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Strangely enough, I get more comments since I write shorter entries.... could it be the secret for success?
surreal
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theoriginalsin:
Americans have short attention spans. Just like most kids.
morgan:
(((hug)))
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Same as last week... except it's fucking hot now (it's the weather I'm speaking of).
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rawr_ima_monster:
oh no....what if that DOES happen? it would terrible...I might actually get something good! aaaaaah!
-ew, heat.
Dave
adam12:
merci...you're welcome to come by anytime...
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robot I still have tons of drawing to do... don't be upset, folks, if I'm a bit slow at answering...
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verystrange:
hey tororo
thank you for your support. My last two exams went much better than the previous ones. Those were probably the last exams of that kind I shall ever take in my life which makes me kind of nostalgic!
I have also just been to my last University ska night ever in the UK which makes me sad but also excited about the prospects of something else to do!
morgan:
ooooh! i should send you some pictures of the fireflies on the farm where i grew up. I don't know if the picture would capture the real thing but perhaps they would. Although having you for a visit to see the fireflies would be much more fun!
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"Father Wolf looked on amazed. He had almost forgotten the days when he won Mother Wolf in fair fight from five other wolves, when she ran with the Pack and was not called "The Demon" for compliment's sake".

Something happened, finally... a question asked by ratsonjulia led me to the decision of re-reading Kipling.... as soon as possible.

whatever
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knecht:
Hello yerself there, Tororo.

I just remebered something. I wonder if ratsonjulia has ever read F. Paul Wilson's The Tomb. It's not a very good book, but fairly entertaining. There are these Indian demon creatures in it that I think were called the Rakoshi. Not quite Baksashi or Raksasha, but similar, eh?

P.S. Toshio Saeki makes me feel all weird inside (Good or bad, I can't say).

[Edited on May 29, 2003]
wed:
Je ne sais pas si mes origines viendront ajouter qq chose aux dbats ci-dessus (que mon anglais dfectueux a eu qq problmes a dchiffrer). Mais cherches plutt du ct lorrain-sidrurgie-polak-rital pour mes modestes origines smile quant Kerguelen, ca vient d'une certaine fascination pour ces "iles de la dsolation" wink merci pour ton petit message! Y aurait t'il un website avec tes crations qq part? For the other readers: sorry for not writing in english, it's day off here today and we froggies tend to be lazy in that kind of days...
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Another week spent mostly in front of the drawing table, nothing spectacular happening...
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ratsonjulia:
I think you hit the nail square on the head with the AD&D ref. --when I woke up from the dream the image in my mind was a pen&ink drawing I'm sure came direct from one of the manuals--(incidentally, I think I can out-dork anyone in the room in that I only "role-played" once of twice, but I've read a lot of the manuals & supplementary materials)

'The Jungle Book" has been on my "to read" list for a long time, & I'm going to try & get to it in the next few weeks as one of the projects I've been mulling over concerns a "feral child" in the manner of Mowgli, Tarzan ( & a number of historical precedents), worked around the framework of the "Little Red Riding Hood" Mythos.

good luck with the deadline, eh?
ratsonjulia:
little niece & nephew are addicted to Disney movies, so I've seen the animated Jungle Book a number of times (but not the subsequent live-action versions)--I've got admit a certain fondness for it, mostly for the vocal talents of Phil Harris & Louis Prima (the "I Wanna Be Like You" rocks, if you can shut off a somewhat disturbing latent message that seems buried therein)

I still can't bring myself to watch the animated "Hunchback of Notre Dame", altho I have a certain morbid fascination--I re-read the novel recently, & it seems to me to be about as apt for the "Disney Treatment" (chipper songs, plucky side-kicks) as Stephen King's "The Shining" (which led to the somewhat diverting mental game of "What would the Shining be like, given the Disney treatment?")

& finding "The Hunchback of Notre Dame 2" at the rental place a while back struck me in pretty much the same way as if I'd heard they'd made a "Hamlet 2" (opening with Hamlet & Ophelias wedding)

I suppose I should actually watch them if I'm going to keep bitching about them, but bitching about them gives me a certain comfort, & I shall continue to do so whenever the subject comes up. it's, like, my thing.

[Edited on May 26, 2003]

[Edited on May 26, 2003]
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Today morning, walking in a street in my neighborhood i found out there was a building burnt almost to the ground. The fire started around 1 AM, roughly I hour before I went to sleep, without noticing anything. I was told that the firemen came with their sirens off, according to new regulations about night-time interventions, and extinguished the fire without causing any din.... dans...
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verystrange:
I know what you mean. When we lived in germany, we lived two houses down from a restaurant with two michelin stars. One night I woke up to find my house in uproar and there was a lot of noise everywhere. I was small and didn't have a clue what was happening! I was taken outside by my parents and watched the restaurant burn to the ground. In the next four years it burnt down another three times until they found out it was a kitchen assistant who was part time arsonist. I even once completely slept through it burning down. In the morning, there was only the ash and blackened timber.

Its been rebuilt every time. Does that tell us more about the resilience of the owner and his spirit or about the capitalistic ideals which stand behind such a venture?
flux:
and what a welcome it was; thank you!
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I was caught by surprise by a totally unexpected esthetic emotion, reading, on a miniature train accessories company website (woodlandscenics.com), the descriptive of some new figure sets they proposed for sale (for reasonable prices).


Full Figured Folks
A1845 (HO Scale)

A man and a woman sit on a park bench. The woman holds her popcorn, while the man is totally unaware that a pudgy pug...
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theoriginalsin:
Hey, thanks for the birthday wishes. Good to see you're still around. I finally got back on the net so I'll be around more myself.
nisi:
your favori reminds me of my american uncle in colorado.
you are the sweetest mon ami.
i am so curious about this flying monkey??? do tell.
kissnisi
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Read in "Raed"'s blog:
A conversation overheard by G. while in the Meridian Hotel the Iraqi media center :
Female journalist 1: oh honey how are you? I havent seen you for ages.
Female journalist 2: I think the last time was in Kabul.
Bla bla bla
Bla bla bla
Female journalist 1: have to run now, see you in Pyongyang then, eh?
Female journalist...
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carmele:
Je ne crois pas te l'avoir vraiment dit, mais te lire me fait toujours tres plaisir.
kinto:
Excellent ! (et triste aussi)

K
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Muhammad Dib (French language Algerian writer) died May 03.
As a conclusion of the last interview he gave on Feb. 21 to " Le Monde des Livres", he quoted these verses: "Si ton chant n'est pas plus beau que le silence, alors tais-toi" :...'if your song is not as beautiful as silence, stay silent".
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denk:
No, no further improvements are possible. Now it has to detoriate again into a look-at-my-new-haircolor-and-my-cool-Duffy-Duck-tattoo-on-my-ass-I'm-a-real-rebel-punk-now-journal. eeek

That's a beautiful quote. Maybe in five years, when I'll be able to understand real french I can try to read him. Now I'm still at the stage of "Qu'est-ce que tu fais dans la vie? Je suis mcanicien."
smatt:
Wise words, maybe everyone should have to read that every morning!
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Strawberries!
koolthing:
Is it that time of year already?

I had some beautiful ones in California - but great fruit is not such a treat there

;-)

good to see you back.
morgan:
*rushes out to buy some*