Death By Logic!

Death By Logic!

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Had to put this one up, it was just TOO correct




Your Birthdate: December 20



You are a virtual roller coaster of emotions, and most people enjoy the ride.

Your mood tends to set the tone of the room, and when you're happy, this is a good thing. When you get in a dark mood, watch out - it's very hard to get you out of it. It's sometimes hard for you to cheer up, and your gloom can be contagious.



Your strength: Your warm heart

Your weakness: Trouble controlling your emotions

Your power color: Black

Your power symbol: Musical note

Your power month: February




-Jacked from Phi

Huh. That's actually pretty creepy, how accurate this one is for me. About the only thing NOT accurate is the "most people enjoy the ride". I try to be very exclusive with whom I allow on my roller-coaster, so complete strangers don't get too weirded out. But it is true, I can go from incredibly content and/or happy to living on the South Side of depression. Getting back on the North Side can be really difficult. I guess it's kind of like a roller-coaster that way too . . . the cars can go much faster when they're helped by gravity than when they're fighting it.

And I could go into the metaphor of gravity being a very serious thing, but I'll skip irony for now. Take this one and see what it gives you. Phi's was pretty damn accurate, too.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

"An Outpouring" or "Thoughts on Fairy Tale Endings"

"I have a dream," he said slowly. "I persist in dreaming it, although it has often seemed to me that it could never come true. I dream of a home with a hearth-fire in it, a cat and a dog, the footsteps of friends - and you!"

Two people, meant from day one for each other, find happiness at long last.

Or . . .

A child is reunited with her lost kitten. The down-and-out sports star makes one last glorious return to "go out on top". The hero recovers from the lethal sickness, and all is well. The knight slays the fierce dragon, rescues the princess, and they live happily ever after.

Don't you love the way things work out in fiction, despite all manner of obstacles? The way good will always triumph over evil, as predictable as the sun rising? The blessed assurance that things will always end on a note of sincere encouragement? The inspirational message that if this person could overcome these problems, you can too? The way a character's love life can be so haphazard, yet still end exactly as we think it should?

Don't you love happy endings?

Don't you love the way things are so simplified in fiction, despite life being proof to the contrary? How being inept (or in some cases, completely clueless) can still equte to catching the crook? Don't you love how an inspirational story can make you feel like more of a failure for even thinking of quitting? Or how a beautiful happily ever after can make you feel utterly alone and miserable?

Don't you hate happy endings?

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

The Passing of a Warrior

This post is dedicated to the memory of a unique and amazing individual. The Crocodile Hunter, Steve Irwin, has passed on, leaving a strange gap in me. While some may say it was bound to happen at some point, given his lifestyle, it still shocked and saddened me to learn of Mr. Irwin's death. It also puzzled me; why should the death of someone I have never met affect me so?

After thinking it over for awhile, I have decided the biggest reason I will miss Steve Irwin is related to what he represented: Wildlife conservation and increasing public knowledge of wildlife. Steve Irwin was a passionate advocate of both the aforementioned, and his influence will be sorely missed. It is safe to say there is no one quite like Mr. Irwin, nor is it likely that there ever will be again. His dedication to the protection and conservation of animals, from the highly endangered species to the more commonplace, was worthy of respect.


I am not a "tree-hugger" or a "nature zealot" myself, but I do recognize that the protection of ecosystems (and the creatures that comprise them) is of very serious importance. It is for this reason, more so than any other, that I mourn the passing of the late Steve Irwin. He was an amazing man with a true gift when it came to interaction with wildlife. He was a self-proclaimed "wildlife warrior", fighting to increase public awareness and protect the world we all call home. And with The Crocodile Hunter's death only hours old, his fervor, unequaled and blazingly genuine, is already painfully absent.

Godspeed, Steve Irwin. I, for one, will miss you.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Horray for Boredom at Work!!

Y O U ... C A N ... O N L Y ... T Y P E ... O N E ... W O R D !

N O ... E X P L A N A T I O N S !

