1 - you should be super-proud of your sucess, its not like it just fell into your lap, you fucking worked for it. 2 - all i have to say about the negative energy, well that is what happend to me here, at new college, last year. i had to escape to alaska and i now still spend most the time by myself. people who i though were my good friends, people i would defend and help without thought, ended up hurting me more than anyone ever had.
first of all, darling face, ive felt the same way, but ive come to realize that no one hates me, its actually my subconcious telling me that because it seems like no one makes an effort to be around me and no one invites me anywhere which must mean they hate me, right? i think they dont realize the effect they have on certain people and its not that they dont like you, its the weird groupings of people that were a product of initial insecurity and a need to belong felt by everyone and having a "group" fills that void. or something. and i dont know if this helps, but i have never during my time here heard anyone say anything negative about you. not one single thing. and if it makes you feel any better, i think the people who are saying passive agressive insults but not insults to you are just products of the semi-competative enviornment that seems to have surfaced. so i geuss what it all comes down to is, you and i? well, somehow we've been turned into people that would cause "drama" around other certain people. if you know i mean. so
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Theres nothing i can say that hasnt been said by the two above me. But this video is really fuckin intersting and you should watch it.
This fascinating, brilliant 20-minute video narrates the history of the "Amen Break," a six-second drum sample from the b-side of a chart-topping single from 1969. This sample was used extensively in early hiphop and sample-based music, and became the basis for drum-and-bass and jungle music -- a six-second clip that spawned several entire subcultures. Nate Harrison's 2004 video is a meditation on the ownership of culture, the nature of art and creativity, and the history of a remarkable music clip
matthew michael ahern hettichmattfelsenFebruary 23 2006, 03:10:11 UTC
i miss you a lot. please come to miami and/or new college so we can hang out and talk and be happy. also please send me your finished wake e.p. so i can listen to it and be like "omg dude i totally know this kid we used to go kayaking and make sacrifices to the rock god and this one time he saved me from a fire." the end.
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2 - all i have to say about the negative energy, well that is what happend to me here, at new college, last year. i had to escape to alaska and i now still spend most the time by myself. people who i though were my good friends, people i would defend and help without thought, ended up hurting me more than anyone ever had.
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This fascinating, brilliant 20-minute video narrates the history of the "Amen Break," a six-second drum sample from the b-side of a chart-topping single from 1969. This sample was used extensively in early hiphop and sample-based music, and became the basis for drum-and-bass and jungle music -- a six-second clip that spawned several entire subcultures. Nate Harrison's 2004 video is a meditation on the ownership of culture, the nature of art and creativity, and the history of a remarkable music clip
http://nkhstudio.com/pages/amen_mp4.html
Oh yeah i can offer one word of advice.....
BOOBIES!
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do you remember that time we went to tallevast and those cows stared at us? that was scary.
p.s. i think i probably told you this, but i used to have a big crush on you. yeah, i still kind of do. damn, it's not a secret anymore!
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