Hay look! Mah Weasyl!
Posted 12 years agoE'rerbuddys doin it.
https://www.weasyl.com/profile/cyriljackal
https://www.weasyl.com/profile/cyriljackal
I am the only furry not going to AC.
Posted 12 years agoEternal Blaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh....................
I've been on Weasyl for a while.
Posted 12 years agoCar Problems.
Posted 13 years agoI hate asking for stuff, but basically I'm beyond any help I can provide myself.
My car engine seized up and I've found out it will be over $2000 to get a new engine for it. I can't afford new car payments, so that's out. If anyone, anyone cares to throw something at me the only thing I could really give is thanks. But I would. (Not that I really do art but someone asked for that for their help too, so I could do something along those lines too.)
My paypal is my email cyriljackal[at]yahoo.com if anyone could help. Thank you.
My car engine seized up and I've found out it will be over $2000 to get a new engine for it. I can't afford new car payments, so that's out. If anyone, anyone cares to throw something at me the only thing I could really give is thanks. But I would. (Not that I really do art but someone asked for that for their help too, so I could do something along those lines too.)
My paypal is my email cyriljackal[at]yahoo.com if anyone could help. Thank you.
Weasyl Invites
Posted 13 years agoIf you wanted one, note me with the email address you'd like to use.
Single or Not Meme
Posted 13 years agoStolen from some monster
SINGLE OR NOT put this as your journal & see what you get
♥ = I want a relationship with you
C: = I'm falling for you
:3 = I miss you
;] = i really like you
:* = I want to kiss you
:< = I hate you
: X = I like you
O: = I like you but im in a relationship
:/ = I like you but your in a relationship
:] = You're cute
</3 = I regret leaving you
:b = We should get to know each other
;^) = We should hang out
<3 = I love you.. \o//
<:^ = i want to know you
@FT@=*stalk*
eue= You're hot
<:3 = You're a great friend
^_^ = We're friends
^.^ = We're best friends
>;3 = I want you on top
>:3 = I want on top
Logarth made me do this Furry Meme (not really)
Posted 13 years ago[X] you meow/bark to get attention
[ ] you find pets toys amusing
[ ] you get hyper by the smell of catnip
[ ] you growl/hiss when someone gets too close to your food
[ ] you growl/hiss when someone you dislike is too close to you
[ ] you purr/shake your leg when someone shows you affection
[ ] if someone tosses a ball, you chase it and bring it back
Total: 1
[ ] you love to be scratched behind the ear
[X] you love fish/meat
[ ] you like to stick your head out through the window of a moving car.
[X] you like when people pet your head
[ ] people can make you stop doing stuff by hitting you on the nose with a newspaper
[ ] you think feathers are fun to play with
Total: 3
[X] you sleep a lot during daytime
[ ] you enjoy scaring birds
[ ] you lick peoples faces to show you like them
[X] you bite people if they annoy you
[XXX] you tend to steal food from your friends/family's plate when you have eaten all of yours
[ ] milk or water is your favorite drink
Total: 6
[X]you own a collar and you enjoy wearing it
[ ] you own a leash and enjoy wearing it
[X] you own animal ears/tail/paws or a fursuit
[ ] you enjoy long walks in the park
[X] you meow/bark when you see something you want
Total: 9
[X] you call your hands and feet "paws"
[ ] you tilt your head when you do not understand what someone is talking about
[ ] you run to the door when someone mentions a walk
[X] you really enjoy cuddling
[X] you stretch your body and whimper a bit every morning when you wake up
[ ] you can wake up and go back to sleep right away after looking around
Total: 12
[ ] you have your favorite spot besides your bed where you like to sleep
[X] you meow or bark very often
[ ] you hide when you get scared
[ ] you run to the door to see who it is every time someone comes in to the house
[ ] you like to chase flying insects and try to catch them with your bare hand
[ ] you tend to chew on stuff a lot
[X] you like to do tricks to get a treat
Total: 14
[X] you own a wearable item/tag with your name on it
[X] you refer to yourself as an animal
[X] your username has something to do with animals
[X] your e-mail has something to do with animals
[ ] if you get a bleeding wound, you lick it to make it feel better
[X] you look for edible stuff often
Total: 19
[ ] you often find yourself looking through the window for a long time
[ ] you like to say hi to strangers
[X] you like to be petted when you have done something good
[ ] people think you act like a pet
[X] you growl/hiss at stuff you do not like
[ ] you like to eat grass
[ ] if you get wet, you shake to get rid of the water
Total: 21
Final total: 21
Take your score and multiply it by 2
42% Furry - Uh........uh-oh... That's damn high.