1. Yourself: Maturing

2. Your boyfriend/girlfriend: Huh?

3. Your hair: "different"

4. Your Mother: Lovely

5. Your Father: Amazing

6. Your Favorite Item: Computer

7. Your dream last night: Bizarre

8. Your Favorite Drink: Tea

9. Your Dream Home: Simple

10. The Room You Are In: Lobby

11. Your Ex: Huh?

12. Your fear: Insignificance

13. Where you Want to be in Ten Years: Secure

14. Who you hung out with last night: Family

15. What You're Not: Obnoxious

16. Your Best Friend: Indescribable

17. One of Your Favorite Things: Gaming

18. Your Gender: Male

19. The Last Thing You Did: Working

20. What You Are Wearing: Black

21. Your Favorite Weather: Mild

22. Your Favorite Magazine: Anime

23. The Last Thing You Ate: Oatmeal

24. Your Life: Improving

25. Your Mood: Feh

27. What are you thinking about right now: Sleep


-Jacked from Phi (thx!)

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Nightwish - Nemo (This band rules!)

I absolutely adore this band, and this song is probably my most favourite of all their material. The music video is suitably themed, with very beautiful and scenic shots throughout.

I've been reading Anne of Green Gables, so she's starting to rub off on me . . . I really do think it'd be terribly romantic to play rock music on a mountain top in the snow.

Anyways,
I think if you can find any album by Nightwish, I would highly recommend you pick it up!




Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Time for some Reader - Writer Interpersonals . . .

If you comment on this post:

1. I’ll respond with something random about you.

2. I’ll challenge you to try something.

3. I’ll pick a color that I associate with you.

4. I’ll tell you something I like about you.

5. I’ll tell you my first/clearest memory of you.

6. I’ll tell you what animal you remind me of.

7. I’ll ask you something I’ve always wanted to ask you.

8. If I do this for you, you must post this on your blog.

Jacked from Phi

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Added a Few Minutes After . . .

I'm really really having a hard time leaving the previous post the way it is. It'd be sooo easy to change and/or delete that one before anyone reads it . . . but I want to keep things the way they are once they're published. So, for better or worse, guess it's staying. Again, sorry to everyone for the melodramatic way things turned out. I had no idea when I started, honest!

Don't Know Where This is Headed . . .

I told myself I'd never end up doing this, but for some time I've been feeling like posting poetry that is not my own. It's actually lyrics from a song by Chevelle called The Red. Like I said, I didn't want to do this, mostly because if a stranger wanders into my page, I want to reassure them that the writings on this page are my own . . . but I suppose now that's not completely true.

*shrug*

Oh well, it's my post. Guess I'll do whatever the heck I want with it. Here it is:


The Red
They say freak
When you're singled out
The red, well it filters through
So lay down, the threat is real
When his sight goes red again
Seeing red again, Seeing red again
This change
He won't contain
Slip away, to clear your mind
When asked
Who made it show
The truth, he gives in to most
So lay down, the threat is real
When his sight goes red again
Seeing red again, Seeing red again.
Anyways, that's it. For reasons even I don't fully understand, it's one of my very favourite songs. I suppose I can relate to it, and ever since I first heard it, I pictured more than just an anger management issue (see the music video, if you can track it down). I've always pictured this song being about the Columbine shootings, although I don't know if that's what the band had in mind when they wrote it or not.
I guess this song reminds me of my early Elementary school days, before Grade Five. To say I was an angry youngster would be putting it mildly. But I didn't just start out that way, of course. I had moved to High Prairie in Grade Two, and was still under the innocent perception that the world was a good place, full of nothing but good people.
Before I go further, I suppose I should explain something for any strangers reading this. I have a cleft lip, and during my childhood (before I received corrective surgeries) this left my nose deformed and a very noticeable scar perforated my upper lip.
When I had lived in Edmonton, my teachers had gone to great lengths to ensure I fit in as easily as possible. They introduced me to the classes and explained in easy terms why I looked different. The teachers there realized that children can single out a single physical flaw and be merciless in their ridicule of it. This understanding was sadly lacking in High Prairie. I very quickly learned that children can be incredibly cruel. Even the kids you would assume would be above such things, the "good kids", would join in and make an outsider's life hell.
Within a year, I had learned that I was not a welcome addition to the class that had been together since Preschool. I learned that because I was a pudgy child, and my cleft lip singled me out, I was the easiest source of fun for all the bullies, and other children learned that it was far easier to ridicule me than to simply ignore all of this (or put a stop to it). I became very bitter and angry, not just at those who made fun of me, but at everything and everyone. The person I blamed the most though, was myself.
By the time I was in Grade Four, I already had so much hatred built up towards everyone in my class that I would come home and play with my action figures, pretending that Casey Jones or the G.I. Joes were the people who'd been mean to me lately. Grinding them into the dirt, dropping heavy objects on them, and throwing them up against the wall of the house was about all I could do for destructiveness, but I started to wish I could do something to the people themselves.
Actually, my rage became so focused on the kids in my class that I couldn't even tell who my real enemies were anymore. I ended up directing my impotent anger on every kid in class, whether it was justified or not. At the time, I just wished I could either hurt them, or have it all end. I never truly entertained thoughts of mass-killing (and Columbine was still years away, remember), but I think that I was saved from that path.
The thing that saved me from doing things I could never undo? It seems rather trite to say it, but it was a single act of kindness that became a friendship. All it took to break the cycle was one student who was separate from the mass cruelty that was my grade. She moved to High Prairie from another town, and didn't know (or perhaps just didn't care) that I was the social outcast. She befriended me, and I was so used to being ostracized by everyone around me that I clung to her kindness; I was terrified to let go, lest it disappear like the dream I believed it to be.
But no, I found we had quite a bit in common, for being in Grade Four. Through Grade Five, we developed our friendship, and I found that a good deal of my anger had dissipated. I still suffer from insecurity relating to my childhood, and I find it particularly difficult to keep a positive self-image, but the intense anger and helpless rage I once had was almost completely gone. It is for this reason that I still attribute my current place in life to this friend. Whether she realized it or not (before now), I have always truly felt like she saved my life. Who knows what might have been, if not for kindness?
I didn't know where my rambling would lead when I started this.
. . . So, I suppose I come around to it now. Thank you, Blue. And I could never say it enough; "Thank you!" Although I'm sure you never realized the extent of things, you really have made an incredible difference in my life. I had hoped to get around to telling you this story in person, but things just kind of poured out tonight. *sorry! ^_^*

Friday, June 09, 2006

Public Service? Not for me . . .

So, when somebody asked "What do you want to be when you grow up?" what did you say? Originally, I would say "A paleontologist!" But when I hit Grade 11 I suddenly wasn't so sure. That was an awful lot of study and hard work, and what if I discovered afterwards that it really wasn't what I wanted to do with my life? Thusly, since Grade 11, I have been essentially directionless.

I would like be employed in a way that benefits society. Lifelong gas station jockeys and burger-flippers, my hats off to you (though I don't usually even wear one hat, let alone multiples), because I could never do that for so long. So, a job that helps people . . . that should be easy, right? Except I can't stomach people in pain, and due to a meningitis scare in elementary school, needles present issues of epic proportions to me. So, pretty much anything in the medical world is a non-option. Bummer.

Firefighting. A very noble profession, and definitely a job which helps others. Apart from the very real dangers and the highly physical nature of this job, I can't really offer any reason that I could not perform it. However, for whatever reason, it really does not appeal to me right now. So, for no good reason I can find, firefighting is off my list.

But wait, there're plenty of other jobs that help people! Become a police officer, right? Wrong. I could handle nearly every aspect of that line of work, but unfortunately, police need to 1) protect and uphold the law and 2) remain calm and impartial in the midst of a crime investigation

I didn't pull those "rules" from anywhere in particular, it's just how I've always pictured police (by the way, the first one is most definitely a tribute to
Robocop). The first rule I'd have no problem with. It's against the law, don't do it. You do it, you suffer the consequences. Pretty cut-and-dried to me. The second would get myself arrested, and very quickly. All it would take would be my first child victim or abuse of trust crime (I think you know what I'm referring to here) and I wouldn't be following the first or second rules anymore. I'd be loading my standard issue, packing a metal Louisville slugger, and getting no sleep at night. I'd be dispatching real justice to the wretches that deserve it.

