What I Did Yesterday

I didn’t update. But here’s something along the lines of what I was thinking of putting:

Yesterday, I woke up. I ate breakfast. It wasn’t that good, so I didn’t eat a lot. Then, I took BART to ATDP. I read a book on BART, and I wrote out scripts for TPV comics.

When I got to Berkeley, I went to my classroom. I browsed on the internet a little bit because class never starts on time. During breaks, I played cards with people. I got new cards, not too long ago. They are Bicycle cards, and they are really smooth, so good to shuffle. Playing cards is fun.

During class, we tried to make a robot that would climb a stair. No one succeeded. Our robot got off the ground, but fell off the stair.

Then, I took BART home. I played cards with a friend on BART, and then read.

I got home. I watched TV and I ate lunch and dinner (not at the same time). I updated TPV on time, for once. It features Captain Nova. I also started writing Chapter 19 of Return to Dawn, which I haven’t worked on in a long time.

Later, I watched The Transporter. It’s an okay movie. The lady in it is annoying. The fight scenes slightly reminded me of Jackie Chan.

I went to bed and didn’t weblog.

And that’s why I don’t write about what I do. Because it’s all crap. It’s boring; I don’t do anything exciting. And, very often, neither do a lot of people. That’s why I write about what I’m thinking instead, because my mind is more interesting.

One could blame the (intentionally) dry writing style, but I still don’t see any point to what I wrote. It’s worse than reality TV. Now, all I have to do is add in some spelling and grammatical errors, take out most of the periods and paragraph breaks, add a few cryptic in-jokes, and, voila, there’s your average weblogger’s entry.

Reciprocating a link to Lloyd. “I found your dry recitation of yesterday’s events rather interesting, actually…” As always, Lloyd makes a good point. Whenever I find things interesting about what people have done, it nearly always contains something unique that piques my interest. Ironically, it’s the dry style that is what’s unique in my writing. Haha.

Coincidentally, Stevie has something related. “What is WITH people and their “trendy” blog-type sites? It amazes me how many people maintain a blogger, xanga, AND livejournal, filling all three with the same pointless chatter…”