- Read whole webcomic archives, some of which I enjoyed;
- Watched Serenity and some episodes of Firefly;
- Had long discussions with people about various subjects involving religion, Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series, and other such things;
- Gone to a video-game music concert, which was good. Could have been better, but it was still an enjoyable experience;
- Made initial preparations for going to see a Yes concert (apparently, they're touring again. This is excellent. I thought all my favorite bands were either in Europe or defunct.)
- Read World War Z, by Max Brooks, in one session;
- Given a great deal of thought to the world for a D&D campaign I might run in the future;
- Downloaded "Linley's Dungeon Crawl" again. (This was, as always, cronic suicide. LDC is free, downloadable, and the most addictive game I have ever come across (yes, more so than Pokemon). It ate another one of my afternoons. I have deleted it once more.);
- Started a project for a manga about the National Spelling Bee (yes, it's a good idea. Yes, there will be fight scenes. Right now, we're looking for an artist - a couple of people have been interested but have also been busy.)
Things I have not done this past couple of weeks:
- My job (not much of it, anyway. I'm several hours behind.);
- Homework more than eight hours before it's been due;
- Slept.
I'm sure I'm not the only one who sees a problem here.
1 comment:
I like the format of this blogpost: antithesis of two things, funny conclusion.
"It ate another one of my afternoons. I have deleted it once more." ← That's really funny. Any sentence beginning It ate [...] my [...] is bound to be, since It suggests an inanimate object, and it seems funnily capricious for an inanimate object to eat anything, and if the thing eaten belongs to you, that probably inconveniences you in a way funny to your audience. And another suggests that the eating of your afternoons by things is a recurrent phenomenon, another funny inconvenience.
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