Swapnoting!
Posted 14 years agoWho all on my list has:
A) A 3DS
B) Their system updated with Swapnote downloaded.
Looking to add more than just the 5 or so people on my friends list and get more Swappednotes for fun.
You can reply privately if you want. My 3DS friend code is 2836-0090-2907, so add me!
http://www.computerandvideogames.co.....pnote-arrives/
A) A 3DS
B) Their system updated with Swapnote downloaded.
Looking to add more than just the 5 or so people on my friends list and get more Swappednotes for fun.
You can reply privately if you want. My 3DS friend code is 2836-0090-2907, so add me!
http://www.computerandvideogames.co.....pnote-arrives/
Jackal see, jackal do.
Posted 14 years ago1. Tell you something I'll learn about you by looking at your FA page for 13 seconds.
2. Tell you which color you remind me of.
3. Tell you my first memory of you.
4. Tell you what Pokemon you remind me of.
5. Ask you something I've always wondered about you, and your answer has to be as vague as possible to keep the suspense.
6. Tell you my favorite thing about you.
7. Give you a weird nickname
8. Tell you what's on my shirt right now.
9. Challenge you to post this on your journal
(Human) Sex is Boring.
Posted 14 years agoLyrical Obfuscation
Posted 14 years agoStolen idea from one of the things Skippy loves to do. Good Luck! All comments screened until they're all figured out.
1)
"I am a Felon. Because every time I scribble two corresponding words, these folk think it's a felony to express what's in my thoughts. I suppose I'm a FELON."
2)
"Currency, retreat.
I'm fine, "nemesis of the giant", do not place your paws on my pile.
Currency, it is like taking a drug."
3)
" 'Acronym for American Nurses Association' 'common Cantonese name in the Manhattan phonebook' and myself are becoming elderly.
And yet have not ambled in the effulgence of the others prodigious companionship."
4)
"Media libra 'black tar'
media libra uncrystalized syrup
That is the way the narration goes
divulged is the malevolence."
5)
"Existence is existence
when everyone experiences the electricity
when everyone experiences the hurt
it is a experience of the populi
it is a experience of the topography"
6)
"It's impossible to gesticulate for anyone else
a rut is located within the cardio pulmonary organ"
7)
"I am insane. Let me fascinate you. I am said to be hideous, but I pay no mind. Yet I infiltrate pantaloons and have a jitterbug that is mine."
8)
"I'm similar to a canine in rut, a grotesquerie without notice, I crave copulation because I am exceedingly aroused"
9)
"It is the final culmination of terminal karma.
Protagonists, antagonists, combustions wherever ocularly available.
They will all die, save one, my speculations who it is."
10)
"T'was insane guy posting these.
I enjoy, crank the knob.
Tho our tunes and illicit pharmaceuticals remained constant
Tho our tunes and absorptions remained constant
We remained entwined, roll in the hays located in the natural spring,
We inhaled with each other and cascaded to Hades."
1)
"I am a Felon. Because every time I scribble two corresponding words, these folk think it's a felony to express what's in my thoughts. I suppose I'm a FELON."
2)
"Currency, retreat.
I'm fine, "nemesis of the giant", do not place your paws on my pile.
Currency, it is like taking a drug."
3)
" 'Acronym for American Nurses Association' 'common Cantonese name in the Manhattan phonebook' and myself are becoming elderly.
And yet have not ambled in the effulgence of the others prodigious companionship."
4)
"Media libra 'black tar'
media libra uncrystalized syrup
That is the way the narration goes
divulged is the malevolence."
5)
"Existence is existence
when everyone experiences the electricity
when everyone experiences the hurt
it is a experience of the populi
it is a experience of the topography"
6)
"It's impossible to gesticulate for anyone else
a rut is located within the cardio pulmonary organ"
7)
"I am insane. Let me fascinate you. I am said to be hideous, but I pay no mind. Yet I infiltrate pantaloons and have a jitterbug that is mine."
