Friday, 27 June 2008

  • frustration frenzy

    It's been a long time since I've written on my xanga.  Looking at my current layout makes me smile but is slightly annoying to look at, so I'll change it... later. 

    Today, many frustrating things occured.  I'm not going to go into detail, but I probably will never have the same relationship with those two people again.  Not like I'm going to miss them because now I realize I shouldn't have even tried to be friends or friendly to these people to begin with.  I guess my reaction is a little immature, but I really can't handle THEM.  (dun dun dunnn)  Then again, putting my phone on silent so i don't hear my phone ringing is really immature but BAH!!  It's summer, and I should be running and playing tennis.  I really would've liked to go to this water balloon bonanza two of my friends held, but that would be strenuous activity.  No strenuous activity for me until Mon. because I had my wisdom teeth pulled.  I must admit that for awhile I thought I was going to die of blood loss from open wounds in my mouth... not a pleasant picture. 

    On a brighter note, it's good to know that I have people on my side against annoying ... pipsqueaks who have no class. 

    Sunday is going to be a ... blast, albeit (hehehe) an awkward blast.

    And I think someone is trying to make my life one irony after another (or maybe that's what happens when you get ... older.  -not like I'm old or anything-).  I was stressing about several things, and I go on Facebook.  BAM!  My fortune on the fortune cookie app is "You only think it's a crisis."  Despite me stressing, I had to laugh because in the grand scheme of life it's not a crisis.  If anything is a crisis it's what this is addressing. http://www.tgm.org/rreymond_islam.html  <-- very enlightening

    Peace. 

    Conscience is the inner voice that warns us somebody may be looking.
    H. L. Mencken (1880 - 1956), A Mencken Chrestomathy (1949)

    harbinger \HAR-bin-juhr\, noun:
    1. (Archaic) One who provides lodgings; especially, the officer of the English royal household who formerly preceded the court when traveling, to provide and prepare lodgings.
    2. A forerunner; a precursor; one that presages or foreshadows what is to come.

    transitive verb:
    1. To signal the approach of; to presage; to be a harbinger of.

    Comets have been mistakenly interpreted by humans in times past as harbingers of doom, foretelling famine, plague, and destruction.
    -- Walter Alvarez, T. Rex and the Crater of Doom

    More than the steamboat, more than anything else, the railroads were the harbinger of the future, and the future was the Industrial Revolution.
    -- Stephen E. Ambrose, Nothing Like It In the World

    The airy draughts felt to him like the undoing of everything, the unfastening of ties, a harbinger of chaos.
    -- Pauline Melville, The Ventriloquist's Tale

    Harbinger, which originally signified a person sent ahead to arrange lodgings, derives from Middle English herbergeour, "one who supplies lodgings," from Old French herbergeor, from herbergier, "to provide lodging for," from herberge, "a lodging, an inn" (cp. modern French auberge), ultimately of Germanic origin.

  • Choose Identity

  • Give eProps (?)

  • Post a Comment

  • Say it with Minis! (?)

  • New! You can now edit your comments for 15 minutes after submitting.

Who recommended?