Muddle's Meaning

The sand pebbles of Darwin's suffering have caused some to caterwaul
hilariously during circumspection.
Comparing Moses and the burning bush to Joseph and the golden plates, which of course aren't in the New Testament, or the Covenant as it is called by Sonjo, Planch, and Sorwell, does tend upon half-circumspection to be similar!
Shards of thought in the tora-tora-tora method of learned speaking, like me, often do leave some in desperation of not misunderstanding.
Obfuscating whole pages of random thoughts obtuseively, can and will create hedradecathalonic dimples like some golf balls with many, many dimples.
I have a dictionary that weighs 43 pounds (American) and has hundreds of thousands (well one hundred thousand anyway), words or phrses or letters in it and I intend to prognosticate what will occur when we use them all up or ruin them!
Booyaa!

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Submitted by d.smith700 on Mon, 12/17/2007 - 5:58pm.

I have been reading some of muddle's philosophy and got buffaloed as to what was the problem and the solution.
This essay of yours above helps me enormously to understand the intricate enhancements that words can engender.
It is simple, plain English, and is not written to confuse, as is a U.S. Internal Revenue instruction booklet--which although it does make more sense than muddle, has the same results----a guilt feeling for most scanners.
Aristotle, taught many of the Greek homosexuals--especially Alexander The Great (great what, I don't know), but he had nothing to do with the "300" homosexuals who fought off the "Persians," I think it was, until the rest of the guys could get there.
Considering the total failure of all those advised by the old philosophers, I personally think that what is needed to think through things are more engineers.
Even "seers," Muses, clowns, svengalis, dumb-asses, etc., have been used over the years to come up with the answers to the meaning of life and the only thing that has ever worked very long has been natural resources! The meaning is that the cave man was born, he died and was gone forever.
Same thing now. Although some may burn--some may not. Haven't answered that one for sure yet.

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Submitted by muddle on Mon, 12/17/2007 - 6:45am.

When I was in elementary school, everyone mercilessly picked on a kid named Alan Grimsley. Looking back, I have mixed feelings about it all. On the one hand, I wish I had not joined in it as I did.

But, on the other hand, Grimsley invited it and brought it on himself by the things he said and did. I'm sure that, had we all been psychologists rather than fifth-graders, we might have seen that Grimsley had issues. But when he would go out of his way to insult people, and when this was combined with his overall idiocy, it was just a bit too much to resist.

Dollar, your name isn't Grimsley, is it?

Mind if I call you that from now on?

________________

My Opie impression: circa 1963.


Submitted by Nitpickers on Mon, 12/17/2007 - 7:50am.

You commented on my comments by saying that "dollar" had a fifth personality!
I don't know what that means, but I know what happened to Grimsley.
He made it to major league baseball as a pitcher for about 10 years.
He was then accused of taking steroids for enhancement and was allowed to retire. He also went through an air conditioning vent and stole the corked bat of a ball player named Albert Bell--I suppose so Bell wouldn't be booted
An airplane hit his home once and missed killing him---he wasn't there!
Some say he was mind-altered in a gross way by the way some smart-alecs in school used to tease him!

Denise Conner's picture
Submitted by Denise Conner on Mon, 12/17/2007 - 6:01am.

Did that 43-pound dictionary fall off the shelf and hit you on the head? Puzzled

"circumspection" -- Why don't you try that for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and get back with us with your results in 2020? Laughing out loud


Submitted by Nitpickers on Mon, 12/17/2007 - 7:53am.

I did play football with Gerry Ford--without a helmet!
That is exactly what I have been doing lately--circumspecting!

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