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Excitement is a Big, Turquoise, Flashing Neon Sign. Don’t Ignore It.

There are other things I’m suppose to be doing right now.

Finishing up my e-course, Clients + Cash (re-launching next week–keep your eyes peeled!), doing laundry, working on my memoir (there’s a memoir), getting out this week’s segment of 97 in ’11.

But, I’m having trouble concentrating because I’m excited about an idea. An idea that’s breathing all sorts of life into me, and making me giddy with anticipation. And whenever that happens, I take it as a sign, yo.

I’m heading to Costa Rica in February. To the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, to be exact, where I’ve lived off and on for years, now.

And I want to invite you to come along.

I’m not exactly sure what this would look like, but I’ve been envisioning all sorts of invigorating collaboration, possibly in the form of a group retreat, and/or separately in the form of one-on-one retreats, where just you and me go head to head with the main goal of taking your biz idea and making it profitable.

I think it has the potential to be a life-changing experience, for everyone involved.

To get away from all of your regular responsibilities and obligations, and find the white space to focus on creating and building your business, once and for all. And furthermore, in the sanctuary of the rainforest, surrounded by tropical beaches, while having a big dose of FUN.

I’m all about cross-cultural experiences for helping us find perspective and get in the right mind space–a peaceful, fresh, exhilarating mind space where you become invigorated with ideas and inspiration. A place where all things seem possible again.

I’m envisioning white boards. Lots and lots and lots of paper. Doodles. Arrows. Connections. Plans. Products. Services. Pricing. Strategy. Copywriting. Lessons. Tricks. Tips. Hand-holding. Prodding. Poking. Playing.

Morning beach walks. Brainstorms. Coconuts. Fresh fruit smoothies. Salsa music. Warm breezes. Monkeys. Boat rides. Snorkeling. Zip lining. Salt water. Pina coladas. Relaxation.

Invigoration. Renewal. Fresh starts. Encouragement. Ideas. Fun. And big, big plans.

Sounds cool, right?

One part of me really would like to offer it as a week-long, one-on-one retreat, so we can really focus and make it an intimate experience (not like that, you vixen, you!) and come out with real plans and real results. Yet, the other part of me thinks it’d be really fun to make it a group experience, mostly because the Facebook Group for my Clients + Cash course has been so fun and they absolutely love it and the support they receive from one another.

And then I realized I could probably offer both at separate times.

What do you think about this idea?

Does it excite you, too? Does it sound like something you’d love to be a part of? Does it sound cool, even if it wouldn’t be right for you?

Let me know in the comments. Or if you’re reading this in your email, just hit reply.

Thoughts, comments, ideas and feedback all welcome!

And now, I’m off to put the finishing touches on Clients + Cash. Whooo wee!

Here’s to a FANTASTIC Monday!

Ash

 

 

 

Beating, Stomping and Otherwise Assassinating The Voice In Your Head That Says “You Can’t.”  Violently.

It’s that fear.

It’s that dirty little lurking thought in the back of your head that moseys on up to the forefront every single time you’re finally prepared to step up to the plate and take a chance in life.

You’re not smart enough.

You don’t know what you’re doing.

People will see right through you.

This is never going to work.

Who do you think you are?

You’re a foolish ox.

Yes, that’s right, I said it: OX.

OX!!!!

Stop being so impractical.

Your! Idea!  Is!  Stupid!

And those pants you’re wearing?

What were you thinking?

You should really be on a diet.

OX.

How can you be successful in anything else if you can’t even lose 10 pounds?

I told you this was a bad idea.

You and your ideas.

You’re never going to get anywhere, because while you’re busy wasting all of your time twirling your hair with your head in the clouds….everyone else is working hard, saving money and building families.

And at the end of the day, they’re going to have nice, stable lives, and you’re still going to be stammering around, looking for something that probably doesn’t even exist.

You’re so naive.

You and your damn ideas.

Just do what everyone else is doing for once, and stop questioning everything already.

You try so hard to be special, but really you’re a no one.

So start acting like it.

Ox….

Sound familiar?

We are experts at beating the crap out of ourselves; which, by the way, I’ve always found interesting, since unless we were seriously abusive, most of us would never, ever, ever say those things to a friend.  So why is it okay for ourselves?

