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FW: My Latest Favorite Diversion…

Wetwired Time Monday, August 23rd, 2004 at 6:12 pm by Finley

So, here’s the thing.

Pylorns, in his infinite wisdom, posted a link to an online game called
Blogshares last week to show the “value” of the site in a virtual stock
exchange based on blogs as stocks. Me being the curious bastard that I
am, I decided to take a look.

Thanks, Pylorns. Thanks a whole fricking lot.

See, because of this one peek I decided to get in. Now, the $500.00 in
play money has grown to well over $3,000,000.00 (at last check.) I’m
waiting in anticipation for the next chance to make transactions, since
I’m limited to 21 transactions within any 24 hour period. I’m now
considering paying these folks 15 bucks so I can play unlimited for a
year. I’m researching to see what blogs are good tips, and making
“money” hand over fist with it. If only I could be so good in real life.

Out.




Whats topping the news on this monday.

Wetwired Time Monday, August 23rd, 2004 at 7:23 am by pylorns

WWI soldiers frozen in time.

From here.

WWI soldiers’ bodies found in ice
From correspondents in Rome
23aug04
THE preserved bodies of three Austrian soldiers killed in World War I had been found at the foot of an Italian glacier, 86 years after their deaths, a museum in northern Italy said today.

They were found by Maurizio Vincenzi, the director of the military history museum in the small town of Peio in the Trentino region.

The bodies were found 3400 metres up the San Matteo mountain and were said to be exceptionally well preserved.

They were spotted by Mr Vincenzi, a member of a mountain rescue team, after he scanned the glacier with binoculars and noticed marks on it.

The area was the scene of fighting between Austrian and Italian troops in 1918 and the Austrian soldiers would have belonged to a regiment based at Dimaro nearby.

It is believed that the men died when they were attacked with grenades. Their bodies have been taken to a morgue in Peio and will be transferred to a military cemetery.

According to Mr Vincenzi, it is 80 years since the preserved body of a World War I soldier has been found.

Skydiver jumps without parachute.

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (Reuters) — A South African skydiver survived a 3,500 meter (11,500 ft) plunge after her parachute failed to open and lines broke on her reserve chute, a local skydiving club said Monday.

Christy McKenzie was hurtling towards the ground at more than 200 kms (120 miles) per hour on Sunday when her parachute failed to deploy, Johan Mulder, the chief instructor at the Johannesburg Skydiving Club, told Reuters.

“When it didn’t open she tried to deploy her reserve parachute and it had a fairly hard opening. A couple of the lines broke and so it was not fully open,” he said.

This meant that her descent was still dangerously fast.

Powerlines broke her fall and may have saved her life. She survived with a hairline fracture to her pelvis.

“It’s extremely, extremely rare … it’s unheard of that there are malfunctions in reserve parachutes,” Mulder said, adding that the equipment was being sent to the manufacturer to determine why it did not work properly.

The Johannesburg Star newspaper quoted McKenzie, an experienced skydiver, as saying from her hospital bed: “I’ll jump again.”

The incident occurred at Carletonville, about 70 km (40 miles) west of Johannesburg.

Hot off the press. If your interested or not, Simon’s Mrs. M. shot a baby out of her at 88 miles per hour.




Ah snail mail.

Wetwired Time Friday, August 20th, 2004 at 12:10 pm by pylorns

Remember the times I’ve droned on about how cool it is to get hand written mail. And how with email and instant gratification we’ve gotten away from that. Well one of you loyal readers was nice enough to send me a hand written letter. Making you the first person aside form the parental unit to send me a letter in something like 7 years.

Not only that I got my netflix movies in today:
Heat
Flatliners
Diehard

Anyway, with blockbuster deciding to do the whole rent movies and no late fees to compete with netflix, I’ve considered not doing netflix because of the convenience of blockbuster. I’m not going to. One: I don’t like blockbuster for the sake of not liking them. Two: I like getting real mail and not bills or junk mail. Red envelopes with DVD’s is like a present in itself. Three: Netflix has a larger selection than of course the regular neighborhood blockbuster.

To sum it all up, netflix is the best thing I have in my mail box once or twice a week aside from this piece of goodness from my adoring reader.




Cyber Flirting

Wetwired Time Friday, August 20th, 2004 at 7:56 am by pylorns

Posted from here.

