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Looking for new, fun forums / internet community.

Ever since the forums of quizilla became a ghost town I have been missing it’s community. I thought tumblr was a good replacement, but even though I love reblogging things to please my inner fangirl I miss the talking with others (lets face it the communication options here suck + I haven’t really made any real friends on here either), the debating, book discussions, the writing stories/poetry and the random threats where you can just post fun .. stuff.

I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions where I might go?


chroniclebooks:

What happens when the great minds of Tumblr and Chronicle Books unite? A unicorn is born! Wait, no. Awesome Tumblrs like F*ck! I’m in My Twenties and Dads Are the Original Hipsters become hilarious books.

And now, it could be your turn.

We’re looking for the next big humor book idea. This is your chance to get your idea in front of our editors.

Here’s how it works. Pitch us your laugh-out-loud funny book idea using Tumblr. You can use text, photos, animated gifs, artwork, videos—just get our attention. Then our editors will judge the entries and choose a grand-prize winner whose idea will be considered for publication. You may use an existing Tumblr or create a new Tumblr to illustrate your book idea. Just remember: we’re looking for humor.

To enter, tag a post “Tumblr Book Search” and include:

1)      The title of your humor book

2)      A written synopsis of  your idea (200 words or less)

3)      Examples of the book’s concept (can be photos, animated gifs, artwork, video, text, or any media supported by Tumblr)

Then, hop over here to give us your basic contact information and the link to your post.

Hurry, the contest ends 2/28/2013. Read the official rules and submit your Tumblr entry now!

1 Grand Prize:

·         Book idea considered for publication

·         $300 of Chronicle books

·         Your Tumblr featured on Tumblr Tuesday

·         Feedback session with a Chronicle Books editor

·         Feedback session with Rachel Fershleiser, Tumblr’s Director of Literary Outreach and co-creator of the New York Times Bestselling Six-Word Memoir Book Series

·         And more!

3 Runners-Up:

·         $100 of Chronicle books

·         Written critique from Chronicle Books editors

·         Feedback session with Rachel Fershleiser

Questions? Email contests@chroniclebooks.com

Source : chroniclebooks
x

x

Source : writingprompts

(via clairington)