So . . . police service is definitely out. After all, even though I think having police-certified
vigilantes (read: bounty hunters) available to deal with repeat offenders (and particularly horrific first-time offenders) is a good thing, I can't say that the justice system we have right now can condone it in any way. *shrug* I think it's a pretty good idea, but the law can't differentiate between vigilante justice and murder, so . . .

I can't really think of any other jobs that really help benefit society directly, and this post was kind of started by the whole police vs. vigilantism thing, so I guess I'll end here. I'm still considering the
Armed Forces because, even though I know it can be used to harm society, I think it has incredible potential to help as well. We'll see . . . maybe I'll enter the Service and be helping out in some natural disaster zone next year. Who knows?

Saturday, June 03, 2006

A Quick Update from the Madhouse

Hm. The past while has been harder to keep up with regular posting. My apologies to whoever my readers are (I know I have at least a couple, so sorry :) I'll try to keep this as updated as I can, but my hours at work have been scaled down considerably, and when I'm bored and thoughtful at work, that's when I feel the need to post. So at any rate, I'll try to post every so often, but I can't promise much.

Updates from the life of me:

- Life has calmed down some in the recent days. Things were pretty crazy for awhile with work, either too many shifts or not enough.
YC '06 was an incredible experience, as always. 11 consecutive years, and I'm thinking I might catch the next one too. Getting kind of old, but I might squeeze one more year out of it ;) The reason for the stress recently was due to my organizing a group of about 40 to attend. Things before YC were insane (I hold title as the Official Albertan King of Procrastination . . . Yes, OAK-P, that's me), but I finally got there, and things eased up a bit when we got there.

- Lost my voice completely by 5:00 pm on Sunday, which comforted me a bit. I was getting worried that I wasn't gonna make it, since losing one's voice at YC is a tradition dating back to the days of yore (back when you could actually number the people at YC, if you took all weekend and had nothing better to do). But as it turned out, yelling instructions over a group of 30 youth and their supervisors, over the craziness of 16,000+ in Rexall Place multiple times proved sufficient to get the voice gone. So my voice is still slowly repairing itself, which is good. I was getting frustrated with sounding like a fourteen year old again.

- And it's official: I'm moving. As are my brother and cousins. Yes, we're packing up and making the perilous trip with all our earthly belongings to a destination 3 doors down from where we're currently at. Yeah, big whoop. The place is pretty much the same as the 1/2 duplex we're in right now, only it's got a patio deck, a carport, a finished basement, wood laminate flooring, and is generally nicer to look at and live in than our current abode. The room layout is far more convenient as well. Bigger living room, bigger dining area (but a slightly smaller kitchen area), carpet and walls in the basement (which makes for a far more comfortable atmosphere), and there's a nice area in the backyard that seems destined to become a firepit. Exxxxxcellent!

- As I've mentioned, the hours at work have been axed quite a bit, which is frustrating. I'm already not making as much from my second part-time job, which I'll be ending alongabouts the end of July anyway, and now this :^( As much as I hate to admit it, I might have to move on and get a different job. Really don't want to, because as cliche as it may seem, I really will miss the people I work with. Also, it's comforting to know your way around work, and I've always hated that 1-2 month period where you're walking on eggshells, trying to remember everything (and everyone's name).

- Also, I'm considering ditching High Prairie altogether. Where would I go, and what would I do?
The Shadow knows! . . . .Yeah, whatever. Might move to Prince Rupert with my parents, might move to Edmonton and do whatever. Been considering the Canadian Armed Forces, or maybe teaching English overseas . . . The list is endless, but I may be faced with the decision sooner than I expect, since I'm rooming with my bro right now. He's looking at getting married around October or November, and I'm not really into renting by myself in High Prairie, so . . . Who knows? If anyone knows how to get ahold of The Shadow, let me know. I'll ask him.

