Sunday, September 1, 2013

I'm Back From The Dead, jk

So I "lost" my mom's password on Blogger and didn't post for about, well, eighty days. Woe is me

Henceforth, I could not post anything. And then I procrastinated and did not try to ask Mom to type in her password again and left this blog in tumbleweed. HA HA HA
But banana yes, Mom made me an email on like August Ten, because I didn't have on before XD (I'm not sure if that's even a good beginning, because right there's a cartoon movie on tv  when I'm writing this and I cannot simply focus. It's about an Indian kid superhero and some super rich guy who built destroying robots. There's his daughter who attended a boy's school and blaaaaaaah..... I CAN'T WRITE ANYMORE AGFKGFIEWUGFWLQHWGVIGIVGIWGEIG it's a bit corny tho well actually right now, it's Liverpool vs Manchester United I wrote that on something like two months ago -_-

An' lo, someone from the Philippines asked me in a card along with a box full of all the world's flags to write about mah "adventures" in Nepal, so imma do just dat in here YAY YAYAYAY xD
*FIREWORKS* *ROCK MUSIC*

I'll try bye (imma play The Infinite Ocean foirst ;D)

Thursday, June 13, 2013

A conversation after dinner (we had Tinola soup)

We were all almost finished with dinner. I was drinking my soup. It lacked saltiness.


Tita Wendy: ...In Myanmar, there's a hanging clear box in which people put their money in it, to honour Buddha. 

Me: What...?

Tita Wendy: My friend John G told me, "That's real money."

Mom: So why don't the people just take it?

Tita Wendy: Well, they believe something bad will befall their lives if they steal from it. So the box is just filled with a lot of money.

Me: Sacrilege... 

Dad: Then they should put a non-Buddhist man there and take all the money.

*laughs*

Tito TJ: What about a Muslim man?

*again, laughs*

(I imagine one of those boxes in front of entrances to malls, like Trinoma, where you put some of your change for donations, only 100 times bigger, and Buddhist-i-fied in the middle of a Highstreet-like park and people walking by, dropping money in a huge slit. Then after Dad's and Tito TJ's remarks, I imagined those two guys snitching some bills from the box XD no offence) 

Then, after thinking about what they said for a while, recalling what I had been reading in the Bible for the last weeks, which was the adventures of the Israelite guys who just escaped from the desert, disobeying and rebelling against the LORD, and getting kicked in their butts, (LOL) I made a statement.

Me: Either way... they're still sinning. 

Tita Wendy: Haha, oh yeah!












Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Welcome back, Jose

So the Special One is back. He's blue, what else matters? 

(But I miss Rafa :'( lol)

http://www.chelseafc.com/news-article/article/3205677/title/mourinho-very-good-feeling

