Castro Posted January 20, 2006 ^ It was in Cairo saaxib. Same shidh different latitude. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nephissa Posted January 20, 2006 ^ You missed out alot! The best part was, when two kids get into a fight, and the whole class screams: " Johnny, Johnny, Johnny " till this day I don't know what that meant! It cracks me up everytime I remember. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Castro Posted January 20, 2006 ^ You ain't got to tell me what I missed. I'd imagined it so much I thought it was real in my head. What an experience it must have been? But being a kid is a trip anywhere. I had a good time growing up. The locale really matters little. As long as you're in a loving home and good food to eat, a kid is happy being a kid. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacpher Posted January 20, 2006 You've missed more than you can imagine. I can picture Bishaaro laying on the ground oo ciid afka loogu guraayo and all the kids screaming coward. Those were the days. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nephissa Posted January 21, 2006 ^L0L. Coward I am. I'll run before I'll fight someone. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haneefah Posted January 21, 2006 When a mother shouts to her, naa heblaayo , if what follows is not a weak and codyaroo nuxuus ah that goes like, haa hooyo (ood moodid in naftu kasii bixi rabto ), then the bachelor would know that he should expect mid abraar ah oo beerku weynaaday Classic! Show Dhuuboyin badan baad goob-joog u ahayd baaritaankooda Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
-Serenity- Posted January 21, 2006 Originally posted by Caano Geel: ^ luckily we now keep u in your rightfull place, qaxooti, Yeah, the civil war was a great leveler, eh? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Caano Geel Posted January 21, 2006 ^^ yes i know, its funny how scum naturally floats to the top Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Maf Kees Posted January 21, 2006 ^Lol Caano Geel. Curling Waterfall. What kind of life did you enjoy in Somalia and what would have become of you if Somalia was just business as usual? Please answer, I'm intrigued. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
-Serenity- Posted January 22, 2006 Originally posted by Caano Geel: ^^ yes i know, its funny how scum naturally floats to the top It takes some ingenuity to get there dear. You wouldn't know, its not in your genes. Daanyeer, my parents both held government jobs (not political but health) and were well paid. I think waa la i 'meeleyn' lahaa somehow, somewhere. Its not difficult when ur rich and well connected. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xiinfaniin Posted January 22, 2006 ^^Words of the elite . I knew you were no snob girl, CW. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
-Serenity- Posted January 22, 2006 Originally posted by xiinfaniin: I knew you were no snob girl, CW. .. ah.. the scent of sarcasm! ax... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xiinfaniin Posted January 22, 2006 ^^^ Not at all. I have no ax to grind . Meel cidla ah ha ka didin . Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Alle-ubaahne Posted January 22, 2006 I've seen the heydays of my youthful past. the playful period of the joyous era, the peak of a child's happiness. But I wonder what it will look like when I leap into my sixties, and reflections of my wasteful past in America told me that I was deprived of the best experiance to gain from homeland events. Assorted experiences, the ones ingrained with the wise elders I used to see in Somalia. At one sitting, he can lecture about the essence of life, the meaning of life lived in its fullest. Well, at sixty they speak in poem, they pause with proverbs, and present themselves with all kinds of examples. Its the unique intellectual embodiments that shaped and differed a Somali elder from the rest of humanity. That is, indeed, the inclination I seek to exist in, but its going to be an inevitable reality that Alle-ubaahne will be deprived off as he lives in the confining world of the west. He can only be silent while other elders are narrating about their epoch. He could wish that he was a bystander of the events and history that disqualified him true elder. Woe to him, for he was the wrong spectator in the wrong arena, for the wrong events! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Laba-X Posted January 22, 2006 the ones ingrained with the wise elders I used to see in Somalia. At one sitting, he can lecture about the essence of life, the meaning of life lived in its fullest. Well, at sixty they speak in poem, they pause with proverbs, and present themselves with all kinds of examples. Its the unique intellectual embodiments that shaped and differed a Somali elder from the rest of humanity ...Allaylehe run baad sheegtay! Danyeer, Fanax/Faantax is considered a beauty aspect in many parts of Somalia, thats why if a girldoesn possess one, she tries to space apart Dhoolayaasha.. The reasons, i heard tea makes the girl soft, don't ask me how! and maraq is meant to make the girls belly bigger, again don't ask me how and why! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites