OK, just read the last post...sorry. I personally need a chill pill (ie-xanax), but have a little too much to do to take one ):. I can't stand it right before my period.
I'm far from perfect as well, but it still doesn't stop me from trying to be. What can I say, I'm a perfectionist. And yet, I know, nobody is perfect.
I think perfect is when everything is just right and you're at ease. And this never lasts, because it's boring and it sucks.
that was very sweet of you to say bella(even if ya jumped the gun), thank you i know of anyone, you totally understand my current stress of living in this strange place.
i need no one to tell me that im perfect or great, or whatever, it's what i think about myself that counts... I answer to me and at the end of the day (as egotistical as i may or may not be) i'm quite content with who I be
ohh my darlin piaf, it was you who taught me about the wonders of the alpha female, without ya i'd still be just a bitch p.s im sig'n that
NOOOOOOOOOOO dont cancel it im blowin my own horn lately cause i need the boost, im slightly fallin apart in this steppford wives hell...just dont tell anyone
Yeah, alpha female sounds way better than bitch I called you alpha female, you called me pocket pixie. Those were our special moments and I will never forget
*wipes tear* those were some good times weren't they? or that time you found me that perfume? i still owe ya one...i'll get on that!!
I took a class in piano tuning a few years back, at the local community college. We learned that there's no such thing as a perfectly tuned piano, or a perfectly tuned note. Each note has to be tuned to a "compromise" tuning, slightly off of what would have been considered "perfectly in tune" in relation to itself. This is due to the fact that a piano string has more than one dimension. It not only has length, but also has thickness, or diameter, which muddles up the situation with harmonics and overtones. So, the commonly accepted mode of tuning today is called "equal temperament", where each string is slightly altered in pitch, in order that the whole sound, not just an individual string, but all the strings together when being played sound reasonably in tune to the average listener. It's a compromise. This relates to our sense of individual perfection in that we, in and of ourselves, can never be "perfect". We all have to find a compromise in relation to others around us, not seeking merely our own perfection, but rather, how well we harmonize, how well we mesh with the surrounding environment. The most we can ask for is "improvement", in piano tuning, or otherwise. Perfection can never be reached. Perfection exists, but only as a kind of interwoven symbiosis of all living things. It's not just about our own survival, or our own predominance. Perfection is more like a dance. In dancing, we're always striving for how we relate, trying to improve.