woah. just enough time to take a breath...
i have holes. gaps. dead space. i need to do a defragment.
today was hectic. here, there and everywhere... sand is the only drawback on going to the beach.
saturday night was awesome. mstrkrft were awesome. so was ajax.
You just got killed by a Daewoo Lanos, motherfucker!!
i need sleep.
question i have been pondering this week:
*do whales sleep? if so, how and where? (i know in the ocean but where int he ocean, floatingon the top? down lower?)
i have holes. gaps. dead space. i need to do a defragment.
today was hectic. here, there and everywhere... sand is the only drawback on going to the beach.
saturday night was awesome. mstrkrft were awesome. so was ajax.
You just got killed by a Daewoo Lanos, motherfucker!!
i need sleep.
question i have been pondering this week:
*do whales sleep? if so, how and where? (i know in the ocean but where int he ocean, floatingon the top? down lower?)
What happens there is
interesting: half of the brain seems to sleep at a time, with the two
havles switching off. This makes sense, because all cetaceans (whales,
dolphins and porpoises) are voluntary breathers - that is, they have to
think to breathe. We don't - we breathe automatically. But a diving
animal that spends lots of time underwater obviously needs to have
control over its breathing. Therefore, if the entire brain shut down
(as it does in people) the whale would presumably forget to breathe. So
what we think currently is that half the brain sleeps while the other
half stays alert to keep track of respiration. This is probably what
all whales and dolphins (including killer whales) do, but no one knows
for sure.
interesting.....