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LightningRodOfHateThe American Obesity Problem
Published: 2011-02-07 01:33:06 +0000 UTC; Views: 941275; Favourites: 1612; Downloads: 201
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Description                I have no face. There was a time when I may have owned one, but this is a fuzzy half-memory. In fact, it may be entirely an invention of fantasy. These days, regardless of my history, I know for a fact that I have no face. However, I have been granted a name: The American Obesity Problem. And I am growing in the United States. You may have seen me on television. You may have been witness to my disconcerting back cleavage and mystified by the seamless transition my legs make from my calves into my ankles. You probably saw my unsettlingly large, shelf-like behind as it strained against my tight Capri pants that I swore I would fit into someday and, when I didn't lose the weight, decided to wear anyway because, "If I spend more than $30 on pants I better damn well find a way to squeeze into them." You may have caught a glance of ponytail resting on my back, or a peek at several of my lower chins. But, if you've seen me at all, you can say with confidence that I do not have a face. I have a plethora of everything else, but that is one thing I do not have.



                There was a time when I thought I may be a woman—but I am not. I am The American Obesity Problem. Women are not obese. Women are creatures with perfectly smooth hair, smooth skin, smooth voices…but, most importantly, women have faces. Faces with large, engaging eyes that hide behind long, fluttering eyelashes. Faces that are graced with petite, feminine noses. Faces with plump, red, moist lips. Faces that smile and laugh and contort to emote coyness. Have you ever attempted to be coy without owning a face? One time, in 2009, I attempted such an endeavor and it left spectators believing that my hip was out of joint. I was so upset that I wanted to cry but, without a face, I wasn't properly equipped with the tear ducts that are required.



                I have been told by close friends, in confidence, that women have sex. I'm still not completely convinced of this rumor's validity, but my sources are fairly reliable. I do have several friends who are women themselves. In all honesty, I remain skeptical. For nearly two decades I have believed that women, like The American Obesity Problem, spawn at random. I spawn, you see—I appear as if by magic. One night I am an unsuspecting human being with hopes and dreams, full of love and ambition, and then, the next morning, I am mystically transformed into The American Obesity Problem. I was never born. I will never procreate. I have no gender. I've looked—I've set out on expeditions, you see. It takes planning and provisions to search for any sign of gender on The American Obesity Problem. There's quite a bit of ground to cover. Quite a bit of flesh to explore. I returned sadly from each journey only gleaning knowledge of endless rolls of fat. They extend for eternity into some great abyss I have yet to fully understand. There is nothing else there, no sign of any kind of life or vitality or feeling. On one occasion I brought a Sherpa with me, but he got lost somewhere—enveloped, rather. I wonder if I'll ever see him again…  

  

                It is quite interesting to be an asexual blob living in a world whose axis spins on the idea of sex. I press my fleshy, faceless cranium against the thick pane of glass that separates me from everyone and everything else, and I attempt to observe. Which is quite difficult without eyes, I admit, but you develop other sorts of senses as part of The American Obesity Problem. Fatty perceptions that the rest of society is not privy to. You watch women struggle into tight, low-cut shirts and hear them claim they enjoy cutting off the circulation in their breasts and that they are not—definitely NOT—trying to grab anyone's attention. You watch men lift weights up and down in endless repetition in the hope that they will lose their insecurities like you lost that pen you swear you just had five minutes ago. Then there are the instances when both genders pound down drink after drink after drink so that their stark biological differences are made inconsequential. At this point, they are able to converse freely and—according to rumor—copulate. Or, perhaps, they simply meditate on the idea.



                I have been witness to such things because I am in a peculiarly rare situation. Most members of The American Obesity Problem are not college students like I am. Education is not terribly important to many of us. Typically, food is the priority. And lack of exercise. We love not exercising. If we could not exercise all week, we would—and quite frequently do. But a college education is about binge drinking and spring break bikini contests and sleeping through class and loveless sex and pregnancy scares. Clearly this excludes The American Obesity Problem, as most of us would much rather read a book or write an essay. There has to be activity between food and not exercising to break up the monotony, and I find that reading books or writing essays helps pass the time. Yet, without one solitary pregnancy scare, I've somehow managed to maintain a decent GPA. If I had parents, I'm sure they'd feel a slight tinge of pride that might, momentarily, outweigh the guilt and shame of having The American Obesity Problem as a child.



