The Handwriting Game


Your name/Tumblr username.
Right-handed, left-handed, or ambidextrous?
Favourite letters to write.
Least favourite letters to write.
Write: “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
Write the following words in capital letters: CRAB, HUMOR, KALEIDOSCOPE, PAJAMAS, GAZILLION.
Write your favourite song lyric.
Tag people!
Any special note or picture.

The Handwriting Game

  1. Your name/Tumblr username.
  2. Right-handed, left-handed, or ambidextrous?
  3. Favourite letters to write.
  4. Least favourite letters to write.
  5. Write: “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
  6. Write the following words in capital letters: CRAB, HUMOR, KALEIDOSCOPE, PAJAMAS, GAZILLION.
  7. Write your favourite song lyric.
  8. Tag people!
  9. Any special note or picture.
 
 
“ So you believe [Boyd] is […] a saint. The way I understand it, one of the hallmarks of a saint is humility. Someone with true humility would consider the possibility that God hadn’t chosen him for that kind of honor. He’d consider the possibility that he just had an illness. ”
— Dr. James Wilson to Boyd, the “faith healer” (Season 2, Episode 19: “House vs. God”).
 
“John Stanmeyer spent much of the last decade documenting the political and social changes in Indonesia. He traveled to Afghanistan in 2001, returning five or six times. 

‘This picture happened the day after the Taliban fled Kabul. I had followed the Northern Alliance progression down from Kunduz in the north. It was as if we were driving through the wrinkles of God’s hands. I felt so insignificant passing through those mountains. We arrived in Kabul and saw this breath of fresh air. It was suddenly a bunch of color walking around, such a contrast to the beige dirt everywhere in Afghanistan and the men all wearing those same beige outfits. The only color was that blue of the burka. Under the Taliban regime, there were no kites, no balloons, no music, no TVs. This picture signifies hope, life, celebration of humanness. Having colors, balloons, kites, and music was a monumental shift. Where did this man get the helium?’”

(This is the only photo that I felt looked remotely hopeful of the entire set. More photos are available at Reader’s Digest’s “The Longest War: Photos from Afghanistan”.)

“John Stanmeyer spent much of the last decade documenting the political and social changes in Indonesia. He traveled to Afghanistan in 2001, returning five or six times.

‘This picture happened the day after the Taliban fled Kabul. I had followed the Northern Alliance progression down from Kunduz in the north. It was as if we were driving through the wrinkles of God’s hands. I felt so insignificant passing through those mountains. We arrived in Kabul and saw this breath of fresh air. It was suddenly a bunch of color walking around, such a contrast to the beige dirt everywhere in Afghanistan and the men all wearing those same beige outfits. The only color was that blue of the burka. Under the Taliban regime, there were no kites, no balloons, no music, no TVs. This picture signifies hope, life, celebration of humanness. Having colors, balloons, kites, and music was a monumental shift. Where did this man get the helium?’”

(This is the only photo that I felt looked remotely hopeful of the entire set. More photos are available at Reader’s Digest’s “The Longest War: Photos from Afghanistan”.)

 
(Re-blogged from: tearingmeasunder.)

(Re-blogged from: tearingmeasunder.)

 
(Re-blogged from: tearingmeasunder.)

(Re-blogged from: tearingmeasunder.)

 
(Seen in Boston’s “Recent Scenes from Indonesia”. I’m aware of the birth country bias here.)

(Seen in Boston’s “Recent Scenes from Indonesia”. I’m aware of the birth country bias here.)

 
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