Source :
fuckyeahspookyshit:
Last year, I spent six months participating in what I was told was a psychological experiment. I found an ad in my local paper looking for imaginative people looking to make good money, and since it was the only ad that week that I was remotely qualified for, I gave them a call and we arranged an interview.
They told me that all I would have to do is stay in a room, alone, with sensors attached to my head to read my brain activity, and while I was there I would visualize a double of myself. They called it my “tulpa.”
It seemed easy enough, and I agreed to do it as soon as they told me how much I would be paid. The next day, I began. They brought me to a simple room and gave me a bed, then attached sensors to my head and hooked them into a little black box on the table beside me. They talked me through the process of visualizing my double again, and explained that if I got bored or restless, instead of moving around, I should visualize my double moving around, or try to interact with him, and so on. The idea was to keep him with me the entire time I was in the room.
I had trouble with it for the first few days. It was more controlled than any sort of daydreaming I’d done before. I’d imagine my double for a few minutes, then grow distracted. By the fourth day, however, I could manage to keep him “present” for the entire six hours. They told me I was doing very well.
The second week, they gave me a different room with wall-mounted speakers. They told me they wanted to see if I could still keep the tulpa with me in spite of distracting stimuli. The music was discordant, ugly, unsettling, and it made the process a little more difficult, but I managed nonetheless. The next week, they played even more unsettling music, punctuated with shrieks, feedback loops, what sounded like an old school modem dialing up and guttural voices speaking some foreign language. I just laughed it off; I was a pro by then.
After about a month, I started to get bored. To liven things up, I started interacting with my doppelganger. we’d have conversations, play rock-paper-scissors, I’d imagine him juggling or break dancing, or whatever caught my fancy. I asked the researchers if my foolishness would adversely affect their study, but they encouraged me.
So, we played and communicated, and that was fun for a while…and then it got a little strange. I was telling him about my first date one day and he corrected me. I’d said my date was wearing a yellow top, and he told me it was a green one. I thought about it for a second and realized he was right. It creeped me out, and after my shift that day I talked to the researchers about it. “You’re using the thought-form to access your subconscious,” they explained. “You knew on some level that you were wrong, and you subconscious corrected yourself.”
What had been creepy was suddenly cool. I was talking to my subconscious! It took some practice, but I found that I could question my tulpa and access all sorts of memories. I could make it quote whole pages of books I’d read once, years before, or things I was taught and immediately forgot in high school. It was awesome.
That was around the time I started “calling up” my double outside of the research center. Not often, at first, but I was so used to imagining him by now that it almost seemed odd not to see him. So, whenever I was bored, I’d visualize my double. Eventually, I started doing it almost all the time. It was amusing to take him along like an invisible friend. I imagined him when I was hanging out with friends, or visiting my mom; I even brought him along on a date once. I didn’t need to speak aloud to him, so I was able to carry out conversations with him and no one was the wiser.
I know that sounds strange, but it was fun. Not only was he a walking repository of everything I knew and everything I had forgotten, he also seemed more in touch with me than I did at times. He had an uncanny grasp of the minutiae of body language that I didn’t even realize I was picking up on. For example, I thought the date I brought him along on was going badly, but he pointed out how she was laughing a little too hard at my jokes and leaning towards me as I spoke, and a bunch of other subtle clues I wasn’t consciously picking up on. I listened and let’s just say that the date went very well.
By the time I’d been at the research center for four months he was with me constantly. The researchers approached me one day after my shift and asked me if I’d stopped visualizing him. I denied it and they seemed pleased. I silently asked my double if he knew what prompted that, but he just shrugged it off. So did I.
I withdrew a little from the world at that point. I was having trouble relating to people. It seemed to me that they were so confused and unsure of themselves, while I had a manifestation of myself to confer with. It made socializing awkward. Nobody else seemed aware of the reasons behind their actions, why some things made them mad and others made them laugh. They didn’t know what moved them…but I did, or at least I could ask myself and get an answer
A friend confronted me one evening. He pounded at the door until I answered it and came in fuming and swearing up a storm. “You haven’t answered when I called you in fucking weeks, you dick!” he yelled. “What’s your fucking problem?”
I was about to apologize to him and probably would have offered to hit the bars with him that night, but my tulpa grew suddenly furious. “Hit him,” it said, and before I knew what I was doing, I had. I heard his nose break. He fell to the floor and came up swinging, and we beat each other up and down my apartment. I was more furious than I have ever been, and I was not merciful. I knocked him to the ground and gave him two savage kicks to the ribs, and that was when he fled, hunched over and sobbing.
The police were by a few minutes later, but I told them that he had been the instigator and since he wasn’t around to refute me, they let me off with a warning. My tulpa was grinning the entire time. We spent the night crowing about my victory and sneering over how badly I’d beaten my friend.
It wasn’t until the next morning, when I was checking out my black eye and cut lip in the mirror, that I remembered what had set me o ff. My double was the one who’d grown furious, not me. I’d been feeling guilty and a little ashamed, but he’d goaded me into a vicious fight with a concerned friend. He was present, of course, and knew my thoughts. “You don’t need him any more. You don’t need anyone else,” he told me; I felt my skin crawl.
I explained all this to the researchers who employed me, but they just laughed it off. “You can’t be scared of something that you’re imagining,” one told me. My double stood beside him and nodded his head, then smirked at me.
I tried to take their words to heart, but over the next few days I found myself growing more and more anxious around my tulpa, and it seemed that he was changing. He looked taller and more menacing. His eyes twinkled with mischief, and I saw malice in his constant smile. No job was worth losing my mind over, I decided. If he was out of control, I’d put him down. I was so used to him at that point that visualizing him was an automatic process, so I started trying my damnedest to not visualize him. It took a few days, but it started to work somewhat. I could get rid of him for hours at a time, but every time he came back, he seemed worse. His skin seemed ashen, his teeth more pointed. He hissed and gibbered and threatened and swore. The discordant music I’d been listening to for months seemed to accompany him everywhere. Even when I was at home; I’d relax and slip up, no longer concentrating on no seeing him, and there he’d be, and that howling noise with him.
I was still visiting the research center and spending my next six hours there. I needed the money, and I thought they weren’t away that I was now not actively visualizing my tulpa. I was wrong. After my shift one day, about five and a half months in, two impressive men grabbed me and restrained me, and someone in a lab coat jabbed a hypodermic needle into me.
I woke up from my stupor back in the room, strapped into the bed, music blaring, with my doppelganger standing over me, cackling. He hardly looked human any more. His features were twisted. His eyes were sunken in their sockets and filmed over like a corpse’s. He was much taller than me, but hunched over. His hands were twisted, and his fingernails were like talons. He was, in short, fucking terrifying. I tried to will him away, but I couldn’t seem to concentrate. He giggled and tapped the IV in my arm. I thrashed in my restraints as best I could, but could hardly move at all.
“They’re pumping you full of the good shit, I think. How’s the mind? All fuzzy?” He leaned closer and closer as he spoke. I gagged; his breath smelled like spoiled meat. I tried to focus, but I couldn’t banish him.
The next few weeks were terrible. Every so often, someone in a doctor’s coat would come in and inject me with something or force-feed me a pill. They kept me dizzy and unfocused, and sometimes left me hallucinating or delusional. My thought-form was still present, constantly mocking. He interacted with, or perhaps caused, my delusions. I hallucinated that my mother was there, scolding me, and then he cut her throat and her blood showered me. It was so real that I could taste it.
The doctors never spoke to me. I begged at times, screamed, hurled invectives, demanded answers. They never spoke to me. They may have talked to my tulpa, my personal monster. I’m not sure. I was so doped and confused that it may have just been more delusion, but I remember them talking with him. I grew convinced that he was the real one and that I was the thought-form. He encouraged that line of thought at times, but mocked me at others.‘Another thing that I pray was a delusion: he could touch me. More than that, he could hurt me. He’d poke and prod at me if he felt I wasn’t paying enough attention to him. Once, he grabbed my testicles and squeezed until I told him I loved him. Another time, he slashed my forearm with one of his talons. I still have a scar; most days I can convince myself that I injured myself, and just hallucinated that he was responsible. Most days.
Then, one day, while he was telling me a story about how he was going to gut everyone I loved, starting with my sister, he paused. A querulous look crossed his face, and he reached out and touched my head. Like mother used to when I was feverish. He stayed still for a long moment and then smiled. “All thoughts are creative,” he told me, then he walked out the door.
Three hours later, I was given an injection and passed out. I awoke unrestrained. Shaking, I made my way to the door and found it unlocked I walked out into the empty hallway and then ran. I stumbled more than once, but I made it down the stairs and out into the lot behind the building. There, I collapsed, weeping like a child. I knew I had to keep moving, but I couldn’t manage it.
I got home eventually; I don’t remember how. I locked the door and shoved a dresser against it, took a long shower, and slept for a day and a half. Nobody came for me in the night, and nobody came the next day or the one after that. I twas over. I’d spent a week locked in that room, but it had felt like a century. I’d withdrawn so much from my life beforehand that nobody had even known I was missing.
The police didn’t find anything. The research center was empty when they searched it. The paper trail fell apart. The names I’d given them were aliases. Even the money I’d received was apparently untraceable.
I recovered as much as one can. I don’t leave the house much, and I have panic attacks when I do. I cry a lot. I don’t sleep much, and my nightmares are terrible. It’s over, I tell myself. I survived. I used the concentration those bastards taught me to convince myself. It works, sometimes.
Not today, though. Three days ago, I got a phone call from my mother. There’s been a tragedy. My sister’s the latest victim in a spree of killings, the police say. The perpetrator mugs his victims, then guts them.
The funeral was this afternoon. It was as lovely a service as a funeral can be, I suppose. I was a little distracted, though. All I could hear was music coming from somewhere distant. It was discordant, unsettling stuff that sounds like feedback, shrieking, and a modem dialing up. I hear it still – a little louder now.