When Mayor Mary Anne Clancy of Newburyport, Mass., a married mother of three, engaged in a brief e-mail dalliance with a married gym teacher earlier this year, neither could have imagined the public embarrassment that would result from their private exchanges. But after Mrs. Clancy’s husband, Brian, discovered the romantic e-mails this month, he allegedly assaulted Jason Beauparlant, the teacher, and was arrested. The ensuing headlines exposed the cyber-tryst.
The incident spotlights a largely hidden but rapidly growing phenomenon: cyber-affairs, romantic liaisons conducted via computer. Although a majority of such encounters never lead to a physical relationship - causing some observers to dub them “safe infidelity” - cyber-betrayals can seriously damage and even destroy the marriages of those involved, according to experts.

“It is a huge, huge issue,” says David Greenfield, author of “Virtual Addiction.” Noting that the Internet “has changed the whole landscape of human sexual behavior,” he adds, “You’ve got this box on your desk that is accessible all the time with little or no effort. That just makes it too easy for a lot of people to communicate.”

So easy, in fact, that they don’t even need to leave home. “People sneak down to their computers while their spouse is sleeping and engage in these behaviors,” Dr. Greenfield says. “They don’t have to meet someone at the bar.”

These cyber-flirtations are also attracting growing ranks of women. Although numbers are hard to pin down, researchers have found that “many more women than we ever imagined are using the Internet for sexually related activities,” says Marlene Maheu, author of “Infidelity on the Internet.”

In the past decade, lawyers have seen an increase in divorces and separations resulting from cyber-infidelity. “Some clients arrive at our office with hard drives they’ve yanked from their husband’s computer, with downloaded e-mails, and with digital photos of their spouse’s paramour,” says Mark Guralnick, a divorce lawyer in Marlton, N.J.

In about 30 percent of cyber-affairs, Greenfield finds, the relationship escalates from e-mail to telephone calls to personal contact.

Even when no physical contact has occurred, these relationships can be “extraordinarily hurtful,” says John Mayoue, a family law attorney in Atlanta. Unlike physical affairs, where a spouse doesn’t know what a straying partner says during an illicit encounter, e-mail leaves a record.

“With a cyber-affair, I know every word that is communicated between the two persons,” Mr. Mayoue explains. “They say things that are extraordinarily sexual, in ways that the husband and wife do not talk. They also appear to be speaking more from the heart than married folks speak to one another.”

These cyber-romances raise new questions about what constitutes infidelity. In a statement to the press, Mrs. Clancy, the mayor, insisted that she did not have a physical relationship with Mr. Beauparlant. At the same time, she acknowledged that their online flirtation was “inappropriate” and expressed deep regret for the hurt she had caused her family. Her office did not return calls seeking comment.

What makes cyber-affairs deceptively easy and potentially confusing is the absence of visual cues that exist in face-to-face conversations, Dr. Maheu says.

She offers an example: “If two people are having lunch and one says something that is possibly flirtatious, the other person can respond by raising an eyebrow, looking away, dropping their jaw, or changing the subject. All those things could mean, ‘I’m not going to flirt back.’ ”

Even if people do flirt over lunch, she says, “it typically takes many hours of flirting before anything sexual is mentioned, whereas in e-mail it could be in the next five minutes.”

Without social cues as a guide, Maheu continues, people can find themselves exchanging steamy e-mails and then wondering the next morning how they could have said such things. They may write e-mail in a hurry, without considering their words.

Diane Daniels observed firsthand the devastation such relationships can cause. A friend who suspected her husband of cyber-cheating asked Ms. Daniels, a former technology expert in Norwich, Conn., to track his computer activity.

Daniels typed the husband’s e-mail address into Google and found “tons of posts from him to other people,” some bearing risqu




Women with large natural breasts oppose boob jobs.

Wetwired Time Thursday, August 19th, 2004 at 1:30 pm by pylorns


Look at her tits. They are huge. Of course she’s proud of them. What about the women who aren’t as gifted? True, the government shouldnt be paying for this. She has a point. My point is, she expects women to be proud of their bodies. The truth is with our society unless you’re born with tits like that most women want bigger tits. Most of the women I’ve gone out with talked about getting a boob job.

Porn star tells U.S. military “bullets, not boobs”

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A group supporting natural breasts has staged a street protest in Hollywood against a U.S. military policy offering free breast implants to female soldiers.

The group, led by porn star and former California gubernatorial candidate Mary Carey, said the military should spend its money on “bullets, not boobs.”

