Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts

Thursday, July 8, 2010

30 Days to an Almost End - Day 15

An inspiring quote
July 6th-8th 2010
A. Voltaire
     Of all that is written I love only what a man has written with his blood. Write with blood, and you will experience that blood is spirit.
     It is not easily possible to understand the blood of another: I hate reading idlers. Whoever knows the read will henceforth do nothing for the reader. Another century of readers—and the spirit itself will sink.
. . .
     Whoever writes in blood and aphorisms does not want to be read but to be learned by heart. In the mountains the shortest way is from peak to peak: but for that one must have long legs. Aphorisms should be peaks—and those who are addressed, tall and lofty. The air thin and pure, danger near, and the spirit full of gay sarcasm: these go well together. I want to have goblins around me, for I am courageous. Courage that puts ghosts to flight creates goblins for itself: courage wants to laugh.
     I no longer feel as you do: this cloud which I see beneath me, this blackness and gravity at which I laugh—this is your thundercloud.
     You look up when you feel the need for elevation. And I look down because I am elevated. Who among you can laugh and be elevated at the same time? Whoever climbs the highest mountains laughs at all tragic plays and tragic seriousness.
     Brave, unconcerned, mocking, violent—thus wisdom wants us: she is a woman and always loves only a warrior.
     You say to me, “Life is hard to bear.” But why would you have your pride in the morning and your resignation in the evening? Life is hard to bear; but do not act so tenderly! We are all of us fair beasts of burden, male and female asses. What do we have in common with the rosebud, which trembles because a drop of dew lies on it?
     True, we love life, but because we are used to living but because we are used to loving. There is always some madness in love. But there is always some reason in madness.
. . .
     I have learned to walk: ever since, I let myself run. I have learned to fly: ever since, I do not want to be pushed before moving along.
     Now I am light, now I fly, now I see myself beneath myself, now a god dances through me.

     Thus spoke Zarathustra.

Monday, July 5, 2010

COSA18 Interviews Ryan Maloney from Cerebrot.com

“Swasticrow”

     If there’s an artist I’m positive deserves my respect and admiration, only a single individual comes to mind. Surpassing all celebrity and expectations of a dear friend, “if this isn’t real, then this is as real as it gets.”

     Over the past year I’ve wanted great things for COSA18, one especially being to go out with a bang,
not with a whimper. If there’s one person who’s taught me how exactly to achieve that this crucial year of mine, it’s the most spectacular artist I’ve had the honor of unexpectedly befriending—Ryan Maloney. The pleasure was, has been, and will be all mine.
 
Whether you feel you fit the broad definition or not—why are you an artist? When do you believe you became what it means to you?
I am an artist because Charles Manson is locked up, because Jesus Christ is a lie, and because being born is far more of a bloody and painful spectacle then dying. The first time someone told me that what I was drawing was disgusting was when I truly felt like an artist. I believe it was in fourth grade, where I was sent to the school social worker for drawing monsters doing unspeakable things to people.  I am an artist because I have to be, because I feel compelled to put something into the world besides CO2.  My whole life I have been lied to, and promised and threatened and pressured by men under the banner of God. All those people only ever encouraged me to subtract things from my life, and separate myself from the world.  Being ‘worldly’ was to be evil growing up, but now I consider the alternative to just being invisible.  So I paint, write, and photograph unsheathed.

“Fraternus”

Are you influenced or inspired by other artists? Do you think there’s a difference between the two?
I am heavily influenced by other artists. But not generally inspired. For me, being inspired is typically difficult and out of my control.  If anything, looking at art is discouraging when I am uninspired. Thoughts such as ‘why didn’t I think of that’, or ‘Christ s/he is good, I’ll never have that much discipline’, or other such negative thoughts.  But when I look at nature, and photography, and get outside a bit I can get whims of momentum, and within a few days I’m usually gritting my teeth to get off work and throw some penciling down.  I usually have a list of 10 things I want to paint at a time.  Or destroy 10 previous ones. It’s either or.

Besides fellow artists, what influences and/or inspires you?
Biology, botany, fetish, sobriety, medieval art, surreal photography and music. Also not being able to paint inspires me. Like only drinking coffee for 3 days; if you down a cold glass of clean water after that you are probably going to orgasm. Or create something, in my case.  You said besides fellow artists, so I hope that answer is sufficient.

