Booyah Soup

I like to tumblog. I'm not a good tumblogger because don't like reblogging or shit like that and also I try to post things that my mom and I would both enjoy.

I'm a great tumblogger. I tumblog for me and me alone and also my friend Skyler.

My real name is Eric. Booyah Soup is just the name of my web log. My interests include web 3.0.

I also play around with tumblogs donimospizza and Dox FDNY

Please let me know if you find a good blingee site for my tumblog.

Dec 18, 2009 12:28am

c.r.e.p.e

cash rules everything, period, everything

Dec 15, 2009 11:21am
Desperate for any kind of acknowledgement, and beginning to experience what’s known in the trade as the ‘crumbling dam effect’, I blurted out: What I’m trying to say is, you read brilliantly … To which he replied: Well, I hope so: it’s not effing Amateurs Night. -

Paul Farley

http://www.griffinpoetryprize.com/speeches.php?t=5

Dec 14, 2009 12:05am

what the t-wolves lack in wins they make up for in making derek fisher a woman

Dec 13, 2009 3:19am

i think you just told me that on my phone once. i think that's called a message. you left me a message once.

Dec 12, 2009 4:01pm
Dec 11, 2009 1:51pm

the twenty-tens

will be remembered as the decade in which i got rich or died trying

Dec 10, 2009 7:48pm
Dec 10, 2009 1:44pm

i like to support gay-friendly corporations

like chase bank who just f*ck*d my h*m* *ss

Dec 10, 2009 1:57am

Literary lives?

willmccloud:

Maybe the reason certain things are hard for us (like closure, and uncertainty, and our futures) is because we demand that our lives play out like a book.  We literally refer to our lives in “chapters”, and we try to piece together what constitutes another “story” in our lives.  It’s difficult when it doesn’t work out that way for some reason or another.  You try to make sense of the characters, try to pinpoint the conflict, really get into the subtext.  It’s not like that.  It is, but not in the present.  How we see our futures, yeah, sure, that is like a story, and it is most certainly how we view our past (to the point of distorted and romanticized chapters), but we live in the present, and when we’re struggling to turn the page, we get stuck.  There are no static characters, there is no conventional plot.  I guess what I am saying is: we cannot conceptualize our relationships, people are not that easy.

I think it’s more likely that the causality is reversed. We don’t want our lives to be like popular narrative themes. Rather, popular narrative themes are popular because that is how we want our lives to be.

Dec 8, 2009 6:29pm
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