“I think girls should have natural boobs and natural beauty,” Carey said after unveiling her own breasts in the protest at an Army recruiting office on Sunset Boulevard.

“Women should be happy with their bodies and what they’re blessed with,” the 24-year-old star of 37 porn films said.

Her words and deeds drew cheers from a small group of men who had gathered to watch the event on Wednesday. Passing cars sounded their horns in response to a sign that read “Honk if you love natural breasts.”

Carey, who wore green camouflage shorts and bikini top, assured all that her own breasts were real.

The protest was organised by porn impresario Mark Kulkis, president of Kick ass Pictures, the company for whom Carey stars.

It follows recent news stories about the military offering free plastic surgery, including breast enhancements, to soldiers and their families so military doctors can practice their skills.

Kulkis said he opposed military breast implants because they are an unwise expenditure of tax money and because he does not like fake breasts.

“We support our military 100 percent. Part of the reason we’re protesting is that we think these tax dollars would be much better spent on essentials (for soldiers),” Kulkis said.

“I’m personally opposed to boob jobs, but more so when they use our tax dollars for them,” he said. “It’s an issue near and dear to my heart.”

Kulkis’ porno films come with a promise that none of his female stars have breast implants

He and Carey presented a $500 (274 pound) cheque to Jennifer Zandstra of Commerce, Texas, who was honourably discharged from the U.S. Army two weeks ago and answered a Kick ass announcement seeking military women opposed to breast implants.

“Thank you for coming up here and thank you most of all for keeping your real breasts,” Kulkis told Zandstra.

Carey invited her to star in her next film, “Mary Carey Rules: No. 6,” but Zandstra, now a college student, politely said, “No, thank you.”

A military spokesman for the recruiting office where the protest took place said he had no comment.




Question of the Day: Drugs

Wetwired Time Thursday, August 19th, 2004 at 8:53 am by pylorns

Do you think drugs should be legalized? If so, why and which ones?

Sure. I think it was stupid to make marijuana illegal and no I don’t smoke. It was lobbied to be made illegal by Dupont, who came up with a new way to process wood pulp. That’s it. It has similar if not less effects than alcohol and up until the 1930’s or 40’s it was the 2nd largest cash crop under cotton.

Today, its used for cancer patients to ease the ill feelings or nausea from the chemo treatments.

If we were to legalize it, we’d see a surge of clothing, paper, and fabric process in the industry. The paper companies and clothing industry that pushes the use of cotton would shudder because its cheaper and cleaner to manufacture hemp.




Does your webhost do this?

Wetwired Time Wednesday, August 18th, 2004 at 3:23 pm by pylorns

Thank you Ventures Online. You may have noticed wetwired was down for a whole day this week. Below is the reason.

We have completed our root cause analysis on the service outage that occurred on the multi-host servers Phoenix, Paperboy, Contra, and Eclipse between Sunday August 15th and Monday August 16th, 2004.

Late Sunday evening we detected a possible security event on one of the four servers. After an initial review of the situation, we determined that a common outside source had gained privileged access to Paperboy, Contra and Eclipse. We later determined that this same attacker had attempted to gain privileged access to Phoenix, which resulted in system instability requiring an OS reload on that server.

We immediately took the effected servers offline in order to preserve data integrity and to initiate an intrusion analysis to determine the point of entry and to identify any trojans that may have been installed. Unfortunately, the depth of the compromise was severe and all attempts to isolate the infected binaries and libraries were unsuccessful.

Identifying the point of entry is also proving to be complicated as there is no obvious source at this time. All of the servers involved were running OS versions patched by the Fedora Legacy project which makes a best effort to provide timely patches to security vulnerabilities, but makes no guarantees as to the timeliness of patch release. At this point it appears the attacker was able to exploit an un-patched service.

Consequently, once these factors were analyzed, we determined that it would be in everyone’s best interest to re-install the servers with new operating systems and migrate the data despite the outage that would be incurred.

This event comes at an unfortunate time for us as well. We are currently in the middle of two very large projects that will culminate with the release of a highly robust and flexible hosting environment and a new line of dedicated server hardware. Both will allow us to extend more functionality down to the end user and are scheduled to be online in early Q4.

That being said, we will be providing compensation in the form of a service credit on your account. Our SLA does not provide for server downtime, however, we feel that this is a way that we can show you we are committed to outstanding service and support. The amount of credit due to you will equal 50% of your normal monthly bill for hosting service.