Your own blood is your popular medium. When did you begin using blood in your paintings (or in any other artistic creation)? What led you to the choice?
Somewhere in a lot of books that everyone has read people say that blood forms the strongest bond. And people wonder why I paint with it. I may not live for very long on this earth, but hopefully my paintings will.  Blood work never really took an artistic form for me until my 20’s, but it was a means of dealing with extreme emotional distress before that. Inner thighs when I was young, progressing to ribs and pectoral areas these days. People who cut their arms probably would be advised to not try and relate to me, as I have no patience for it. The old lady at Starbucks shouldn’t feel the need to pet you and tell you she loves you and everything’s going to be OK. That would mortify me. Why would you want that kind of attention? Getting scornful emails, and negative comments in front of your paintings is far healthier in my opinion.  I chose to do it because it releases adrenaline in my brain, and I’m addicted to it. I love to paint and draw, so eventually the two just spiraled together.

Have you always solely used your own blood, or have you used the blood of other people or animals in your work?
I’ve only used my blood but I have made a few commissioned pieces using other people’s blood to paint their live portraits. It always ended badly. Apparently taking the commission was akin to prostitution. And that’s not what I plan on when I pick up a paintbrush. Live painting is anxiety to me. I don’t know how a person can engage in sex acts after spending hours worrying that they are making the victims neck too fat or eyes too bland.  So now I strictly paint in my own. It’s my art, my craft and my madness.  The only blood I would want to mix with my own in a work of art would be another artist, not a bystander.

 “Myself as a Bird”

I won’t inquire the specifics of your blood drawing methods, but I will ask this: do you ever dread having to draw the blood for use in a piece?
If anything it’s the opposite. Though there are days where I look at a finished penciling and as I cotton scrub it down (fading) I get a pang of annoyance at the labor that is impending. Once I start and that rush hits my veins however, the bar is down and the ride has begun.  Recently I’ve been using vials and painting from stored/refrigerated blood for ease of effect and its just nice when you are out of Bactine and don’t feel like being shirtless.  You can’t do this kind of thing and not get a little bit excited about it. If you don’t lick your lips a little bit you should probably hit the hobby store and pick up some paints.

Clearly, you are not the only “blood painter” out there. Do you hold any sensitivity or lackluster involving the field of blood painting?
Clearly. I started this before I knew others existed. I had no doubts that there would be others, because no one invents anything these days. I’ve been gravely disappointed at other people’s ability to give me any credit, since I have a lesser fan base or whatever. But in the previous 12 months time I’ve sold a few thousand bucks worth of original art, prints, and commissioned live pieces, and have had several photo shoots with more on the way, and more orders pending.  So, that pretty much comforts any sensitivities I have about being accused of copying or wanting to crawl up another artists ass.  There are certain individuals that I hold sensitivity to. It’s not in my nature to be forgiving, or overlook things unfortunately.  I’m a grudge keeper, and its horrible immature but immovable. Art isn’t about choosing sides so people can think whatever they want.  For some people art is like changing songs on an iPod, which is a shame.  I don’t paint for other people. I paint for me. If you don’t like it then just hit next.

What types of environments do you create when painting?
I try as hard as I can to not create any environment. Painting the things that I like would just be ruined if I tried to put them in a setting. That’s what photography is for in my opinion. But many a great painting has one form of environment or another that makes it wonderful. I just am incapable of achieving that at this point.

What piece are you most proud of, and why?
Infetish is the one I am most happy with… but I am definitely not proud of my works. I’m proud of people having the courage to tell me that I’m degenerate or fucked up, because I believe that takes more courage than what I do.  Correction. I am very proud of everyone who works with me on photo shoots, and my kitten when he superman slide tackles my painting and forces me to start over and create something better.

“Infetish”

I’m sure you’ve heard about Marilyn Manson’s Antichrist Superstar video being leaked from the depths of his website by a hacker of sorts. With Cerebrot.com unopened to the public, how would you feel and react if someone infiltrated your art in a similar way?
I did hear about it, and was sent the video before I was even aware of an issue or leak or anything. I was expecting something totally different. It showed up in my inbox first thing in the morning before work, I hit play, rubbed my eyes and started my morning with one of my favorite songs, paired with a strange video.  It wasn’t till two days later that I found out people were piss whipped about it. Now it feels like a drunk hook-up. It just kind of happened, it was over before you know it, and now everyone is standing around yelling and pointing fingers and someone might lose their job. Cerebrot.com will be a blip amongst a billion blips. People won’t visit it often, it will just be partnered with my Facebook page to be updated with new pieces and shoots. And the occasional photo-travelogue or absinthe review.

The video was magic. It’s a shame it caused such a stir.

In Plato’s Republic Socrates says, “as [far as the] arts are concerned, then, no art ever studies or enjoins the interest of the superior or strong party, but always that of the weaker over which it has authority.” What do you think about this statement?
Horse shit. Art can absolutely be the authority on the superior party.  AKA critics, or swarms of fans whose wallets can skyrocket a piece to infamy.  Weak and strong can’t be distinguished in the face of art save for the few that can destroy it, or engulf it in recognition.  Art has silence and stirred millions of people for ages. Looks like Socrates didn’t have his little boy the day he wrote that.  Paintings, statues, palaces, jewelry, monuments have been erected for ‘superior’ people and often those are the pieces of art that endure the test of time.  I could just be misinterpreting the quote though. It’s 3:00am.

 “The Light Shines”

Over the next ten years, where do you hope your art carries you? Or, where do you hope to carry your art to?
I want someone to have a cardiac arrest standing in front of one of my paintings in a gallery, and have the person’s family spend inordinate amounts of money on the piece so they can ritually destroy it in the name of God.  Then I would like to attend the funeral and be thrown out. That is success. 

Interview by Alexis Voltaire

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Sam Halpern

     I just read Justin Halpern’s memoir of his father Sam Halpern in Sh*t My Dad Says. I remember when the concept was a simple Twitter page that I found wildly hilarious whenever I got a chance to stumble across it.
     I was pleasantly surprised when Halpern showed up one night on Chelsea Lately talking about his new book and a TV show in the works!

     With that, today all the quotes are from the mouth of Sam Halpern.

This Weeks Theme: Sam Halpern
“When it’s asshole-tightening time, that’s when you see what people are made of. Or at least what their asshole is made of.”

“Listen up, if someone is being nice to you, and you don’t know them, run away. No one is nice to you just to be nice to you, and if they are, well, they can go take their peasant ass somewhere else.”

“Sometimes life leaves a hundred-dollar bill on your dresser, and you don’t realize until later it’s because it fucked you.”

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Apologies

     I find it slightly irritating when someone apologizes to me for the sole reason of moving on themselves from their wronging me. It’s not situations where I’m holding resentment so strongly I refuse the apology—the apology is simply sour, false; a last resort to rid one’s self of guilt. It’s not genuine, I won’t tolerate it.

This Weeks Theme: Apologies
“Apology is only egotism wrong side out.” - Oliver Wendell Holmes

“It is a good rule in life never to apologize. The right sort of people do not want apologies, and the wrong sort take a mean advantage of them.” - P.G. Wodehouse

“Why must conversions always come so late? Why do people always apologize to corpses?” - David Brin

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Realizations

     Dwelling and eating me inside out like maggots in disguise; I’ve had a few realizations recently.
1.   I was genuine with every inhale of ash blonde breath. Heart-wrenching tonight, it was realized wholeheartedly where you had never found me.
2.   It is possible to use someone after ties have been severed, even if no conscious thought of usage had occurred when they were originally wrung tight.
3.   There are wrong reasons and right reasons for (ab)using someone. I have not justified use with a wrong reason.
4.   My body is simply a body, although it is mine to partially do what I wish with.
5.   Vanquishing specific emotions will eternally be unfeasible, lest I self-annihilate without resurrection to complete the Übermensch show.
6.   I am the Übermensch as long as I want to be, for the ape is still within thee.
7.   Slacking on my studies wasn’t a result of a declining care for biology, instead, an escalator gallivant to the roof of attention in pursuit of a spotlight.
8.   Someone would die in place of me. My value must be high, so shall it remain and rise.
This Weeks Theme: Realizations
“Love is the extremely difficult realization that something other than oneself is real.” - Unknown

“But egoism is more than this. It is the realization by the individual that he is above all institutions and all formulas; that they exist only so far as he chooses to make them his own by accepting them.” - John Buchanan Robinson

“Having seen and felt the end, you have willed the means to the realization of the end.” - Thomas Troward

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Quotes in “Blog Art”

     Like most female bloggers, I have a guilty pleasure in typography—or at least I think that’s what they’re calling it. The folder on my computer refers to it charmingly and plainly as “Blog Art.” That’s what it always has been to me, a little flair for my seemingly bland thoughts. The captivating pictures are alluring, they catch the eye for a magnificent feast.

