this is a very fifth eye open galaxy brain mood
60 weeks of DBT group in one tweet
a dude came into the library stoned out of his mind and was like, “do I need a library card to look at books?” And I said, “to take books home, yes. To look at them, no” and he looked so relieved. bro was staring at a fish encyclopedia for like an hour and then just left.
this is literally all society needs to be
in my flop era (like how a bunny flops over when they're comfortable. thank you.)
in my flop era (my ears are so so floppy and fluffy. thanks)
i didn't even know 2023 is year of the rabbit. lets all enter our flop era... together oxo
one of the worst feelings in the world is when you're playing a game with dialogue choices and none of the options are something you want to say. like i know it's not me, it's the character i'm playing, but he would not fucking say that. i know him better than you and the burden of this knowledge weighs heavier on me than you will ever understand.
For real, it drives me nuts when people act like I’m “behind the times” for still collecting physical movies and books.
Like when I blind bought Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange on bluray and the classmate who recommended it to me looked at me like I confessed to writing on stone tablets.
“But it’s on Netflix!”
And guess what was taken off of Netflix a few months later?
I like watching my movies when I want to watch them.
And you know what else? I like not depending on the internet to watch things. The internet in my apartment? Dodgy as hell. There are periods where streaming won’t even pull up on my TV because the internet will blip for 5-10 minutes. And it gets REALLY annoying when you’re in the middle of a show.
Also, there are people who live in more rural areas who can’t get decent internet either. Those people tend to still use cable and rent a lot of DVDs from the library.
So yeah, between streaming companies censoring content and pulling stuff down, and the internet not always being consistent, long live physical media.