We understand the inconvenience this has caused everyone. If you have comments or concerns, we encourage you to talk to our support staff so we can address them directly.

Regards,

Heather Bennett
Director of Customer Operations




How much is wetwired worth?

Wetwired Time Wednesday, August 18th, 2004 at 12:54 pm by pylorns

http://blogshares.com/blogs.php?blog=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.wetwired.org




Moment of Zen for the day

Wetwired Time Wednesday, August 18th, 2004 at 8:50 am by pylorns

http://www.media.ebaumsworld.com/index.php?e=katanaslip.mpg

(hat tip to MJ)




I rolled an 18 your dead!

Wetwired Time Wednesday, August 18th, 2004 at 8:14 am by pylorns

Wow. It’s hard to imagine back when I was a kid I played this from time to time. I had the 20th anniversy 2nd edition Players Handbook.

BOSTON (Wireless Flash) — Players of the role-playing game “Dungeons & Dragons” have cause to celebrate.
No, they’re not finally moving out of their parent’s basement. This year marks the game’s 30th birthday.
The game’s anniversary will be celebrated at the upcoming Gen Con Game Fair in Indianapolis tomorrow through Sunday (Aug. 19-22), but the game’s creators at Wizards of the Coast, have a few other cards up their sleeves to celebrate the milestone.
In October, a coffee table book of “D&D’s” history will be published which contains game-playing celebrity anecdotes from stars like “The Daily Show” correspondent Stephen Colbert, Mark Tremonti, former bandmember of Creed and a forward written by 25-year veteran player Vin Diesel.
Then in October 16, a spokeswoman for the company says they will hold World Wide D&D Game Day by trying to set a world’s record for the most people playing a role-playing game at the same time.




New Words for 2004- Essential Additions For The Workplace Vocabulary

Wetwired Time Tuesday, August 17th, 2004 at 11:26 am by Finley

In an effort to keep our readers up-to-date on the latest technological and societal jargon, we here at Wetwired provide the following educational service. We encourage all to study and apply these phrases to your daily work routine.

BLAMESTORMING: Sitting around in a group, discussing why a deadline was missed or a project failed, and who was responsible.

SEAGULL MANAGER: A manager, who flies in, makes a lot of noise, craps on everything, and then leaves.

ASSMOSIS: The process by which some people seem to absorb success and advancement by kissing up to the boss rather than working hard.

SALMON DAY: The experience of spending an entire day swimming upstream only to get screwed and die in the end.

CUBE FARM: An office filled with cubicles.

PRAIRIE DOGGING: When someone yells or drops something loudly in a cube farm, and people’s heads pop up over the walls to see what’s going on.

MOUSE POTATO: The on-line, wired generation’s answer to the couch potato.

SITCOMs: Single Income, Two Children, Oppressive Mortgage. What yuppies turn into when they have children and one of them stops working to stay home with the kids.

STRESS PUPPY: A person who seems to thrive on being stressed out and whiney.

SWIPEOUT: An ATM or credit card that has been rendered useless because the magnetic strip is worn away from extensive use.

XEROX SUBSIDY: Euphemism for swiping free photocopies from one’s workplace copy machine.

IRRITAINMENT: Entertainment and media spectacles that are annoying but you find yourself unable to stop watching them. The J-Lo and Ben saga (or not) was a prime example.

PERCUSSIVE MAINTENANCE: The fine art of whacking the crap out of an electronic device to get it to work again.

ADMINISPHERE: The rarefied organizational layers beginning just above the rank and file. Decisions that fall from the adminisphere are often profoundly inappropriate or irrelevant to the problems they were designed to solve.

404: Someone who’s clueless. From the World Wide Web error message “404 Not Found,” meaning that the requested document could not be located.

GENERICA: Features of the American landscape that are exactly the same no matter where one is, such as fast food joints, strip malls, and subdivisions.

OHNOSECOND: That minuscule fraction of time in which you realize that you’ve just made a BIG mistake.

WOOF’S: Well-Off Older Folks.

CROP DUSTING: Surreptitiously farting while passing through a Cube Farm.




CONSPIRACY: THE MEETING AT WANNSEE EXPOSED

Wetwired Time Tuesday, August 17th, 2004 at 8:17 am by pylorns

If you’re interested in WWII and history you might find this interesting.

