im totally going to sleep after i master this whole coagulation cascade. seriously, after this, im getting some fucking sleep.
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4
Saturday Jan 22, 2005
well, it has started snowing here and it seems that its pretty seriou… -
2
Tuesday Jan 18, 2005
amount of anatomy learned>>amount of time spent sleeping -
2
Thursday Jan 13, 2005
if anyone needs their acl or pcl checked out, step over here. -
1
Sunday Jan 09, 2005
apparently my dog is getting good at catching birds in mid-flight. th… -
2
Saturday Jan 08, 2005
so i ended up just taking today off, which was nice. i didnt get up u… -
1
Wednesday Jan 05, 2005
de kooning was such a fucking badass. also, i tried, but was unabl… -
1
Tuesday Jan 04, 2005
man, its gonna take me a long time to work through all this new music. -
0
Monday Jan 03, 2005
im having trouble trying to resolve something in my head. recently, i… -
1
Monday Jan 03, 2005
god damn i look hot in scrubs. -
2
Wednesday Dec 22, 2004
finally kind of awake again.
So are you saying that, for instance, if I were able to correlate Eliot's environment with the imagery of his poems, it would not work? (An obvious example of environment affecting would could be Blake and 'London'.)
I think that it is very difficult to disassorciate seminal experiences from one's life from one's creations. It would be difficult to aruge that the affects of drugs, positive or not, does not affect the user.
I have read essays which attempt to correlate themes in Virigina Woolf's work with experiences she had 20 years prior to the work's creation. Is that an illegitimate claim?
A very obvious example would be Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan', his attempt to capture the experience of the opium dream. Can we say that this poem is uninfluenced by the affects of drugs on the poem's creator? (A very cursory google search turns up this link as the first result).
anyways, yeah, i feel you on the sleep deprivation deal pal. oh boy do i ever.