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Limsey's Journal

limsey
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05/02/2007 19:27 #39131

Cute!
Well, well. I've had lots of fun on elouai.com.
I made a nice little pixelated doll of my mum.

(imk2, below)

image

Aww. Isn't she a cutie?
lilho - 05/03/07 12:44
cute!
metalpeter - 05/02/07 19:44
Not that I like to use the term adorable but yeah it does look like that. Not sure if she really looks 14 in that picture or if often that style of art is used for kids who are around that age. The clouds that are blushing and have blue eyes are interesting.
limsey - 05/02/07 19:38
I was talking about the picture. Heh. But the point IS for her to look 14! It's adorable!
metalpeter - 05/02/07 19:34
I find that kinda a trick question. Are you talking about (e:imk2) or the picture of Her? Plus in that picture as cute as it is she looks about 14 well maybe a little bit older hard to tell in that style of art.

04/14/2007 15:07 #38884

New Avatars, Whoopie!
Hey, everyone!
I've recently decided that I needed my own, hand-drawn user pic.
Of course, I love drawing avatars because they're small and quick to color.
But as I was coloring...I wondered,
"What color scheme is this meant to be?"
I quickly decided to make several so I could change them, depending on my mood.
GENIUS!

I dedicate these pics to the first season ending theme for FullMetal Alchemist!
This style of coloring was directly insipired from that.


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Hm.
While I'm on the subject...
Anybody else watch Family Guy?
American Dad?
Futurama?
limsey - 04/14/07 22:01
Y'know (this is limsey) The red was going to originally be a dark orange. Thanks for commenting!
paul - 04/14/07 19:50
I think it would look good in orange.
limsey - 04/14/07 15:29
sorry...this is (e:imk2), i cant sign you out of my computer.
limsey - 04/14/07 15:22
so what moods do the individual colors correspond with? those are really cool. post more drawings please!

03/14/2007 20:55 #38459

Moody Drawing
I have a problem about drawing.
I can't really draw unless I feel...inspired. Inspired meaning, I have to either be in either a really good mood or a really bad one.
If I try drawing while in an in-between mood,
I get really frustrated because my pictures look horrible.

Luckily, I've gotten into a weird mood.
Don't know what that is,
but you'll understand once I finish this picture.
It's a picture I've wanted to draw for a long time, since maybe...
a year ago?
Well, that's okay! It at least gives me hope for all the other projects I've abandoned.

Meh.
I needed to post something.

carolinian - 03/14/07 22:49
I know the feeling. I find that some of my best work (writing and programming) is often the stuff I put down in frustration and come back to years later. When I revisit something I've done years later, I also have found that what I've done is actually pretty good, it just seemed really crappy at the time, and I wonder how in the heck I ever thought that what I did could be that bad.

03/01/2007 20:15 #38322

I Come Carrying Brain Matter
Yes, I am alive.
And, in case you didn't know, my name is Faben and I am ink2's daughter.
I'm sure you've heard a lot about me (if not, check out imk2's journal) because she sure has brought me up quite a few times. I've just finished scouring all of her entries...and all I have to say is...

Wow, my mother writes like a sixth grader.

Like, really? Does she talks to all of her adult friends like that?
I'm honestly asking!

Truthfully, I think the infinite wisdom of adulthood is quite a disappointment.
Maybe it's just the fact that most adults (usually the younger ones) seem to think they are superior to children. The same goes for children themselves. It's like...grade-school rivalry!

I don't think that adults have forgotten what it is like to be a kid, so I'm not sure what's causing it.
( I mean, really, I've made one of my teachers cry and another one of my teachers humiliated in front of our principal...twice...each.)

I am not only using my mother as an example to create a stereotypical assumption.
Many times, when I was very young, I sat and listened to adult conversations. Things like religion, how the earth was created, etcetera... I always listened in on them, and I thought that they were so amazing and smart.
But now, I understand "the big words" and I really know what adults talk about...
Somehow, it reminds me of "Flower's for Algernon."
Do you know that book? It's about a retarded man who undergoes an operation that ups his intelligence.
Once he is able to understand the world around him, he realizes just how disappointing everyone is.
They're not as smart as they were when he was stupid.

But I'm sitting here, listening...
listening to all the things that spew from my mom's mouth when she is not directly speaking to me.