                I have vague recollections of being a child—which is strange, because they can't possibly be true. They must be fabrications; illusions of the mind. Perhaps these memories are dreams. I recall one such dream, and it included an ice cream party. I was, allegedly, in the sixth grade. A boy, mindlessly licking his frozen treat, approached me with an incredulous look on his face. "Why are you eating that?" he asked, pointing to the vanilla ice cream cone melting in my hand. "Aren't you already fat enough?" I stared at him for a moment, blinking with eyes I couldn't have possibly had, yet distinctly remember. After this brief moment, I responded. "No. No, I am not fat enough. I must continue to eat and gorge myself; shovel in the ice cream. I am not nearly as fat as I could be. There's so much potential! I will grow to be part of The American Obesity Problem, and you can't stop me!" At which point I consumed the entire cone in one gigantic bite. "I am America's future!" I proclaimed. I jumped onto one of the desks, commanding the attention of all the other sixth grade children in the room, and proceeded to give a speech to the captive audience:



           "I am America's future! I will be the consumer of super-sized value meals and, simultaneously, diet pills that have not been approved by the FDA. One of the two—or both in tandem—will lead to cardiac arrest. And that, my friends, is my ultimate goal. There is comfort in knowing that I have planned to end my life via heart attack. I may settle for a severe case of diabetes to tide me over, but heart failure is the only victory that will satiate this appetite! Until then, until success, I will perpetuate industry. I will consume. I will spin the cogs of this great nation. And when I say 'great' I don't mean 'good,' I mean 'LARGE'—large in capital letters. It is my duty to make sure America remains the greatest country in the world! My cause is just, my religion is Consumerism, and my fuel is ice cream. If you have any iota of patriotism, you will give up your ice cream right now! You will hand your cones to me! You will witness as, one after another, I shove them down my throat. And I will grow, my friends. I will grow into The American Obesity Problem!" My cries were suddenly muted by rapturous applause.



             Then, as effortlessly as it weaved itself into my psyche, the dream unhinges and recoils into some dark corner of the mind. There is a strange, backwards relief in this fantasy that plays itself out on the stage of my subconscious. The dream implies choice. That I had a decision to make—a desire, even—to become part of The American Obesity Problem. I can't claim full knowledge of how I properly spawned, but that is the dream that always springs to mind when I struggle to remember. I'm not entirely sure what to make of it, but I do love the dreams in which I appear to be human.



            The American Obesity Problem is not human. Our species is something modern science is still trying to comprehend and classify. But, as a virtually undefined genus, we don't have many of the rights that most human beings take for granted. Like dignity, for example. Or respect. We are frequent fodder for comedians and pedestrians alike. Why not? There is, after all, nothing worse than being part of The American Obesity Problem. In a "Most Disgusting" contest, our flabby folds will beat out any challenger, any day of the week. Our asexual spawning confuses and alienates humans. Our apparent lack of self-awareness and disdain for proper bodily upkeep is inexplicable. Our desire to be hated and loathed is unfathomable. We are a misunderstood group, though there are many of us. We make vain attempts to become human, to be accepted into a foreign culture, to forge a path between worlds.



            I know. I've tried.



           At the end of the day, all that's left to me are those wonderful dreams. Under the quiet blanket of endless stars, I feel the impossible could be possible. I am inspired to imagine myself in a woman's body. I grant myself the ability to dream of a time and a place in which I am human. The folds of endless fat lift up and over my head like a poorly fitting costume I can now freely discard on the floor. I feel the ability to breathe fully. I drift and float and feel light. I sometimes drift right into someone else's arms by accident. Sometimes they are arms that belong to a man. He smiles, and kisses my forehead, and reaches his arms around me with ease. He doesn't have to stretch and strain, but simply embraces as if it were wholly natural. And that makes me smile. I smile a big smile with coy lips and engaging eyes that ask him not to let go. My entire face lights up—and suddenly I'm aware that I have a face. I have a face. And, if I'm lucky, I imagine I have a name. And even luckier still, I have all of these things, and…



        …and I am loved.
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Comments: 1040

DailyLitDeviations In reply to ??? [2011-02-15 04:31:22 +0000 UTC]

Your wonderful literary work has been chosen to be featured by DLD (Daily Literature Deviations) in a news article that can be found here [link] Be sure to check out the other artists featured and show your support by ing the News Article.

