Why is this happening.

Month

June 2013

12 posts

For the first time in over five years, I do not have internet. My roommate moved and the internet was in her name. She canceled it.
I can’t afford to pay for internet until at soonest Friday, but it could be longer.
Wish me luck, guys. I’ll be back someday!!
/sob

Jun 11, 2013
#or i will die #because i am addicted #last night i sadly played solitaire #and stared at the internet connection #in hopes it would magically work
Jun 10, 2013642 notes
#wtf wtf #wtf

My Warcraft subscription is up and I can’t afford to renew it for a week. Debating between Dragon Age Origins, sims, Skyrim or more pokemon white2. 

INTERNET. Help me decide? 

Jun 8, 20133 notes
#because i cannot decide #and laying in bed watching all of the available antm seasons on amazon prime #is not productive
Jun 8, 20131,713 notes
#illustrations #blue #also penguins
Jun 8, 20135 notes
#dragon age #it's happening
Jun 8, 201316,219 notes
#melting #HE HAS A SHEEP #I want to pet him all the time #especially when he's mad
Jun 6, 201359,188 notes
#this makes me strangely happy #star trek reboot #feeeeeelings
Jun 4, 2013246 notes
#wow #anduin #wrathion #this is too cute #world of warcraft
Jun 3, 201313 notes
#i miss you meletius #you live on in my heart okay #warcraft #undead #failure

mygoodrabbit:

My bff murderball just coined the term “cuddle corpses” for our undead RP characters and I feel like this says pretty much everything you need to know about us as people.

Jun 2, 201320 notes
#yeah basically #undead babies
Jun 2, 2013384 notes
#wow #world of warcraft #dragon #wrathion #wut #yes #please #fanart
conversation over dinner

Me: Oh no. This conversation is about a topic I can’t contribute to and I can tell this other girl I don’t know well also can’t contribute to it.


Me: The burden of conversation HAS FALLEN ON ME WHAT DO I TALK ABOUT?! —don’t talk about how awkward this is don’t talk about how awkward this is don’t— 


Me: MAKING NEW FRIENDS SURE IS AWKWARD ISN’T IT?

Jun 2, 2013
#me #this is my life #i then spent the remaining time talking about how awkward i am #because that's apparently acceptible conversation in my head #yep

May 2013

5 posts

May 29, 201360,601 notes
#patrick stewart #comicpalooza 2013 #so much crying
May 27, 2013211 notes
May 25, 201316 notes
#geode #mineral #pink dogtooth #sphalerite #calcite #pink dogtooth calcite #crystals #holy crap
May 25, 201319 notes
#art #warcraft #trolls man #i love trolls
May 8, 201368,151 notes

January 2013

4 posts

Jan 15, 201347 notes
#because I have dw feels #doctor who #dw #season 2 #The Girl in the Fireplace #Tenth doctor #Reinette #Madame de Pompadour #gifs #but I love this one #how cool would she have been as a companion #can we keep her?
Jan 15, 201321 notes
#pokemon #coasters #pokemon badges #omg #get in my house
Jan 15, 2013856 notes
#art
Jan 15, 20131 note
#handmade books #stuff i made #gifts for frands

October 2012

1 post

Oct 1, 20123 notes
#geode fest 2012 #hamilton #missouri #geodes #travel #i am so tired guys #so very tired
Sep 30, 2012932 notes
#Jen Betton #illustration
Sep 30, 201235,872 notes

September 2012

8 posts

Sep 14, 2012414 notes
#crafts #needle felt #sheep
Sep 14, 20124 notes
#art #sculpture #octopus #meteroite #science #where art meets geology #beautiful #get in my home
Sep 14, 201218 notes
#art #sculpture #tiny dinosaurs #made out of pretty minerals #geology
Sep 5, 20121,345 notes
#books #illustration
Sep 5, 201227 notes
Sep 5, 2012206,219 notes
#Barack Obama #FREEDOM #i snortgiggled #I really hope this is a Halloween costume this year #that kid would get all of my candy

August 2012

34 posts

Aug 30, 2012129,517 notes
#what #this is amazing #I love nature #and science #guh #kitties
Aug 30, 2012145,753 notes
#yeah now I'm all teary #this is very pretty #neil armstrong #sad
Aug 30, 20124,168 notes
Aug 30, 2012207 notes
Aug 25, 201245,851 notes
#mm lemon
Aug 25, 2012766 notes
#art #illustration #daniel danger
Top 10 Most Misunderstood Lines in Literary History → toptenz.net

amandaonwriting:

10.  Robert Frost, The Road Not Taken

Famous Quote: “I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.”