I don't even talk about half the things my mother talks about.
I mean...who cares about hair styles?! Who cares about who's dating who?! Who cares about worthless celebrities?! Who cares about that certain person who can't stand to be around but you hang out with anyway?!
Didn't you ever leave high school???

Yeah,
maybe I'm just a little kid talking out of my butt.


ps. This entry does not apply to all adults.
pps. I've just realized everyone on this site is an adult.
ppps. Oh no...
limsey - 03/02/07 20:58
Um.
Thanks everyone for all the comments. I love the feedback!
Right now, I'm thinking that maybe a few of you should reread(or read for the first time...) Flowers for Algernon.
It's really a good book.
And about everything else...
well there's just too much to respond to so I'll just say "hello."

By the way,
dont expect me to bring this entry topic up again.
Once is enough!
uncutsaniflush - 03/02/07 20:23
I think I first read Flowers for Algernon when I was in school around your age if memory serves. I think that Daniel Keyes teaches an important lesson that wisdom is relative and perception-dependent. I really identified with Charlie Gordon. I thought it was a wonderful story.

Did you know that it has been one of the top 100 most challenged books in U.S. school systems? Apparently, there is something there that some adults don't want kids to know.

Personally, I think saying that Flowers for Algernon is about a mouse is like saying that Moby Dick is about a whale. But what do I know? I used to be Melville scholar once upon a time.

metalpeter - 03/02/07 19:02
Firstly welcome to the site. Interesting post by the way. Not everyone on the site is an adult, although it does look that way. There where at least a few people who arn't adults but you hardly ever see them post anymore. I'm sorry that I can't remember there user names. I never read Algernon but for some reason thought it was about a mouse also.
jason - 03/02/07 08:34
Limsey, you are 100% correct about the celebs, fashion and whatnot. It's quite voyeuristic. I know! Let's focus on someone else's life because we are so bored with ourselves! Hahaha. That's really gonna piss someone off.

About being an "adult" - it's only a matter of age and experience. Young minds are sharp and everyone knows that. It's true that once you get older you start caring about different stuff, but it doesn't fundamentally change who you are. Experience does that.

Disappointment is unhealthy. We are who we are, idiosyncrasies and all.
jenks - 03/01/07 23:44
I read Algernon... and I remember liking it... but somehow I thought it was about a mouse.

Damn alzheimers.
lilho - 03/01/07 23:16
ok, little kid. i care about hairstyles, celebs, whose dating who, and the crazies. without thse things life would no longer be fun. high school never ends, its not even high school, its life kid. welcome!
twisted - 03/01/07 22:51
there are no adults. just grown-up kids impersonating adults and trying desperately not to get found out. (speaking for myself at least...)

ps. Welcome to the site!
imk2 - 03/01/07 21:59
besides, don't you remember who told you to read flowers for algernon in the first place?
imk2 - 03/01/07 21:51
welcome to the great disappointment that is life. nothing is as impressive as it seems. everything and everyone has faults. don't think that you're the only one who has great some great insight. nothing in life comes for free. everything has its price including creativity and intelligence. you gain one thing but loose another. it's one trade off after another. I cure cancer at work, and write enormous papers with enormous words and ideas, hence, I talk about nothing here. one cannot constantly be 'ON'. could you draw every minute of every day?

and don't knock sixth grade writing and celebrity gossip. don't I clearly recall you watching 'i love new york' and 'flavor of love'? you laugh just like the rest of us. and if you have all of this intelligence and brain matter that you claim to possess, use it for something useful. do something that'll make an impact and don't complain about things you have no intention of changing.
libertad - 03/01/07 21:05
I'm glad you joined the site limsey. Actually there are a lot of people who care about hairstyles and celebs here. Lately I have been finding myself go through trashy magazines to look at pictures and read the celebrity gossip. It really isn't as bad as I thought. Hopefully you will keep on writing, cause so far I find you exceptionally interesting.
vycious - 03/01/07 20:29
dont worry, limsey. i certainly never grew up. your mom can back me up on that, for sure. as for 'flowers for algernon', ive never heard of it. book, i would assume? its how i have felt lately about almost everyone around me, sans one or two rare peeps. i credit it to my winter-self. or at least, im hoping. this anti-social streak is running a tad deep, this time however. im pretty much sick of just about everyones shit. lets hope its cabin fever, eh?