Categories
internet

Pimp my blog!

Xzibit and I pimped Theo’s blog. All it’s missing is a plasma tv –
ooh, and one of these.

Check it out.

Hopefully this means he’ll actually start updating it more.

Categories
internet webcomics

Rainfall at a sixty degree angle

The last two days have been gloomy-gloomy,
with little hints of teasing sun, poking through;
an hour here, an hour there. It’s been chilly,
but I don’t dislike it. This is weather I know.

Poking through some old Diesel Sweeties today,
I ran across this and this, which I thought cute
enough to share with you, the rest of the world.
Yes, I’m thoroughly addicted to web comics.
They’re the best thing since ralley monkeys.

If you loved the 80s, you should buy a memento.
Had I the money, I would buy about a hundred of them.
Who knew I was such an 80s dork?

Categories
humor internet love personal webcomics

You can’t handle the tooth!

Darbey Conley can do amazing things
with four little panels. Be sure to check
out today’s comic if you haven’t.
It’s pure genious; like smores.
Also pure genious: tokyoplastic v.2.

So, waiting by the phone for my big lunch date.
A few butterflies, but mostly a solid calm.
I haven’t even had the date, yet it’s already
been a positive experience for me;
an excellent chance to examine my thoughts,
question my ideals and assess my values.
You know, all that stuff.

There’s a lot still there to learn and
my faith in the beauty of this world is unshakable.

Categories
internet

Bright Center of the Island

My japanese name is ? Akira (bright) ?? Nakashima (center of the island) .
What’s your real japanese name, hmmmm?

The web’s full of such random nonsense.
That doesn’t mean it’s not fun sometimes.

Categories
internet personal poetic

You say lagomorph, I say rabbit…

… or lapin, because I’ve always liked that word.

This weekend I make the short trek to
Port Townsend, home of: my mom, good food,
the Puget Sound as it nears the Pacific,
the Rose Theatre, and my siblings
(for the weekend, at least).
I’ve one brother and one sister;
they’re both older, and super-cool
(my brother let me beat him up when I was a tyke;
my sister tickled me mercilessly, and
had her friends chase me around with lipstick).

I didn’t grow up with my siblings;
rather I saw them over the Summer and on
various holidays. So, though I think we know
each other well, we don’t have that “know everything
about each other” thing that similar-aged
grow-up-together siblings do. As such,
our meetings are always half familiarity
and half exploration. This is not a complaint.

Port Townsend is full of memories:
childhood days of carefree exploration
(I was quite intrepid), and my pre-college
days of creative indulgences, naive ideals,
and romantic sulks (also known as “failures”).
I was 17. Need I say more?

If you haven’t yet, check out the mystery that is:

I Love Bees.

In the end, it’s basically advertising, true.
But it’s still absolutely fascinating.

A poem from 8/15;
a young-woman musician who,
traveling through Olympia,
played while we were sitting in Caffé Vita.

Your sultry voice like butter melting:
highs & lows
and caught-betweens;
songbird-wings and a smile.
Thin-boned for flight,
breaks easy and transparent.

You’ve got on your samurai kid-gloves,
prepared for gentille swordplay,
wordplay; “May I?” “You may.”
Spin songs, trap hearts,
blown apart at the seams,
you laud the diocese.
Saints speak lunacies,
heresy, are remembered
for their honesty.
You should be so lucky.

When your Icarus-wings
tear apart in the light –
like butter melting –
where will you fall then?

It rambles, groans;
mutters vagueries.
It needs clarification,
I think;
but there it is.