The domino effect
You know that feeling when you make a single decision, which then triggers a whole bunch of actions to follow that initiating event?
You know that feeling when you make a single decision, which then triggers a whole bunch of actions to follow that initiating event?
Things always feel more intense than usual for me around the time of an eclipse.
Sometimes you're so tired you can barely type a sentence. Today is one of those days.
According to some calculations I ran this morning, I've moved every six months on average for the past 13 years.
I was listening to Elon Musk talk about The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, how it really throws this philosophical idea that it’s not so much the answers but the questions that matter.
As a society, we’re obsessed with the best.
These days, the beings I want to be around the most are animals.
There's a guy who builds rock formations by the water near where I live.
I loved looking at these rocks as I passed by them on my walks. So one day when I spotted him, I asked him why he builds them all the time.
This was one of my favorite movies growing up. I was introduced to it by my dad, who loves 90s rom-coms.
It’s a movie about two people falling in love over email and chat. It begs the question, “Is it possible to fall in love through words alone?”
“Oh, but what a way to go!” – Lucy
The above line is from the hilarious show, I Love Lucy. For context, she’s spying on a mysterious new neighbor through a pair of binoculars with her friend Ethel. Ever since I watched that episode ages ago, I can’t think of the phrase “curiosity killed the cat” without following it up with that enthusiastic punch line.