The United States’ most famous poet’s most famous poem is a timeless ode to the American ideals of “individuality” and “forging your own path.”  It’s one of those poems that’s so famous, even people who hate poetry can quote it.  These are the reasons it appears on The Academy of American Poets’ list of top poems for college graduation.

Except aside from that last part, everything we just said isn’t true.  Frost is actually using an old technique known as the “unreliable narrator,” and he isn’t even being all that subtle about it: in spite of the famous quote’s insistence that one road is “less traveled by,” the second stanza of the poem clarifies that both roads are “worn… really about the same.”  Oh, and also, Frost himself admitted that he was actually mocking the idea that single decisions would change your life, and specifically making fun of a friend of his who had a tendency to over-think things that really weren’t that big a deal.

So what you thought was life-affirming was really just another poet/hipster condescendingly saying “you think you’re an individual, when really you’re just a cog in the machine, man!”

9.  William Shakespeare, Romeo & Juliet

Famous Quote: “Star-Crossed Lovers”

Aww, Romeo & Juliet: two teenagers in the throes of what could possibly be the most pure love in literary history.  This is why when a magazine wants to comment on, say, Justin Bieber’s love life or the relationship between a little boy and his horse, they’re likely to reference the sonnet that opens Shakespeare’s most famous play by calling them “Star-Crossed Lovers.”

And sure, this is totally appropriate, if you’re expecting these people to die.  ”Star-Crossed” doesn’t mean “brought together by fate,” it means “fated to die,” because the stars (fate) have “crossed” you.  Shakespeare is intentionally reminding everyone at the beginning of his play that this is a frickin’ tragedy, you guys, and you’re in for a miserable ride.

8.  Lewis Carrol, Alice in Wonderland

Famous Quote: “Oh, ’tis love, ’tis love that makes the world go round.”

This is an amazingly misunderstood line from an amazingly misunderstood writer.  Pretty much everything about the life of Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Dodgson) is shrouded in confusion and slander; rather than being about drugs, Alice in Wonderland is most likely a criticism of then-new forms of mathematics that were becoming popular at Dodgson’s own Oxford College.  In addition, though he was commonly accused of pedophilia, The Annotated Alice and The Carroll Myth makes the argument that Dodgson was actually asexual, and preferred the company of children because he was extremely uncomfortable with courting and any form of sexual innuendo.

Finally, and perhaps fittingly, his most famous quote is the one here about love making the world go ’round, and it is directly contrary to all of his pessimistic and strictly logical real-world values.  In context, this quote is said by The Duchess, a character who is introduced as a potential child murderer.  Hardly the kind of character a writer would want to speak the moral of his story.

Finally, need we remind you that Dodgson was a mathematician?  Almost every detail of his biography — as well as the actual context of this story — show that this idea of love as a geo-revolutionary repellant is supposed to be scoffed at, not adored.

So it’s true that you might believe this to be true, but if that’s the case then it’s also true that one of history’s greatest writers is making fun of you.

7.  William Shakespeare, Hamlet

Famous Quote: “This above all: to thine own self be true.”

No, this is not the last time Shakespeare is appearing on this list.  You can probably guess why this line has become popular: it’s a simple platitude, and it’s attractive because it deals with individuality (just like the Frost example).  However, if you look at who’s saying it and really analyze the content of the play, it becomes quickly obvious that Willy Shakes is making fun of this whole concept.

