D i n o profile picture

D i n o

all we ever want is more time

About Me

I exist as I am, that is enough, If no other in the world be aware I sit content, And if each and all be aware I sit content. --Walt Whitman -- Many of us grew up believing that approval depended on what we did. And we could never do enough, good enough. So today, we still worry that we aren't acceptable, that we are never finished, presentable, good enough. As we practice self-acceptance, we let go of that old anxiety. The more we tell ourselves we are fine just the way we are, the less worry we have about what others think. We become less self-conscious, more relaxed. We discover that people like us just the way we are. We see people how we want to see them not always for what they are. SO I say...I am what I am...popeye the sailor man toot toot. ..width="425" height="350" ..

My Interests


How to make a Dino
Ingredients:
3 parts intelligence
1 part silliness
5 parts instinct
Method:
Add to a cocktail shaker and mix vigorously. Add a little lovability if desired!
Username:

Personality cocktail
From Go-Quiz.com

I'd like to meet:

I would like to meet the man in the mirror......

Movies:

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Television:

Your results:
You are Spider-Man Spider-Man 90% Green Lantern 85% The Flash 80% Hulk 75% Superman 65% You are intelligent, witty,
a bit geeky and have great
power and responsibility.
Click here to take the "Which Superhero am I?" quiz...

Heroes:

At first sight it is curious that our own offences should seem to us so much less heinous than the offences of others. I suppose the reason is that we know all the circumstances that have occasioned them and so manage to excuse in ourselves what we cannot excuse in others. We turn our attention away from our defects, and when we are forced by untoward events to consider them find it easy to condone them. For all I know we are right to do this; they are part of us and we must accept the good and the bad in ourselves together. But when we come to judge others it is not by ourselves as we really are that we judge them, but by an image that we have formed of ouselves from which we have left out everything that offend our vanity or would discredit us in the eyes of the world. To take a trivial instance: how scornful we are when we catch someone out telling a lie; but who can say that he had never told not one, but a hundred? We are shocked when we discover that great men were weak and petty, dishonest or selfish, sexually vicious or intemperate; and many people think it disgraceful to disclose to the public its heros' failings. There is not much to choose between men. They are all a hotchpotch of greatness and littleness, of virtue and vice, of nobility and baseness. Some have more strength of character, or more opportunity, and so in one direction or another give their instincts freer play, but potentially they are the same. For my part I do not think I am any better or any worse than most people, but I know that id I set down every action in my life and every thought that has crossed my mind the world would consider me a monster of depravity.