8)
"I'm similar to a canine in rut, a grotesquerie without notice, I crave copulation because I am exceedingly aroused"
9)
"It is the final culmination of terminal karma.
Protagonists, antagonists, combustions wherever ocularly available.
They will all die, save one, my speculations who it is."
10)
"T'was insane guy posting these.
I enjoy, crank the knob.
Tho our tunes and illicit pharmaceuticals remained constant
Tho our tunes and absorptions remained constant
We remained entwined, roll in the hays located in the natural spring,
We inhaled with each other and cascaded to Hades."
Please read and tell me how much you agree!
Posted 14 years agoScience and religion: God didn't make man; man made gods
Posted 14 years agoJuly 18, 2011|By J. Anderson Thomson and Clare Aukofer
Before John Lennon imagined "living life in peace," he conjured "no heaven … / no hell below us …/ and no religion too."
No religion: What was Lennon summoning? For starters, a world without "divine" messengers, like Osama bin Laden, sparking violence. A world where mistakes, like the avoidable loss of life in Hurricane Katrina, would be rectified rather than chalked up to "God's will." Where politicians no longer compete to prove who believes more strongly in the irrational and untenable. Where critical thinking is an ideal. In short, a world that makes sense.
In recent years scientists specializing in the mind have begun to unravel religion's "DNA." They have produced robust theories, backed by empirical evidence (including "imaging" studies of the brain at work), that support the conclusion that it was humans who created God, not the other way around. And the better we understand the science, the closer we can come to "no heaven … no hell … and no religion too."
Like our physiological DNA, the psychological mechanisms behind faith evolved over the eons through natural selection. They helped our ancestors work effectively in small groups and survive and reproduce, traits developed long before recorded history, from foundations deep in our mammalian, primate and African hunter-gatherer past.
For example, we are born with a powerful need for attachment, identified as long ago as the 1940s by psychiatrist John Bowlby and expanded on by psychologist Mary Ainsworth. Individual survival was enhanced by protectors, beginning with our mothers. Attachment is reinforced physiologically through brain chemistry, and we evolved and retain neural networks completely dedicated to it. We easily expand that inborn need for protectors to authority figures of any sort, including religious leaders and, more saliently, gods. God becomes a super parent, able to protect us and care for us even when our more corporeal support systems disappear, through death or distance.
Scientists have so far identified about 20 hard-wired, evolved "adaptations" as the building blocks of religion. Like attachment, they are mechanisms that underlie human interactions: Brain-imaging studies at the National Institutes of Health showed that when test subjects were read statements about religion and asked to agree or disagree, the same brain networks that process human social behavior — our ability to negotiate relationships with others — were engaged.
Among the psychological adaptations related to religion are our need for reciprocity, our tendency to attribute unknown events to human agency, our capacity for romantic love, our fierce "out-group" hatreds and just as fierce loyalties to the in groups of kin and allies. Religion hijacks these traits. The rivalry between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, for example, or the doctrinal battles between Protestant and Catholic reflect our "groupish" tendencies.
In addition to these adaptations, humans have developed the remarkable ability to think about what goes on in other people's minds and create and rehearse complex interactions with an unseen other. In our minds we can de-couple cognition from time, place and circumstance. We consider what someone else might do in our place; we project future scenarios; we replay past events. It's an easy jump to say, conversing with the dead or to conjuring gods and praying to them.
Morality, which some see as imposed by gods or religion on savage humans, science sees as yet another adaptive strategy handed down to us by natural selection.
Yale psychology professor Paul Bloom notes that "it is often beneficial for humans to work together … which means it would have been adaptive to evaluate the niceness and nastiness of other individuals." In groundbreaking research, he and his team found that infants in their first year of life demonstrate aspects of an innate sense of right and wrong, good and bad, even fair and unfair. When shown a puppet climbing a mountain, either helped or hindered by a second puppet, the babies oriented toward the helpful puppet. They were able to make an evaluative social judgment, in a sense a moral response.
Michael Tomasello, a developmental psychologist who co-directs the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, has also done work related to morality and very young children. He and his colleagues have produced a wealth of research that demonstrates children's capacities for altruism. He argues that we are born altruists who then have to learn strategic self-interest.