     This week’s Thursday’s Thoughts will be attended to in the fashion I’ve recently been indulging in.

This Weeks Theme: Quotes in “Blog Art”


Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Today my realization was the following—

   When in my prime, I’m forced to the pedestal with a choice: pride or dive.

   Pushed me to the brink of madness, with the options upon cystalline presentation: gloat freely in retaliation, destroy me in dissociation, or gaze into the abyss for it longs to gaze into you, of desperation.


Thursday, April 22, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Time

     For the past few days I have been reading Stephen Hawking’s A Briefer History of Time and it has completely captivated me. (One of the reasons why not much has been posted on COSA18 lately, still!) His beautiful explanations make the wonders of physics so easily graspable. My dad keeps joking, “So are you going to go become a physicist now instead of a sociobiologist?” In reply I say, “Why would I need to? Hawking has already answered every question I’ve ever pondered about physics!”
     As if it weren’t obvious from the title, time, specifically space-time, is the central theme of the book. It’s led me to think a bit about time, and I find it most appropriate for this week’s theme.

This Weeks Theme: Time
“The only reason for time is so that everything doesn’t happen at once.” - Albert Einstein

“There is a time for departure even when there’s no certain place to go.” - Tennessee Williams

“There is only one you for all time. Fearlessly be yourself.” - Anthony Rapp

     The final quote by Anthony Rapp made me tear up. It’s something I “needed” to hear today.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Thursday’s Thoughts - Theme: Strength

     Walking away from the final moment together in the airport, I built to be one of the hardest things I would ever have to do. Something unexplainable mingled, the predetermined pressure didn’t feel like the absolute worst I would endure as of yet. There wasn’t a Little Voice assuring me it would crush me; alone, leaving me crumbled into apprehension instead. Particularly welcomed, no, because I was facing the uncertainties of the unknown.
     After toying with the possibility of the separation only hurting a smidgen, my cockiness was getting ahead of my capabilities before I rightfully earned them, or so I feared. Quizzing my strengths, recalling Epictetus’ Art of Living with hopes of newly unearthed enlightenment previously overlooked, I thought I had found none.


     The time came sexually charged with an expression commonly the opposite of love leading to sick despair. The act wasn’t pushed so far to the brink of desperation, the ultimate loss of a completely physical connection, which I am grateful for. My decision was the healthiest one, for me at least, the one who matters most in my world.
     When the untwining occurred, unraveling stayed astray. I backed away and almost lingered upon a pregnant second while casting my sorrowful gaze back.

     However numerous the scenarios my risk could have manifested, I’m grateful for the daring glance solely with the realization it offered: I wasn’t drowning in the abyss after all.
     Slow, deep breaths would calm my physiology, indomitable will comparable to Zarathustra’s would fuel my mentality if I shoveled fast enough, which leads me to my final prideful gloat: without the lamenting years and recent endeavoring months of preparation, my biceps might not have been worked enough to handle the vast amounts of coal in such a short amount of time required to halt the ship from sinking to depths of the barely survivable sea bottom.


     I’d like to brag the ship didn’t even wobble, because it’s true to not render me immediately an arrogant asshole. I’m honest, proud, and honestly proud when I share how not a single drop of rain splattered onto my waxed deck; the beauty of the day even called for me to sail about aimlessly as opposed to docking at my island of self-deceit only to wallow on my shores of old misery.


This Weeks Theme: Strength
“Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.” - Mahatma Gandhi

“The strongest man in the world is he who stands most alone.” - Henrik Ibsen

“Anyone can give up, its the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that's true strength.” - Unknown

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Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts: Theme: Long Distance Relationships

This Week's Theme: Long Distance Relationships
“We are the perfect couple, we’re just not in the perfect situation.” - Joey Rivett

“Distance never separates two hearts that really care, for our memories span the miles and in seconds we are there. But whenever I start feeling sad, because I miss you, I remind myself of how lucky I am to have someone so special to miss.” - Unknown

“True love doesn't mean being inseparable; it means being separated and nothing changes.” - Unknown

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Ancestors

     Someday, it’s likely I will change my last name to detach from the family I was born into by “chance.” So few that the name belongs to have offered me help that I hardly see how I should keep it. For what genuine honor does any Mullino deserve outside of my father, who supports the idea of a name change?
     I had a conversation with my mother yesterday who proposed that it might be selfish to change my last name. But why? Is it still not my name, although a name someone placed on my head? Who deserves any credit for anything of my social existence, aside from me? If someone gives me something and I take it, that’s not selfishness. And quite frankly, it hasn’t happened too often among my ancestors.

