Remember you don't do anything in isolation.
Before I got glasses, I thought Monet was the world's only realist landscape painter.
I care more about the people in books than the people I see every day.
It's wrong for libraries to have limited budgets.
I sat on the bench by the willows and at my honey bun and read Triton. There are some awful things in the world, it’s true, but there are also some great books. When I grow up I would like to write something that someone could read sitting on a bench on a day that isn’t all that warm and they could sit reading it and totally forget where they were or what time it was so that they were more inside the book than inside their own head. I’d like to write like Delany or Heinlein or Le Guin.
Tolkien understood about the things that happen after the end. Because this is after the end, this is all the Scouring of the Shire, this is figuring out how to live in the time that wasn’t supposed to happen after the glorious last stand. I saved the world, or I think I did, and look, the world is still here, with sunsets and interlibrary loans. And it doesn’t care about me any more than the Shire cared about Frodo.
It's amazing how large the things are that it's possible to overlook.
I started being really proud of the fact that I was gay even though I wasn't.
Even though the stuff Im doing right now is relatively easy, I think in the future I would love to play things that have nothing to do with me and thats good.
If this code works, it was written by Paul DiLascia. If not, I don't know who wrote it. . I'll be laughing when I'm old and and all my programmer friends have gone alexic from staring at too many tiny pixels
At Christmas I no more desire a rose Than wish a snow in May's new-fangled mirth; But like of each thing that in season grows.