fuckyeahspookyshit:

Last year, I spent six months participating in what I was told was a psychological experiment. I found an ad in my local paper looking for imaginative people looking to make good money, and since it was the only ad that week that I was remotely qualified for, I gave them a call and we arranged an interview.

They told me that all I would have to do is stay in a room, alone, with sensors attached to my head to read my brain activity, and while I was there I would visualize a double of myself. They called it my “tulpa.”

It seemed easy enough, and I agreed to do it as soon as they told me how much I would be paid. The next day, I began. They brought me to a simple room and gave me a bed, then attached sensors to my head and hooked them into a little black box on the table beside me. They talked me through the process of visualizing my double again, and explained that if I got bored or restless, instead of moving around, I should visualize my double moving around, or try to interact with him, and so on. The idea was to keep him with me the entire time I was in the room.

I had trouble with it for the first few days. It was more controlled than any sort of daydreaming I’d done before. I’d imagine my double for a few minutes, then grow distracted. By the fourth day, however, I could manage to keep him “present” for the entire six hours. They told me I was doing very well.

The second week, they gave me a different room with wall-mounted speakers. They told me they wanted to see if I could still keep the tulpa with me in spite of distracting stimuli. The music was discordant, ugly, unsettling, and it made the process a little more difficult, but I managed nonetheless. The next week, they played even more unsettling music, punctuated with shrieks, feedback loops, what sounded like an old school modem dialing up and guttural voices speaking some foreign language. I just laughed it off; I was a pro by then.

After about a month, I started to get bored. To liven things up, I started interacting with my doppelganger. we’d have conversations, play rock-paper-scissors, I’d imagine him juggling or break dancing, or whatever caught my fancy. I asked the researchers if my foolishness would adversely affect their study, but they encouraged me.

So, we played and communicated, and that was fun for a while…and then it got a little strange. I was telling him about my first date one day and he corrected me. I’d said my date was wearing a yellow top, and he told me it was a green one. I thought about it for a second and realized he was right. It creeped me out, and after my shift that day I talked to the researchers about it. “You’re using the thought-form to access your subconscious,” they explained. “You knew on some level that you were wrong, and you subconscious corrected yourself.”

What had been creepy was suddenly cool. I was talking to my subconscious! It took some practice, but I found that I could question my tulpa and access all sorts of memories. I could make it quote whole pages of books I’d read once, years before, or things I was taught and immediately forgot in high school. It was awesome.

That was around the time I started “calling up” my double outside of the research center. Not often, at first, but I was so used to imagining him by now that it almost seemed odd not to see him. So, whenever I was bored, I’d visualize my double. Eventually, I started doing it almost all the time. It was amusing to take him along like an invisible friend. I imagined him when I was hanging out with friends, or visiting my mom; I even brought him along on a date once. I didn’t need to speak aloud to him, so I was able to carry out conversations with him and no one was the wiser.