MOURINHO: VERY GOOD FEELING

Posted on: Mon 10 Jun 2013
As he spoke to the media for the first time since being appointed Chelsea manager for a second time, Jose Mourinho expressed his delight at returning to Stamford Bridge, and his hope that it is the start of a long period in charge.
Seldom has an introductory press conference been greeted with such interest, with supporters outside in the hope of catching a glimpse of the Blues boss, camera crews reporting in the area since the early hours and the attendance inside as large as anyone could remember.
Mourinho cut a calm, composed figure as he discussed his appointment at length, and having been nicknamed 'The Special One' following a comment made at his first Chelsea press conference, he had an updated suggestion for those eager for a quick headline.
'I'm the happy one,' he said. 'Time flies, it looks like it was a couple of days ago but it was nine years ago and since then a lot has happened in my professional life.
'I have the same nature, I am the same person, I have the same heart and the same kind of emotions related to my passion for football and my job. In this moment I would describe myself as a very happy person. It's the first time I've arrived at a club where I already love the club.'
The Portuguese delivered our first title for 50 years in his debut season at the club, following it a year later with another Premier League triumph. He also won the 2007 FA Cup and two League Cups, as well as reaching the semi-finals of the Champions League on two occasions before his departure in the September of his fourth season. He is confident of more achievement at Stamford Bridge.
'I always trust my work, I know many of the people that belong to the club and I know the ambition and mentality that people have.
'My career was built and based on success, and in every club I was able to reach success, win trophies and leave a different kind of legacy, so I have to believe in that.
'The normal message to my players is to work hard, with quality, and that the club is much more important than ourselves. Normally, with hard work success arrives.
'I read and keep hearing I was fired, sacked and that we had a complete breakdown in our relationship, which isn't true,' he said of his departure in 2007.
'It was a mutual agreement at the time and we felt it was best for me and the club. It was a sad moment but I don't regret the decision because after I went to Inter where I had probably the best moment of my career.
'After that I went to Madrid where we have the record for the best team in Spanish history. For Chelsea things went well too, they were European champions for the first time.
'It was only because of the fact it was a mutual agreement and that there was no break in the relationship that I'm here today, it wouldn't have been possible if there was a complete break in the relationship.
'I'm back because we feel we are in a moment where we are ready to work together again, and in better conditions to work together, succeed and achieve what this club wants, which is stability.'
Mourinho was clearly more eager to look forward rather than dwelling on past achievements.
'We all want the same, we are heading in the same direction and it is a moment when there is maturity, a very good feeling and we have the same perspective for the future,' he said.
'My area is the sports area, but more now in the world of football you have to be deeply connected with other areas in the club, and I think we have the same kind of vision.
'I want to be respected for what I did in the past, of course, but I want to be loved for what I can do in the future, and the fans can know that I come here to do my best.'
Today marks a national day of celebration in Mourinho's native Portugal, with the country celebrating their rich history and culture.
Since leaving his homeland in 2004, his career has spanned three different countries, but after an exciting period, which has seen him lead his respective sides to countless trophies, the time has come, as he explained, to lay down some firm roots.
'I am Portuguese and I always love adventure like the Portuguese ones in the past,' he said. 'I am a bit of a navigator and I did what I wanted to do. I needed a special family, which I have, and they gave me the chance to move around.
'I wanted to do it, I wanted to win the three most important leagues and cups and I did it. People have other good things but the culture in football is something very important for the manager, and six or seven months ago I wanted to go to somewhere I enjoy it very much.
'It is up to me to show the club that I deserve to be here a long time, I hope I can go to the last day of this contract and if the club want for me to be here longer I will be very happy.
'You have to learn with experience. Sometimes people speak about older people in a negative way and I think experience in life is very important, especially if you use it in the right way.
'I analyse myself every day and I try to improve. I am the same but nine years is a big difference and when I arrived in 2004 I was pushed a lot in that first press conference to have a strong approach.
'Now you know me and my history and now I don't need that approach, I want to be calm and work the best I can and I think I am in the best moment in my career. I am so sorry the pre-season does not start tomorrow.'
"That's two questions now!"-Ad Ryan on an FB comment

I WANT THIS SHIRT!!!!!!!!!
Cutie pie Mou :3 xD

Aaaaaaaaaaand introducing...... David the Geezer!!!!!!! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA, what are those, knitting needles? XD awesome bro #Random


Monday, June 10, 2013

The Company of Myself

The corn leaves sways with the wind.
So does my heart
Your coming and going is like that of a sparrow
A few years in length.

The raindrops are falling on my head, forever drenching me
I was with you in the forest, and I watched you as you grinned. 
Though those days are a silhouette, no longer in my possession
The rain is still here, I don't know what will follow

Your dark eyes, hazel, if you look too close, betrayed me
I gave you my collections, but you tore them apart,
I wish I had never listened.
I wonder if I will fly again, I wonder what will give me strength.

I don't even know if I'm going to end this foolishness in making you see,
That you had become the subject of my depression.

But I'm not letting go.
I'm not letting go just yet.




Here I am, in the company of myself.
Shattered?
Perhaps I should have never gathered the bread.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

A small talk at the back of beyond

(begun at 11:20 AM, June 7, ended 8:20 June 8)

One of the things that strikes me solemn is the game, "A Small Talk at the Back of Beyond", along with the history of Marceline and Ice King/Simon Petrikov, and a video of a commercial that Dean showed me and Shelby at The Old Spaghetti House, which was the last I saw of him and her ever since. (LOL that was December last year)

