House of lynmund updated

Emily the Church Pianist Free

Learned how to read with the Beginner's Bible Stories and "Calvin and Hobbes" (both on bottom shelf of bookcase). Still love the Bible (obviously) and Calvin and Hobbes, and many other comics. Frazz is one of my more current favorites. My grandfather used to save the comics from his daily newspaper and give my sister and I the comic papers in a bag each time we came to visit. Some other favorites include, but are not limited to, BC, Peanuts, Classic Garfield, Heathcliff, Zits, and Stuffed.

Recent Comments

  1. 4 days ago on Grand Avenue

    Stephen Nedoroscik anyone?

  2. 21 days ago on Garfield

    My cat got a mouse for the first time in his life yesterday (it ran in the house past me when I opened the back door, it’s cold out where I am, and I couldn’t save it). He caught it, badly wounded it, dropped it in a corner, and SNARLED at it for about two minutes before he killed it when I tried to intervene. Like, deep-throated growling that cats only do when they’re really, really mad. I think he was a wee bit creeped out by it since he hadn’t seen a live one before.

  3. 4 months ago on Pickles

    Remember how old Pearl is. It makes perfect sense. My grandmother’s hair was so thin and took WAY too long to grow back so she always kept it in a near-bald Buzz cut and she only needed it cut once every few weeks. She could have shaved it bald and had practically the same result if she wanted to. Some women do go bald/stop growing hair much with age.

  4. 4 months ago on Pickles

    She means she never has to worry about hairstyling again. She wears the wig to look nice.

  5. 4 months ago on Calvin and Hobbes

    This is one of my all-time favorite Calvin and Hobbes strips. I remember the first time I read it, and it’s the only strip I can say that for. We were with a big family group at the beach house in Topsail Island, my dad had just bought me a new C&H book to read, and I saw this one and started screaming laughing. I showed it to every family member in the house in turn.

  6. 5 months ago on Pickles

    I mean, fortunately, since those two guys got banned or just got tired and left, it’s not been an issue here. I wasn’t talking about here, just it’s a general societal issue.

  7. 5 months ago on Pickles

    No, here it’s not been an issue. We just travel a lot and are acquaintances with a lot of people. It’s a trend I frequently see everywhere in-person, not just on the internet, and not just towards me either. And I don’t use Twitter or Instagram, but I do use FB, Youtube, Wikipedia, and some special interest group/hobby group sites under a different handle, only even then I don’t post much because of the above. Nothing like that I described has happened on Go-comics personally to me, though for about two years running a long time ago (some of it before I formally joined) there were two guys who used to post generally on this site everything they thought was wrong with two of the comics, on each strip of said comic they came across. They literally were there for no other reason to try to get people to dislike the two strips in question and if anyone dared say anything to them, they would start listing the reasons the person responding was wrong/foolish/etc. So fortunately on this particular site it’s not been an issue, but I’ve seen it be a huge issue towards me AND others elsewhere.

  8. 5 months ago on Pickles

    It says nothing about you, what you like and dislike. That is the point. The individual attitude of like and dislike isn’t the point. That’s normal human. The point I’m trying to make is, there a quite large number of people in this world who believe that it is their duty to shoot down things that other people enjoy because they personally don’t enjoy them, or automatically assume people who enjoy things they don’t are somehow deficient. There are a lot of people who can’t simply say, “I personally don’t enjoy that thing much” when confronted with something they aren’t interested in. They have to either roll their eyes, ignore or openly say “That thing is stupid/tacky/tasteless/useless/babyish/for idiots/old-fashioned/too new” or basically any other insult implying “you’re an idiot if you like this.” I use Star Wars as a really common example because if you dare to enjoy one of the newer films or the prequels better than the original trilogy you will be absolutely BLASTED as stupid/immature/wrong/foolish in any comment section. Same goes for sports teams – you can’t just say “I don’t like this team”, you have to say, “You’d have to be an idiot to like this team”. Those are more extreme examples, but there are a lot of other things much smaller that this happens about. For instance, less-popular hobbies are often ridiculed as a waste of time or pointless by other people, especially if it’s something considered either too new or too old fashioned. It’s also common, if people prefer older TV shows or movies to new ones, or vice versa, people on both sides go out of their way to try to point out the flaws in what someone else is enjoying (“Why do you like THAT?”). When people see adults at places like roller rinks and arcades, the first reaction is usually, “They’re too old for that”.Many of us have lost the ability as a culture to simply say, “I personally dislike this” without having to try to spoil other peoples’ liking of it by calling it objectively/blanket “Bad”.

  9. 5 months ago on Pickles

    On my end, Religion/Faith hasn’t ever been an issue. None of it has had to do with religion at all. It’s been more “perceived intellectualism” that’s the issue – I.e. “I have a problem with this so it’s inherently bad”. It’s all over real life and even more so on the internet. For an example, you’ll see a LOT of that (i.e. Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, etc) – if a majority of people dislike something, anyone who enjoys it will be ridiculed or called stupid or be told what they enjoy is bad. Look at how people get about home decor or clothes, refusing to acknowledge it’s all fads and making fun of anyone has a style different than theirs. Also I’ve moved quite a lot but several people I’ve known have run into the same thing if they dare to have an interest different from people around them, especially if said interest is something they enjoyed as a child and therefore must be supposed to “grow out of” later.

  10. 5 months ago on Pickles

    It isn’t just me. The more I look into it the more I realize it’s a deep, longstanding cultural issue. Look at how fans of certain teams or TV shows or movies react. Ask anyone who genuinely wants to get into art or music that comes from a non-artistic family (not those in it for profit, just those in it for fun) and I guarantee you’ll hear that they went through something similar. Ask anyone who’s really passionate about a not-super-profitable or not-super-popular hobby how many people they know who don’t take it seriously or who say it’s a waste of time. Trust me, it’s not just me.