my sisters. trying to not look too far forward, i'll die eventually. towels that don't have feces on them. photography. art. drinkin yoohoo til I puke. music. c'est ma numéro un confiture. vegetarianism. webcomics. animal rights. learning. trying to find a TARDIS, teaching. traveling. bicycles. prouts. chupacabras. road dawging for mel jones. someone has to keep her in check. hollow earth. polaroid pictures. putting vodka in my slim fast. pursuing happiness and educating myself and trying to find balance with all of the above mentioned things
I'd like to meet:
lurkers and perchers and people to go to terrible bars with me.
And some of these guys
Music:
I like all of these bands a lot.
And I mean a lot.
my bloody valentine, the jesus and mary chain, kimya dawson and the moldy peaches, jawbreaker, sonic youth, a tribe called quest, neutral milk hotel, they might be giants, the black angels, fugazi, tom waits, the motherfucking boss, the roots, talking heads, mountain goats, broken social scene, dinosaur jr., joy division, nina simone, cat power, jeff buckley, billie holiday, archers of loaf, emotron, pavement, interpol, yo la tengo, swervedriver, blackstar, skylight honey, seduction bomb, american analog set, m83, galaxie 500, modest mouse
so so much more. it's absurd.
Television:
I edited my profile with Feet and Poots! V4.4
Books:
Current:
And
Favorites:
bukowski.
"a spy in the house of love."
"blues legacies and black feminism."
"democracy matters."
"the hollow earth: the greatest geographical discovery in history made by admiral richard e. byrd in the mysterious land beyond the poles--the true origin of the flying saucers."
"breakfast of champions"
Heroes:
Apparently, the popularity of the image has little to do with science. Apart from the fact that "Double burials from the Neolithic are unheard of, and these are even hugging," the archeologists working in Mantua opted to preserve the image of the lovers rather than pry the bones apart for tests and analysis. A large slice of rock containing the prehistoric loverswill be moved to a museum, on display for the curious. The bones have "more of an emotional than a scientific value," says Luca Bondoli, an anthropologist at Rome's National Prehistoric and Ethnographic Museum.