Beyond psychological adaptations and mechanisms, scientists have discovered neurological explanations for what many interpret as evidence of divine existence. Canadian psychologist Michael Persinger, who developed what he calls a "god helmet" that blocks sight and sound but stimulates the brain's temporal lobe, notes that many of his helmeted research subjects reported feeling the presence of "another." Depending on their personal and cultural history, they then interpreted the sensed presence as either a supernatural or religious figure. It is conceivable that St. Paul's dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus was, in reality, a seizure caused by temporal lobe epilepsy.
The better we understand human psychology and neurology, the more we will uncover the underpinnings of religion. Some of them, like the attachment system, push us toward a belief in gods and make departing from it extraordinarily difficult. But it is possible.
We can be better as a species if we recognize religion as a man-made construct. We owe it to ourselves to at least consider the real roots of religious belief, so we can deal with life as it is, taking advantage of perhaps our mind's greatest adaptation: our ability to use reason.
Imagine that.
J. Anderson Thomson is a psychiatrist at the University of Virginia. He serves as a trustee of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science. Clare Aukofer is a medical writer. They are the authors of "Why We Believe in God(s): A Concise Guide to the Science of Faith."
Before John Lennon imagined "living life in peace," he conjured "no heaven … / no hell below us …/ and no religion too."
No religion: What was Lennon summoning? For starters, a world without "divine" messengers, like Osama bin Laden, sparking violence. A world where mistakes, like the avoidable loss of life in Hurricane Katrina, would be rectified rather than chalked up to "God's will." Where politicians no longer compete to prove who believes more strongly in the irrational and untenable. Where critical thinking is an ideal. In short, a world that makes sense.
In recent years scientists specializing in the mind have begun to unravel religion's "DNA." They have produced robust theories, backed by empirical evidence (including "imaging" studies of the brain at work), that support the conclusion that it was humans who created God, not the other way around. And the better we understand the science, the closer we can come to "no heaven … no hell … and no religion too."
Like our physiological DNA, the psychological mechanisms behind faith evolved over the eons through natural selection. They helped our ancestors work effectively in small groups and survive and reproduce, traits developed long before recorded history, from foundations deep in our mammalian, primate and African hunter-gatherer past.
For example, we are born with a powerful need for attachment, identified as long ago as the 1940s by psychiatrist John Bowlby and expanded on by psychologist Mary Ainsworth. Individual survival was enhanced by protectors, beginning with our mothers. Attachment is reinforced physiologically through brain chemistry, and we evolved and retain neural networks completely dedicated to it. We easily expand that inborn need for protectors to authority figures of any sort, including religious leaders and, more saliently, gods. God becomes a super parent, able to protect us and care for us even when our more corporeal support systems disappear, through death or distance.
Scientists have so far identified about 20 hard-wired, evolved "adaptations" as the building blocks of religion. Like attachment, they are mechanisms that underlie human interactions: Brain-imaging studies at the National Institutes of Health showed that when test subjects were read statements about religion and asked to agree or disagree, the same brain networks that process human social behavior — our ability to negotiate relationships with others — were engaged.
Among the psychological adaptations related to religion are our need for reciprocity, our tendency to attribute unknown events to human agency, our capacity for romantic love, our fierce "out-group" hatreds and just as fierce loyalties to the in groups of kin and allies. Religion hijacks these traits. The rivalry between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, for example, or the doctrinal battles between Protestant and Catholic reflect our "groupish" tendencies.
In addition to these adaptations, humans have developed the remarkable ability to think about what goes on in other people's minds and create and rehearse complex interactions with an unseen other. In our minds we can de-couple cognition from time, place and circumstance. We consider what someone else might do in our place; we project future scenarios; we replay past events. It's an easy jump to say, conversing with the dead or to conjuring gods and praying to them.
Morality, which some see as imposed by gods or religion on savage humans, science sees as yet another adaptive strategy handed down to us by natural selection.
Yale psychology professor Paul Bloom notes that "it is often beneficial for humans to work together … which means it would have been adaptive to evaluate the niceness and nastiness of other individuals." In groundbreaking research, he and his team found that infants in their first year of life demonstrate aspects of an innate sense of right and wrong, good and bad, even fair and unfair. When shown a puppet climbing a mountain, either helped or hindered by a second puppet, the babies oriented toward the helpful puppet. They were able to make an evaluative social judgment, in a sense a moral response.