This Week's Theme: Ancestors
“Do well and you will have no need for ancestors.” - Voltaire

“Every king springs from a race of slaves, and every slave had kings among his ancestors.” - Plato

“Some people are your relatives but others are your ancestors, and you choose the ones you want to have as ancestors. You create yourself out of those values.” - Ralph Ellison

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Good & Evil

     I’ve been considering the concept of good and evil quite a bit these past few days, as I’ve been reading Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil. I recommend it only if you’ve read Thus Spoke Zarathustra, though. It’s not as exciting because it’s not told as a story, but Beyond Good and Evil could be equally enjoyable if you’re familiar with Nietzsche’s concepts. (And enjoy them, of course.) 
     It’s also not a bad idea to begin thinking deeply about the contrast, and more importantly— what truly does take place beyond good and evil.

This Week's Theme: Good & Evil
“The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance.” - Socrates

“All good becomes a great evil when implemented by force.” - JJ Dewey

“To rid ourselves of our shadows — who we are — we must step into either total light or total darkness. Goodness and evil.” - Jeremy P. Johnson

Happy birthday, my love.





Happy                      Birthday.
Thank you for forever being my grandeur.
You’ve taught me so much already.
I love you.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Insults

This Week's Theme: Insults
“The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.” - J. Russel Lynes

“If we desire to avoid insult, we must be able to repel it; if we desire to secure peace, one of the most powerful instruments of our rising prosperity, it must be known, that we are at all times ready for War.” - George Washington

“The way to procure insults is to submit to them: a man meets with no more respect than he exacts.” - William Hazlitt

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Tightropes

     Since reading Thus Spoke Zarathustra last month, I’ve been captivated by the concept of man as a tightrope. It floods my senses on a constant basis, the vision of men dancing across ropes is something I can’t dispel.
     I’ve taken to “heart” what Nietzsche has shared with the still-man standing. Nietzsche has inspired me to shove myself in the direction I previously misunderstood, though so longingly desired.
     I squandered about the grounds ravenously, scouring for growing seeds to ride past the mountaintops. I denied that I wasn’t going to someday randomly mount a beanstalk, no matter how long I raped the world.

     The tightrope has strung itself across my recent work, though the majority of it I haven’t yet shared on COSA18. It’s encryption into my brain will become clearer and clearer as time goes on. Some truths you just cannot shake.

     Zarathustra, however, beheld the people and was amazed. Then he spoke thus:
     “Man is a rope, tied between beast and overman—a rope over an abyss. A dangerous across, a dangerous on-the-way, a dangerous looking-back, a dangerous shuddering and stopping.
     “What is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end: what can be loved in man is that he is an overture and a going under.
     “I love those who do not know how to live, except by going under, for they are those who cross over.
- Thus Spoke Zarathustra

This Week's Theme: Tightropes
“The leader can never close the gap between himself and the group. If he does, he is no longer what he must be. He must walk a tightrope between the consent he must win and the control he must exert.” - Vince Lombardi

“In this day and time, with no competition you are really walking a tightrope. I mean you may think that no competition is good, but in reality no competition is really bad.” - Jerry Lawler

“Being on the tightrope is living; everything else is waiting.” - Karl Wallenda

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Writers

     This week, my reading material has been instruction books about becoming a better writer.
     On Monday, I read Anybody Can Write. I highly recommend it, it's not only educational, but fun and hilarious.
     After this is posted, I apologize for it being so late, I shall finish the last few pages of The Elements of Style. I just found it the other day too, after it being lost for months. The Elements of Style should go without recommendation, although if you haven't read it, I urge you. You must!

