccion said, in business they are extremely sensitive to hierarchy and the highest position Japanese women usually attain is either an air hostess or an office lady (administrator).
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:49, Reply)
The hustle and the bustle is worth all the fuss(le)
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:18, Reply)
Yeah I love that too, it makes me feel like Annie when she arrives in the city, looking up at all the buildings and being dead excited. I love walking through the city at night when everyone's in restaurants and bars and stuff and there's loads going on.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:19, Reply)
I might end up doing that holding hands and skipping around dance with you.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 10:27, Reply)
I'm gutted I'm not going to meet you too. And there are other fantabulous b3tans I want to meet, and ones I've not seen in a while and would love to see. I'm leaving the bashing to djtp though.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 11:03, Reply)
Spray him with your perfume so you can be there in spirit.
(, Wed 20 Oct 2010, 11:07, Reply)
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