Emigration. Evacuation. Total solution. Final Solution.
Historians of the Holocaust may disagree as to exactly when this euphemistic
Nazi phraseology took on its deadliest meaning. No single document has
ever been found in which Hitler himself explicitly ordered the annihilation
of European Jewry. Most historians agree, however, that at some point
in 1941, after the launch of the Russian campaign (Operation Barbarossa),
“evacuation” became more widely understood in the Nazi hierarchy as
a codeword for systematic, industrial-scale murder, orchestrated by
Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, and, until his assassination in the
late spring of 1942, his second, Reinhard Heydrich. By that spring,
the gas chambers were no longer experimental; they were operating to
their full, ghastly capacity.

Two crucial, surviving documents frame the period in which the ultimate
meaning of the Final Solution went from theory to practice. First is
a letter of July 31, 1941 (drafted by Adolf Eichmann at Heydrich’s bequest)
in which Reichsmarshall Hermann G




Its better than guns…

Wetwired Time Tuesday, August 17th, 2004 at 7:53 am by pylorns

City gangs turning to machetes, police say

from here.

As a boy growing up in El Salvador, Somerville pastor Luis Morales said, he was never frightened when he saw peasant farmers with machetes hanging from their belts. For rural Salvadorans, the long knife is a basic and ubiquitous tool, as common as a Swiss Army knife is here.

Morales, pastor of the Vida Real Evangelical Center, has watched in dismay as Hispanic street gangs have transformed the rural implement into an intimidating urban weapon. Area police say street gangs, whose members once might have favored switchblades and homemade zip guns, now prefer the long knives with blades that can be nearly as thick as an ax and as long as a sword.

“It seems to be that machetes are the weapon of choice,” said Detective Brian Kyes, spokesman for the Chelsea police. “In the past couple of years, we’ve confiscated at least 50 machetes that have been used in crimes in the city.”

Law enforcement officials say they have seen a surge in machete attacks, which prompted East Boston police this spring to revive a little-known city ordinance banning knives longer than 2.5 inches. Several suburban communities have enacted similar ordinances to deal with the sword-like knives.

Police seized a number of machetes, as well as Chinese throwing stars and a manrikigusari — a Japanese metal-chain whip — during a sweep for gang members in Boston, Chelsea, Lynn, Revere, Everett, and Somerville last month. Lynn police seize two of the long knives each month, either from suspects or at crime scenes, said Mark Richmond, evidence control officer for the Lynn Police Department.

Machetes, available at corner markets, garden stores, and on the Internet, are the most prevalent among the unusual weapons gangs have begun to use. Under Massachusetts General Law, machetes are legal to carry in public.

The machete’s proliferation has garnered less police attention and public outcry than recent gun-related homicides at Boston parks, despite a spate of attacks that have left at least four Massachusetts men hospitalized this spring and summer with machete wounds.

Hispanic community leaders and law enforcement officials said the machete has emerged as the weapon of choice for gang members in the past three or four years, a development that has tarnished the machete’s centuries-old reputation as a tool used primarily to cut sugar cane and clear underbrush.

“For people in El Salvador, the machete is not looked at as a weapon,” said Morales. “Peasants use it in the fields. It’s a way of life.”

Members of Boston’s Hispanic community often hang machetes on living room walls as souvenirs from home or use them for backyard gardening, said Edwin Argueta, cochairman of the East Boston Latino Community Coalition.

“It’s part of the culture like [Roman Catholic] crosses and arts and crafts,” said Argueta, who first heard machetes referred to as gang weapons two years ago during tense debate over a proposal in Somerville to ban suspected gang members from loitering in public places. Somerville officials passed the ordinance after two deaf girls, one of them confined to a wheelchair with cerebral palsy, were raped in a city park by alleged members of the Hispanic street gang Mara Salvatrucha 13. The gang, also known as MS-13, started in Los Angeles two decades ago and has since spread to dozens of North American and Central American cities.

“People think of you as some sort of a hoodlum if you have a machete,” said Argueta, who opposed the loitering ordinance two years ago as a form of racial profiling. He said he is frustrated that Hispanics are increasingly associated with gangs, when gang members make up only a fraction of the state’s Hispanic residents. According to the 2000 Census, there were 428,729 Hispanics in the state.

Argueta and Roberto Escobar, El Salvador’s consul general in Boston, bristled at questions about the machete’s role in gang attacks.

