somethinglessstupid replied to your post “monkey island is such a good game”
the first computer game I ever played
same!!
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somethinglessstupid replied to your post “monkey island is such a good game”
the first computer game I ever played
same!!
somethinglessstupid replied to your post “My frickin’ upstairs neighbour always stomps around her apartment and...”
we walk with PURPOSE (I stompwalk too and honestly I don't know why or how long I've been doing it)
Maybe it’s a genetic thing. Like the whole “you can either roll your tongue or your can’t” thing. Maybe stomp-walking (love that phrase btw haha) is a coded in our DNA ><
somethinglessstupid replied to your post “I finally bought overwatch yesterday!!!!”
on pc????
on ps4!!!
somethinglessstupid replied to your post:somethinglessstupid replied to...
Culturally appropriating eyebrows. Something that happens naturally to you. That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.
yeah body hair is not culture...literally anyone could have thick or thin brows but like some people are more prone to it than others. I got teased just as much as “your people” half of whom have thin ass brows. Like I know you want to own a fashion trend thats based off something you got made fun of for as a kid but when its something so stupid thats not culture specific AT FUCKING ALL you’re just an attention seeking “SJW” tumblr wank joke.
Cthulhu, mutant spider
cthulhu:do you like the ocean? why or why not?
bitch i looove the ocean. its life and death, peace and turmoil, cleansing and destruction. it never has one colour...the more you stare at the more alive it comes and the more it changes. the ocean is perfect. its secrets are perfect. its beauty and devastation are perfect.
mutant spider:what is one of your biggest fears?
FUCKIN SPIDERSalso rejection/failure
that awkward moment when your most awesome followers are Elliot, Brandon, Libby, Jamie, and fifteen-year-old girls. hahaha. Taylor Swift and teen wolf pack probz. This obvi doesn’t include the ppl i know in real life. yall are the real mvps.
somethinglessstupid replied to your post “Who wants to take an impromptu trip to Antarctica because it is SO...”
every now and then I check job postings down there
Is “hanging out with penguins” a job? Because I’ll take it.
i've never seen cosmos. either version.
Well firstly, Carl Sagan has a voice of thick, dewey drops of sarsaparilla that you could gently lull you into slumber (you dont even know how many times I’ve thought of him reading me a bedtime story or just talking about space. Him and Bob Ross, man, I wish they were my dads) and though he was a scientist he possessed the soul of a poet. There was no greater beauty in life than the science behind things to Carl, he lived not to accumulate knowledge but to continuously ask more questions. Carl Sagan didn’t look at what we knew of the Universe and shuddered or shied away, he wanted to know what was lurking in all the dark corners, he wanted to shine a light on every void, every abyss, every black hole. He believed there was an elegance to the randomness of things, that in all the Universes, in all the Galaxies, in all the Star Systems, an absolutely cosmic-defying series of events coalesced and created us, that was the true miracle to him. Faith, to Carl Sagan, was not that everything was orchestrated, or had a grand plan behind him, faith was that the Universe will always contain within it the possibility of something marvelous and if we’re daring enough, we might just be able to bare witness to it.
Cosmos was an extension of that belief, an effort to make space more accessible to the masses, like art. There is no part of the original series that isn’t dripping with Carl Sagan’s love for all things, regardless of scale. I highly recommend it. The newer series with Neil Degrasse Tyson has, obviously, much better technology to work with and a few paces farther in knowledge to impart, but does an excellent job of connecting often overlooked advances in human development to the men and women who dared to dream them (the actual people, not the ones history remembers). Both are full of imagination and zest for the unknown yet manage to make the rigid scientific method an adventure.