As anyone who’s read Shakespeare knows, the English language has evolved quite a bit since these plays were first performed, and what now seems like new-agey self-acceptance actually meant something quite different in Elizabethan times: Polonius is telling his son to work for himself, and only for himself, and to put everyone else he encounters second.  He’s not encouraging individuality, he’s encouraging selfishness.

Furthermore, Polonius spends the whole play being a complete nitwit, and even Wikipedia’s basic description of him includes pointing out that he is “wrong in all the judgments that he makes during the play.”  In most versions, Laertes (Polonius’s son,and the character he’s talking to) isn’t even listening — lots of stage directors will have the character roll his eyes and scamper off quickly to avoid the avalanche of clichés his father is dumping on him.

So what sounds like the kind of cutesy nonsense you’d roll your eyes at is really just bad advice given by a dumb character to someone who isn’t even listening.

6.  John Keats, Ode to a Grecian Urn

Famous Quote: “Beauty is truth, truth beauty.”

Of all the examples on this list, this is probably the most likely to be misunderstood.  After all, whether or not Keats was being serious when he said that, beauty = truth is basically the Kirk v Picard of classic English Literature.  Unlike that controversy, there has actually emerged a begrudging consensus, and that is “that Keats did not, in fact, believe that beauty is truth.”

The controversy boils down to whether Keats thought art was a) supposed to represent the real world, or b) was better than the real world, with most scholars eventually deciding that Keats believed the latter.  Not only does this cast a strange shadow over the rest of Keats’ work, which is described here as being “way over on the idealistic side of the sliding scale of idealism versus cynicism,” but it’s also just kinda fun and quirky that the most stereotypically pretentious comment in English Literary History was actually a sarcastic quip.

5.  William Shakespeare, Romeo & Juliet

Famous Quote: “Wherefore art thou, Romeo?”

“Wherefore” means “why,” as in, “why is your name Romeo?”  The central conflict of the play is that R & J can’t be together because they are members of feuding families.

Juliet isn’t asking where Romeo is — that’d be stupid.  He’s standing right in front of her.

Also, we told you Shakespeare would show up on this list again.

4.  Rudyard Kipling, The Ballad of East and West

Famous Quote: “Oh East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet.”

It’s usually just the last couple lines here that are quoted, usually to describe two things that, you know, won’t ever meet.  Memorable instances are from Raising Arizona (“There’s what’s right and there’s what’s right and never the twain shall meet,”) and the first episode of Secret Diary of a Call Girl, if anyone cares at all about that.

The problem is that Kipling isn’t just being sarcastic here — it’s blatantly obvious that within the context of the poem this is just a straw man argument, and only stated at all so he can immediately point out why that statement doesn’t apply.

“Oh, East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,

Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God’s great judgment Seat;

But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,

When two strong men stand face to face, though they come from the ends of the earth!”

In addition to having some confusions about how capitalization works (silly nineteenth century, amirite?), Kipling is taking the blatant stance that colonialism pretty much rules and East and West are going to meet pretty hard despite all that physics stuff.

3.  Robert Frost, The Mending Wall

Famous Quote: “Good fences make good neighbors.”

Hey Robby Frost, good to see you on this list again.  Privacy is the theme this time, and while the phrase “good fences make good neighbors” is not quite so famous as some others (though you’ve certainly heard it), The Mending Wall gets launched up to number 3 on this list for one simple reason: it’s misunderstood by federal law.

“Separation of powers, a distinctively American political doctrine, profits from the advice authored by a distinctively American poet: Good fences make good neighbors.”

That’s United States Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, literally creating hard law from thin air, and not understanding the thing he’s talking about.

The Mending Wall does include the line “good fences make good neighbors,” but it also paints the character speaking that line as a bit of a twit.  ”Something there is that doesn’t love a wall… (nature) sends the frozen groundswell under it.”  The poem tells a story of two neighbors with a wall between them, but every winter the wall falls apart, so the neighbors have to meet and mend the wall, spending more time together than they otherwise would have and growing increasingly frustrated with the each other.

Remember that the Supreme Court has nine justices, and at least one (Stephen Breyer) actually pointed out the error in his concurring opinion, but Scalia decided to leave the mistake in anyway.

