the working of Zina's mind scares me at time - BUT I LIKE IT! - NYAHAHAHAH!
(sexy Ryner)
Ok....
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Silverfox_R
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- Location: Townsville, NQLD, Australia
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<A HREF="http://furfire.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Furfire</A> Enter a new world
<A HREF="http://kimyako.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Baka Kimya-ko </A> Two heros - and a world that needs saving - from them!!
<A HREF="http://kimyako.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Baka Kimya-ko </A> Two heros - and a world that needs saving - from them!!
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Zina
- Regular Poster
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- Location: Boulder, Colorado, USA
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I like it too. It's all...blank. ^^
<A HREF="http://zina.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Element's Song</A> -It's neat. And everyone likes neat things.
<A HREF="http://clad.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Cute Li'l Anti-Christ Daiji</A> -cute anti-Christ fun!
<A HREF="http://clad.keenspace.com" TARGET=_blank>Cute Li'l Anti-Christ Daiji</A> -cute anti-Christ fun!
What... you don't appreciate insanity? Heh...
Insanity is a big part of being human (or human-ish). 'Sanity' is a socially defined thing. Thus, there being no absolute craziness, that which is dubbed insanity becomes a driving force for change in society as a whole. In fact, the famous sociologist Emile Durkheim (champion of the Functionalism paradigm) once described deviance (any case of going against the norm, be it odd ideas or even crime) was "the driving force behind social evolution, being the means by which standards are set and tested, and new methods applied to real situations". Hug a crazy person today; they're helping you more than you might think!
And Zina is a good case. By bringing you face-to-face with what scares you, in an environment where you know it to be fictional, she provides a way to step back and analyze just what it is you fear, and how that fear can be bested. Nt only that, but as Calvin (of Calvin and Hobbes) put it, "it's man's unsuppressable nature to scare himself silly for no good reason!" Thus, not only is it a means for catharsis, but it's a cheap thrill too! Really now, can life get any better?
Insanity is a big part of being human (or human-ish). 'Sanity' is a socially defined thing. Thus, there being no absolute craziness, that which is dubbed insanity becomes a driving force for change in society as a whole. In fact, the famous sociologist Emile Durkheim (champion of the Functionalism paradigm) once described deviance (any case of going against the norm, be it odd ideas or even crime) was "the driving force behind social evolution, being the means by which standards are set and tested, and new methods applied to real situations". Hug a crazy person today; they're helping you more than you might think!
And Zina is a good case. By bringing you face-to-face with what scares you, in an environment where you know it to be fictional, she provides a way to step back and analyze just what it is you fear, and how that fear can be bested. Nt only that, but as Calvin (of Calvin and Hobbes) put it, "it's man's unsuppressable nature to scare himself silly for no good reason!" Thus, not only is it a means for catharsis, but it's a cheap thrill too! Really now, can life get any better?
"I just want to be feared, to be loved, to be worshipped like the god I've dreamed of being!"