Barbara Yung's Poems

I'm very annoyed these days. The two TVs at home are good, but my son is still clamoring for a "big TV", which is the kind of LCD TV hanging on the wall. In the words of today's children, our family is really "out of date and needs to be updated." In fact, I'm not old, I'm in my thirties, which doesn't mean I'm going behind the times. It's just that times change so fast that I can't keep up with the pace. ...

I like listening to the radio since I was a child. This is not a natural interest, but almost the only leisure choice of the year. In the early 1980 s, there was no TV at home and power was often cut off. Radio is an important entertainment tool with good quality, low price and convenient use. I listen to "serial stories" at noon every day, and there are often "movie recordings" at eight o'clock in the evening, so that I am quite familiar with the voices of Qiao Zhen and Ding Jianhua later. I remember there was a program called Summer Breeze on Hubei Satellite TV. In the summer evening, I lay on a bamboo bed to enjoy the cool, listening to this program which integrates prose, poetry and music. I really like it! There is often "poetry appreciation" in the afternoon 10. In that era when TV was scarce, a small radio also brought me endless fun.

At that time, TV sets were rarely owned by families. There is a factory in front of my house. They have a 14 inch black and white TV. At night, the factory will move the TV set [www.fwdqw.com comes from Fan Wendaquan] to the open space in front of the door. We often finish our meals quickly and move stools to grab seats quickly. Many times, the music of the condor heroes sounded and came from afar, and we were impatient at home. Until today, the Cantonese version of the song "Vaguely Dreaming ..." can still make people of our time relive the feeling of kindness and blood boiling. I once posted a beautiful portrait of Barbara Yung in one of my notebooks for more than 20 years, and this notebook is still in my bookcase today.

In the mid-1980s, we finally got our first TV set at home. Although it is just a very ordinary 17 inch black and white TV (at that time, we thought that 17 inch TV was so big), it has already made us very excited. At noon that day, my father moved it back and installed it. I can't wait to see it. I remember watching a documentary about Jinggangshan at that time. I stared at it and thought it was really great! Although so many years have passed and I have watched countless TV programs, I don't know why, but I still remember that scene clearly until today.

Ten years later, this black-and-white TV set was replaced by a 19 inch color TV set. Two or three years later, when I got married, the society was already a 25-inch color TV, and there were many new terms, such as picture in picture, plane right angle and so on.

Later, the child was born, bought a house, had a living room and a bedroom, and the TV at home was changed from one to two ...

In the process of "upgrading", the washing machines, computers and several mobile phones that were "eliminated" were idle at home, and now the children are clamoring to eliminate these two trouble-free TVs. Alas, as the song goes, "It's not that I don't understand, the world is changing fast!" " "

More than 20 years ago, my good friend's father was the factory director, and the factory installed a new phone for her. In fact, this is the oldest rotary dialing method. But at that time, we thought it was too weird and mysterious to imagine that we could directly talk to people thousands of miles away through such a small device? ! If someone was able to cross it and just visit it, let me know: after ten years, this thing will spread to families; In 20 years, you will all have a wireless, smaller "mobile phone", which can be put in the palm of your hand to talk, listen to songs, play games and watch programs, and carry it in your pocket at any time. I won't believe it.

Twenty years ago, when I was in middle school, I learned an English text, which meant that a little boy named Charlie was going to have his birthday. Her mother turned on the computer (at that time, I first learned the word "computer" and wanted to buy him a bike as a birthday present). They choose the bike style and negotiate the price on the computer, and then someone will give this gift to Charlie on his birthday. When we were studying this text at that time, we didn't believe such a thing at all! We understand it as a science fiction article, and the teacher has not had such "foresight" to tell us that this is something that can be realized in the near future! Yes, a few years later, I saw the real "computer". Ten years later, computers entered the family. Today, I know what Charlie's mother did, which is called "e-commerce" today. It is not mysterious, nor is it science fiction.

There are many such things! More than ten years ago, when I was just working, I first saw the "home theater" at my colleague's house. I feel very "modern" and advanced. I can sing karaoke and watch movies at home. But now my family has eliminated the round from VCD to DVD. ...

I can't help but sigh that the times are changing so fast that it's no exaggeration to describe them as changing with each passing day. In terms of age, I am in my thirties, basically in step with the thirty years of reform and opening up. From childhood to middle age, I clearly see the dribs and drabs changes that the reform and opening up have brought to our lives. As [www.fwdq]