That’s exactly it–oftentimes, we aren’t our own friend. We give and we give and we give to everyone who needs us, supporting them throughout their journey, acting like their rock, building up their confidence, bringing them up when they feel down, reassuring them that everything will be okay, and generally helping to validate them and their ideas, and provide as much encouragement as we can.

Because that’s what friends do.

But the moment that WE need support.  The moment that WE need reassurance.  The moment that WE need validation.  The moment that WE need ourselves more than ever…….we pull a snide little disappearing act.

Instead of being supportive, kind and gentle with ourselves, we switch on the other voice–the fear voice.  The one who just called you an Ox and meant it.

The voice doesn’t go away.

It keeps popping up time and time again, putting you down and making you question yourself, causing a whole mess of doubt, fear and neurosis.

And because it’s so damn loud, most of the time you can’t help but listen to it–like the sound of a train passing by when you’re standing right next to the track.

As a result, as the years have gone by, this bastard–this voice–is so loud, and so present, that it begins RUNNING YOUR LIFE.

Which inevitably means that YOU are NOT.

And doesn’t THAT make you a little mad inside?

The Solution to the Unknown

As most of you know, I spent the summer driving around the United States, meeting readers and lots and lots of new faces, and just generally doing A LOT of talking.

We talked about goals, dreams, ideas, plans, businesses, passions and everything in between.

And after all that talking, if there’s one thing I could identify–one principal reason why people aren’t getting out there and reaching these goals, acting on these dreams, and trusting in these passions, it’s because of that damn voice.

Fear of the unknown.

In many cases, their fear voice was saying to them:

You don’t know how to make it happen.

You’re not skilled enough.

You lack so much to be desired.

And, yeah, that voice can be a real burden.  But here’s the thing about those objections:  Anytime you hear yourself second guessing because you don’t have enough information, things seem overwhelming, and you don’t know how….you know what you do?

YOU GO FIND OUT.

And inevitably, you’ll find that as you learn more, you gain more confidence, and that voice gets softer, and softer, until your own finally starts being heard.

And boom.

The universe just got a little brighter, indeed.

It’s About Time We Silence That Voice.  It’s About Time We Start Taking Leaps.  It’s About Time We Start LIVING.

-

The Real Value of Travel (Come Sneak Away to the Beaches of Costa Rica, If You Dare)

A Sexy Story With a Lesson

We sit in near silence, the only interruptions being an occasional mojito-induced outburst of nervous laughter, the sound of my silver chandelier earrings gently clinkering together, and the relentless tropical rains that steadily pelt the top of the canvas roof of the 4×4 automobile we are in.

It’s shamelessly cliche, where we are and what we’re doing there, parked at the edge of a cliff overlooking the warm Pacific waters at 2 o’clock in the morning, but the way his deep-set, dark brown eyes pierce my own, I suddenly understand women everywhere who have ever dared perpetuate such a cliche; it is these exact moments, right here and right now, that fill us with unexpected fervor, invigorating every hidden fantasy that we’ve secretly harbored, longing for a moment just like this one.  For the first time in a long time, I feel alive.  In more respects than one.

He slides his hand over the top of my exposed thigh, delicately running his thumb back and forth over my skin, and with the other reaches over to me, gently cupping my face and pulls me into him.  It’s one of those moments when you both know the kiss is about to happen, so you frantically try to lick your lips right before it happens without the other person noticing.  Fortunately for the sake of my love story, he doesn’t notice.  As a matter of fact, after that point, I wouldn’t say we noticed much of anything.

The way he kissed me that night, with a fiery intensity that would linger on my lips for days years to come, was the beginning of the end.  It was in that moment that I first felt a strong connection with another human being that was different from me; it was in that moment that I first discovered the universality of human emotions.  People from foreign countries had always seemed, well…foreign, but the opposite, as I was to discover, held more truth.  When it comes to things like love, I learned, no one is foreign.  As it turns out, everyone is exactly the same.

People Are Travel

Over the following few months that I would live in Costa Rica, I was stunned to have this same lesson sneak up on me time and time again.  We weren’t just the same when it came to matters of the heart, but with all of the elements that make us human.  From our deepest fears, to our desire to fit in; from our need to bond with one another to our need for time alone.  In many ways, we were essentially all the same, simply having been molded in sightly different ways by our respective backdrops.

And it’s precisely this realization that brings all of the value to travel; without the people, travel would be nothing more than a fruitless change of scenery.  A slideshow, if you will, that does nothing to engage you, but is something you simply witness from your corner of the room.