Michael Tomasello, a developmental psychologist who co-directs the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, has also done work related to morality and very young children. He and his colleagues have produced a wealth of research that demonstrates children's capacities for altruism. He argues that we are born altruists who then have to learn strategic self-interest.
Beyond psychological adaptations and mechanisms, scientists have discovered neurological explanations for what many interpret as evidence of divine existence. Canadian psychologist Michael Persinger, who developed what he calls a "god helmet" that blocks sight and sound but stimulates the brain's temporal lobe, notes that many of his helmeted research subjects reported feeling the presence of "another." Depending on their personal and cultural history, they then interpreted the sensed presence as either a supernatural or religious figure. It is conceivable that St. Paul's dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus was, in reality, a seizure caused by temporal lobe epilepsy.
The better we understand human psychology and neurology, the more we will uncover the underpinnings of religion. Some of them, like the attachment system, push us toward a belief in gods and make departing from it extraordinarily difficult. But it is possible.
We can be better as a species if we recognize religion as a man-made construct. We owe it to ourselves to at least consider the real roots of religious belief, so we can deal with life as it is, taking advantage of perhaps our mind's greatest adaptation: our ability to use reason.
Imagine that.
J. Anderson Thomson is a psychiatrist at the University of Virginia. He serves as a trustee of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science. Clare Aukofer is a medical writer. They are the authors of "Why We Believe in God(s): A Concise Guide to the Science of Faith."
Quote of the Day!
Posted 14 years ago"Religion is like a penis. It's good to have one, it's good to be proud of it, but it doesn't mean you should parade it around for all to see, and it certainly doesn't mean you can shove it down my children's throat. " -collex
3 Things Meme
Posted 14 years agoStolen from
clemfox
Three names you go by, other than your given name:
1. Un_Chakal
2. "The Jackal"
3. "Jackal Lord of the North"
Three screen names you've had:
1. Un_Chakal
2. GotCyril
3. cyriljackal
Three physical things you like about yourself:
1. legs
2. chest
3. cawk
Three physical things you don't like about yourself:
1. I'm
2. not
3. self conscious
Three parts of your heritage:
1. Welsh/Irish
2. French
3. German
Three things you are wearing right now:
1. burgundy t shirt
2. powder blue boxer brief undies
3. glasses
Three favorite bands/musical artists:
1. The Cramps
2. Rob Zombie
3. The Aquabats
BONUS 4! The Residents!
Three favorite songs:
1. Surfin' Dead - The Cramps
2. Demons Dance Alone - The Residents
3. GIANT ROBOT-BIRDHEAD - The Aquabats
Three things you want in a relationship:
1. Being able to share what I like.
2. companionship.
3. Sex
Three physical things about the preferred sex that appeal to you:
1. I'm
2. not
3. sure.
Three of your favorite hobbies:
1. Collecting Transformers
2. Fencing
3. Drawing
Three things that scare you:
1. Being horribly injured, but not dying.
2. Deranged people in charge.
3. Mob mentality triumphing over reason and order.
Three of your everyday essentials:
1. Mytouch G3 Slide Android phone
2. Gateway NV53 laptop
3. Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder
Three places you want to go on vacation:
1. England
2. Japan
3. Canada
Three nicknames you dislike:
1. Andrew
2. n/a
3. n/a
Three careers you have considered/are considering:
1. homeless junkie
2. superhero
3. average worker
Three ways you are stereotypically a man:
1. farting
2. pile of unwashed clothes
3. unwashed dishes
Three ways you are stereotypically a woman:
1. I make
2. my own
3. sandwiches.
Three things you want to do before you die:
1. Get emotionless revenge on those who've wronged me.
2. Travel to the End of Time to see what happens.
3. NEVER EVER DIE.
Three things you want to do really badly right now:
1. See some friends.
2. Be less sick.
3. Get more money.
Three Pets you own:
1. None
2. That makes me
3. very lonely feeling.