I know that sounds strange, but it was fun. Not only was he a walking repository of everything I knew and everything I had forgotten, he also seemed more in touch with me than I did at times. He had an uncanny grasp of the minutiae of body language that I didn’t even realize I was picking up on. For example, I thought the date I brought him along on was going badly, but he pointed out how she was laughing a little too hard at my jokes and leaning towards me as I spoke, and a bunch of other subtle clues I wasn’t consciously picking up on. I listened and let’s just say that the date went very well.

By the time I’d been at the research center for four months he was with me constantly. The researchers approached me one day after my shift and asked me if I’d stopped visualizing him. I denied it and they seemed pleased. I silently asked my double if he knew what prompted that, but he just shrugged it off. So did I.

I withdrew a little from the world at that point. I was having trouble relating to people. It seemed to me that they were so confused and unsure of themselves, while I had a manifestation of myself to confer with. It made socializing awkward. Nobody else seemed aware of the reasons behind their actions, why some things made them mad and others made them laugh. They didn’t know what moved them…but I did, or at least I could ask myself and get an answer

A friend confronted me one evening. He pounded at the door until I answered it and came in fuming and swearing up a storm. “You haven’t answered when I called you in fucking weeks, you dick!” he yelled. “What’s your fucking problem?”

I was about to apologize to him and probably would have offered to hit the bars with him that night, but my tulpa grew suddenly furious. “Hit him,” it said, and before I knew what I was doing, I had. I heard his nose break. He fell to the floor and came up swinging, and we beat each other up and down my apartment. I was more furious than I have ever been, and I was not merciful. I knocked him to the ground and gave him two savage kicks to the ribs, and that was when he fled, hunched over and sobbing.

The police were by a few minutes later, but I told them that he had been the instigator and since he wasn’t around to refute me, they let me off with a warning. My tulpa was grinning the entire time. We spent the night crowing about my victory and sneering over how badly I’d beaten my friend.

It wasn’t until the next morning, when I was checking out my black eye and cut lip in the mirror, that I remembered what had set me o ff. My double was the one who’d grown furious, not me. I’d been feeling guilty and a little ashamed, but he’d goaded me into a vicious fight with a concerned friend. He was present, of course, and knew my thoughts. “You don’t need him any more. You don’t need anyone else,” he told me; I felt my skin crawl.

I explained all this to the researchers who employed me, but they just laughed it off. “You can’t be scared of something that you’re imagining,” one told me. My double stood beside him and nodded his head, then smirked at me.

I tried to take their words to heart, but over the next few days I found myself growing more and more anxious around my tulpa, and it seemed that he was changing. He looked taller and more menacing. His eyes twinkled with mischief, and I saw malice in his constant smile. No job was worth losing my mind over, I decided. If he was out of control, I’d put him down. I was so used to him at that point that visualizing him was an automatic process, so I started trying my damnedest to not visualize him. It took a few days, but it started to work somewhat. I could get rid of him for hours at a time, but every time he came back, he seemed worse. His skin seemed ashen, his teeth more pointed. He hissed and gibbered and threatened and swore. The discordant music I’d been listening to for months seemed to accompany him everywhere. Even when I was at home; I’d relax and slip up, no longer concentrating on no seeing him, and there he’d be, and that howling noise with him.

I was still visiting the research center and spending my next six hours there. I needed the money, and I thought they weren’t away that I was now not actively visualizing my tulpa. I was wrong. After my shift one day, about five and a half months in, two impressive men grabbed me and restrained me, and someone in a lab coat jabbed a hypodermic needle into me.

I woke up from my stupor back in the room, strapped into the bed, music blaring, with my doppelganger standing over me, cackling. He hardly looked human any more. His features were twisted. His eyes were sunken in their sockets and filmed over like a corpse’s. He was much taller than me, but hunched over. His hands were twisted, and his fingernails were like talons. He was, in short, fucking terrifying. I tried to will him away, but I couldn’t seem to concentrate. He giggled and tapped the IV in my arm. I thrashed in my restraints as best I could, but could hardly move at all.

“They’re pumping you full of the good shit, I think. How’s the mind? All fuzzy?” He leaned closer and closer as he spoke. I gagged; his breath smelled like spoiled meat. I tried to focus, but I couldn’t banish him.

The next few weeks were terrible. Every so often, someone in a doctor’s coat would come in and inject me with something or force-feed me a pill. They kept me dizzy and unfocused, and sometimes left me hallucinating or delusional. My thought-form was still present, constantly mocking. He interacted with, or perhaps caused, my delusions. I hallucinated that my mother was there, scolding me, and then he cut her throat and her blood showered me. It was so real that I could taste it.

The doctors never spoke to me. I begged at times, screamed, hurled invectives, demanded answers. They never spoke to me. They may have talked to my tulpa, my personal monster. I’m not sure. I was so doped and confused that it may have just been more delusion, but I remember them talking with him. I grew convinced that he was the real one and that I was the thought-form. He encouraged that line of thought at times, but mocked me at others.

Another thing that I pray was a delusion: he could touch me. More than that, he could hurt me. He’d poke and prod at me if he felt I wasn’t paying enough attention to him. Once, he grabbed my testicles and squeezed until I told him I loved him. Another time, he slashed my forearm with one of his talons. I still have a scar; most days I can convince myself that I injured myself, and just hallucinated that he was responsible. Most days.

