this MIGHT hurt
Definition:
pain in the abdomen and especially in the stomach; a bellyacheExample:
"... unfortunately I awoke this morning with collywobbles, and had to take a small dose of laudanum with the usual consequences of dry throat, intoxicated legs, partial madness and total imbecility..." — Robert Louis Stevenson, Vailima Letters, 1890-1894About the Word:
Etymologist believe that collywobbles most likely has its origin in cholera morbus, the Latin term for the disease cholera (the symptoms of which include severe gastrointestinal disturbance).How would cholera morbus have shifted into collywobbles? By folk etymology – a process in which speakers make an unfamiliar term sound more familiar. In this case, the transformation was probably influenced by the words colic and wobble.
more power?
Should we be working to stop Google and Facebook from becoming even more powerful?
Well:
Well:
If it’s clear that Facebook and Google can’t manage what they already control, why let those corporations own more? America’s antitrust enforcers can impose such a rule almost immediately.
For one thing, there is no doubt these corporations qualify for antitrust regulation. Facebook, for instance, has 77% of mobile social networking traffic in the United States, with just over half of all American adults using Facebook every day.
Nearly all new online advertising spending goes to just Facebook and Google, and those two companies refer over half of all traffic to news websites. In all, Facebook has some 2 billion users around the world.
mind-expander
this thing ::: Seeking the meaning of mind
Haus- Rucker-Co, Mind Expander, 1967 Haus- Rucker-Co's experiment brought new perspectives on the fusion/separation between the body and the space.
BOOM has a folder of crazy stuff
which you will be seeing SLOWLY all next month... some of it will make sense, or maybe not.
A preview:
we are gif-crazy... you do know that, right? BOOM!
A preview:
we are gif-crazy... you do know that, right? BOOM!
santa school?
Beach Santa sounds perfectly normal to us... BOOM!
There is even a Santa school... when you get to do fun stuff...
There is even a Santa school... when you get to do fun stuff...
nine word story
here is one of my Mental Midget poems:
you do not know
what? what
you do not know
I amabnormal normal not
i break rulers rules apart
i bendspoons minds backwards
hope is skin-thin paper-thin
hope iswaterproof tear-proof gone
hopecracks creaks buckles
lost all my hope
yup, I am working on a new poetry collection... (c) 2017 LT... BOOM
you do not know
you do not know
I am
i break
i bend
hope is
hope is
hope
yup, I am working on a new poetry collection... (c) 2017 LT... BOOM
hair swapping?
Hair-swapping may seem a bit strange now, in an age where we can carry basically all of the non-forensic evidence of a relationship—from photos to correspondence to shared transactions—around in our phones. But in the past, and particularly in the Victorian era, swapping hair served as a common sign of affection, a way to literally give a friend, relative, or lover a piece of yourself, and keep a piece of them in turn.
VIA
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| John Keats’s hair, with a note from Leigh Hunt attesting to its provenance. The empty frame probably originally contained a portrait of the poet. Atlas Obscura |
VIA
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oh yeah...
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