Three favorite drinks:
1. Coke Zero
2. Lemonade/Iced Tea
3. Turkey Hill Diet Green Tea
clemfoxThree names you go by, other than your given name:
1. Un_Chakal
2. "The Jackal"
3. "Jackal Lord of the North"
Three screen names you've had:
1. Un_Chakal
2. GotCyril
3. cyriljackal
Three physical things you like about yourself:
1. legs
2. chest
3. cawk
Three physical things you don't like about yourself:
1. I'm
2. not
3. self conscious
Three parts of your heritage:
1. Welsh/Irish
2. French
3. German
Three things you are wearing right now:
1. burgundy t shirt
2. powder blue boxer brief undies
3. glasses
Three favorite bands/musical artists:
1. The Cramps
2. Rob Zombie
3. The Aquabats
BONUS 4! The Residents!
Three favorite songs:
1. Surfin' Dead - The Cramps
2. Demons Dance Alone - The Residents
3. GIANT ROBOT-BIRDHEAD - The Aquabats
Three things you want in a relationship:
1. Being able to share what I like.
2. companionship.
3. Sex
Three physical things about the preferred sex that appeal to you:
1. I'm
2. not
3. sure.
Three of your favorite hobbies:
1. Collecting Transformers
2. Fencing
3. Drawing
Three things that scare you:
1. Being horribly injured, but not dying.
2. Deranged people in charge.
3. Mob mentality triumphing over reason and order.
Three of your everyday essentials:
1. Mytouch G3 Slide Android phone
2. Gateway NV53 laptop
3. Mitsubishi Eclipse Spyder
Three places you want to go on vacation:
1. England
2. Japan
3. Canada
Three nicknames you dislike:
1. Andrew
2. n/a
3. n/a
Three careers you have considered/are considering:
1. homeless junkie
2. superhero
3. average worker
Three ways you are stereotypically a man:
1. farting
2. pile of unwashed clothes
3. unwashed dishes
Three ways you are stereotypically a woman:
1. I make
2. my own
3. sandwiches.
Three things you want to do before you die:
1. Get emotionless revenge on those who've wronged me.
2. Travel to the End of Time to see what happens.
3. NEVER EVER DIE.
Three things you want to do really badly right now:
1. See some friends.
2. Be less sick.
3. Get more money.
Three Pets you own:
1. None
2. That makes me
3. very lonely feeling.
Three favorite drinks:
1. Coke Zero
2. Lemonade/Iced Tea
3. Turkey Hill Diet Green Tea
Back from AC?
Posted 14 years agoAm I the ONLY one who had a lackuster time with a few good things interspersed?
Harold Camping reaffirms October date for end of the world.
Posted 14 years agosays May 21 date was ‘invisible judgment day’
Wat?
WHAT?
FDS.
Wat?
WHAT?
FDS.
MyFur.net is exploding!
Posted 14 years agohttp://myfur.net/profile/CyrilJaquel
Keep the disease spreading.
Keep the disease spreading.
UK politics involving cats and what it could mean to us.
Posted 14 years agohttp://youtu.be/HiHuiDD_oTk
This style makes a lot of sense to me. Seems like people who think in black vs white terms are the only ones who wouldn't like it.
"Next best" choice is better than "either or" choices to me any day.
IRV or Independent Runoff Voting is what it seems to be called here. http://youtu.be/wqblOq8BmgM
IRV should be implemented here so we'd have choices and not have a knock down drag out fight just to be the last man standing.
http://www.formspring.me/CyrilJaquel
This style makes a lot of sense to me. Seems like people who think in black vs white terms are the only ones who wouldn't like it.
"Next best" choice is better than "either or" choices to me any day.
IRV or Independent Runoff Voting is what it seems to be called here. http://youtu.be/wqblOq8BmgM
IRV should be implemented here so we'd have choices and not have a knock down drag out fight just to be the last man standing.
http://www.formspring.me/CyrilJaquel
Formspring Ask-me Stuff
Posted 14 years agoThe Pierley/Redford Dissociative Test
Posted 14 years agoPlease take this test and report your findings in a message.
http://www.hypnoid.com/psytest2.html
"Phil Freeman points out that after taking this completely disturbing psychological test he's worried that he's been recruited to become some kind of sleeper assassin. You'll be directed to answer twenty increasingly scary questions by picking between two weird, throbbing shapes. By the end, you're having a bad trip. And then you're given a breezy, horoscope-like personality assessment that seems to have nothing to do with your harrowing journey.