“What about baseball bats? They are also used in gang-related attacks. Even a shoe can be considered a weapon if someone uses it to hit someone else,” said Escobar, who said he has a machete in the trunk of his car in case he needs to clear a fallen tree from a roadway, a possibility that may seem remote in Boston but is not uncommon on the country roads of his homeland.

But machetes have a darker history, too. They have been used in numerous civil conflicts around the world, from the Mexican Revolution in 1905 to the current ethnic strife between Christians and Muslims in Nigeria. Authorities in North American cities have registered dozens of gang-related machete attacks this year alone.

“Three or four years ago, it wasn’t really that common,” said one East Boston 16-year-old, who said gang members wielding machetes attacked him twice in the last two years. “But right now, even little kids and most of the gang members are carrying machetes.”

The youth, who spoke on the condition that his name not be published, also admitted to briefly owning a $25 machete before his parents found it in his bedroom and took it away.

One of the attacks, he said, occurred on London Street in East Boston, where several teenagers the youth believed to be gang members approached him and asked if he belonged to a rival gang.

“I said, ‘I’m not a gang member,’ ” he said. “Then, they pulled out a machete and I just leaned back and took off running.”




The voyage home

Wetwired Time Monday, August 16th, 2004 at 8:15 am by pylorns

Saturday I woke up super early. Actually like 3:30am EST. Luckily I had someone call me to wake me up because it was only 12:30am their time on the West Coast. After throwing all mystuff together I hopped in my rental car and drove the hour drive back to Detroit so I could hop on my first flight to Chicago.

Once I got situated waiting for my flight I noticed someone walk by that I had never seen before. A female commercial airline pilot.

I’ll let that sink in.

Ok, now being a pilot myself, there are no shortage of female private pilots, but when it comes to commercial airlines its a male dominated field. In fact until Saturday I had never EVER seen one. For the most part, its a male dominated industry because most of the pilots are x-airforce pilots that come out and get this cushony job.

Once back in Austin, I questioned my friends to ask them if they had ever had or seen one, and they too had never come across one. Like a rare breed I spose. We discussed the significance of it a bit. Not that any of us have a problem with it. Its not like having a woman firefighter. This doesnt require any type of physical labor so there is no reason to set the genders apart in this case. I think it was just a shock to see that when in my 25 years, I’m used to the social stigma of male pilots and female stewardesses er, flight attendents.

What are your thoughts on this?




Introspection and the like…

Wetwired Time Sunday, August 15th, 2004 at 9:11 pm by Finley

If you’ve been in my circle of friends long enough, you know that this is usually a very tricky time of year to know me. Since that may confuse those of you that don’t in fact know me, I’ll explain.

See, in less than a month I “celebrate” my birthday. For more than a decade or so, the month before my birthday has been a time for me to reflect on the year that has passed, and a time to take stock of my life and where I stand compared to a year ago. In the past, Beerslinger has looked at this time of year with a sense of dread, knowing that I wouldn’t be in the best of moods as I take things at their most negative. In years past, I would get moodier and more brooding than usual as I made myself miserable, seeing only the bad parts of what had happened the eleven months prior.

Around my birthday, the funk itself would lift. At this point, I came out of my mood and would look forward to another year hoping that I would take some opportunities presented to me. It was that hope that caused me to become depressed, knowing that I had once again squandered the chances presented to me.

Well, I’ve begun my introspection again. And you know what?

Life ain’t that bad.

(I’ll wait for Beerslinger to wipe off where he sputtered out his drink in shock.)

No, I’m serious. I’m looking at the past year, and I see that things are in a pretty good place for me right now. I have a decent job with opportunities presenting themselves for advancement. I’ve had a creative rejuvenation of sorts, returning to the writing that had eluded me for a while. I’ve become closer to people that had escaped my circle of friends for a while. Other friends have had opportunity come forward and they have grabbed hold. So far, so good.

There’s also one other thing that has happened to me in the past year that has helped put things in perspective for me. I’ll not go too far into it here, but suffice it to say one relationship I had has helped me gain a newfound perspective on life and how I deal with it.

It was sometime after that relationship that I decided to better myself this year, too. I’ve begun examining how I deal with people and with that in mind, I’ve begun changing how I act around others. I try to have a more positive attitude when I deal with people, and I think it’s helping.

This doesn’t mean I’m not a moody bastard as I normally am. It does mean though that the state of Fnliii this year is a pretty good one, with positive outlooks for the next year.

At least, that’s what I’m hoping. Who knows- it could all go to hell tomorrow.

Out.





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