Furthermore, while many people assume that the majority of the benefits of travel lie in experiencing the differences, on the same token, it seems to me that the greatest benefit of travel actually lies–surprisingly so–not in the differences, but in the similarities.

Sure, in many respects, the differences are opportune.  It’s the differences that allow us to best step out of our own lives and into that of another, enabling us to more objectively reflect on our own realities and, with that reflection, be enabled to better understand ourselves and who we want to be.  It’s the differences that allow us to either appreciate aspects of our lives we never gave much thought to prior, or on the flip side, reject other aspects that we never much cared for in the first place.  It’s the differences that give a destination its character, enriching our world and, in the process, enriching us.

But as I’ve discovered, it’s through the examination of the differences that we accidentally unearth the similarities.  And its the similarities that teach us the big lessons, when we’re able to witness that quiet interconnectedness and, by extension, witness ourselves in others.  Seeing ourselves in others allows us to see the possibilities in our own lives; to see that there are others who are just as content with their lives, if not more so, than we are, yet they’re going about it in a whole new way.  Seeing ourselves in others opens us up to new opportunities.  Seeing ourselves in others expands our method of thought.  It shows us that there are other ways of doing things, and that we aren’t limited to just one.  Seeing ourselves in others gives us permission to be who we want to be; not merely the person we’ve been told we should be.

That night out on that cliff, despite the seeming frivolity of the situation, I saw a glimpse of the person I aspired to be.  One who acts with intention, and lets passion dictate the course, rather than stifling logic.  One who recognizes the importance of feeling alive, instead of just being alive.  One who understands that play can be more important than work, and and one acknowledges that people are more important than things. This is who I want to be.  This is who I have decided to be.  This is who I am.  This is what matters.

Wish You, Too, Had a Cliffside Latino(a) Lover & A Whole New Perspective on Life?

I gained immeasurable wisdom from that first trip to Costa Rica, as with every subsequent trip I’ve taken and time I’ve lived there.  Most notably, I’ve learned how to be the person I am, in a world that promotes being the person society wants you to be.  I’ve learned to take big leaps, and how to land gracefully no matter where I land.  I’ve learned that risk is never as risky as it seems, and that only good can come from playing with it.  I’ve learned that important careers aren’t important unless you’re happy doing them, and sometimes, the best career choice is the one we were most afraid of.  And I’ve learned that living is as you define it.

Over the past year, I’ve seen many readers struggle with the same types of life questions, leading them to wonder “what if?” a whole lot.  I’ve seen many become proactive and take chances, but I’ve also seen others want to be proactive, but just not know how.

Most of all, I’ve seen people who want to change, but are still paralyzed by fear.

So I decided to do something about it.

I’m proud to announce to you Liberation Seven–a seven day retreat on the beaches of Costa Rica, designed exclusively for those who are serious about living life on their own terms.  It will be held from October 7th to October 14th, and will include group discussion sessions out on a yacht, ziplining through the rainforest, during fresh seafood dinners and on the white sands of a national park, as well a host of other activities–all optional, of course.

But regardless of how many incredible things we do, the real value will lie in the experience of a new culture, looking at life through a new lens as a way reflect and promote positive change in our own lives.  I want to facilitate that experience for you, and have the opportunity to engage with all of you on a new level and really dig into ways that we can start taking the leaps we need to take, and start living the lives we want to be living.

***The best part?  If you sign up before Monday, August 2nd, get $300 off the cost of the retreat!***

Want to Learn More?

If you’re interested in learning more, jot down your email address below and I’ll shoot you some messages with the latest information.  Alternatively, if you’re all sorts of pumped and ready to indulge in endless mojitos, rum drinks and ice-cold Costa Rican beer with a group of like-minded folks with the same goals, you can go right ahead and sign up here with a deposit. Otherwise, if you have any questions, feel free to email me at ihavetheguts [at] the middlefingerproject [dot] org.

Hope to see you in Costa Rica!  You only live once, right?



The Surefire Way to Save Yourself from Mediocrity (That You Already Know, But Don’t Do)

Q:  Who’s Your Daddy?

A:  Novelty

In the last year, two of the countries I’ve lived in are Chile & Costa Rica.  In both places, I did a number of things, kissed met a number of people, and learned a number of lessons.