Have a nice day!"
http://www.hypnoid.com/psytest2.html
"Phil Freeman points out that after taking this completely disturbing psychological test he's worried that he's been recruited to become some kind of sleeper assassin. You'll be directed to answer twenty increasingly scary questions by picking between two weird, throbbing shapes. By the end, you're having a bad trip. And then you're given a breezy, horoscope-like personality assessment that seems to have nothing to do with your harrowing journey.
Have a nice day!"
Seems a lot of people
Posted 14 years agoare being cunts today. Is something happening with the moon or something?
No Subject
Posted 14 years agoHuman being are members of a whole
In creation of one essence and soul
If one member is afflicted with pain
Other members uneasy will remain
If you've no sympathy for human pain
The name of human you cannot retain!
Saadi ( Persian Poet )
In creation of one essence and soul
If one member is afflicted with pain
Other members uneasy will remain
If you've no sympathy for human pain
The name of human you cannot retain!
Saadi ( Persian Poet )
Ten short letters to ten different people
Posted 14 years ago1. You "don't want to reconnect". I tagged along with you for years, your hippy shit, your emotional wreckyness. Hanging out with your now dead ex boyfriend who you only yelled at each other with? And now you find out how damaged you are? And I'M the worst person to try to find friends from the past? Yeah you deserve to be miserable forever. I just really wanted to write this down somewhere because really, you're the asshole. YOU are the asshole.
2. I understand you, I really do. You think no one does, you think that everyone is out to get you. You mete out your own justice. You pay back those who hurt you. Even those you're close to. But you do it in secret. And you don't REALLY forgive. You don't follow or understand the law because you follow your own law. But like lots of people you cannot follow the law when you feel you've been wronged. And there's the difference. I stop. You really could 'be somebody' if you didn't just stick to the old ways you do things and hold onto the past the way you do. You pretend to have but I know you still keep getting revenge even though you pretend not to. I've heard. I know.
3. You live in a different world, and I know you used to do the grind like the rest of us, but it's 'not quite the same' as it used to be. Here's a personal theory of mine. The world is like an onion. We have different layers that sometimes touch and people jump, like an electron, to a different layer or shell. That doesn't mean I don't like you in any way shape or form. Problem is, I just see that we're on different shells, and now more than ever before, I can't imagine myself getting to a higher shell. I see less freedom comparatively. But is this my fault? Maybe it is. Sometimes I don't like being aware, it makes you see stuff coming up that otherwise you can pretend was a waylay.
4. You seem to want to give. Give give give. And I can totally dig it. To give you must have, and to have you must work your way to the top, or your own little mountain. From there, you can help out those less fortunate or able. I myself don't ever see myself getting to the top of any kind again. If the stable base gives out, everything its built on goes. What would Brian Boitano do?
6. So many people are here for you, but I know what your family has put you though. I wish there was a way to fix everything for you, and I'm sure there is. Thing is, by the time it's done I'm not sure you'll still think the vast portion of your life was good. I wish I could fix the world.
7. Dude, you're a faggot. You know it, I know it, DOGS know it. Back in the day they used to call what you have a 'beard'. A girlfriend to hide what you and everyone else knows is true. You're setting yourself up for a LIFETIME of misery that you will only share with that girl. You've gotten yourself together in SO MANY WAYS. You can hold real conversations, but mostly about what you regret you've lost, and it's sad sad sad you can't live the way your heart is telling you to. Because you're afraid of what people THINK? Says the guy who mentions Colombine like it's a funny haha joke? Go gay, fag it up and live how you want to, not like some milkman or something with a creepy secret.
8. Nowhere else would put up with this, but I'm too nice. Late over and over. Nobody else is gonna put up with that. Making me late to stuff? I like you a lot but, no way. Maybe it's good you won't be around much longer...You have such potential to do, without even trying.
9. You've got it. Even if you do have wonky neurons that sputter, you've got it. If onlyI were the kind that could follow. We'd chat and dine in the Bahamas. What will our little dreams do for us?
10. You're from the past, a bad past. I hated you with a passion. When you died, I thought of dancing on your grave or at least pissing on it, like they do on GG Allin's grave. I've calmed some after......maybe ten years? Maybe you regret how you hurt me over and over? After gutting the stuffed animal I gave you just because I went out and had some fun like you yourself suggested, I can't imagine so. And I still wonder if I should talk to you after all this time. No, you'd just blame me.