This Week's Theme: Writers
“The writer, when he is also an artist, is someone who admits what others don't dare reveal.” - Elia Kazan

“Talent alone cannot make a writer. There must be a man behind the book; a personality which, by birth and quality, is pledged to the doctrines there set forth, and which exists to see and state things so, and not otherwise.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

“When a writer talks about his work, he's talking about a love affair.” - Alfred Kazin

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: First Time

This Week's Theme: First Time
“Minor things can become moments of great revelation when encountered for the first time.” - Margot Fonteyn
“The first time someone shows you who they are, believe them.” - Maya Angelou
“No one can possibly know what is about to happen: it is happening, each time, for the first time, for the only time.” - James Arthur Baldwin
      This week's theme wasn't picked at random. When I first started COSA18 last August I had a few specific ideas for topics I hoped to eventually discuss, one of them being doing things for the first time. Luckily, this past week three things occurred for the first time, giving me enough events to share for it to be worthwhile.

 
     Earlier this week I was struck with the sudden urge to attempt to curl my hair. Every time my hair has been curled it was by a friend's skill, I've never done so successfully. I tried anyway, and was using my webcam as a mirror. (I'm not sure why I thought that was a good idea.) Later on, Jonathan signed onto AIM and we were chatting while I was still at my attempts. He said something that made me laugh, and I ended up burning the hell out of my forehead, as pictured above. I've never burnt myself straightening or curling my hair, and I've been doing so for five years. This was definitely an unpleasant, yet funny first.

     On Monday, my dad and I went to Walmart to poke around. While he was shuffling through  the$5 DVDs he never buys, I wandered over a few isles in search of desk chairs, only to instead find multiple racks of picture frames on clearance. I surveyed the variety, picked what I wanted, and began searching through the ridiculous amount of frames they crammed onto one rack.
     As my dad rounded the corner, it happened. A frame fell to the floor, and the glass smashed into a hundred pieces. I've never broken anything in a store before in my life, even throughout childhood I never broke a single thing. I thought it was really hilarious that I was seventeen when it finally happened, and that it happened at all.

     This last first happened just yesterday, and is by far the most exciting out of the three. Yesterday, out of a random conversation with my mom about a friend of mine, I drank Absinthe for the first time. I didn't feel like I was in Dracula, but I did feel as chill as Marilyn Manson appears in all his interviews where he's drinking his own brand.
     In the midst of texting and IMing my friends about random things like "nugget strips" and whatever else I thought was clever and important for everyone to know, I took a few pictures, as did my mom. Behold, my  hilarious, possibly embarrassing, "Absinthe face:"


     I think it's worth mentioning that although I vowed long ago to never drink alcohol ever again in fear of "relapsing" back to self mutilation, the thought never crossed my mind yesterday in my decision to drink. I have no regret, second thought, nothing. I am completely happy with the decision I made because I made it smartly. Regardless of being seventeen and it being illegal to drink, I am completely one hundred percent happy with my decision because I made it consciously and reasonably.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Thursday's Thoughts - Theme: Love

     In honor of Valentine's Day this past Sunday, this week's theme for Thursday's Thoughts is love. Quotes on love are probably one of the highest ranking Google searches, or so I'd imagine, considering all the same quotes that clutter girls' Myspaces, Facebooks, and blogs.
     Personally, I've never been in love. I've loved before, though I question some of my past relationships where I thought I loved someone, but now realize it's likely I was in a sick relationship and confused the abuse for love. Anyhow, my dream has always been to someday meet my "wight spider," my love, my everything, all out of choice. I won't know what forever feels like until it's been forever, I just need someone to show it to me.
     For nearly a year I've envisioned my "perfect love," my wight spider, as my personal interpretation of the illustration of the White Spider of Adar. The illustration of a game monster speaks miles that I cannot even describe. Loosely— I carry light, shrouded like a ghost save my smirk, yet my wight spider remains poised and ready for whatever comes next. We are more than simply a team because we are in love, and I am not leading because I have disadvantages, as does my spider. One without the other is neither until complete.

This Week's Theme: Love
“I was about half in love with her by the time we sat down. That's the thing about girls. Every time they do something pretty... you fall half in love with them, and then you never know where the hell you are. ” - J. D. Salinger
“Love takes off masks that we fear we cannot live without and know we cannot live within. ” - James A. Baldwin
“The worst thing you can do for love is deny it; so when you find that special someone, don't let anyone or anything to get in your way.” - Unsure