latest comments:
ps | tildanew furniture needed | tilda
beads | tilda
work machine | edward
walls 1 hand 0 | brad
seriousness take a vacation | brad
though only on my home computer | tilda
Well, here we are sans furniture:
Throw in a few pieces and you arrive at this:
No pix of the subzero or the viking range yet. You can make out the viking dishwasher, though. The balthazar/brad storage area is also unseen so far.
at least that's what my browsing history would suggest ...
Truth be told, Tilda and I have been working overtime just to get things squared away and former houses emptied. We should finally be able to post some pix this evening...
...on the positive side, we now have enough free space to house a small army. Provided, of course, that the soldiers are capable of hovering.
for some reason i thought that posts would increase post purgatorial purchase of said domicile, but that does not seem to be the case.
so if one must step up, then clearly that one should be brad, no? and the point of such? ah, to maximize my triumphant destruction about to be loosed on the district...that's right - a shower or four down the road (have i mentioned dust yet?) and i'll be ready to rock.
the only question is - what vice first? blitzed at ed's pad? sauced on sixteenth street? crawling near the canal? i encourage suggestions, with points to the most debased of all...
as you can see, i've fully embraced edward's beloved term.
however, the question as i continue to unpack is this: why do i keep books that i've already read? it's kind of ridiculous, because i'm never going to crack them open again and they're all dusty and disgusting. i had to wash my hands like six times already today. gross!
i think i've re-read maybe two books in my entire life (patented tilda exaggeration is probably at play there, but it's close).
of course, i should probably do it more often. why?
hm. well, i have this weird disorder where i remember almost none of the details of the books i read within a month or so of completing them. it's totally bizarre, because i have an damned excellent memory in general (especially for perceived slights), i'm not a total idiot, and i also love to read.
but let's see ... an example ... i love flannery o'connor. however, i had to read a good man is hard to find like six times before i could keep the plot in my head. and it's a flipping short story.
on top of that, i routinely recommend books without having a clue what was in them. i just have a general impression in my mind that they were really, really good and i couldn't put them down. for instance, i made edward read secrets a couple of months ago, which i maintain is one of my favorite books, but when he mentioned things from it to me, i had only a vague idea what he was talking about.
whatever - i've made it this far. and i'm not as bad as edward, who appears to be keeping several books on indoor barbecuing as well as the te of piglet.



