We are taking back America - yes -
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Tuesday Apr 18, 2006
go listen - http://www.ifilm.com/player/?ifilmId=2667425&bw;=300&mt… -
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Tuesday Apr 18, 2006
I really have a rather simple life and not much to say ever. I work … -
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Monday Apr 03, 2006
spring is sprung -
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Tuesday Mar 14, 2006
hmm - Life is good - just spent the past 2 weekends working with the … -
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Sunday Feb 05, 2006
Have I nothing to say or just too much to say? -
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Sunday Jan 22, 2006
it's dark and cold - just like it is outside -
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Tuesday Jan 17, 2006
Well how the hell are ya? That good - good for you! And what … -
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Sunday Jan 15, 2006
Worse thing to hear from someone after you tell her you love her, jus…
As for Cache... I was intrigued, frustrated and much of that had to do with the complicity of many characters in their own suffering and the way that pride or ego prevents people from doing what is kind, fair and considerate. The end, as I mentioned before, felt like a trailer for a sequel. I want to know what kind of havoc might unfold if the son was used as a way to access the father's emotions, in a revenge tragedy manner... not in a violent sense, but in the way that... if appeals to emotion, from people you don't care enough to feel compassionate about, cannot bring you to a sense of remorse for past actions (even if you can't change them)... the surrest way to access and force that emotion, to validate the experience of suffering, is to bring suffering home... ie. to have someone you DO care about, perceive you in such a troubled way that you cannot ignore your guilt because the subject of your cruelty is beneath you, or because you don't respect your victim. If his own son's opinion of him is destroyed, it is not as easy to shrug the guilt as it is to turn away from the son of your victim.
wheeew. long and vague... but, i'm sure you get what i'm saying.
Thank you. that's what I really meant to say. xo