Then, one day, while he was telling me a story about how he was going to gut everyone I loved, starting with my sister, he paused. A querulous look crossed his face, and he reached out and touched my head. Like mother used to when I was feverish. He stayed still for a long moment and then smiled. “All thoughts are creative,” he told me, then he walked out the door.

Three hours later, I was given an injection and passed out. I awoke unrestrained. Shaking, I made my way to the door and found it unlocked I walked out into the empty hallway and then ran. I stumbled more than once, but I made it down the stairs and out into the lot behind the building. There, I collapsed, weeping like a child. I knew I had to keep moving, but I couldn’t manage it.

I got home eventually; I don’t remember how. I locked the door and shoved a dresser against it, took a long shower, and slept for a day and a half. Nobody came for me in the night, and nobody came the next day or the one after that. I twas over. I’d spent a week locked in that room, but it had felt like a century. I’d withdrawn so much from my life beforehand that nobody had even known I was missing.

The police didn’t find anything. The research center was empty when they searched it. The paper trail fell apart. The names I’d given them were aliases. Even the money I’d received was apparently untraceable.

I recovered as much as one can. I don’t leave the house much, and I have panic attacks when I do. I cry a lot. I don’t sleep much, and my nightmares are terrible. It’s over, I tell myself. I survived. I used the concentration those bastards taught me to convince myself. It works, sometimes.

Not today, though. Three days ago, I got a phone call from my mother. There’s been a tragedy. My sister’s the latest victim in a spree of killings, the police say. The perpetrator mugs his victims, then guts them.

The funeral was this afternoon. It was as lovely a service as a funeral can be, I suppose. I was a little distracted, though. All I could hear was music coming from somewhere distant. It was discordant, unsettling stuff that sounds like feedback, shrieking, and a modem dialing up. I hear it still – a little louder now.

(via ramblings-of-a-madman)

Source : fuckyeahspookyshit

Day 15 - A Goodbye

Here you have your goodbye. And a fake one at that! Yes, you heard me. F.A.K.E.

~~~~~~~~~
“I guess we surprised everybody.”
The girl’s leaning against his car while she looks up at him. They smile at each other but then he looks down at his shoes.

“I guess we did.”
She puts her head against his chest and places her hands on his waist. He lets out a sigh, as he kisses her head.
“I’ll never be sorry.” He says as he strokes her arm and she looks up at him.
The love in her eyes is plain for anyone to see.

“Neither will I.”

He takes her face in his hands and gives her a short, soft kiss. They both know this is the last time they will see each other. And really, they seem to have accepted it.

~~~~~~~~~

Well I haven’t! I haven’t accepted it, not at all! Seriously, are you kidding me? Don’t say goodbye!! I hate goodbyes.

Some of you might recognize in this little fabrication the ‘saying goodbye’ scene in Dirty Dancing, with Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey. Yes, he comes back a little later to do ‘the final dance of the season’, but after that – what happens? She’ll be going back to wherever she came from with her daddy and plan her trips with the peace corps and he’ll be going somewhere where he can give dancing lessons. They won’t see each other anymore, the relationship is OVER. The end of the movie as we know it.

I’ve always found this simply unacceptable. It is such a romantic and lovely movie, especially because of all the dancing, for I just love ballroom/latin dancing. But then they go and end it like this.. A goodbye. And a goodbye forever at that.

So I left my copy of this DVD in my closet for what seems like a decade. I might have watched it once or twice, but really.. I  felt a bit annoyed by the whole thing. Such a great movie and such a lousy ending. But then, one day.. Everything changed. Turns out it was not a goodbye after all. It was a fake.
(dum, dum, dumm….)

Yes that’s right. Not a goodbye. Johnny and Baby Francis forever, HA! Maybe I’m really not talking about anything new here, and everyone in the whole universe already knows this but me.. But I don’t care. Since this is my rambling post on my rambling blog I can ramble about what I want, right? Right. So..

A few days ago I had a couple of my friends over and somehow the conversation landed on “Dirty Dancing”. It turned out that none of them had really seen the whole movie! Well, I couldn’t just let that pass by, even though I wasn’t that much of a fan of the movie’s ending it’s still a good movie. So, we watched it. And then - they went home.

So there I was. Again with mixed feelings about this beloved movie, sitting in the darkness of my living room as my family had already gone to bed, when I noticed it. The DVD box had a second disk. With trembling fingers I put it in the DVD player and pressed the button. A glorious screen unfolded before my eyes and I saw not one, but three headings just screaming at me “MORE SCENES”. I was bewildered at this brand new discovery and terribly impatient to have seen it all. To know the truth about this heart-breaking goodbye.

And believe me, after a total of 15 minutes, I was utterly satisfied. Especially with this one scene.. You are probably thinking right now, as you are reading this;  “What an idiot.. Acting all dramatic about someone everybody already knows.” And I´d have to say - ´You are absolutely right.´ But I’m a girl. I love being dramatic sometimes.