Keep writing and keep creating.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

FromDarkerWoods In reply to ??? [2011-02-09 00:23:08 +0000 UTC]

On regards to that Mandrin diet, I want to say that it sounds a lot like a fad diet. It may work for a bit but you wont be healthy in the end. Your body needs a variety of nutrients form multiple things to stay healthy not just a single food. Not even Keto diets are healthy which will make you loose lots of excess fat by tricking your body into ketosis that burns fat. Losing weight is 70 percent diet (meaning not eating hormone infested food, and chemicals) but whole foods and although more expensive organic food will do a number on your body, skin tone, and energy because your body is not bombarded by toxins which it struggles to get ride of. In fact fat cells store toxins which actually take up more space than the cells themselves so if you can eat better and sweat out them you will loss atlot of it.

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Nefertekas In reply to FromDarkerWoods [2011-02-17 22:40:34 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for saying that.
Also, people should note that having a poor diet after you had one that you consider to be fulfilling will eventually lead most people to fall back into the first diet, even more voratiously, causing them to gain more weight than they'd lost...

Oh, and not everyone realizes that even overweight/obese people have nutritional deficiencies. Eating a lot of crappy processed food that doesn't have the right nutrients for a human body is never good. We need to be balanced.

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FromDarkerWoods In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 17:34:32 +0000 UTC]

yes that is very true.

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FromDarkerWoods In reply to ??? [2011-02-09 00:13:52 +0000 UTC]

Wow Laura you still write amazing stuff! I have lost touch with you over the years but I still remember reading your stories and plays... you continue to amaze me with your linguistic art of expression. You capture the world so well, and keep my interest to the end. Unfortunately many peoples writing does not and my ADD kicks in within the first paragraph but yours hold me to the end.

You must be a senior now in school right? Are you still at Ithica?
<3-Cassi

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FunckyJunky In reply to ??? [2011-02-07 12:49:05 +0000 UTC]

Stop whining !
Just eat less, find a job and get layd !
Stop imagining things !
I was fat like you, But I have worked hard on my self.
And it took me less than 2 month.
Yes I know, food is so demn taisty, but so is cocanine !
Life is NOT a farytale. Its a harsh reality that will hit you in your "noface" . In less you take an action. Because if you don't., You will die fat, lonely and miserible. And it would take long. So why even bother going to college.

My words may sound cruel and hard. It is because I care and want to help.
I hope DO succed with honor.

R.Alex

P.S. Try Eating mandarines. Thay a sweet, taisty and quite filling.

👍: 0 ⏩: 14

JirachiChick In reply to FunckyJunky [2012-11-21 03:31:47 +0000 UTC]

Looks like somebody missed the point of this piece. -__-

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amanders0991 In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-27 04:47:13 +0000 UTC]

Dear FunckyJunky,
I don't think it's whining, I think it's a beautiful message. I am fat. I am not miserable, nor am I lonely. I will not die alone, because my boyfriend is fabulous. I think before you cast stones at people, you should work on you first....especially your grammar. This attack of yours was a bit unnecessary. You may have lost weight, wonderful. But you know, there is more to love than a figure or a face. There's a heart, a soul, a love. You may be skinny now, but you are by no means attractive.
Love,
A fat girl who will not "die fat, lonely, and miserable".

To the author, this was great. Some of things said I don't necessarily agree with...but I still think this essay was wonderful. Very beautiful, just like you.

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boxofslavery In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-18 06:54:28 +0000 UTC]

Wow, you may be correct sometimes that some people can fix their weight if they see it as a problem.
However, with all the spelling and grammar mistakes, I am led to believe that "you can't fix stupid."
Perhaps you should have gone to school instead of the gym.
You know, the brain is almost completely made of fat. Perhaps you lost weight where you needed to keep it.

