thatslikeyouropinionman
Thatslikeyouropinionman
thatslikeyouropinionman

Fucking Disney World. I had an inkling that it would be nasty, but urns out I underestimated its hellishness.

All that yoga has really paid off for you!

Please elaborate.

LinkedIn invites every 15 seconds.

Would read regularly.

I haven’t read it yet, but there’s a new book out called something like ‘The Indo-European Controversy’ by Asya Pereltsvaig and someone else. It looked interesting from my 2 minutes of leafing through it.

If you like linguistics, you’re already cool. Don’t let me ruin your PIE party!

I’m relieved. And you are right, because Good & Plenty is naaaasty.

Come on, leave the PIE for granddad and come dive into Proto-Tibeto-Burman or Proto-Nilo-Saharan with the cool kids.

I’m confused. Is the special place in your heart or in hell? Is your heart in hell, or is there a hell in your heart? Please let it be that there is a special place in hell for Good and Plenty, and that your heart is not in hell, because Clive Barker explained how that turns out and ouch.

Shh.

I know someone who’s all of the above!

The books are so unedited and so damn loooooong. The show is ok, although it lost me last season or this season, I forget.

Ok, so I live in a country in which Starbucks failed abjectly because (1) their coffee grosses out the people who live here and (2) no one was willing to work their corporate way, mainly because no one could compute doing busy work if there’s no work to do, which they seemed to require at the time. Therefore: no

Why aren’t more people discussing this comment? It is a very important comment. Not being sarcastic.

I’ll tell you what’s harassment: the radio playing first ‘From a Distance’ and then ‘I miss you like crazy,’ and me being too lazy to get up to switch that damn thing off or to a different station.

Amen amen amen amen amen amen amen amen, this brought tears to my eyes from how right-fucking-on you are.

Silly and cheap, but I laughed out loud!

I culled a lot of books recently and gave them to the local bookstore. Similar criteria: if I love it and might re-read it, then I keep it forever and ever. The rest can go. Until a friend’s 15 year old bookworm son, who is EXCITED about 20th century European novels, came over. He got pretty much the whole load of the