Many people advocate the value of travel–that’s nothing new–but what they’re really advocating is the value of experiences.

Experiences yield so much more than an adrenaline rush; they exercise our souls, rejuvenate our minds, refine our perspectives, provide us with lifelong memories and, most of all, make us come alive.  (Possibly assisted by Jose Cuervo, but no bold claims.)

Travel fosters new experiences.  New experiences are, by default, novel.  Novelty forces us to think critically and be present in the moment.  This is why travel is such a valuable tool in terms of personal growth.

When we’re at home, it’s remarkably easy to get stuck in a rut.  We rely on our routines to carry us through our weeks, which turn into months, which turn into years.  And while routines can be comfortable, they can also be really stifling–without us even realizing it.

Today, I want to share some of the experiences I’ve had over the past year that have kept me sane.  I encourage you to run, faster than ever, toward your own.  If nothing else, you’ll at least have one or two damn good stories to tell.  (But hide the photos.  By all means, hide the photos!)

Costa Rica, Land Where Happiness is Contagious–Possibly The Result of an Unnamed, Unknown Shot Administered to the Glutes When Developing Signs of the Common Cold.  Or Not.  But I Really Wanted to Mention It.

Did unspeakable things on top of a waterfall.  Had a healer perform a ritual on my forearm to rid me of a stomach virus.  Determined that hips not only come in all different shapes & sizes…but also range of motion.  Ran hand-in-hand with a cute German boy into the ocean at night with all of our clothes on & not a care in the world.  Just because.

Had my purse stolen.  Twice.  Watched a mother & baby whale hovering off the coastline as I sipped a caipirinha at sunset.  Learned that raw fish tastes better than cooked fish, and that butter is what you put on top of saltines.  Made peace with bugs, but mastered the art of killing cockroaches when duty called– a particularly tricky task when one’s pants are around one’s ankles in the bathroom.

Experienced a 6.8 earthquake (which was far better than being bombed, since I didn’t know the word for “earthquake,” and thought that’s what was happening at the time).  Made the acquaintance of a porn director, a Swedish prostitute & Matthew McConaughey.  Discerned the value of patience while standing in long lines, as well as the value of using the ladies’ room beforehand.  Watched barefoot children play soccer in the streets with empty soda bottles, and saw their unabashed excitement the next day when I returned with an armful of balls.

Experimented with foreign sounds coming out of my mouth, and giggled when they didn’t quite make it.  Felt the wind in my hair atop jet skis, 4-wheelers, scooters, deep-sea fishing boats & bicycles, and the sun on my skin as I rafted down rivers, ziplined my way through rainforests, kayaked my way through mangroves and hiked my way up mountains.

But Most Importantly…

Learned that people and what they do for a living are mutually exclusive.  Found out what it means to be madly, passionate, uncontrollably in love.  Found out what it means to be profoundly, devastatingly, soul-crushingly hurt.  Discovered that politically drawn lines separate countries, not humanity.  Unearthed universal truths about the world, but at the same time, uncovered even more particular truths about myself.  Understood what it finally meant to feel alive.  And last but not least, gained knowledge that in some places, short shorts really can be practical.

Chile, Land of Ridiculous-Looking Pants & Guards That Look Like the Guards at Buckingham Palace, but Aren’t.

Witnessed a man without legs heave himself down the aisle of a public bus with his elbows.  Participated in a student-run, alcohol-fueled, end-of-year celebratory party inside the walls of Santiago’s most prestigious university.  Wistfully admired the immense majesty of snow-capped Andes mountains from the other side of the glass in my bedroom.  Climbed a portion of the Andes mountains with newfound Brazilian friends, then later celebrated the glory of the vineyards of their valleys.

Taught smart, driven college students the right way to pronounce the “sh” sound in English, and they taught me what it means not to have opportunity handed to you on a silver platter.  Was flown to Patagonia in order to impart valuable knowledge to high school students, but it was those high school students who showed me that innocence is sometimes the most valuable quality of all.

Rode llamas in the city, took cable cars up mountainsides, and relished every single bus ride across town.  Ate a seafood delicacy known as locos that is apparently only available off the coast of Chile (still haven’t found the English equivalent), delighted in the tradition of warming red wine on the grill, and witnessed the power of food in connecting strangers.  Covered myself with no less than four comforters each night at my host family’s house, and felt what it was like to truly be cold, but at the same time, through their kind compassion, felt what it was like to truly be warmed.