I’ll come to my conclusion now, which is that this scene should never have been taken from the public eyes. This scene shouldn’t have been cut, it shouldn’t have been thrown on a second disk – it should have been part of the story. As they are dancing together in the aisle during ´the final dance´.  This should have been the real goodbye.

~~~~~~~~~
Baby: You know what im scared of Johnny? I’m scared they will beat us down and say we have our whole lives ahead of us, that I’m going to peace corps and you’re going dancing, and we don’t know what we feel…

Johnny: Think we don’t know.

Baby: And we’ll start thinking it wasn’t such a big deal and everyone will be against us, even us, what do we do then Johnny?

Johnny: We’ll fight harder Frances, that’s what we’ll do .. we’ll fight harder!


*fight harder refers back to when Frances told Johnny to stand up to his boss and fight harder.

 ~~~~~~~~~

I couldn’t find it on YouTube. But now that you read it….It’s not really much of a goodbye is it? Actually.. It´s not a goodbye at all!

My whole world turned upside down. It totally altered the entire movie! How ridiculous is that - that an extra scene on a second disk would change these (yes, yes, fictional) people’s lives – forever and our image of it. It makes the scene I gave to you in the beginning of this rant a complete and total fake.

Which I’m grateful for. Because the fact there is no goodbye - makes me love this movie even more.

 

Day 13 - Remember that time when…

” Remember that time when you and I first started dating? It was such a huge shock to all our friends, for they all thought we were absolutely no match for each other. But we’re still together now, five months later. I was still a little shy on those first few dates, and it was still a little awkward. But you tried your hardest to make sure I was having a good time.

You always came up with the craziest ideas for dates. I never was the type to be swept of my feet by just an ordinary date at some “romantic” restaurant – and oh you were so creative! We went skiing in the middle of the summer, in one of those indoor skiing halls. We would go to a random city we had never been before and explore, sometimes even spent the night. Every date seemed like some sort of - mini vacation with you. How I loved to tell all my friends our crazy adventures the very next day, in the greatest detail.

Oh and remember that party two weeks ago? We both had had a little bit too much to drink, quiet scandalous really, and then we snuck out when we thought no one noticed. We stayed away for a whole hour while everyone inside was wondering where we’d gone off to. And we were kissing in your car parked up front, not the least embarrassed when someone would walk by. And we were just laughing the entire time, like two complete idiots! We really were a little bit too drunk you know, what shameless behaviour! I know for a fact that we got talked about after that. Seriously.

Everyone always said that I was your queen, for you were always so attentive. Hanging my coat, opening the door for me, pulling back the chair for me, carrying my purse. I even heard someone say, though no-one in particular, that it got a bit sickening how much you doted on me. But a smile from me could make you do anything. As it can still, right baby?

And that one time you threw me a huge surprise birthday party. Inviting all my friends and family and you organised the entire thing by yourself. There was an enormous cake, the brown chocolate one I like so much from that special bakery down town. And you had bought me the most astonishing present! A diamond bracelet I had seen in a magazine at a friend’s house, four whole weeks before. You had remembered it. But well, how couldn’t you? During that visit I must have mentioned it at least twenty times!  And at the end of the evening, when we all thought there couldn’t be any more surprises, surely, you announced we were going away for a romantic weekend!  You remember all of that?Don’t you, babe?

Oh, of course you don’t. No no, that’s right.. That is probably because you did all those things with her, not me. While I was sitting at alone at home, wasting my time. Aching for you. “


Day 10 - Something you hate

Arrogance. Discrimination. Selfishness. Anxiety.  Shallowness. Writers block. Uncaring. Slyness. Oh yeah, and spiders.

I will not elaborate about these things, or name anymore.  Because yeah – that’s how much I hate them.. xD

Day 7 - A pet who is loved

Imagine a little girl with blonde hair that is almost white. A girl who’s actually quite tall for her age. On the side of her head she’s got a little ponytail, and she’s wearing  the most horrific clothing you can imagine. A knitted, thick sweater full of stripes and patterns of almost every colour you can imagine. Her trousers are a homemade, comfy pair of a dark purple colour. Exactly the one colour that cannot be located in the sweater. This description of an outfit everyone probably (in the Netherlands) recognizes, for it seems as if in this country our parents’ generation were all colour blind for a period of time. And that time was our childhood. Ending, to everyone’s relief, the moment we were old enough to dress ourselves. But I never really cared about that – I actually quite liked my clothes. I knew no better, plus there were more important things to care about. Things like that huge, dark, empty hole in my heart where the love for a sweet pet should be!

Yes this little girl was an animal lover, and still is I dare say. But because the beloved mum of this child was allergic to animals, she could never have one of her own. Yes, she had a few fish for a while – but a little girl like that wants something to cuddle, something to play with! Now, this want of a cuddle buddy was one of the very, very few reasons why this child was actually happy her parents were divorced. Her dad, stepmother and stepbrothers were not allergic.