After a day of worship practice, Filipino studies and 'We Bought a Zoo', I went downstairs with my laptop. I checked Chelsea and FB stuff first, then decided to play games. I went to Coolmath to play Sugar, Sugar, anbutd Friv to find a good game. I decided to play Coma on Friv, bt it wasn't there so I just went to http://armorgames.com/play/6286/. I played Sugar, Sugar, and chatted with my classmate Iolo on Facebook about random stuff, using 'LOL' and other various forms of laughing in almost every message. Coma loaded, and I was plunged into the memory of playing it in my hometown, Masbate, home for my Lolo (Grandpa) Val's funeral and my cousins were there, taking turns to play on the laptop. I remembered finding Coma on Friv, intrigued by the title. Jania watched me as I played it, and I occasionally looked at walkthroughs through the game. I did not finish it the second time, though. 
But before I could play it, I was commissioned to watch my brother, sleeping, upstairs. I went, still chatting with Iolo, and started Coma. It opened to the inside of the house, in the kind of theme I dreamed of for my own house, though a bit too eerie. The game unfolded in events of grief, and it had some complicated platforms I tried hard to pass through. I told Iolo about what I felt, and here it is:

K.
;D
I'm playing Coma.................
go
its theme is kinda like my dream thing
I mean, not the dream last night lol
Never mind.....
uhhhhh
Yes or no?
Lol
Yes or no...?
Blast it I said no
This game is super cool
8:18pm
Ah, the word to describe it is 'melancholic'.



Jivan woke up, and Mom took him. I realized I was having one of my 'good times' (O_O lolwat) playing Coma in the room, the lighting was a bit dark, the brown fan was spinning, and I was lying on the bed, playing alone (though God is always with me XD). 
A bit bored of the hard parts, I searched up 'coma game meaning' on Google, and found it on this site: http://www.casualgirlgamer.com/articles/entry/22/Ten-games-that-make-you-think-about-life/. Yes, Coma did make me think about life. I browsed through the other games it talked about, and picked 'I Wish I Were the Moon' and a few other games, but I didn't play them that much. I went downstairs, because I think the people downstairs would call me down, eventually.
So I played http://www.kongregate.com/games/danielben/i-wish-i-were-the-moon, and it was amazing. Here is what Casual Girl Gamer said:

I WISH I WERE THE MOON

Daniel Benmergui has become something of a legend in the world of arty games, thanks to quirky gaming gems like Today I Die. Perhaps my favourite game of his is I Wish I Were the Moon. For this game, Daniel drew his inspiration from Italo Calvino's short story The Distance of the Moon about an odd love triangle. Daniel describes the game as follows: "I tried to make it about the exploration of an emotional situation instead of a physical space, without using any text."

(I know, I'm not the kind who reviews games :T) I just really liked the 'I Am Your Moon Ending', and that's all I'm going to say...
I went to eat dinner, and thought about I Wish I Were the Moon, and went back to my seat and tried another game called Today I Die. I didn't finish it though, because I had to wash the dishes, and my sister Abbie closed its window. After washing, they played MasterChef on TV, and I played A Small Talk at the Back of Beyond.

But now I can't write about it. I tried last night, and failed. I'll just write what I did write last night, on Facebook. 

"I am afraid. To die alone...
You have two choices... Would you rather stand a chance of 3.7% survival but probably die alone... Or go to certain death with someone to hold your hand? Which I ask you for."
"I will stay and hold your hand till we die."
"I am sorry, but I don't understand what you just said. Please rephrase.
However, you have two choices..."
"I am going to stay... with you."
"You are going to die. Are you sure?"
"I am."
"Very well... Thank you."

"At least I'm not alone."
:'(
This game makes me cry.

I'll hold your hand, LDAC, till the red giant's corona burns us up
...together.

Unless you want to cry inside and not get over this melancholic sci-fi-y game and talk with a computer who has feelings and is frequently talking about chess, the best pictures ever taken on Earth and a 320-page story he made that was set in Victorian London, and how he is afraid, don't play this game. 

A small talk at the back of beyond still leaves me shaken.
I know, I probably did not write enough for you to go and play those games. And to talk about what really happened... Let's just say something changed me emotionally last night.
Well, it's 8:14 AM and I'm still trying to get over this game and think about the present.




And I'm wondering if our special number "The Proof of Your Love" will work. 
Hosanna.... God be with us.....

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Oh, I say, TV................................

Man, we just watched some Pinoy commercials on AXN, Chowking, Globe, Colgate, Dolfenal, Philam, etc.














