this is general chat...put it somewhere else if you want more seriousness or something
this is general chat...put it somewhere else if you want more seriousness or something
I would probably go play video games or have sex (the usual) - Nominus Experse
my mom would be like "ve? yo te dije, el internet no es bueno."
"seriously, my mom tells me "que tu hase en eso el dia entero?" and im like "mami yo toy hablando con people" xD. spanglish, ftw." ~ liz
Remember that guy who thought he was a ninja? He was awesome.
Yeah. He looked down upon us pathetic humans.
And if you wanted seriousness, theres a Writers Corner.
I want Mr. Hooper in this story.
I like how you guys think he's serious.
Personally, I won't be happy without a Mexican in Indonesia.
Miss Cleo can use her mind powers to create a giant psychic barrier.
BEST. THREAD. EVER.
The tsunami story is up. Tell me how you like it.
http://forums.eyesonff.com/showthread.php?t=94164
Is that your final answer?
I think that story is a much bigger mess than anything a tsunami could have made.
I wish my story is as good as yours.![]()
I really want to believe that this is all one big joke. I really, really do. Based on your other posts, SuperMillionaire, I cannot help but think that you're completely serious about this whole thing.
This saddens me greatly.
Lighten up people! Fiction is Fiction, no need to follow any rules except one: tell a good story.
You are surely mixing a lot of different fictional universes and it will be hard to get any purist to like the mix. But if you and your friends like it, who cares ?
I had a tidbit you may like about Idonesia and the Tsunami
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/...1601321600.htm
For Tamils, "the ocean takes on a life of its own," as a villain, mercilessly land-grabbing, with a vengeance.
"O Indian Ocean! Where did you conceal our Tamil Nadu, our ripe old land? Why did you plunder the 49 Tamil territories thousands of years ago," wails a 1945 quote of A.M. Paramasivanandam.
"The battle lines are clearly drawn in the Tamil country where labours of loss are also labours of grief, in which the ocean is the principal enemy of the Tamil people and of their drowned ancestral homeland," declares Sumathi.
When tsunami appears transliterated and not translated in the vernacular press, one wonders if there's no word for it in Tamil.
Would katalkôl meaning `seizure by the sea' be apt? "All of Tamil devotion's ocean fears and fantasies turn around this word," observes the author.
It may sound creepy, but she cites K.P. Aravaanan's suggestion that Tamizh has amizh meaning `to submerge'.
"In his reckoning, Tamilians are those people who survived submergence by the sea: they were named as such by their ancestors so that they might remember this original catastrophe."
Perhaps that explains to Sumathi why the typical Tamil "lives a life of loss, forever in exile from an imagined state of plenitude and perfection, of which he can only dream but never ever attain."
I like to mix reality with fantasy sometimes. This story WILL NOT be submitted to the video game and comic companies; it's just something for me that I would like to share.
Is that your final answer?