- And of course, the most important thing right now: The
Edmonton Oilers are going to win the Stanley Cup! Yes, the Holy Grail of hockey will soon be residing in the City of Champions once again. What's that? Speaking prematurely??? I would slap some sense into you, if I could be so bold. They're up against Carolina . . . and the last time I checked, Carolina didn't rank on my list of the Capitals of Hockey. In fact, if I had to peg anyone as not being a Hockey Mecca, it'd be Carolina. (Sorry to any Carolina fans . . . actually, do any exist north of the border? *shrug*) Plus, I knew from the moment they killed the Sharks that the Oil was going all the way. Nope, you won't find any stanleybutterfinger-calgaritis when it comes to Edmonton.

And that's a quick update from my world. Feel free to drop comments, since on this page, they'll actually get read.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Down, but not Out!

Yes, the Oilers made their comeback in friendly territory tonight, winning over the San Jose Sharks in a stunning 3-2 Triple Overtime. Just a thought, but how many teams ever make triple overtime? I'm not a huge hockey fanatic, but it seems to me that the only team that consistently delivers such epic battles is the Edmonton Oilers. Just a thought.

Now, on to celebrate! No deathgrip on the Oilers yet, unlike the unfortunate Ottawa Senators. Losing any of their possible four games will spell doom for their Stanley cup dreams. In light of this, and because if Ottawa is eliminated, Edmonton will be the only Canadian team in the Battle of the Cup, even regular non-Edmonton fans should be very eager to cheer on the Oilers.

Go, Canada!


And to echo a friend of mine, to everyone who thought Edmonton couldn't do it, or didn't stand a chance in the Playoffs . . . "Screw you!!"

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

More Mind Drool (consider yourself warned)

Here's another attempt at poetry. Please keep in mind, poetry is generally not to be taken literally. In fact, with the exception of lyrics, poetry is almost always metaphorical . . . at least, from what I remember in English class, that was the case. In any event, this poem reads as follows :

Cut


So . . . quick, barely noticed.
Yet the line of pink becomes
Red, betraying the implied
Secrecy of the wound.
As the scarlet seeps forth,
The sting begins to drive home;
How I wish I could ignore all of this.

So . . . the issue of blood slows
And will stop in time.
The falibility of memory will
Aid the healing process.
Eventually, only an ugly dark red
Will hint at what used to threaten life.

So . . . the mark becomes only
A shadow of the pain endured.
Barely noticed among the other marks,
They blend into the tone of my skin.
The pain, once so raw, reduces
To an ever-present ache; life without
Becomes unthinkable, life with is only
Bearable.

So . . . continue the cycle, cut, bleed,
Heal over; All in vain, for it begins again.
Yet I endure, in spite of, or perhaps
Because of the pain.

So . . . remind me that I am, in fact alive.
Sear reality into my being.

Cut me again.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

"Inner Vertigo"

Lochlyn asked me to post, and I don't think I've really got much to say. This might seem weird, so bear with me. Probably, you'll all think either I'm completely odd, or worry that there's something wrong, but I don't think it's too big of a deal, myself.

Maybe you've never had this, but once in a long while, I'll have a bit of what I call "inner vertigo". Actually I'm having it right now, thus the post. Don't know what causes it, or what makes it stop, though I think fatigue or stress might be related. I don't usually find it alarming and just try to enjoy it, since it's kind of relaxing.

The best way to describe it is like this : in the middle of whatever I'm doing, I'll suddenly feel light-headed and slightly disoriented, like I had just spun in one of those Twister fair rides. I'll feel dizzy, but not enough to really impair my mobility. I move slowly whenever this happens though, just in case. When I close my eyes, the feeling that the world's spinning intensifies, which makes this kind of annoying if I'm trying to sleep.


