[1:33 a.m.] : [2002-07-14]

i had a date tonight with my girlfriend. it was cool, we actually got dressed up and went out.

WE WENT TO THE CIRCUS.

it totally could of been a worse night. in fact i think the only complaint i had is that the ring master was this scrawny black hip gyrating bad singing machine. if he would of just shut the @$%& up it would not of hurt my feelings. but aside from that the circus was great.
we had nachos and popcorn and a snowcone and hotdog, and at one point in the evening while walking around there where two people at a merch booth, one girl standing there talking to the gentleman behind the table and another girl with her hand attached to said first girls ass. ugly dyke whores without shame at a family event in front of five year olds. it was absolutly fantastic.
oh while i'm on the subject of five year olds, ashley made us cut in the line to get in, mind you all that we ended up cutting infront of like a bajillion screaming children most under the age of eight.
i took a picture of it, maybe it will get posted.


comments: didn't mean to mess your paradigm

par�a�digm ��Pronunciation Key��(pr-dm, -dm)
n.

  1. One that serves as a pattern or model.
  2. A set or list of all the inflectional forms of a word or of one of its grammatical categories: the paradigm of an irregular verb.
  3. A set of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that constitutes a way of viewing reality for the community that shares them, especially in an intellectual discipline.


[Middle English, example, from Late Latin paradgma, from Greek paradeigma, from paradeiknunai, to compare �: para-, alongside; see para-1 + deiknunai, to show; see deik- in Indo-European Roots.]
Usage Note: Paradigm first appeared in English in the 15th century, meaning �an example or pattern,� and it still bears this meaning today: Their company is a paradigm of the small high-tech firms that have recently sprung up in this area. For nearly 400 years paradigm has also been applied to the patterns of inflections that are used to sort the verbs, nouns, and other parts of speech of a language into groups that are more easily studied. Since the 1960s, paradigm has been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework, as when Nobel Laureate David Baltimore cited the work of two colleagues that �really established a new paradigm for our understanding of the causation of cancer.� Thereafter, researchers in many different fields, including sociology and literary criticism, often saw themselves as working in or trying to break out of paradigms. Applications of the term in other contexts show that it can sometimes be used more loosely to mean �the prevailing view of things.� The Usage Panel splits down the middle on these nonscientific uses of paradigm. Fifty-two percent disapprove of the sentence The paradigm governing international competition and competitiveness has shifted dramatically in the last three decades.

My pair-a-dig-um is just fine and dandy it aint "messed" yo G, but thanks for the concern buck-o.

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