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MaliciousMallard In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-18 06:30:20 +0000 UTC]

This struck a little to close to home. I love it, it's a wonderful vignette about how America classifies and systematically hates fat people. I disagree with some of the comments here- automatically assuming that all fat people are fat because they aren't trying hard enough is hurtful and ridiculous, and strikes me as a severe prejudice. I struggled with my weight for many years, even though I was quite fit (it seems a bizarre concept I know- I ran, swam, hiked up mountains, and walked, and was still overweight) and later found it was due to a medical problem. It just goes to show that when you judge some one on appearance, you don't really know the person- It is the same as judging by race. This piece of writing was masterfully crafted to give the face back to fat people- the key term being people- and try to lift the prejudices that an image-obsessed America has created for itself. Brava! This was exquisite and moving LightingRodOfHate! I'm so glad you wrote it!

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Apphia In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-18 04:05:25 +0000 UTC]

You are very ignorant sir.

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mizutamari In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-18 00:45:32 +0000 UTC]

Apparently, in spite of your amazing ability to drop whatever weight you might have had, you never learned how to spell. Why should we take advice from someone who can't even spell?

And your words DO sound crude and harsh- because they ARE! If you DID care and DID want to help, you wouldn't be such an ass.

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Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 23:09:30 +0000 UTC]

"I WAS FAT! I WEIGHT TWO WHOLE POUNDS MORE THAN I DO NOW! BUT WITH THE HELP OF A LITTLE WILLPOWER AND A WHOLE TRUCKLOAD OF METH, I SHAVED THOSE TWO POUNDS OFF IN NOTIME! IT WORKED FOR ME, AND IT WORK FOR YOU!! METH IN, CALORIES OUT! METH IN, CALORIES OUT!!"

👍: 0 ⏩: 3

wivetwhisk In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-04-23 05:02:45 +0000 UTC]

I snickered.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

VioletTwilight In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-03-09 07:35:33 +0000 UTC]

"Meth in, calories out!" Thank you for your caloric-liscious comment. This fatty feels like she just ate a whole chocolate cake. Satisfaction.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

syncs In reply to Gozer-The-Destroyor [2011-02-17 23:21:28 +0000 UTC]

I would also like to point out that it is indeed possible to partake in the use of amphetamines and still be overweight.

(ps I would like my truckload of meth now plz)

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Gozer-The-Destroyor In reply to syncs [2011-02-18 00:05:01 +0000 UTC]

Shh! You're ruining my joke!

*drops a truck trailer from 50 feet up*

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Beligoy762x39 In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 20:47:34 +0000 UTC]

I like your comment, it's true! I used to be fat, and then I stopped eating like crap, started to work out and BAM! I'm still workin' on the whole job idea...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Glamazone In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 16:36:00 +0000 UTC]

I second every word of this.

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doxxxa In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 15:19:58 +0000 UTC]

haha, wow, you're acting like an asshole because you care about a stranger.
you sound like my mother. its not the exterior of people hat has to change, its their mentality. you're the living proof of that.


👍: 0 ⏩: 0

HFXmermaid In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 15:15:40 +0000 UTC]

lkfnhvdinhvgfkd

sorry, just smashed my face into the keyboard. :\

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

phydeau In reply to HFXmermaid [2011-02-17 22:37:55 +0000 UTC]



Right with you. Do trolls have their own dictionary? And is it spelled "dickshinery"?

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

Nefertekas In reply to phydeau [2011-02-18 11:38:44 +0000 UTC]

"dickshinery" = win.

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HFXmermaid In reply to phydeau [2011-02-18 00:08:18 +0000 UTC]

hahahah. I love you. SO much. though after reading the comment thread I think it wasn't done in malice

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Art-by-ifer In reply to FunckyJunky [2011-02-17 15:08:02 +0000 UTC]

I don't know if you realise this, nor if it is what you intended, but your comment makes you sound like an incredibly hateful, narrow-minded, rude, and/or horrible person. If that was not how you intended to come across, I'd like to suggest being a bit more careful about how you word things, especially on an emotional piece. If you meant to be helpful, then I think you may need to rethink your strategy. Most people don't appreciate or consider advise when they are offended. If, however, you neither missed how your message would be interpreted, nor were attempting to help in an extroardinarily rude way, then that would make you a troll. And not one of the good kinds, either.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Glamazone In reply to Art-by-ifer [2011-02-17 16:37:21 +0000 UTC]

DA, the wonderful place you'll always be called a troll for speaking truth.

