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User:Amphitere

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Amphitere
en | ko| eo
de - fr - it - ja - pl - ru - sv
尹一荷
Korean
English
I translate and proofread from Korean to English on Wikipedia:Translation.
French
English
I translate and proofread from French to English on Wikipedia:Translation.
Esperanto
English
I translate and proofread from Esperanto to English on Wikipedia:Translation.
This user was a proud member of the AINW (before it got deleted by the administrators).
del This editor is a deletionist.
This editor is a WikiGnome.
This user clicks on Random article way too often.
Language
ko 이 사용자는 한국어모국어입니다.
en-5 This user is able to contribute with a professional level of English.
fr-3 Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau avancé de français.
ja-3 この利用者は上級日本語を話すことができます。
la-2 Hic usor media latinitate contribuat.
eo-1 Ĉi tiu uzanto povas komuniki per baza nivelo de Esperanto


ko-
han-3
이 使用者는 高級水準漢字의 理解가 可能합니다.
𐑞𐑦𐑕 𐑿𐑟𐑼 𐑦𐑟 𐑦𐑯𐑑𐑼𐑧𐑕𐑑𐑩𐑛 𐑦𐑯 ·𐑖𐑱𐑝𐑾𐑯.
This user is interested in Shavian.


This user thinks that simplification ruined the beauty of Chinese characters.
Nationality
이 사용자는 한국인입니다.
This user is of Korean ancestry.
This user is a hero or a heroine of Goguryeo.
This user supports the peaceful reunification of N. and S. Korea.
這個用戶是龍的傳人
This user is a Descendant of the Dragon.
Technology
This user runs Mac OS X.
This user uses Mac OS X Server.
This user has an iPod.
1600 x 1200 This user contributes at
1600 x 1200 resolution.
iTS This user uses the
iTunes Store.
dvrk This user contributes using a Dvorak keyboard.
This user contributes using a
MacBook Pro.
b
This user supports Blu-ray.
This user allows their neighbors to use their wireless internet connection.
BB This user contributes using a broadband connection.
Location
This user is from Earth.
This user's time zone is UTC+9.
The time is currently 01:03:14 GMT+5:30.


Today is 11 July 2009.
About
This user is male.
Name This user's name is Ilha Yune.
sis This user has a little sister
This user is an ageless Immortal.
This user is a Dog.
Knowledge
This user loves getting tangled up in Knot theory.
SI This user uses the metric system and loves it.
This user knows by heart an unspecified number of digits in the decimal representation of pi.
This user knows that yellow pigs have 17 eyelashes. 17
This user knows how to travel 1 mile due south, due east, then due north and end up where they started. [1]
This user exploits the pigeonhole principle.
\sum_{k=1}^{\infty}{x^k \over k!} This user loves problem solving.
Ethics
This user does not smoke.
S-0 This user does not drink carbonated beverages.
Arts
This user likes all of the colors.
This user's favorite color is blue.
Image:User_audiophile.gif This user is an audiophile.
This user likes most types of music.
This user enjoys classical music.
This user enjoys Chinese traditional music.
This user listens to World Music
This user is a musician.
This user's favorite composer is Frédéric Chopin.
This user loves Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
orch This user plays in an orchestra.
This user plays the piano.
This user plays the violin.
Wikipedian
This user is a member of the Association of Structurist Wikipedians.
☺ This user is part of the
Welcoming Committee.
This user loves userboxes.
This user is a member of
WikiProject Korea.
This user is a member of WikiProject China
END This user has no more userboxes.

Head Note

This is a Wikipedia user page.

If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated, and that the user this page belongs to may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia itself. The original page is located at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Amphitere.

Wikimedia Foundation
Hip hop is the culture.
Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared, so does computer bits.
The universe is full of wonders.
Ethics are temporary and always vulnerable to change.
Human desires have no limits.