Anyway, like I said, it's not that big a deal, and kind of fun . . . also like I said, it doesn't happen very often at all, and doesn't usually last for more than an hour or so. So don't freak out, friends and family.


*shrug*

Don't even know why I'm writing this, actually. Maybe to see if anyone else has ever had "inner vertigo", or if I'm just special . . .

Friday, April 07, 2006

Don't Laugh . . .

Okay, this was written over a period of months, whenever I found myself in a suitable mindframe. Usually at work, bored out of my mind, and full of thoughts that needed an outlet.

Don't know exactly why I'm posting this . . . I absolutely hate talking about myself, but I'm kind of proud of this poem. I'm calling it poetry, even though it follows no rhyme. It's the closest I think I'll ever get to writing lyrics or beautiful verse. * Shrug * Wasn't ever much good at writing anyway, but here it is.


Don't laugh!


"How these words, this pen, these lips, fail me. For I

Cannot find words to
Describe the Indescribable. I cannot write,
Or say, or illustrate or sing.
I draw no comfort from my efforts, nor courage from my
Heavily veiled attempts.

"That which humbles even the greatest of men has humbled me :

Fear of the Unknown.
Or perhaps it is Fear of Loss, its sister. In either case I should be the
Coward. But now, perhaps,
You may guess at the substance
From which my heavy sighs are wrought. And if so,
You may suddenly find the past rewritten, with new
Insights, emphasis placed on
Different words. Perhaps
You may become suspicious of motive.

"Though it may be more difficult to

Trust, please believe that I care for
You above all others, and my only concern has ever been
Your welfare. To this end I have
Hidden myself, hidden beind a Friendship
True.

"And by these actions I have

Doomed myself to a prison of my own making;
Were the heavens to rain blood and fire this night,
And all manner of destruction to befall me,
Yet still count me
A Friend and I would gladly bear them all.
But should any ill befall that trust, and all the
Goodness and blessing in the world
Would not console me.

"Thusly do I live each day in

Silent torture, wishing for a life
I cannot have. And thusly do I
Choose to live, for the alternative
May prove far worse."



Anyway, that's it. Don't know if it means anything special to anyone else, but it was good for me to get out on paper. I'll mark any further mind drool with a warning in the title, in case you want to skip my horrible attempts at poetry. ;)

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Life as a Dim-witted Genius: Part One

So I was walking home from work the other morning, not paying much attention to my surroundings. I was musing over the quirks of worldly justice; drunks who beat a person to death can make bail shortly after, but an evil genius whose world domination plans are foiled may be doomed to multiple life sentences in prison. Is taking over the world really that bad? Wouldn't it be easier on people, not to have to vote for their politicians, who don't listen to them anyways?

So engrossed in this train of thought was I that I failed to notice the shadows which followed me, until it was nearly too late. Only my keen Anti-Ninja sense helped me avoid a gruesome beheading as the shadows solidified and attacked me. Ninjas, sent from my evil arch-rival, no doubt! I dodged and weaved, avoiding their strikes as deftly as possible, for I found myself unarmed and at a serious disadvantage.

The assassins moved impossibly fast, even by Ninja standards. Their garb was black from head to toe, and no physical traits could be noticed. They also seemed to be able to use their feet as dextrously as their hands in combat. Then I spied the awful truth. As I delivered a mighty back kick to one of the assailants, he tumbled backwards and a long, thin and furry tail protruded from his lower back.

Ninja Monkeys! My nemesis had spared no expense in hiring these denizens. The anti-matter grenade I had left in his lunchbox must have really pissed him off . . . Then, as all hope seemed to be lost and the Ninja Monkey leader closed to deliver the finishing blow, I remembered the one weakness of these furry warriors : Ukelele Polkas.

I quickly unstrung my Ukelele (I practice during slow shifts at the hotel) and began a spirited Polka called "The Squidging Helga" (believe me, you don't want to know how the name was picked). Suddenly, the Ninja squad began to dance, Bavarian style, and I was able to slip away and plot my revenge. Perhaps it is time for me to unleash my army of Killer Penguins . . .