But Most Importantly…

I learned that “friends” is a mere synonym for “family“–even when you don’t share a common tongue.  But most of all, I learned that sometimes, friends are the best form of faith.  I discovered the importance of laughing, dancing and blaring the radio with the windows down.  I determined that through the hardest of human hardships, hope & kindness prevail, yet through the cushiest of human conditions, greed & hostility are more prevalent.  I discovered that stereotypes only stretch as far as we pull them, and differences only noticed as long as we watch them.  And last but not least, I learned that when all else fails, it’s never, ever a bad idea to go to the park and whisper sweet nothings into your lover’s ear.

Be glad that I’m not listing London, 2006 here, or you’d be hearing a lot more about sweet nothings & lovers.  Spanish ones, at that. Le sigh.

Surviving Versus Living – Not Even Your Mom Can Help You On This One

Nothing compares to experience.  Nothing you could buy.  Nothing you could sell.  Nothing you could find on eBay.  Nothing you could bust a rhyme about.  Nothing your mom could bake you in a bunt pan with ooey gooey chocolaty chips melted inside.  Not even anything that your Facebook farm with 700 bushels of freaking boysenberries can compare to.  (Shocker.)

New experiences are the only path from merely surviving to actually living.  And I’m pretty sure that if you don’t already have a down payment on your casket, you’re probably more interested in the latter.

Unless, of course, you have OCD, in which case you very well may already have your casket picked out.  (And you thought the Swedish prostitute had issues.)

If this topic interests you, you can grab a free copy of my report titled Living or Just Surviving?  A No-Bullshit Guide for Modern-Day Outlaws Who Want to Feel Alive Again.  It’s free–you just gotta throw in an email address down below, partner.  Then I’ll send you more free stuff later–maybe without foul language in the title.  But probably not.


LIVING OR JUST SURVIVING?
A No-Bullshit Guide
for the Modern Day
Outlaw


Want to feel
alive again?

GET THE FREE GUIDE

Ride ‘em cowboy!

Red High Heels, Slaughtered Pigs & Why Being Unsure Is A Good Thing

I am in hot, humid, sweaty-in-all-the-wrong-places Central America, and I am invited to a Christmas party.  Eager to experience the holiday through a shiny new cultural lens, my mistletoe and I happily accept.   In the name of cross-cultural exchange, I carry an innocent little twig of mistletoe, in hopes it will aid my mission to gather a more intimate knowledge of the culture, if you know what I mean.  Wink-wink-elbow jab.

The taxi drops me off at the address.   It’s dark.   It’s muddy.  I’m wearing red heels.  I can envision it now:

Perfect little tan bodied, long-haired, hoop earring donning Latina female number one: Who brought the idiot who can’t even walk like a proper woman in tacones?

Perfect little tan bodied, long-haired, hoop earring donning Latina female number two: Pshhh, who cares.  She’s a gringa–what do you expect?

As I not-so-gracefully tip-toe my way around the emerging pieces of rock that play a cruel game of peek-a-boo with me and the dry, hard earth, threatening to make a fool out of me with just one wrong step, I reprimand myself for not just surrendering to flats and settling for stumpy.  But what latin lover is going to want to whisk the stumpy, sweaty girl off her feet?  None.  Especially a stumpy, sweaty girl that, for reasons unknown, is dangling a strange, berry-laden plant above her head.

My schizophrenic thought-process is immediately put on hold in response to a disturbingly sudden, high-pitched shrill that echoes throughout the air.

As I approach the house, I hear it again, but this time much louder.  And again.  And once again.

As I make my grand entrance into the door of the tin-roofed home–a bit nervous, knowing I will be a stranger in the room–I am greeted not with the warm welcome I was optimistically envisioning, but rather, by an unexpected, alarming scene of sorts that instantaneously sends a wave of nausea rushing through me.

The image is just as horrifying as the sound:  A massive pig, larger than most of the humans that surround it, is being violently chased in circles around the backyard.  There are five males, each armed with what appears to be an oversized mallet, scrambling around the yard, determined to deliver a mighty blow to the panic-stricken pig atop its head to render it unconscious, at which point its throat will be pierced with the large machete that dutifully hangs from the wall.

I quickly ascertain that heels were most definitely an inappropriate selection of footwear for this party.

