- Joined
- Apr 2, 2025
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- 6,087
The only way to be immortal is to make sure someone CANNOT forget you.Glorious![]()
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The only way to be immortal is to make sure someone CANNOT forget you.Glorious![]()
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I think charging someone rent is among the quickest ways to rob someone legally. They're literally commodifying someone's existence and need to occupy space. If you had rare Pokemon cards laying about I could understand the concern though.I totally get that, and if it was anyone else, I may be concerned, but the man is too busy to rob anyone.There was a tiny bit more to the conversation than just that, but the general vibe was "he was curious, maybe even a little enamored, but still didn't know the first thing about any of it." And while he's worked to the bone, he also makes damn good money, so I just don't see the need. I always joke (but am only ever halfway joking) that if anyone wants to rob me or steal money from my account, go right ahead. Let me know if you find anything valuable!
Like Damien said, that's what most people say after they see it all, just to make conversation. And, like, I wish it was valuable, but I collect to collect, not to one day sell. Most of it's out of the box anyway, so while some nerd out there would buy it, I ain't gonna be rolling in the dough.
Yeah it all kind of blends after awhile.I found a Sailor Moon hoodie at the back of an EB a couple years ago. XL, baggy enough for my big frame comfort.
I like wearing it because it's this magical portal for strangers to connect. People will ask me if I have a favorite, tell me who their favorite is, etc. This thing breaks so much ice. They should have had it back when they were exploring the Arctic circle.
It's funny because I have seen people online make their little selfie video rants about how it's rude and intrusive when someone comes up and tells you that your t-shirt looks cool or to compliment you at all. And I don't understand that. I don't know what went wrong at some point. And I know that's like a very small percentage of the world, so I don't take it seriously, but:
If you're wearing a blink-182 t-shirt, do you not want to broadcast to the world that you like blink-182, and would you not want me to tell you that's a cool shirt, I also partake? If you're wearing a Spider-Man shirt, I have to imagine you do want someone to go cool shirt. That's why I have every cool shirt I have. It's for me, but it's also a line if people would like to connect and avoid the s***** adult world.
And at the end of the day I think that's why that a****** dude lost his wife to the action figure guy. It's just being authentic and comfortable with yourself. That seems rarer and rarer. As we all know from Mallrats, you think just because a guy reads comics he can't start some s***? Or change a tire, or start a fire, or shoot a gun, or throw a nice spiral pass, or whatever weird ass metric people are using for masculinity these days. I heard Trump is using shoe sizes. You know what they say about men with big feet.
And it's also why our community here is so nice.
Yeah it all kind of blends after awhile.
I mean there is the old (now) discussion about sports fans. The "acceptable" fanatics. Guys painting their faces, wearing cosplay (jerseys), going topless in subzero temperatures at games, memorabilia/fancaves, the whole "we won" (your not on the team), etc. etc. I think there will always be the situation of people who look down on "geekdom" but are clueless about the double standard of sports fandom, etc.
Absolutely. I've been doing this more over the past couple of years and the results are fantastic.We all- myself included- need to compliment people on their clothes more.
This is, I've found, 100% about delivery. If you say "you look good in that shirt" the comment scans as being about that person's body. But if you say "I love that shirt!" or "that shirt is so cool" you're complimenting their taste and it lands completely differently on the ear. Now you're saying something about who they are as a person based on how they've chosen to present themselves. Never had a problem with it so long as I keep that in mind. Like, to the extent where I saw a young woman walking on campus the other day with this wild rainbow long coat and I rolled down my car window as I passed to tell her "hey that coat is awesome!" and I could see the genuine smile of appreciation and got a really happy "thank you!" in return.I always worry about coming off creepy.