17 Hours


Never Give Up
November 15, 2008, 7:05 am
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , ,

Quitting is just too easy.

There are two types of people in this world: quitters, and the ones who stick it out.

Those who give up on everything in life never get anything out of it. They may be saving themselves from pain, but in the end, they don’t get anything.

Those who stick it out are the ones who reap the rewards. They get all the glory, they’re the ones who succeed in life. Granted, it took a LOT of hard work, and they suffered a LOT of heartbreak to get where they are, but they earned it.

I mean, look at me and Troy. I got grounded because my parents found out I’d been talking to someone I met online, and we aren’t going to be able to talk regularly for about a month or two. It would be easy for us to say, “Hey, I’m getting bored of waiting, I think I’ll just move on.” But no, we love each other too much. Right now, I’m doing everything in my power just to hear his voice. If I gave up RIGHT NOW, I may be able to save myself from the ups and downs that every relationship has, but I would miss out on having the most AMAZING GUY IN THE WORLD be a (huge!) part of my life.

So, bottom line, don’t give up. On anything. Ever.



People Kill Me Part II
November 15, 2008, 7:05 am
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , ,

Every day I’m bombarded with ramblings by people who won’t shut the hell up about anything and everything, meaning they complain, and it’s all a bunch of redundant drivel all the while, y’know?

I’m tired of people bitching about things and I’m tired of bitching about people who bitch about things. I say:

GIVE ME SOMETHING NEW!

What the fuck is up with everyone? Can’t you just deal with life? Is it hard to get over the fact that you’re too lazy and it’s your fault for not eating less M&M’s instead of exercising? For the love of Larry Bird! I lost my uncle when I was 10, grandmother when I was 11, father when I was 12, friend when I was 15, another friend at the same age, and one of my best friends when I was 16. All the while being young. I’m 17 now. I’ve delt with it.

One day I’m going to get married to the love of my life, the beautiful Rebekka, have kids, make hordes of money, and live a great life with her no matter what, even if it doesn’t start out that way at the beginning.

And guess what? If that fucks up, then I’m going to eventually get over it, and transcend my life better than I could before. It’s just I’m that kind of guy who thrives when a challenge is placed upon a perch in his life.

Boo-hoo, my cat was run over when I backed out of the driveway in my over-sized SUV. Waaah, I made a 95 for an A instead of at least a 99. RARW, I dislike the American government because I helped elect the same guy twice.

You hear the above become tasteless jargon all the time, and it makes me want to leap off a bridge (NOTE: I wouldn’t though).

This rant is virtually dead. I have no more to say.



People Kill Me

Not in the literal sense, but you know what I mean.

Posers, ostentatious attention-grabbers, judgmental idiots, insecure people who bash others because it makes them feel good about themselves.

It’s a load of hoopla.

Sometimes I feel as if Bekki and I are the only two people out there who stick true to their morals and think on their own, straying from the mainstream likes and liking what we like. It’s not being ‘unique,’ it’s being ‘us.’

(NOTE: Allow me to feel free to take this moment and disclose the obvious fact that I’m the luckiest guy in the world to be bestowed by Bekki’s divine and celestial presence.)

However, I know there’s a lot more people out there who stick to what they like and ignore what everybody else seems to be all over. It’s just that the majority of people in America these days would rather delve into what’s in mainstream because a lot of conversations drift into pop culture, and if you aren’t ‘in,’ then you’re ‘out.’

But who am I to say ‘people in America these days’? The seventeen years I’ve experienced thus far on earth are hardly enough to muster any kind of experience, but still yet I’m offering you up a plateful of observations.

My generalization of People in general may irk you, but you will have to get over that. It’s not a grouping whatsoever. It’s just that the people who don’t stand up for what they really believe in drive me crazy, but the few out there that do are exemplary and deserve much needed respect for it.

Reading isn’t as popular as it should be among teens in America, especially teenage guys. However, as I’ve mentioned various times, I’m 17-years-old, and I read myriadly. I don’t fit the mold of the cliched reader, either. I don’t wear glasses or contacts. I’m an avid watcher/observer of sports. I’m six-foot-three (6′3). I’m into playing sports. I lift weights two to three times a week. I write all the time. I never play video games. I think mainstream rap sucks. I think metal sucks. I think emo music sucks. I think country music sucks. I like to act like a smart ass, but at the end of the day I’m always joking and have a steer-clear outlook on life.