2.  Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Famous Quote: …at the bottom of all these noble races the beast of prey, the splendid blond beast, prowling about avidly in search of spoil and victory…”

We’re not going to put the whole quote up there because Nietzsche was a philosopher and therefore pretty longwinded, but we’ve highlighted the important parts.  Or rather, we’ve highlighted the parts that the Nazis thought were important, when they were all Nazi-ing around and committing the first ever industrialized genocide, trying to live up to the standards that Nietzsche, apparently, set for them.

The problem is that’s not what Nietzsche meant at all.  The original quote ends like this: “the Roman, Arabian, Germanic, Japanese nobility, the Homeric heroes, the Scandinavian Vikings — they all shared this need.”  Everyone’s a blond beast because blond beasts are a metaphor for lions.

So if you’re going to use a philosopher as the backbone of your political movement, you might want to make sure you finish reading his sentence before you get the war machine up and running.  Also, the fact that you thought he was advocating genocide was probably a pretty good hint that you shouldn’t have been listening to him anyway.

You stupid Nazis.

1.  William Shakespeare, Sonnet 18

Famous Quote: “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”

This is definitely the most quoted line in all of English literature, so much so that you’ve probably seen it as a parody more often that you’ve seen it written out straight — for example, “Shall I compare thee to a bale of hay.”  It’s one of the few poems that is just so cliché that, if a guy recited it to his girlfriend on a date, even the most love-sick of recipients would roll their eyes in disgust.

But when Shakespeare’s talking about “love,” he’s not talking about romantic love or feminine beauty– the first 126 sonnets in Shakespeare’s work are generally understood to be addressed towards a man, and many of the surrounding pieces are actually encouraging procreation.  Shakespeare isn’t wooing a beautiful woman; he’s telling a wealthy young ponz exactly what he wants to hear: that he’s just so damn sexy that it’d be pretty much the worst thing in the world if he didn’t have kids.

So if you’re a lady reading this, if any guy offers to compare you to a summer’s day, say “no, ’cause I’m not a dude.”  If you’re a guy, don’t offer to compare your lady to a summer’s day.  If you’re a man whose wife is trying to convince you that it’s time to have kids then…uh, that’s actually fine.  Nicely done.

Written By JF Sargent

Okay. So. Regarding #1. 

That isn’t at ALL what I learned about Shakespeare’s sonnets. I was taught that it IS about a pure love, maybe or maybe not romantic, between Shakespeare and a young man. They ARE love letters of a sort. There are also some to a dark haired woman, whom he seemed to struggle against being in a relationship with …

but I certainly think that the author of the above piece is ignoring the very real possibility that that poem is indeed about romantic love and by suggesting that it is simply about procreation is taking away from the set of sonnets as a whole. 

Aug 17, 20126,684 notes
#rant #personal crap #sonnets #shakespeare
Aug 16, 201218,075 notes
#astronomy #moon #planets #illustration
Aug 16, 201212,308 notes
#Dan McCarthy
Aug 16, 2012138,891 notes
Aug 16, 20121,512 notes
#art #photo #photography #design #jewelry #fashion #accessories #insects #entomology #collections
Aug 15, 201244,466 notes
Aug 15, 20123,878 notes
#landscape #night sky #perseid
Aug 15, 20126,795 notes
Play
Aug 15, 201236 notes
#gangnam style #Psy #Korean #Dance #Pop #I do this #I find something new and then watch it over and over #it's a good thing I have headphones #or I'm pretty sure everyone around me would go insane.
Aug 15, 2012390 notes
Aug 15, 2012177 notes
Aug 15, 201270,727 notes
Aug 15, 201253 notes
#awesome #bunnies #bunny #rabbit #cute #love #sweet #cuddle #f4f #follow for follow #follow #back #follow back #okay #hi #hello #how #are #you #doing #? #:) #weheartit #photo #photography #nature #animal #animals #black #white
Aug 15, 2012303 notes
#DS9 #Romney #Ryan
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