Bonus:
11: Last time I saw you, you were a skeleton with no teeth. 90, at 17. You were such a bad girl, and you almost took him with you down to the grave. I'm pretty sure this is how a lot of the world is, people thinking they have it under control, then dying from it. I have a guy who works as a nurse who comes into my store, and tells me about how it really is, that drugs fuck you up, that you get holes in your body and it breaks down, way faster than just getting old. Something I wish you'd have done. You helped me to free myself from just that much more of the fear of death, that much more than when Aunt Cass died, my 100 year old aunt. Your death freed me, by seeing what happens in the real world. But it also shut off a little part of my heart.
2. I understand you, I really do. You think no one does, you think that everyone is out to get you. You mete out your own justice. You pay back those who hurt you. Even those you're close to. But you do it in secret. And you don't REALLY forgive. You don't follow or understand the law because you follow your own law. But like lots of people you cannot follow the law when you feel you've been wronged. And there's the difference. I stop. You really could 'be somebody' if you didn't just stick to the old ways you do things and hold onto the past the way you do. You pretend to have but I know you still keep getting revenge even though you pretend not to. I've heard. I know.
3. You live in a different world, and I know you used to do the grind like the rest of us, but it's 'not quite the same' as it used to be. Here's a personal theory of mine. The world is like an onion. We have different layers that sometimes touch and people jump, like an electron, to a different layer or shell. That doesn't mean I don't like you in any way shape or form. Problem is, I just see that we're on different shells, and now more than ever before, I can't imagine myself getting to a higher shell. I see less freedom comparatively. But is this my fault? Maybe it is. Sometimes I don't like being aware, it makes you see stuff coming up that otherwise you can pretend was a waylay.
4. You seem to want to give. Give give give. And I can totally dig it. To give you must have, and to have you must work your way to the top, or your own little mountain. From there, you can help out those less fortunate or able. I myself don't ever see myself getting to the top of any kind again. If the stable base gives out, everything its built on goes. What would Brian Boitano do?
6. So many people are here for you, but I know what your family has put you though. I wish there was a way to fix everything for you, and I'm sure there is. Thing is, by the time it's done I'm not sure you'll still think the vast portion of your life was good. I wish I could fix the world.
7. Dude, you're a faggot. You know it, I know it, DOGS know it. Back in the day they used to call what you have a 'beard'. A girlfriend to hide what you and everyone else knows is true. You're setting yourself up for a LIFETIME of misery that you will only share with that girl. You've gotten yourself together in SO MANY WAYS. You can hold real conversations, but mostly about what you regret you've lost, and it's sad sad sad you can't live the way your heart is telling you to. Because you're afraid of what people THINK? Says the guy who mentions Colombine like it's a funny haha joke? Go gay, fag it up and live how you want to, not like some milkman or something with a creepy secret.
8. Nowhere else would put up with this, but I'm too nice. Late over and over. Nobody else is gonna put up with that. Making me late to stuff? I like you a lot but, no way. Maybe it's good you won't be around much longer...You have such potential to do, without even trying.
9. You've got it. Even if you do have wonky neurons that sputter, you've got it. If onlyI were the kind that could follow. We'd chat and dine in the Bahamas. What will our little dreams do for us?
10. You're from the past, a bad past. I hated you with a passion. When you died, I thought of dancing on your grave or at least pissing on it, like they do on GG Allin's grave. I've calmed some after......maybe ten years? Maybe you regret how you hurt me over and over? After gutting the stuffed animal I gave you just because I went out and had some fun like you yourself suggested, I can't imagine so. And I still wonder if I should talk to you after all this time. No, you'd just blame me.
Bonus:
11: Last time I saw you, you were a skeleton with no teeth. 90, at 17. You were such a bad girl, and you almost took him with you down to the grave. I'm pretty sure this is how a lot of the world is, people thinking they have it under control, then dying from it. I have a guy who works as a nurse who comes into my store, and tells me about how it really is, that drugs fuck you up, that you get holes in your body and it breaks down, way faster than just getting old. Something I wish you'd have done. You helped me to free myself from just that much more of the fear of death, that much more than when Aunt Cass died, my 100 year old aunt. Your death freed me, by seeing what happens in the real world. But it also shut off a little part of my heart.
FA+