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

The "Joys" of Serving the Public

Well, I'll probably post another, more fun post later . . . just wanted to write a bit here. Been on shift at work for about 1.5 hours now, and within the first half hour we had quite possibly one of the most annoying people on the planet come by the Desk.

D had been warning me about her as I started my shift, since she'd been given hassle earlier by this lady. One of those "the other place is so much better" people . . . "I don't like how the Lounge has been changed here, it's ugly" . . . "The rooms are so much nicer over there, and the staff are so nice" . . . "How come whenever I call about a room you tell me you're full?" . . . "How come these people have a room when you said it's full?" (we'd had a cancellation).

And then she wins some money on our VLT's and as I pay her, she says "I'll just go take this money now and pay for my room at the other place", and under her breath as she leaves (but just loud enough that we could hear her) "seeing as you don't like me here."

Now, except for the last comments, I wasn't around to catch the rest. And that's probably why I still have a job, since throttling patrons is generally frowned upon. But as she left, I thought "We don't like you here? And how could that possibly be?"

If you're looking for a summary or a point to this post, you'll be dreadfully disappointed. Just a mini-rant, no direction or point to make really. As I said, if all goes well, I'll add another post tonight, and if not, I'll add one soon.

Friday, March 10, 2006

Online Tests: Do 'em and Post your Results in Comments!

K, do like the title says. Do the tests, cause they're fun and I like them. Then post what you got in the comments (or on your own blog, but be sure to give me your link so I can see what you got). *Oh joy!*


Take the What High SchoolStereotype Are You? quiz.

Kay, some true, some not so....either way, I'd have classified myself as this in High School too.


What Type of Villain are You?
mutedfaith.com.


Same deal here, true but not so....*shrug* Anyway, it's just fun.

Click here to visit website
Which Final Fantasy 8 Character are you?
You don't like being around people but they don't let that stop them. For some reason others see you as a good leader and keep putting you in charge when you would be much happier locked in your room away from the world.



Yay, Squall! (I was hoping to be him, and kind of figured my personality closely resembles his.

I can live with that. And that's it for this round. How'd you guys do?

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Dear God that's Creepy!

Go check out this site:


Mystical Ball


I found it when I was looking for fun quizzes to pass on to you all.....I have no idea how it works, but it's seriously freaking me out, so I thought I'd pass it on to you guys.

I'll post quizzes that I think are fun as I find them, but for now, be afraid! The Internet can read your mind!!

-KojiroMusashi

Life On The Edge : High Prairie

Okay, I don't mean to make this really negative, so if it starts getting that way, just press "reset" and pretend all of the above was spoken through a gi-normously huge grin. I will now begin to try and tell you what my job is like. This job is not particularily remarkable in any way, except that it is located in High Prairie. This single, seemingly unremarkable fact can flip the world upside down, yet those who live here never seem to realize it. Allow me to elaborate ( and if you don't want to, TOUGH! It's my site, I get to rant if and when I want, so nyaaa! X^P ).

I work the graveyard shift at the High Prairie Inn, as a Front Desk Night Auditor. This means that, in addition to checking guests in and out, setting wake-up calls, helping guests with whatever I can, and helping the Bistro and Lounge staff when needed, I am also responsible for printing more reports per night than the FBI, balancing and restarting the Bistro and Lounge's Interac machines and the Front Desk's, and ensuring that everything (including the computers) is balanced, reset, and ready for business the next day. I also have to empty and balance five VLT's (video lottery terminals...just think slot machines without the lever to pull), and prepare the bank deposits for the VLT's as well as all cashouts from the Bistro, Lounge and Front Desk.

This sounds like more than one person could ever get done in 7 hours (since the last hour is usually spent checking guests out and helping the morning Clerk get going), but once you get the routine down, it's not usually that big a deal. There's also something to be said for working a grave shift...yes, working through the night and sleeping all day isn't so hot, but I get to bring in CD's to listen to all night, I'm alone (and thusly my job suits me), and it's usually pretty quiet and stress-free. Usually.

