Wherever I am, I wake up around eight o’clock. I do not have an alarm  translation - Wherever I am, I wake up around eight o’clock. I do not have an alarm  English how to say

Wherever I am, I wake up around eig

Wherever I am, I wake up around eight o’clock. I do not have an alarm or wake-up call. Breakfast is coffee and croissant. Then I shower and put on make-up: some blue round my eyes and a bit of lipstick. For me it is important to feel good and look good.
If I am at home I am out riding by nine. I ride all day. You have got to practice, practice, practice . I have 15 horses, but I only take seven with me when I’m fighting.
I spent 10 years learning how to ride and kill bulls before I was good enough for the ring. Now I’m taken seriously because I fight well, not because I'm a woman. I regard myself as just another bullfighter. I don’t want to take advantage of being female.
Fighting bulls on horseback makes man woman equal, which is not the case on foot, where woman have to be manly. Anyway, the bullfighter’s outfit does not female contours and there is nothing fighting about a woman, covered in blood and sand, fighting a bull on foot.
I love everything to do with being a woman, even though I do a man’s job in a very macho world. I can handle the macho bit The problems come from the responsibility of knowing it is all down to me. My worst moments are when I am faced when I am training on my own in the cold and rain. It is not all glory. The nervous stress brings tears on occasions.
My parents are proud of me now but when I told them I wanted to be a bullfighter they were shocked. Fortunately they never stood in my way .I think they reasoned that it was batter to have a daughter with a head full of foolish ideas than no ideas at all. But , as the Spanish say, I was born for this.
I need to make £ 50,000 a year to pay for the horses and the rest my team.
I have fallen off a lot and I have been tossed at least 10 times. The worst I have suffered is broken ribs. Of course it is dangerous. The bull is broken ribs. Of course it is dangerous. The bull is there to kill you. He doesn’t think it’s a game. When the bull gets you, it happens so quickly that you hardly have time to react. You just know you have to get up and save yourself.

At home l enjoy cooking, but when I’m travelling, I eat the regional food. If I am near the sea, I eat fish; if I’m inland, I like lamb.
I am very, very superstitious. I was superstitious as a little girl but I am more so now. I will not put a hat on a bed. You only do that when someone dies. When I leave my room, I leave the light on and expect to see it still burning when I get back.
I dress in a certain order. First, I touch up my make up, then I put on my breeches, my blouse, the jacket, and then I polish my boots. When I am dressed, my friend Annie puts my hair up in a Pony tail. Inside my blouse, dangling round my neck are five charms of La virgin del Rocio and La Macarena.
I am scared, not so much of being hurt, more of failure and criticism. Criticism hurts more than a fall. Some days, to do well, I take risks I would not otherwise consider. I know I risk my life but I don’t like about it. So far I have never thought I was going to die. If I have children, I’ll stop. It is not fair to take these risks if others depend on you. The day I stop will be the day I wake and think: I’ve had enough; that’s it.
During the season I see very little of Simon. Our paths do cross. My friends are the people I travel with. I don’t take holidays. Maybe in the winter, when I am not fighting, I’ll go to Paris to do some shopping. There is a lot of administration involved, such as making sure people get paid, or the logistics of constantly being on the move, or last minute changes and calamities to be sorted. I have to be a businesswoman as will.
A glass or two of red wine calms me down, especially before I go to bed. On the road, evenings usually consist of supper with my team. I eat something off the menu. I’m a light sleeper and I have recurring nightmares. One is that the horses aren’t there. The most awful one is a bull that chases me into the car, back to the hotel, and there’s nothing I can do to stop it, until I wake up with a start.
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无论我在哪里,我八点起来。我没有报警或唤醒。早餐是咖啡和牛角包。然后我的淋浴间和化妆:一些圆形的蓝色眼睛和一点口红。我也是觉得很好看
重要。如果我在家里我骑了九。我骑一天。你必须实践,实践,实践。我有15匹马,但我只需要七个与我战斗。
我花了10年时间学习如何骑马、杀死公牛之前我是足够好的环。现在我认真对待,因为我打得好,不是因为我是个女人。我把自己当作是另一个斗牛士。我不想利用女性。
斗牛骑马让男女平等,这是没有脚的情况,那里的女人要男人。无论如何,斗牛士的衣服不女性轮廓,没有一个女人打架,满身是血和沙子,战斗公牛步行。
我爱一切与作为一个女人,虽然我在一个很有男子气概的世界做男人的工作。我可以处理大点的问题来自于了解这一切对我的责任。我最糟糕的时刻是当我遇到我在寒冷的雨在我自己的训练。并不是所有的荣耀。神经紧张的场合
带来的眼泪。我的父母为我感到骄傲现在,但是当我告诉我想成为一个斗牛士,他们震惊了他们。幸运的是,他们从来没有站在我的方式。我想他们认为它是电池有一个女儿充满愚蠢的想法头比没有在所有的想法。但是,由于西班牙说,我出世了。
我需要做£50000一年支付的马和其余的我的团队。
我有很多脱落和我已经把至少10次。我经历了最糟糕的是折断的肋骨。当然这是很危险的。牛肋骨。当然这是很危险的。公牛去杀你。他不认为这是一个游戏。当公会,它发生的太快了,你几乎没有时间作出反应。你知道你必须起床,拯救你自己。