...........on Nepali soil.


But..... Leo Messi...... in a Head&Shoulder advert...... in the Philippines......

ERR MERR GERDsdsdsdadhweouwahawuhgn iahfnkuafehvagriuhngvehsrgnviahrnvwehadlsvhvluhvaelrgvadhgf;vbrasfddasjfneherghrhgkjdfkghreuhguhsd;fgh;adhsfjhfgakgfksdgfhjgaweyfgksahjgfjasdbajsdfjgasfegfsgfasfdgagflefglagfldhjsagfljdgsfjagsdflyegfrgferigfaefguergfrfgahdgjbvdjdsbjsbsacbaksfglafagflagefigfiarglaiufgfaiefgisdugfksdvbasdvagsdfiufgksfgkefgaskdfbalsbclsdbcalsfbeuifergegsdflkasdfbdsbashgfeufgefgsfhHLHFSDFHHEFGgfgeigGGGEGFGEIFGSIFHSDFIHIHSDFIEGFAGSADFSADGFSEFUSEFIUGFEUGFSLDGFLSDLFJDSGFJKGESUFUEGFUGEFGDSKJFGKADKFGKEGFUFGDKSFGGEFGEUFGAKSDFGKLJSDGFEUFUGFKDSGFKLASDGFKLGKihrhafeoiahesfhasfkhasefaesifselfsadkjfjsdfkdsfbkhdfkasdgfieugfkuefgkseufgsdlgfjskfdgeguffeafdaefuaefygae8gyboigoqgfoqgwbfiqgf2hkgkwqiqwegvqevcqkwhgcqkuhgoqvbc,ab;/qf;qbvb;ewhvo3wygvbkqvbiwviwvmwvkqvcjwnqbcqihvqhfkvwqoifqoigvasgfdsjkgldghlsghakgfjkgfiofgsadasdasdsdsaijfhiwebhfwjeigv2wjebvorshuiohfjvbnwelkjgkwhbwgfivhwebvjkjkjkhsavjihswbvjksbviebvkjebvjkebviuebnkvcmeancnecljwhochljflhjfoihkfnelvhoqjc;qjlqwhfoqhfowqhjfoiwyofyowyfouiwghfbncjdbcjkanbanmdsbczxbckjahgqhewfoqyhfhfnekwyfuewhfdjahfkjahfkjhafoiwehyfoihfohfeuwhfoFGWEFUIWBFQOIQJFASDFGHJKLGBHJGJHWGOIUEHNVLKQWJVOWEHVOIJEWNVJKAEHNJHJHJHJBSDVIWHNVOWEHBVOUEWNVOEWNVLOWHNVUWVOOOUOUOUUHIUHYBJEKWVHBWEHAJKHVKJDHVJKDHVKJHDKJHEWIEWehgiweybvc

I hate bell peppers /(>o<)/

Bell peppers. I hate them.


Man, I don't even know why I'm posting a photo of it.

And I say, Mom's telling me that I have to cook it wif eggs tomorrow. 
Noooooooooooooooooooooooooo



Tuesday, June 4, 2013

My irises aren't black :O


I just found out that my eyes weren't actually black. Lol

Actually, if you look at them in normal lighting, they look black. But I went to the mirror awhile ago and saw that they were really rust-colored, with some dark specks circling the pupil, and a black outer ring. I used an Energizer head light to see my irises, and man, how did mah eyes look black?! My eyes hurt after too much light exposure. HAHA wow 

I have a fascination with irises, as a matter of fact. I think I even have heterochromia iridum.  Sometimes I look at people's eyes and find out what color their eyes are. And if you use normal lighting to scale my eyes, they're a 16 in the Martin-Schultz scale, but if you put direct light to them, it's 11 maybe. 


Taken using a MacBook :/



eyes in normal bad MacBook light o.o

whatever, but if you look my eyes are black in sunlight. :T

AAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH (LOL)




Yes, you might think I'm really weird. Welcome to my world.







Oh, and I wonder what Jesus's irises were colored like. Blue, brown or grey? Haha
JESUS GIVE ME UR EYES!!!!!! please

Sunday, June 2, 2013

So I was up on the balcony

I took my stuffed penguin out for a bath. Then I took him upstairs to the balcony to hang him.



