12 July 2009 - back to Kuching
Bradon & cousin
Bradon with po po
Bradon with kong kong
~A Beautiful, Heart-breaking Photo~~
Photos with my beloved father. My father he's the type of person who always says he doesn't want anything and already has everything he needs. Why cook so many, why buy so many, why must buy two cakes...
10 June 2009 - back to Kuching
Celebrating my darling 3rd birthday in school
Feb 2009 - Our visit to my hometown Kuching
I guess that is all for now. I will try to keep you
better posted so please check back at my blog once a while again.
2009 Chinese New Year
2009 CNY celebration in School
daddy 2009 birthday
~my lego - I able to fix many type of transport
19 Dec 2008
19 Dec 2008
December 2008 - Christmas shopping
Octorber 2008
August 2008
July 2008
August 2008- celebrating national day in school
August 2008
March 2008
"I Don't Know"
What is your name? "I don't know. Bradon."
Where is your daddy?"I don't know. pa pa go to work"
What do you want to eat? "I don't know. egg & vege"
What are you doing? "I don't know. play cars."
Why are you crying? "I don't know. I fall down."
Do you want to go playground? "I don't know. I want to play with friends."
the wonderful way we get to communicate with Bradon now. All day long. Isn't it cute? "I don't know. No."
What is your name? "I don't know. Bradon."
Where is your daddy?"I don't know. pa pa go to work"
What do you want to eat? "I don't know. egg & vege"
What are you doing? "I don't know. play cars."
Why are you crying? "I don't know. I fall down."
Do you want to go playground? "I don't know. I want to play with friends."
the wonderful way we get to communicate with Bradon now. All day long. Isn't it cute? "I don't know. No."
Bradon two years old ~BirthDay~
Kuching Trip on March 2008
Grandparent House
2008 Chinese New Year
Boat Quay and the history - Singapore River comes alive only when Sir Stamford Raffles arrived here in 1819 to set up a trading post for the British East India Company.According to Raffles' Town Plan of 1822, the south bank of the river was allocated for the commercial and finance sector, while the Civic and Government Sector on the north bank which is where most of the Colonial Buildings were built. The major ethnic of Chinese, Malays and Indians were allocated to their respective enclaves. The Chinese settled in Chinatown area, the Malay and Arabs in Kampong Glam and the Indians in the Chinatown area initially and later moved to Serangoon Road area, which is known as Little India today, due to overcrowding. Boat Quay, which occupies a section of the six kilometre-long river, was the hub of business and trading activities along the river during colonial time.