"Just in case you're wondering, they've got us pinned terribly."
Once I was in a class, and it was the best class ever. It was Latin class. I and four of my friends embarked on a journey that proved to be life-changing, at least for me. Luna Cogitationis is Latin, and it means Thoughts of the Moon. Or Imagination of the Moon.
I don't really know what this blog will entail... Having a blog always seemed narcissistic to me. Apparently I fall in the ranks of the narcissists. Oh well.
"The thing about getting something you want... It has to want to be gotten. Or its not what you wanted in the first place." --Serena Paige
When someone wants a piece of fruit, they go and get a piece of fruit.
When someone wants a piece of vegetable, they go and get a piece of vegetable.
I don't think it matters whether or not the said foods want to be gotten or not.
But you know, something different happens when we're talking about people.
If someone wants another person, its not just a simple matter of going and getting them-- as much as I'd actually like to think that. I see things in black and white. Give me a gray area; I'll give you a line. But people aren't like that. People are complex. People can't be stereotyped. People can't be put in a category.
I like categories. When everything is in a category, its safe. I know where it is. You should see my Microsoft Word folders-- everything is divided into categories, sub-categories, sub-sub-categories, et cetera (<--Which is Latin, by the way). The problem comes when people begin going into those categories. Because a category can never fully cover a person. Dangerous, to think that it can.
Hm. This was a test of The Blog. My conclusion: Blogs are narcissistic. I just spent a lot of space here. For what purpose? No one honestly cares about this. Oh well. I think my final conclusion will be as follows.
The blog is not for the reader; the blog is for the writer.
So I guess I'm gonna take advantage of that.
vanessa ((
I agree. Spot on.
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