Introduction

  • Be present. Don’t think about how great things will be in the future. Don’t dwell on what did or didn’t happen in the past. Learn to be in the here and now, and experience life as it’s happening, and appreciate the world for the beauty that it is, right now. Practice makes perfect with this crucial skill.
  • Connect with others. In my experience, very few things can achieve happiness as well as connecting with other human beings, cultivating relationships, bonding with others.
  • Spend time with those you love. This might seem almost the same as the item above, and in reality it’s an extension of the same concept, a more specific application. Spending time with the people you love is extremely important to happiness and yet it’s incredible how often we do just the opposite, and spend time alone, or disconnected from those we love, or spend time with people we don’t much like. Make it a priority to schedule time with the people you love. Make that your most important item of the day. For myself, I have a time when I cut off work, and the rest of the day is for my family. Weekends are exclusively for my family. And by setting aside this sacred time, I ensure my happiness by letting nothing come between me and the people I love most.
  • Do the things you love. What do you love doing most? Figure out the 4-5 things you love doing most in life, the things that make you happiest, and make those the foundation of your day, every day. Eliminate as much of the rest as possible. For me, the things I love doing are: spending time with my family, writing, reading, and running. I do those things every day, and very little else. It may take awhile to get your life down to your essentials like I have (it took me a few years of careful elimination and rescheduling and saying “no” to requests that aren’t on my short list), but it’s worth the effort.
  • Focus on the good things. Everyone’s life has positive and negative aspects whether you’re happy or not depends largely on which aspects you focus on. Did you lose today’s softball game? At least you got to spend time with friends doing something fun. Did you sprain your ankle running? Well, your body probably needed a week’s rest anyway, as you were running too much! Did your baby get sick? Well, at least it’s only a flu virus and nothing life-threatening and at least you have a wonderful baby to nurse to health! You can see my point, almost everything has a positive side, and focusing on the positives make all the difference. My Auntie Kerry died last week (as you know), and I’m still grieving, but 1) I’m happy I spent time with her before her death; 2) her death has brought our family closer together; 3) her suffering has ended; and 4) it reminded me to spend more time with the people I love while they’re still alive.
  • Do work you love. An extension, of course, of doing the things you love, but applied to work. Are you already doing the work you love? Then you’re one of the lucky ones, and you should appreciate how lucky you are. If you aren’t doing the work you love, you should make it a priority to try to find work you’re passionate about, and to steer your career in that direction. Take myself for example: I was doing work that I was good at (just last year), but that I wasn’t passionate about. I was passionate about writing, and so I pursued blogging … and with a year of hard work, was able to quit my day job and blog full time. I’m so much happier these days!
  • Lose yourself in your work. Once you’ve found work you love, the key is to lose yourself in it … clear away all distractions, find an interesting and challenging task, and just pour all your energy and focus into that task. With practice, you’ll forget about the outside world. There are few work-related joys that equal this feeling.
  • Help others. Is there any better feeling than helping a fellow human being? There aren’t many. And it’s not too hard.
  • Find time for peace. With the hectic pace of life these days, it’s hard to find a moment of peace. But if you can make time for solitude and quiet, it can be one of the happiest parts of your day.
  • Notice the small things. Instead of waiting for the big things to happen — marriage, kids, house, nice car, big promotion, winning the lottery — find happiness in the small things that happen every day. Little things like having a quiet cup of coffee in the early morning hours, or the delicious and simple taste of berries, or the pleasure of reading a book with your child, or taking a walk with your partner. Noticing these small pleasures, throughout your day, makes a huge difference.
  • Develop compassion. Compassion is developing a sense of shared suffering with others … and taking steps to alleviate the suffering of others. I think too often we forget about the suffering of others while focusing on our own suffering, and if we learned to share the suffering of others, our suffering would seem insignificant as a result. Compassion is an extremely valuable skill to learn, and you get better with practice.
  • Be grateful. Learning to be grateful for what’s in our lives, for the people who have enriched our lives, goes a long way toward happiness. It helps us to appreciate what we have and what we have received, and the people who have helped us.
  • Become a lifelong learner. I find an inordinate amount of pleasure in reading, in learning about new things, in enriching my knowledge as I get older. I think spending time reading some of the classics, as well as passionately pursuing new interests, is energy well invested. Try to do a little of it every day, and see if it doesn’t make you happier.
  • Simplify your life. This is really about identifying the things you love (see above) and then eliminating everything else as much as possible. By simplifying your life in this way, you create time for your happiness, and you reduce the stress and chaos in your life. In my experience, living a very simple life is also a pleasure in itself.
  • Slow down. Similar to simplifying, slowing down is just a matter of reminding yourself that there’s no need to rush through life. Schedule less things on your calendar, and more space between things. Learn to eat slower, drive slower, walk slower (unless you’re doing it for exercise). Going slowly helps to reduce stress, and improve the pleasure of doing things, and keeps you in the present moment.
  • Exercise. I’ve written about the pleasures of exercise many times. It can be hard to start an exercise program (here’s how) but once you get going, it relieves stress and can really give you a good feeling. I feel joyful every time I go out for a run!
  • Meditate. You don’t need to join a Zendo or get a mat or learn any lotus positions, but the simplest form of meditation can really help you to be present and to get out of the worrying part of your head. You can do it right now: close your eyes and simply try to focus on your breathing as long as possible. Pay attention to the breath as it comes into your body, and then as it goes out. When you feel your mind start to wander, don’t fret, but just simply acknowledge the other thoughts, and then return to your breathing. Do this a little each day and you’ll get better at it.
  • Learn to accept. One of the challenges for people like me — people who want to improve themselves and change the world — is learning to accept things as they are. Sometimes it’s better to learn to accept, and to love, the world as it is, and people as they are, rather than to try to make everything and everyone conform to an impossible ideal. I’m not saying you should accept cruelty and injustice, but learn to love things when they are less than “perfect”.
  • Spend time in nature. Go outside and take a walk each day, or take the time to watch a sunset or sunrise. Or find a body of water — the ocean, a lake, a river, a pond — and spend time taking a look at it, contemplating it. If you’re lucky enough to live near some woods, or a mountain, or a canyon, go hiking. Time in nature is time invested in your happiness.
  • Find the miracles in life. I absolutely believe in miracles, and believe that they are all around us, every day. My children are all miracles. The kindnesses of strangers are miracles. The life growing all around us is a miracle. Find those miracles in your life, and enjoy the majesty of them.
-Zen Buddhism

International Wikipedian

My goal in Wikipedia is to share the true knowledge with everyone in the world. And that is why I am an International Wikipedian. I want to make it possible for people to share the knowledge not just in their own country, but throughout the entire world. All of the AINW's translations will be in near-native country, and we/I hope that many people who can speak the native language of that version of Wikipedia can improve the fluency. If you would like to join the Association of International Wikipedians, or even just contribute to better translations, please leave a comment on my discussion page and I will help you by telling you the requirements of an International Wikipedian. For those who already joined, the logo and the WikipediaPhilosophy and WikipediaProject pages are currently being made, and it will be done shortly. Since the AINW was just created, I apologize for the inconvinience in the continuing construction of the Association. Meanwhile, you can still contribute by translating articles, which would surely be notified. Also, it would be nice if you can sign up in this not-yet-official Wikipedia Association, Wikipedia:Association of International Wikipedians. Thank you very much.

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