A Black Kite and a House Crow in conjunction



I found this Red-Vented Bulbul on the same spot earlier. It seems to be his roosting place. I called him Chik-Boy for no apparent reason. He flew off when I took a step nearer to him. Pity.




These are some of the kids that play every afternoon. Some days I watch the boys play football, wearing different jerseys, and myself hoping to join them or at least become a ballboy (ballgirl). Rabin dai, Abbie and I went up there once, with our bikes, and finally I did act as a ballboy once. I usually wear my Chelsea jersey going there.

Solar power thingamajig.

Penguin enduring being dried. He's five years old now.

A Rock Pigeon in flight.

My glamour shot .-.


A glance through my lens.


Another of those pigeons who like roosting on top of the water tanks. I once named one Elliot. Or was it Max? I can't remember.




I guess this is my right lens, which is +250.

Probably my left, +150.



Pigeons.






"All things bright and beautiful, all creatures great and small.... All things wise and wonderful, the Lord God made them all."

Saturday, June 1, 2013

"Perhaps the most dangerous place for a Christian to be is in safety and comfort."

"My dear mother (bless her heart) has some things to say about safety. Again, I'm her only child, so there's a lot at stake for her. As she watched me go to jail and travel to Iraq, with God's hand evidently in it all, my mom has learned a lot about faith, safety, and risk. It has not been easy, but recently she told me, "I have come to see that we Christians are not called to safety, but we are promised that God will be with us when we are in danger, and there is no better lace to be than in the hands of God." Perhaps the most dangerous place for a Christian to be is in safety and comfort."-Shane Claiborne, The Irresistible Revolution, 227.

I just love this book.
I want to go to Iraq, even though at the present it is impossible. But "I can do all things through Christ", and "an unjust law is no law at all."
Love your neighbor as yourself..
Blessed are the poor...for theirs is the kingdom of God.
Jesus was homeless.
"An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth leaves the whole world blind" (and with dentures).
"The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church."






Jesus, give us courage.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Can you see those fish at the bottom of my page?

Yes. That one. No wait, not that thing, THAT one! Yep.
I really like that app. I found it in iGoogle one day. There's even a turtle version!

FYI I made up their names. I'll just put the color that they're in, and their names.

Red: Manchester
White: Luna/Yin
Black: Terra/Yang
Orange: David Luiz
Yellow: Sunny
Blue: Chelsea

Thanks for listening, America!




Spelling Bee winner acts like a boss, doesn't celebrate his victory at all.

