READ THIS : Addressing the title of the blog's website "Freetime is now Extinct" I would like to point out several things. One, to the author of (most of) the blogs: freetime must really be extinct, because he doesn't blog nearly enough as I'd like him to, considering how thoughtfully intelligent I consider him to be. I have random chat's with the author, and many insightful and interesting conversations, none of which he addresses or discusses on his blog. Everything from new cool mom's to violent sex, to great movies, to crazy girls in other states and secret loves left behind (or not), but none of these get mentioned. Some of the best dialogues I've had are with the author of the blog, in which we always engage actively in new and old ideas. Instead of mentioning things we discuss, or things like things we discuss, we get cool images and cool pictures (very cool, actually), which nonetheless interest me because I also always consider what it means to say nothing.
THEN THIS: The title of the blog particularly interests me, because free time is in fact, not extinct. In fact, for a blog to survive at all, in can not be extinct, or no one would post, and no one would read/check it out. TIME is always a concept that has captivated my attention, thus freeTIME is of interest to me. With so many sayings about time, ie: "the timing was off" , "Freetime is not extinct," I wonder if these are things people just like to say, but don't actually mean, or if they actually mean them. One always makes time to do the things one wants to, or feels they ought to, and really, to call time, freetime, is odd to me, because all of time is free. We just don't always spend it well.
But I see why the "Freetime is now Extinct" is an appealing title: Anything--everything-- is appealing under the attraction of the impossible.
--anonymous
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