This is where living in High Prairie can flip even the simplest thing, like a nice easy job, on its ear. Let me tell you a story about Monday night. It was about 1:30 a.m. and I was just settling into my routine, waiting for the Lounge to close at 3:00 so I could start shutting everything down. All of a sudden I hear loud shouting and glass breaking in the Lounge, and T phones. She tells me to call the cops, which I immediately do. The arguement (which very nearly turned into a full-scale brawl) spilled outside the Lounge and into the Lobby. Both waitresses were outside, telling some to go to their rooms (yes, it sounds funny, but it's very true...grown men, having young girls my age scolding them and sending them to their room. Actually it's kind of sad). I was keeping a close eye on everything, trying to decide which patrons were just bystanders and which were the instigators.

Anyway, the R.C.M.P. show up a few minutes later, as everyone is finally clearing out. I don't know for sure what the arguement was about, but I was told by one person that it was between two guys and a couple of young men, barely 18, who apparently work for the local drug dealer in town. According to this guy, they were trying to conduct business and got caught by these guys, who'd both had way too much to drink. They figured it was their responsibility to try and beat these pushers senseless.

*Shrug* Anyhow, this is life in High Prairie. Not all the time, and not always this bad, but this is just one reason why nothing in this town really surprises me anymore. I was struck with the thought, as the people dissipated and the peace was restored, that before starting work at the Inn, I'd never had cause to phone the police even once. In fact, I used to be terrified that some day I might actually have to call 911, and they might think there wasn't cause for it. Then they'd come and yank my phone out of the wall, call me names, and fine me heavily (or maybe arrest me). Stupid? Of course I am, but I really used to be intimidated by uniforms. Now I can call them without even a second thought? I counted, as the night wore on, and I think since Sept. I've called the R.C.M.P. about 10 or 12 times now...

Then I thought "Wouldn't a respectable hotel in Edmonton be horrified to call the police for such a thing? It would be a tarnish on their reputation!" Hm. But in High Prairie, the Inn is only contending with the brand new Pomeroy Inn for the "Best Hotel" bragging rights. And we have reason to call the police almost every six weeks. Sad, very sad.

And, as if to prove my point, as I was typing this, our Night Manager told me he'd heard this very morning, a woman was stabbed by her boyfriend, who then stabbed himself. Neither died, but it just seemed ironic that, as I'm on a rant about the Underbelly of High Prairie, I hear yet another story about how scabby it can be.

Yet, as I had stressed earlier, High Prairie is not a bad place to live! Truthfully, there is far more good than evil in this town, which is why many good people still live here. So if you're reading this and think "My God, I have to drive through there on my way to Such-and-Such", don't fret. This was just my rant, and rants tend to turn out very one-sided. Remember to hit "reset" and imagine me reading it through a gi-normously huge grin. Then believe that it's really a good town, just with its own bad element, as all towns are sure to have.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Post Number One: Enter the Genius

Well, isn't this interesting? Someone has decided that, rather than spend a few minutes living their own life, they'll read about the rollicking adventures of KojiroMusashi, a.k.a. The Dim-Witted Genius, a.k.a. me. I warn you now, no information that could jeopardize national security will be divulged. No information which might prove a source of revenue for unscrupulous characters will be leaked. And no highly embarrassing stories will be told about your host. Period.

On the other hand, you may find my thoughts enlightening, or at least good for a laugh. You might find that you agree wholeheartedly with me on some issues, and disagree vehemently with me on others. This is where the "comments" section will prove very useful, as you can praise my logic, or decry it, and others can read your views and do likewise.

Also, as life in High Prairie, the small town where I live, is not exactly the most interesting place in the world, some of my posts may be, shall we say, exaggerated to some extent. Some will not. It will be you, the reader, who will be responsible for sorting out fact from fiction. Who knows, I just might start a story or two. Names and places may be changed to protect the guilty, or the innocent, depending on whom I sympathize with. Stay tuned!