People who introduce themselves with facts like these ARE the normal ones.
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And this is why nothing feels authentic anymore.
A lizard alien with her mask partially torn off from "V."
This is her vibe.
Yes. "Healing." ๐
The only correct answer is "nothing."
That's what she...wait.
That Google link is pushing spyware.
TIL protein soda existed. The horrors persist.
youtu.be/CKzbBhtNmvw?...
He just joined the club of hack directors. The founding member is Michael Bay.
Today I went into a gas station to buy a Coke Zero. They were selling "erotic whipped cream."
Who walks into a gas station and goes, "I'll take $20 on pump 7, a vape cartridge, a can of Monster Energy, and oh, yeah, that EROTIC WHIPPED CREAM"?
I hope horse gets carrot cake.
Who doesn't?
I'd prefer if Roberts could see it coming. Like Viggo's bitch son in John Wick.
Watching the Thoreau documentary?
She closes with Socrates. For him, Pg 172, "gaining new information [is]...summoning wisdom from our deepest selves." Dark moods teach us that, "we will never be all light, no matter how long we starve ourselves."
So don't run or hide from dark moods. Learn from them.
She's correct. 4/4
The puppeteers are the self-help gurus, the chronically optimistic, and blathering clergy who peddle optimism in the face of real pain, grief, anxiety and suffering. They offer mere shadows to distract us from paying attention to our dark moods and perhaps learning from them. 3/
Page 13, "All this time, we have been taught to be biased against darkness when there was a far more tangible source of danger of living in Plato's cave: The puppeteers. It was their job to fool the prisoners into thinking that shadows were real objects." 2/
The cover of "Night Vision" by Mariana Alessandri. The cover has dark blue circles on a background of light pink and orange. It's like seeing a black hole at sunset.
In January, I read "Night Vision -- Seeing Ourselves Through Dark Moods" by Mariana Alessandri. In it, Prof. Alessandri recounts six stories of six philosophers each who contended with anger, suffering, grief, depression, and anxiety. Through those stories, we see that dark moods make us human. 1/
Isn't that how you're delivered on to the Running Man course?
I should probably be on a statin?
Not only will you cut a bitch, you'll stitch 'em back together. You're good like that.
The cover of "Fool on the Hill" by Matt Ruff.
This was given to me a a gift. I treasure it.
Is the goal gravitational pull?
Welcome back. You were missed.
A tepidly-worded statement from Schumer in 5...4...3...