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andriensh
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Birthday
1992-06-25
Gender
Female
Location
Lolly Land
Member Since
2004-05-07
Occupation
Hospitality Supervisor for Lollipop Land
Real Name
Pei
Personal
Achievements
Keeping my Friends
Anime Fan Since
Jessica dragged me in. x3
Favorite Anime
Fruits Basket
Goals
To stay on the Rainbow, wherever it may go.
Hobbies
talking, reading, writing, drawing, hanging out, uh...drawing, talking, hanging out, trying to recover my lost html skills <--I used to actually kbnow the darn thing! x3->
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Smiling
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Saturday, May 29, 2004
Wahhh!!
I've just finished cleaning up the last of my tears. I have just gotten through most of the Last Samurai, my brother wouldn't lemme watch the rest till he gets home from playing hockey with his buddies (you can see him at my friend's site, sn is efreit). I was sooooooooooo sad when they cut of that guy's hair and took his sword. They kept showing the same girl dying in the beginning also. I cried through the whole thing. Afterwards, my little sister asked why they took the guy's sword away and why they cut his hair. Then I lectured her, gave her billions of paragraphs and similes, maybe a couple metaphors, I dunno. I was gonna put the lecture in here, but sucks that I forgot, huh? Anyhow, I remember saying that the sword was like his soul, it's more important than a doll to a little girl, a little truck to a little boy, it was yourself. Some junk like that. That's basically how I speak when I get all mushy gushy. Although, I say it in a more descriptive, flowery way. Notice in quiz results that I'm a narrative writer. The movie is superb, I recommend it.
Back to today, I think I failed my Chinese School Finals... ^^" Uh...maybe yes? Anyhow, it's really weird how myotaku doesn't have a crying face huh? But why is that? Are they encouraging the emotion of anger and happiness over despair? I certainly do, but at some points of life, you must be depressed. Like, when someone close to you dies unexpectedly, or expectedly, please correct the error. There are five stages to death, shock, denial, anger, grief, acceptance. Or at least, I think. I dunno, ask my lit. teacher, Ms. Roedder. We learned this while we were studying The Yearling. Superb book, I highly recommend it. I will always remember it.
It tells of a sweet childhood, when kids can be kids, but on a stricter note than in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The whole guy girl thing, the "there's no such thing as hunger, why do we have to work so darn hard?", the whole best friend business. Anyhow, now I'm sad again, thinking of that beautiful collection of leaves. I love that book. I hope you enjoy it, too.
Isn't Fushigi Yugi Eleven coming out in English in a couple weeks? hint hint...
Keep Smiling. ^_______________^
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