So enter Boris, the most amazing, wonderful, sweet, lovely, funny (yes he was funny!), calm, awesome, perfect, fantastic, brilliant, beautiful, coolest, astonishing,  breath taking, impressive, greatest, admirable, astounding, dynamic, finest, grooviest, pleasing, pleasant, remarkable, sensational, staggering, tremendous, wondrous, stupendous, divine, excellent, fabulous, peachy, neatest, hunky dory cat EVER!                                           * Thesaurus synonym finder is your friend.. ^^

And I mean it - I’ve never ever seen a cat or any kind of animal for that matter that was more lovely than Boris. And at my father’s house they have had other pets after Boris, so.. I really do mean it.


I’ve still got the picture of when Boris came to us, along with Milou a more independent female,   sitting on the top of my desk in my bedroom. We were sitting in the back garden on a bench. Again me with the biggest of ponytails on the side of my head and wearing a ridiculous sweater, holding Boris. I had already fallen in love with his red coat. And sitting next to me is my sister,  in a little less horrific outfit, holding Milou. She was also really cute and little and adorable.

As he and I grew older, he was always there for me. It sounds strange to say that about an animal, and whenever I hear someone else say it I raise my eyebrows in the most sarcastic way, for animals can’t speak – or in any way really interact with you. So how can such a bond be? But Boris was special. Yet another cliché I know – I’m starting to find this post really, really sappy now. But really, he seemed to know how I felt. The way dogs do, you know?

When I was sad his presence comforted me and he let me hug him as long as I wanted. He know how to play the part of marionette perfectly, whatever I did with him – cuddle him, putting him on my shoulders, spin him in the air - he didn’t mind one bit. Even though I didn’t live there and I only saw him one day in two weeks’ time, he seemed to be most attached to me out of the entire family (which counted six!) so.. that made me feel special.

And when I said he was always there for me, I wasn’t exaggerating. His little place in the house was in the pantry – where there was a window you could open and keep open by putting the metal bar that opened it on a pin. Every time I started to ticker on this metal bar and Boris was somewhere in ear shot – in our street, the garden or even behind that near the canal we lived at – he’d come running. Seriously. He’d come to the window at full speed, wasting no time to stop and he’d jump inside to greet me, all enthusiasm, even if I had just seen him ten minutes before.

He’s been dead for quite some years now. He died because he had all this fluid in his heart, I was still quite a bit younger, so that’s all I remember from the cause of death - besides the fact that it went really fast. In the eyes of a child it did anyway. But I am grateful that I was there when it happened. Now I can still remember saying goodbye to him whilst petting him and burying him short after in the back yard. I feel so sad when I think about it. But it would have been so much harder if I hadn’t been present. Though I still miss him. He was truly, the best pet I ever had, he was actually more than just a pet. I’ve got the most lovely memories of him. And there will always be a place in my heart, just for him.

Day 4 - A pair of eyeglasses.

“Ma’am, you really have to leave now. I was supposed to close the bar over half an hour ago…”
“Oh sweetie don’t mind me! I really can’t – not without my glasses silly …”
“You mean those –“
“Yes those cute ones, they had diamonds on the side.. I can’t remember where I left them.”
“Ma’am – if you’d just look they are – “
Oooh! You are ab-so-lu-te-ly right! Haha, oh dear me.. Yes, just look back.. Where was I when I last had them..”
“No I meant – “
“I was going out with Catherine and Steve, you met them right? And we went to this pub where I had two beers, remember? And Catherine did as well but Steve didn’t  - no he couldn’t possibly! For he had to drive us back, so we teased him and made him drink water all night..”
“Yes I remember Ma’am, you were hard to miss.. Ma’am your glasses -”
“Yes I had them still on when we saw Desmond and Carol, right over there, so we joined them. And we had some shots as we talked about the new apartment they just bought – I really don’t think they’ll last long, Desmond is way too laid back for Carol! He will drive her insane and out of the house in a week! Then we took a taxi to Tamara’s party, for Steve had broken his promise of not drinking when we had shots… You really shouldn’t have given him those you know.. He had to drive silly!” “Right, that was very wrong of me.. But Ma’am- “
So we teased him as we usually do and made him pay for the taxi. Tamara’s place was so very crowded I couldn’t believe - ! I remember Catherine saying she couldn’t breathe so we went onto the balcony to get some fresh air. But when Tamara joined us she made Steve jump – oh he’s so jumpy, all the time really. And well, he let his drink drop! Right off the balcony right on -
“They are on your head ma’am!”
“YES! Right – on – his – head! That man below had been complaining about noise earlier and now he was so pissed and we were so drunk – ha! Oh, he wasn’t pissed as we were pissed though, get it? He was angry. Really angry. And he yelled at us so much..”
“No ma’am I didn’t mean that guy’s head, I meant your glasses – “
“Yes I still had my glasses then, for I remember moving them to the tip of my nose and looking down at the guy with such a superior look - the queen herself could be jealous of!”
“Yes but I mea-“
At least that’s what Catherine told me later, when we were guided out of the house. For you see the man downstairs had called the cops and  he had a really smug look on his face I tell you..”
“Okay.. right.. You don’t say..”
Yes! When we were outside getting a taxi I mean.. So we had to get out leaving Tamara with a huge mess!”
“How horrific ma’am..”
“Well I don’t know for sure but I think Steve stayed behind to help clean up, for when we had called for a taxi and were about to get in we couldn’t find him anywhere, so Catherine and I got in and went back to the pub.. To here! Yes, for we had been here earlier that night you know, this night.. So thinking maybe if Steve will want to find us he will start looking there first – I mean here. Though we had not told him we were going there but – well.. And so back here I spilled my drink all over this guy and I remember I apologized dramatically for he looked really cute, you saw?”
“Oh yes.. really delightful ma’am.. “
Oooooh - so you know him? He is delightful isn’t he? Yes, so the rest of the night I chatted him up but I can’t remember his name… And Catherine was somewhere in the back, I don’t know what she was doing exactly, but she was with the blonde friend of my spilled-drink- guy… And he seemed quite nice so I guess it was all okay.. Oh yes sorry, don’t mind me -”
“Oh, I won’t ma’am..”
“You’ve got to clean up of course..”
“Yes.”
“Anyway.. I recall him saying something about my eyes… So I felt all self-conscious all of the sudden about my glasses, you know I’ve always been shy about that.. So I took them off and put them on my head – knowing my eyes would completely dazzle him for they are a beautiful shade of green, you don’t think? So I – oh…”
Yes.. ma’am?”
“Oh silly me! They have been on my head all this time!”
“Indeed…”
“I can’t believe you didn’t notice them before; I’ve been standing here so long!”
“I really can’t either ma’am..”
“Oh but it’s okay, all is well now.. And I didn’t either.. Well, now then… good night!”
“Good night ma’am..”