在家我喜欢烹饪,但当我旅行时,我吃的粮食。如果我在海边,我吃鱼;如果我在内地,我喜欢羔羊肉。
我非常,非常迷信。我很迷信作为一个小女孩,但我现在更是如此。我不会把帽子放在床上。你唯一要做的,当有人死了。当我离开我的房间,我把灯和期望看到它仍在燃烧我回来的时候我的衣服。
按一定顺序。首先,我碰了我,然后我把我的裤子,衬衫,外套,然后我擦我的鞋。当我打扮的,我的朋友安妮把我的头发扎成马尾。在我的衬衫,挂在我的颈五魅力的La处女删除罗西奥和La Macarena
。我很害怕,不是太多的被伤害,更多的失败、批评。批评比跌倒伤害。有些日子,做的很好,我承担的风险,我也没有考虑到的。我知道我的生命冒险但我不喜欢它。到目前为止我从来没有想过我会死的。如果我有孩子,我会停止。它不是把这些风险公平如果别人依赖你。那天我站将我醒来一天想:我已经够了;这是它。
本赛季我看到西蒙很小。我们做过。我的朋友是我旅行的人。我不休息。也许在冬季,当我不打架,我要去巴黎购物。有很多政府介入,比如确保人们得到报酬,或者不断前进,物流,或最后一分钟的变化和灾害进行排序。我是一个女商人为将。
一两杯红酒能让我平静下来,特别是在我睡觉之前。在路上,晚上通常包括与我的团队的晚餐。我吃东西了,菜单。我是一个轻的卧铺,我经常做恶梦。一个是马不在那里。最糟糕的是一头公牛追逐我上车,回到酒店,和我没有什么可以阻止它,直到我惊醒。
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Wherever I am, I wake up around eight o’clock. I do not have an alarm or wake-up call. Breakfast is coffee and croissant. Then I shower and put on make-up: some blue round my eyes and a bit of lipstick. For me it is important to feel good and look good.
If I am at home I am out riding by nine. I ride all day. You have got to practice, practice, practice . I have 15 horses, but I only take seven with me when I’m fighting.
I spent 10 years learning how to ride and kill bulls before I was good enough for the ring. Now I’m taken seriously because I fight well, not because I'm a woman. I regard myself as just another bullfighter. I don’t want to take advantage of being female.
Fighting bulls on horseback makes man woman equal, which is not the case on foot, where woman have to be manly. Anyway, the bullfighter’s outfit does not female contours and there is nothing fighting about a woman, covered in blood and sand, fighting a bull on foot.
I love everything to do with being a woman, even though I do a man’s job in a very macho world. I can handle the macho bit The problems come from the responsibility of knowing it is all down to me. My worst moments are when I am faced when I am training on my own in the cold and rain. It is not all glory. The nervous stress brings tears on occasions.
My parents are proud of me now but when I told them I wanted to be a bullfighter they were shocked. Fortunately they never stood in my way .I think they reasoned that it was batter to have a daughter with a head full of foolish ideas than no ideas at all. But , as the Spanish say, I was born for this.
I need to make £ 50,000 a year to pay for the horses and the rest my team.
I have fallen off a lot and I have been tossed at least 10 times. The worst I have suffered is broken ribs. Of course it is dangerous. The bull is broken ribs. Of course it is dangerous. The bull is there to kill you. He doesn’t think it’s a game. When the bull gets you, it happens so quickly that you hardly have time to react. You just know you have to get up and save yourself.

At home l enjoy cooking, but when I’m travelling, I eat the regional food. If I am near the sea, I eat fish; if I’m inland, I like lamb.
I am very, very superstitious. I was superstitious as a little girl but I am more so now. I will not put a hat on a bed. You only do that when someone dies. When I leave my room, I leave the light on and expect to see it still burning when I get back.
I dress in a certain order. First, I touch up my make up, then I put on my breeches, my blouse, the jacket, and then I polish my boots. When I am dressed, my friend Annie puts my hair up in a Pony tail. Inside my blouse, dangling round my neck are five charms of La virgin del Rocio and La Macarena.
I am scared, not so much of being hurt, more of failure and criticism. Criticism hurts more than a fall. Some days, to do well, I take risks I would not otherwise consider. I know I risk my life but I don’t like about it. So far I have never thought I was going to die. If I have children, I’ll stop. It is not fair to take these risks if others depend on you. The day I stop will be the day I wake and think: I’ve had enough; that’s it.
During the season I see very little of Simon. Our paths do cross. My friends are the people I travel with. I don’t take holidays. Maybe in the winter, when I am not fighting, I’ll go to Paris to do some shopping. There is a lot of administration involved, such as making sure people get paid, or the logistics of constantly being on the move, or last minute changes and calamities to be sorted. I have to be a businesswoman as will.
A glass or two of red wine calms me down, especially before I go to bed. On the road, evenings usually consist of supper with my team. I eat something off the menu. I’m a light sleeper and I have recurring nightmares. One is that the horses aren’t there. The most awful one is a bull that chases me into the car, back to the hotel, and there’s nothing I can do to stop it, until I wake up with a start.
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