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

Art-by-ifer In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-18 21:02:19 +0000 UTC]

If you say something inflammatory on purpose, and without the intention of helping (conditions which were specifically mentionned in my post), then yes, truth or no, that does make you a troll.

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Nefertekas In reply to Glamazone [2011-02-17 22:40:38 +0000 UTC]

You can speak the truth without being hurtful or insultive.

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JirachiChick In reply to Nefertekas [2012-11-21 03:36:34 +0000 UTC]

They weren't speaking the truth though, they were just being a superficial ass

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MutantClannfear In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 02:34:42 +0000 UTC]

But he apologized. Who cares now, anyway.

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Nefertekas In reply to MutantClannfear [2011-02-18 11:40:02 +0000 UTC]

Yes, true. He did.
Still, what's the point in insulting someone? I just said what I said so he wouldn't do it again, but I guess some people just are the way they are: rude.

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MutantClannfear In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 19:59:39 +0000 UTC]

There will always be rude people in this world. Chiding them does little to stop it, usually.

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Nefertekas In reply to MutantClannfear [2011-02-18 20:21:41 +0000 UTC]

Oh well, yes...very true.
It's an educational problem, rooted in the person's personality, so what really could have been done wasn't.
I need to give up on trying to ask people to be nicer. -.-;

(I just learnt a new word: "chiding". I don't think we have it in Portugal. Thank you ^^ )

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MutantClannfear In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-19 02:32:51 +0000 UTC]

So how are you?

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Nefertekas In reply to MutantClannfear [2011-02-19 02:59:29 +0000 UTC]

sleepy, at the moment.

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MutantClannfear In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-20 03:20:49 +0000 UTC]

Geez, I know that feeling. :/

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Nefertekas In reply to MutantClannfear [2011-02-21 19:25:26 +0000 UTC]

I've been sleeping crappily lately so I've actually been drousier than usual. @_@

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

MutantClannfear In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-22 03:28:52 +0000 UTC]

I'm sorry.

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Nefertekas In reply to MutantClannfear [2011-02-22 11:11:33 +0000 UTC]

Nah, it's okay. Me and my crappy time management.

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DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 00:03:02 +0000 UTC]



c:

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Nefertekas In reply to DevilsWatchOverUs [2011-02-18 00:21:08 +0000 UTC]

Thank you. :3

Oh my! I hadn't seen Him *cue ominous tune* in ages! ^^

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DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 00:28:21 +0000 UTC]

Not a problem~ c:

Hehe, xD I know, it's rare to ever see him anymore. I blame new TV shows. XD

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Nefertekas In reply to DevilsWatchOverUs [2011-02-18 00:59:29 +0000 UTC]

^___^

I haven't watched the PPG in aaaages now...well, I'm not a kid anymore, so that probably has something to do with it. But still. XD

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DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 01:09:18 +0000 UTC]

x3

You know, the older you get, the more puns and parodies you notice. In truth, I think the show should have been rated R sometimes. It's not as kidish as it seems. XD

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Nefertekas In reply to DevilsWatchOverUs [2011-02-18 01:22:30 +0000 UTC]

I completely understand what you mean... Freakazoid too, for example, had so many puns. And I Am Weasel, and such. Not to mention some of the latest Disney movies.

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DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 01:32:42 +0000 UTC]

I don't know either of those, but I've heard of them. I don't really watch the Disney movies anymore; they used to be good, but now it's the same old song and dance every movie- literally.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Nefertekas In reply to DevilsWatchOverUs [2011-02-18 11:38:19 +0000 UTC]

Meh, you're right. But I still watch them any way.
Always singing and dancing... pffft. I think The Simpsons sing and dance too much now, Every damned episode. Argh. >.>

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 19:04:31 +0000 UTC]

With the hope of seeing something new, I'd expect, right?
Yeah, I noticed that. The last 'decent' thing The Simpsons had was their movie, and even that... wasn't that great lol

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Nefertekas In reply to DevilsWatchOverUs [2011-02-18 20:22:26 +0000 UTC]

That and my nephew. He's 4. He likes them, so... >.>
*sing-songs spider pig*
Yeah, that right.

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DevilsWatchOverUs In reply to Nefertekas [2011-02-18 23:21:37 +0000 UTC]

Spider pig was one of the stupidest moments ever XD
x3

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