Thanks to Hollywood affecting people’s minds a little too much, if I randomly met you in a chatroom and told you I was 17-years-old and read, you would probably think that I was some kind of ‘nerd.’ And not to go off on an unnecessary tangent, but the word ‘nerd’ is thrown around too much in today’s world. Not to quote Clarence Carter too much, but let me ask you something: what’s more nerdier? Reading a book or playing video games? Scrolling your eyes across pages full of words or being transfixed by thousands of pixels on a television screen as you mash buttons on a controller while you sit in your mom’s basement eating Doritos?

I don’t know, but even then I threw out a huge cliche about gamers living in their mother’s basement. I know that’s not the case, and a lot of gamers are in their 30s or mature. But if you would have noticed, or read closely, you would know that I’m mocking every single person out there who goes against a cliche by making one of their own, a paradox in which is not a paradox because it bears no truth.

Everybody’s problems these days, it’s crazy. Not sure if it’s caused by the chemicals in today’s food or if it’s because of what people see in pop culture whether it’s from television shows or movies. No matter how you split it, the problems augment. New disorders pop up. Pretty soon everybody in the United States of freakin’ America is going to have a disorder.

Except two people.

Bekki and I.

Of course, we may be crazy enough as it is (asides from the fact that we call each other crazy and insane all the time).

Lazy people kill her. People in general kill me.

Maybe there should be a new disorder launched pretty soon known as the D4PD — Disdain For People Disorder.

Just maybe.



So, You Hate Reading?
November 4, 2008, 11:09 am
Filed under: General, Satire | Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

I wrote this back in April (but I edited it a little bit.)

Y’know what drives the thousands of hair pegs off my arms? People who say they dislike reading. It’s like listening to a bunch of cats scream at night — it’s annoying, harmonious and monotonous. It’s the same thing all the time with no revelations to add to the same excuse. “Oh, I don’t like reading because it doesn’t interest me.” What about it does not interest you? You read every single day. Whether it’s from an advertisement, stupid horse excrement-esque things you read on the bottom of television screens, or obviously from what you read on the computer. If you still believe that reading isn’t for you, then you must be incredibly illiterate or incredibly stupid.

But don’t worry, bucko, it’s not indelible!

Y’know what may surprise you about me? I’m not an advocate of video games. Sure, I play every now and then (once every three to four months maybe). I have an Xbox 360. I have an Xbox Live account. I only play when one of my friends asks me too — and that’s not often, though it’s the time that I play that hinges my decision over what game and what mood I’m in. Video games bore me to death; they’re predictable. The same thing in almost every genre in that said genre’s category that you’d predict from it. I never got anything out of video games. Maybe quick fingers to use on keyboards to type (but still yet I don’t even type correctly — I only use three fingers on both hands each; my thumb, index and middle finger — and I’m an avid user of that middle finger, buddy), but who cares, y’know? I never got anything instilled in my mind from it. Maybe the intermittent excitement, but what else? Senile enjoyment, probably.

Man, I probably sound like Hitler and video games are Jews (OK, that was a comment that could turn me into a polarizing figure around here, so take it with a grain of salt and not of anything insulting).

Call me a nerd, but I’m a 6′3, 198 lb. muscular dude. Even then, I’m not a huge athlete even though I’m a big time sports fanatic. My Mom is 5′6 and my Dad was 5′7 but somehow I managed to pull off a height of 6′3. Magic, y’know? What kind of 6′3, 198 lb. muscular dude enjoys reading books vicariously over video gaming? ME, BABY! It’s me, it’s me, it’s the un-nerdy 6′3, 198 lb. muscular dude in your face, ya see. (Idiotic rhyme, re-read it again and you’ll understand it. . . hopefully).

So, y’know, there’s something for everyone to read. It just takes a little effort — you’re not too allergic to effort are you, self-proclaimed ‘reading haters’? Let’s hope not. Step aside from the norm and be a little more productive in your own life why don’t ya?

Be more like Bekki and I, read a lot and augment your lexicon with every opportunity. It’s not hard. It’s actually very entertaining.