Hawt.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

System, routine and pocket money

By Anik Yadav, for The Kathmandu Post, May 19 2013





For every act of mischief I made back home, dad set up a clever booby trap with which to straighten me up. I wasn’t alone that day. The other kids were in the same pit I was in.
“You play when I say you play. You study when I say you study. Follow what everybody else does here. Stick to the rules and you will be fine,” someone was announcing before supper. He was our duty teacher, Mr Khatri.
“Have fun, keep your head under the rules, and always remember one thing—no matter what you do, don’t try and mess with the system. As a duty teacher, it is my duty to look after you all, from the moment you wake up until you go back to bed again.”
“Sir, how long do we get to sleep?” popped a guy from the back.
“This is your first day, kid. I am surprised your dad didn’t tell you anything before he got you in here. Like I said, from today onwards you’ll follow the routine.”
It was a harsh reply. “You are part of a boarding school now.
Try and enjoy it.”
 That was two years ago. But in here, away from family, two years is a long haul. You get introduced to certain things by the end of the month. After the introductory course is over, get ready to succumb. Or in my daddy’s own words, get ready to straighten up!
 “Kushal, do you need pocket money?” Mr Khatri inquires.
We’re eighty students in a big hall called the dayroom. Theoretically, a dayroom is common room in an institution where people socialise during the day. There is no ‘socialising’ for us though. We come here in the evenings to study. And on Mondays, like today, Mr Khatri distributes pocket money.
“Kushal? Didn’t you hear me?”
“Yes sir.”
“How much do you need?”
“Sir, thirty.”
“Thirty!
“Why thirty? Take ten.”
Kushal is reluctant for a moment but then he knows there is no point in arguing and asking for more. Can’t mess with the system. Moreover, Mr Khatri never ever gave more than ten rupees. They say our house captain got forty once, but I think that’s just plain rumour. It basically depends on your luck.
Pocket money. Funny term to denote one predictable ten rupee note.  This word simply amazes me. Actually this whole place amazes me. When I had to go shopping once, Kushal amazed me too. It was a summer afternoon. I had to buy some clothes from outside and was heading towards the main gate. That was when Kushal saw me.
 “You can come here anytime you like, but you can never leave.” he said.
“What?”
I could not help laughing. “Don’t kid yourself. This isn’t Hotel California!”  
“Seriously James, you need an exeat chit to check out.”
“Where do I get that?” I was still thinking Kushal wasn’t serious.
“It’s easy. Tear a piece of paper and write down the format. Begin with name, roll, time and date. Then the usual ‘exeat chit’ in bold on the top. Ask the duty teacher to put his signature on it.”
“Well if that’s so, why not simply request my teacher to directly contact the gate over telephone?”
“I don’t know James. That’s not how the system works.” And he walked away, leaving me all by myself, amazed.
 That’s not how the system works? Well, then how?
A flood of other formalities was waiting for me for I stumbled over a dozen species of other chits and soon discovered how the system worked. There was clinic chit to prove to the school clinic that you were ill. Tie chit as an excuse for not wearing tie. Chocolate chit that permitted you to eat chocolates. Birthday chit to celebrate. Slipper chit to wear flip-flops to the classroom. PE chit to skip physical education classes. Bed chit to take bed rest formally. Cell phone chit to possess mobile devices. And the most craved among all, the precious, exeat chit.
 Boarding school consists of routine. Our routine begins with sharp blows of the karate whistle, scraping sounds of rushed toothbrush and paste, bread and omelette.
Then comes the hurdle of classes, in geometric progression, each one getting successively annoying by the day. That’s our routine.
 We visit the dining hall four times every day. The most auspicious visits are those of Saturdays, Mondays and Wednesdays for evening supper—chicken days—as we all call them. But even if chicken days sound alluring, trust me, they aren’t.
Our table captain gets the best of us.  
Some days, he punishes us unnecessarily. Instead of five pieces of chicken, we only get one. Instead of a handful finger chips, we get six or seven, not more. There is no pickle or soup, no yogurt either. And the red sweet that comes as dessert in the end, that goes directly to his plate on our punishment days. So we follow what we are supposed to follow. We quietly take orders from our table captain. We eat with minimum noise and maximum servility. Suspicious acts can lead to further curtailments.
 Still, it is funny. No matter how much you kick ass, there comes a day when the ass kicks you. Maybe that’s what happened to our former table captain. In the end, the system got the best of him too. He was busy looting our share of oily chips and chickens and soup for a while. I guess there was enough oil to cost him unstoppable diarrhoea, two weeks of bed rest, and then later, he had to renounce the captaincy. After he was gone, we enjoyed full rations for a few days, until a new dominion began.
Back home, while I had it all, I never learnt what money, time and freedom were. In here, pocket money doesn’t come easy. An Orangeball or Lactofun make for a banquet; a ten rupee note is a gold mine. You have to wait until the following Monday to get ten more. Or if you can impress Mr Khatri, maybe you could break the record set by the house captain and dig out more than forty. And time and freedom? You simply can’t ask for that. Routine keeps you running in a treadmill.  
 “James?...James?”
Thoughts dissolve in an instant when I hear somebody calling my name. I am still in the dayroom. It’s my turn for the money. “
“Do you need? Pocket money?” Mr Khatri is on the top of his lungs. I know the drill.
“Yes sir. Only ten.” As if I have other choices.
The dayroom smiles. A crispy ten rupee note lands in my night dress pocket. I move back to my desk.
I guess I’ve got the hang of it.
 The system. It becomes predictable over time.
Soon the bell will ring. Milk and biscuits will be served downstairs. People will make noises as soldiers do in wars, in local pubs, for a few drinks, as if they’ve never seen milk and biscuits before. We’ll make our beds, pull off the green bed sheets, unroll quilts and drop mosquito nets down. Mr Khatri will come for one last inspection. After everybody is in, the group captain will switch off the lights.
Then there will be darkness. No homework. No punishments.
No pocket money. No chits and no more quirks. Not a single obligation to fulfil. An unbroken stint of nine hours. Freedom.