This is CRAZY!!! Watch these videos all in order.
The Message: Style, quality, and price matters. Everyday matters. Buy what matters. You will miss out on saving money if you don’t buy today.
The Message: You know you have enough stuff, right?
This is CRAZY!!! Watch these videos all in order.
The Message: Style, quality, and price matters. Everyday matters. Buy what matters. You will miss out on saving money if you don’t buy today.
The Message: You know you have enough stuff, right?
I’m a frequenter of DeviantArt. I don’t just display my artwork, I usually try to keep an eye on what’s going on in the forums and in the news. I haven’t been there in a while because of work and all those wonderful little distractions that distract me from other distractions. When I first got involved in the social aspect of deviantArt I began to migrate from the general movies and books forums to the complaints section. I don’t know why I was so attracted to it, I guess I’m a tad grumpy at times. I guess I’m a tad pessimistic at times. The complaints forum opened me up to a whole world of counter-underground-”hacker”-culture. I have to admit, I was slightly dazzled by the idea of this subculture. I’m the kind of girl who has a bit of a libertarian-anarchist streak and it comes up at the most inquisitive or rebellious times. All the inside jokes made me want to be a part of it. I thought it was just some hidden group of people on deviantArt. I thought that it went deeper into the history of THAT website. Well it did, sorta. Read the rest of this entry »
Sometimes things seem to happen to me that would only happen a book. Maybe it’s a slight case of paranoia (which I’m pretty sure I suffer from), but I’m under the most acute impression that my life is playing out like a very long (and a little bit boring) work of fiction. Things just seem to happen to me, things that seem connected even on the lowest scale of relevance to me. For instance, The Bread Truck.
The Bread Truck is a short Mrs. Bairds truck. It turned up in my neighborhood a month ago and I thought it was quite odd. I began to notice that it would park in front of several houses and then rest at one house in the front of my neighborhood. At the time I didn’t think too much about this except that it was slightly peculiar. Then I began to notice this same truck every where I went. I would see it behind me in traffic. I would see it parked at the Dollar Store. I would see it leaving the Subway. And I continued to see it drive past my house. Now, this is a very short bread truck and I still don’t understand it’s recent activity in my small town.
The Bread Truck’s debut in my blog is because of today’s catastrophe. Yes, a huge catastrophe in my neighborhood. The Bread Truck decided to run into… The Mail Boxes. Now, if that’s not weird enough (The Mail Boxes are a good ways away from the road and The Bread Truck is road sized.) The Bread Truck didn’t run into all of The Mail Boxes and it didn’t run into just anyone’s mailbox, no, The Bread Truck ran into our mailboxes (my grandmother’s and mine). See picture.
So, do any of you have a bread truck hell bent on your destruction?
I am reading way too much of Lord of the Rings.
The Bread Truck = Ringwraiths! Oh dear sweet baby jesus!
The “23 Enigma” is the Discordian belief that all events are connected to the number 23, given enough ingenuity on the part of the interpreter. It can be seen in Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea’s Illuminatus! trilogy (there called the “23/17 phenomenon”), Wilson’s Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of the Illuminati (there called “The Law of 23s” and “The 23 Enigma”), Arthur Koestler’s Challenge of Chance, as well as the Principia Discordia.