please empty your brain below

I am also heavy in inertia...

Fancy a drink?

Hi,
Just blog hopping and found your site. After reading your post I to am inertia and would strongly agree with Inspector sands. Have a good day.

Me+Inertia yes, but Me+Stress definitely no.
Which is nice

I think, Dg, your regulars should gather together and buy you a few rounds - to celebrate inertia, of course. (Okay, any excuse for a few rounds) I know I'm almost as guilty. Every once in a while I go out and do something to break the pattern, but then I settle into inertia for a good, long time. I packed up and moved here from Canada a year and a half ago, but I haven't really done much since. Well, since I found an acceptable flatmate, anyways.

you're a nice person with lots of nice qualities. inertia suits you and obviously agrees with you. carry on being inert (I see bernard breslaw playing you!)

and i can confirm that he doesn't 'do' stress. i can also confirm that he doesn't make phonecalls. and I was shocked when my last invitation was turned down as a previous engagement took priority!

I agree entirely with you.

I am in a constant and happy state of inertia and have next to no stress whatsoever.

Long live inertia (and ligers!).

The trouble with intertia (and with Tribbles) is that gravity is acting on you in the background, gradually slowing you down. To maintain a true state of just-moving-along-happily-in-a-straight-line, you need the occasional rocket boost. Otherwise, before you know it, you'll come to a complete standstill. Unless you live in a metaphorical zero-gravity environment, of course; but it's hard to play snooker that way.

Seeing as it's absolutely none of my business, I think you should go somewhere on Holiday for a week. Somewhere you've never been...

It's cobblers anyway. DG's just come back from San Francisco ffs....I notice these things - I haven't been on holiday yet this year.

yeah, and we went out last week.

Like I said, stevie, I've been out one evening this month. But thanks for that.

The guy who wrote the Diceman - Luke Rhinehart - has some quite interesting views on this:

"Personal identifications - name, beliefs, religion, family, possessions, and personal history - all are anchors thrown into the sea of life to try to contain the flow. They are symptoms of fear. They represent graspng for certainty in an uncertain world; consistency in an inconsistent flow;stability within unstable socieities; meaning in a meaningless universe."

And you thought you were just slacking...

Ooh, ooh, please can you teach me how to enjoy (and be satisfied with) being inert, since I have a complete inability in that area.

Inert? Certainly not upstairs, by the smashing stuff that continues to pour out of your brain and through your finger ends onto this favourite of blogs.
But are you prone or supine?

Matt - you can ask me that in person next week if I manage to venture outside my flat to wave goodbye to the number 8 Routemasters at Bow Garage.

You can do that pretty much every night until Friday. There's a farewell tour on Sunday and Monday, specials on the Wednesday and Thursday, then ELEVEN specials on the Friday leading up to the last journey (Victoria 2240-Bow 2331, Friday night slippage allowing). Stagecoach's Routemaster operation is going to go out with a bang. A sad day for London - and which is why I'm going to have to take a deep breath on June 10th and vote for Knobber Norris.

So, is there an official webpage with all these specials, tours and timings on, or is the whole thing a big secret known only within Busworld?











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