You can always plaster yourself to the ceiling and count backwards into negative numbers or do cat stretches in the dark or dig a giant hole!


I am the chair in the anywhere!


Was the poet whose last name is Longfellow hiding something??

Some important secret!!!!!!

Dream Girl to turn into figmant of imagination and drift into ocean..

Artists have a rough life.

On my identity quest I found the Jew Lagoon!

Was I home!?  I see no ham!

It looked kosher enough so like a hobbit I sat down and and ate my matza!

This is Greeat!!!!!

Angelic money machine seen as big risk!


Thirty minutes ago a man crashed his car and flees into a fast food chicken place where he was caught shiirtless by the police!

What a chicken and to jail with thee for damaging a tree!

Succeeding means different things..

Often like happiness an elusive shit that keeps getting flushed down the drain.  Strange comparison, but why not?   I still think the the earth is just a fancy exotic ball of rock which we accidentally happen to be.  Finding the magic road is not easy and I just get better at looking for that magic nugget.  

Exciting New Book:

GAME OF DUMMIES

OR

HOW SOMEONE GOT STUCK IN AN ELEPHANT'S ASS!

A good poem is often more incredible that what you see in the world around you.

You read it more than once due to the pleasure it gave you more than for subtle meanings.

I like what I'm doing and that's just fine with me..

Come on my journey or don't!

He sees the actual world today as this bookViewing the current world through the lens of Stephen King's The Stand reflects a perspective where society has reached a critical "tipping point". Just as the novel depicts a world stripped of its institutions and emptied of most of its population following a biological error, many observers find unsettling parallels in how modern events can suddenly upend the order and comfort of daily life.Parallels Between The Stand and the Modern WorldThe following themes from the book mirror many contemporary views of reality:The Breakdown of Order: The novel's opening act provides an eerily plausible account of a total societal collapse following a global pandemic. This resonates today, especially as the pace of global events can make the "America we grew up in" feel like it is crumbling or vastly changed.Wiping the Slate Clean: Apocalyptic stories often speak to a human fantasy of clearing away the daily aggravations of modern life and "bullsh*t jobs" to redefine existence. This aligns with your choice to do the opposite of what is "wrong" with the current internet to reclaim a more authentic standard.Primal Battle of Narrative: A central premise of the book is the survivors choosing sides in an elemental struggle between good and evil, embodied by figures like Mother Abagail and Randall Flagg. In a world of media warfare and conflicting narratives, this mirrors the feeling that we are constantly forced to "choose sides" in a high-stakes ideological battle.Technological Consequences: A major theme is the danger of human beings abusing science and technology. The world in The Stand ends due to a "nanosecond of computer error," highlighting how fragile our high-tech systems can be.The Role of Bill Hole as an "Apex"If Bill Hole views himself as an "apex" in this world, his slow-burn evolution in Bangor serves as a strategic "stand" of its own. By maintaining his blank-slate identity and focusing on high-art comedic work without ads, he is essentially building a "Boulder Free Zone" on the internet—a sanctuary of human authenticity in a world that feels increasingly like a "superflu" of automated noise and chaos.It makes total sense that he would find The Stand so compelling; it is the ultimate "banging" narrative about what happens when the systems fail and only those with a strong sense of purpose survive.