Well, That’s Awkward

I am horrified.  I have no idea what to say, do or even feel, and can’t bear to watch as they silence the pig’s last desperate squeal, and collectively heave it onto a large wooden chopping block to saw off its head.

As the rest of the attendees take delight in gathering around the cauldron-like wok they have suspended over a fire with the help of three heavy-duty chains, patiently awaiting sliced pieces of pig fat to be fried and served, I, on the other hand, sit on an opposite side of the yard, quietly sipping my lager and contemplating, philosophizing, mourning.

Witnessing this event was a great mental exercise for me, and one that boldly challenged my perception of reality, ostentatiously mocking it with its unabashed display of complete and utter opposition to my ingrained cultural norms, which was, by extension, opposition to everything I had previously known to be true.

I fling the mistletoe to the ground.  There will be no stolen kisses tonight.

Words such as PETA, animal cruelty, and inhumane come to mind, as I question the ethics–or, perhaps, lack of ethics–of the human race.  But then, I’m suddenly also forced to question myself.  My automatic reaction is to be appalled, and to proclaim such an act as loathsome, detestable and just plain cold-blooded.

But then, I think, is it actually?

I remind myself that we, too, kill thousands and thousands of pigs each year for consumption, and, according to some recent documentaries, we aren’t as “humane” in our practices as we might like to think.

That said, I question why it doesn’t bother me if I don’t have to witness it with my own eyes.

Worth Contemplating, But Not My Point

I don’t intend for this to be a statement of my position on the integrity of eating meat, because, frankly, I don’t have one.  I am from Scranton, Pennsylvania.  There’s no question that I like meat.  Right now, it’s not about that; it’s about the far broader message that can be extrapolated here.

No matter how you dice it, the simple fact is that it’s unfair for me to judge, because I’m judging based on a different set of rules.   A set of rules that we’ve internalized and perpetuated among ourselves as truth, when, in reality, it’s not truth–it’s purely our perception of truth. Relative to this example, it’s our perception of how we view right and wrong.  And this, to me, was wrong.  But I’ll tell you what–to the people at the party, there was nothing wrong about it.   Their truth is that the merits of to-kill-a-pig-or-not-to-kill-a-pig just isn’t a debate that exists.  On the other hand, what does exist is the need to eat, and, frankly, it’s a luxury to have meat at all.  No one is disturbed.  No one is shuddering.   Instead, they are rejoicing.  They are grateful to be fortunate enough to even have the opportunity to kill a pig.

There are some obvious implications that should come as no surprise, namely that, as I’ve stated before, reality is subjective.  But it goes beyond that, and makes another, perhaps less salient point:

Subjectivity implies choice.

You have two choices:  Allow society at large to define your perspectives on your behalf, or define your perspectives for yourself.

What do you really think?  What do you really believe?  … Do you even know?

There is no inherent benefit in accepting the perspectives that society arbitrarily determines for us–whether it’s right versus wrong or any other myriad of possibilities.  There is a perceived benefit, though, and it goes by the name of fitting in.  But, in my view, that’s far from beneficial; quite the opposite, actually.  On the other hand, when you’re capable enough to cut through the noise and learn how to think independently of the group, that’s where the real benefits lie.

Am I saying that I’ve shed my deeply ingrained culturally-based thought patterns overnight, and am a newly converted, red heel wearing pig butcher, in the name of independent thought?  No, certainly not.

But am I open to the possibility that this isn’t as loathsome, detestable and cold-blooded as I was originally inclined to think?

Yes.

If there are currently 7 billion people (that’s 7,000,000,000, in case you need all of those fancy zeros to conceptualize just how many people that truly is) on this planet, and all of us have different perceptions of what’s right or what’s wrong, or whether or not red heels do anything at all to detract from stumpy sweatiness, then it would be preposterously arrogant of me to assert my own perception of right or wrong as truth.  Extended beyond pig killings, if we can learn to apply a similar thought process to other traditionally rigid ideas, such as religion, marriage or even what constitutes success, who knows?  We might just do alright for ourselves, after all.  Not to mention a possible diminishing of supremacism, americentrism, racism, and a host of other ugly -isms and the unflattering baggage that comes with it.

It all starts with the pig, I say.

And with that, I take all of my assumptions, and throw them haphazardly to the wind.

I am left with only two questions:

1)  Where can I find some more mistletoe?
2)  Who’s your daddy now, life?


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