This is just funny…
I was looking at the M&Ms website, and there was a survey, so I decided to take it. Here are a few statements you’re supposed to rate…
a) I often speak about chocolate candy to my friends
b) When I speak about chocolate candy to my friends I usually give them a lot of information
c) Within the last six months I have spoken to a lot of people about chocolate candy
d) During a conversation about chocolate candy, it is very probable that I would convince my friends about my ideas
e) My friends would probably consider me a good source of advice for chocolate candy
f) I have nothing important to discuss with anyone.
Okay, so I made that last one up. But, man, if you can even “Somewhat Disagree” with any of the othres, then it has to be true. Who sits around talking about chocolate candy?!
Also, in the department of how often do you (or your family) eat m&ms, I put multiple times a day, because M&Ms are the treat we use for potty training, and Ashley is in that process.
In looking for the link to that post about Mark Horne last year, I ran across these excerpts of dinner conversation.
I need to do more of that.
Internet worlds are colliding.
Mark, is posting about Mark, via his LSW.
I don’t know if I can handle it. Mark Horne was already involved in one colliding of internet worlds for me. Now he is invovled again with Mark, otherwise known as the RumorSage. And there was recently a small crashing of worlds when I joined the Wrightsaid list, and Mark (the Sage) was a member, and welcomed me. I didn’t expect that!
How small is the world wide web, anyhow?
Yesterday I listened to this talk by Joey Pipa on ‘Contemporary Attacks on Justification’. I don’t know why I did it, really. Perhaps as an exercise in self-discipline? I held my speaking aloud to myself to just three or four instances. But, really, it was largely crap. A few outright untruths, and plenty of half-truths.
We watched Hotel Rwanda last night. My reaction can be summed up in saying, ‘My God, how can this be?’. Megan and I both cried throughout. I put Steve Schlissel’s sermon, ‘Postmillennial Thinking in a an Age of Tribulation’ on my iPod to listen to this morning.