Day 3 - Write about something ugly - but find the beauty in it.

“Lot 435.. 15 Droverslane, In Liberton, close to where we are now.” The auctioneer swallowed as he looked down at the papers in front of him. “Well, everyone has seen it in the booklet I dare say.. Just a lick of paint and it’ll be fine I think.” He chuckled as he looked into the room, hoping people would laugh at his obvious joke. When no response came his smirk vanished from his face and he looked down again at his papers. “Right.. Some nice grounds come with it though..” He sighed. “Let’s start at 15.000. Anyone?”

He was about to write down the property as unsold without really looking around, when someone in the room cleared their throat. Annoyed, expecting to only see someone with an apologizing look on their face and the gift of extreme bad timing, the auctioneer looked up. But it wasn’t so. Sitting in the middle of the third row from the front, a young woman, he’d guess her to be in her twenties, had raised her sign. The auctioneer was quite bewildered and turned slightly red, embarrassed that he had missed her as he had been assuming no one would be so crazy to spend even 2000 on this decayed property. He straightened his back as he his eyes shot nervously, from one side of the room to the other. “Right..” His voice was shaking just a little as he tried to come across as a professional to cover up his recent mistake. “15.000 – the lady in the third row… Anyone 15.500 …. 15.250.. maybe?”

She felt their eyes burning in her back as she raised her sign up in the air. They must think her absolutely nuts bidding on such a slum - not even waiting for the price to be brought down just a little. Sarah was aware of what she must look like. Most people here were experienced property developers who’d run and hide if such a lot as this would cross their path. And most of them were male. She had caught quite some eyes as she had entered the room and had found a seat.

“Are you quite sure about that lassie?” The older man who had sat down next to her and whom she had chatted with a little bit before the auction has started whispered to her. “People avoid it as the plague I dare say.. And you – only a beginner.“ Sarah knew he was being genuinely concerned, so she smiled at him sweetly and nodded. Seeing the look in her eyes, the man realised he could say all he wanted but that she was someone who had already made up her mind a while ago. He sat back straight in his seat, mumbling something about the young people these days… ‘careless’,  as Sarah cleared her throat. The auctioneer seemed to have written this lot down as doomed from the start, he hadn’t even looked up yet to see if there was anyone who’d place a bit. People around her started to whisper to each other as she cleared her throat again. The auctioneer finally spotted her, though he looked annoyed and ultimately, surprised. “Right… the lady in the third row…”  Yes, right indeed.

That had been three days ago and a few miles away, in Edinburgh. Right now Sarah was standing in front of her latest purchase. And in her mind – her best purchase yet. Instead of acknowledging it to be the dump people take it for, Sarah had seen its opportunities. Yes, only three of the thirty windows in the entire house weren’t broken. The roof was leaking in at least twenty different places, the front door hung out of its hinges, there was no electricity and the plumbing lay open and bare for everyone to see. And these were only but a few of its flaws.

Someone once said though that the weakness of ourselves and of our reason makes us see flaws in beauties - by making us consider everything piece by piece. So try to see it as a whole; something seen as ugly can actually be quite beautiful. Sarah didn’t see all those little defects creating all in all the dump everyone else seemed to see. She saw Chatsworth with its dark passages, Castle Howard with its shrieking staircases and Blenheim with its chilly hall. She saw through the obvious flaws and looked at the whole picture, she recognised its opportunity to be beautiful.