say say my playmate

month

November 2011

i was all excited my live-in landlord got a job as a trucker because he’ll be away overnight sometimes and won’t be fucking loud for once and i can get a full night sleep during a weekday for the first time in 2 months…

but now he had a shitty day and had to postpone his first day of work. i was all sympathetic but really i’m just sorry for myself because he doesn’t shut the fuck up. i get up at 6:30am for work (not this week but generally), it’s 11pm and his tv is on so loud my desk is shaking every time a car explodes in whatever he’s watching. normally i am okay telling him to be quiet (well, to turn down his TV, but he walks so loud & slams doors i still wake up every fucking night at least once or twice between 2am and 4am) but he’s drinking with a buddy and i really just don’t want to engage in any sort of interaction with them in that situation. drunk men that i don’t know, no thanx, locking my door and not coming out

earplugs are only so effective

Oct 31, 2011-1 notes
#fuck student living
Oct 31, 201129 notes

October 2011

Build your own chopper

topherchris:

jonjohns65:

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Oct 31, 20112,120 notes
“I think the roots of this antagonism to science run very deep. They’re ancient. We see them in Genesis, this first story, this founding myth of ours, in which the first humans are doomed and cursed eternally for asking a question, for partaking of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. It’s puzzling that Eden is synonymous with paradise when, if you think about it at all, it’s more like a maximum-security prison with twenty-four hour surveillance. It’s a horrible place.” —

Ann Druyan (via cocknbull)

“ignorance is bliss”

Oct 31, 201172 notes
Oct 31, 201150,477 notes
“

ZOMBIES DON’T RUN!

I know it is absurd to debate the rules of a reality that does not exist, but this genuinely irks me. You cannot kill a vampire with an MDF stake; werewolves can’t fly; zombies do not run. It’s a misconception, a bastardisation that diminishes a classic movie monster. The best phantasmagoria uses reality to render the inconceivable conceivable. The speedy zombie seems implausible to me, even within the fantastic realm it inhabits. A biological agent, I’ll buy. Some sort of super-virus? Sure, why not. But death? Death is a disability, not a superpower. It’s hard to run with a cold, let alone the most debilitating malady of them all.

More significantly, the fast zombie is bereft of poetic subtlety. As monsters from the id, zombies win out over vampires and werewolves when it comes to the title of Most Potent Metaphorical Monster. Where their pointy-toothed cousins are all about sex and bestial savagery, the zombie trumps all by personifying our deepest fear: death. Zombies are our destiny writ large. Slow and steady in their approach, weak, clumsy, often absurd, the zombie relentlessly closes in, unstoppable, intractable.

However (and herein lies the sublime artfulness of the slow zombie), their ineptitude actually makes them avoidable, at least for a while. If you’re careful, if you keep your wits about you, you can stave them off, even outstrip them - much as we strive to outstrip death. Drink less, cut out red meat, exercise, practice safe sex; these are our shotguns, our cricket bats, our farmhouses, our shopping malls. However, none of these things fully insulates us from the creeping dread that something so witless, so elemental may yet catch us unawares - the drunk driver, the cancer sleeping in the double helix, the legless ghoul dragging itself through the darkness towards our ankles.

”
—Simon Pegg (via wombatfractal)
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