Why do I still have dirty watercolour water on my desk and why did it just lose one centimetre of said water in a few hours?
because memory moves in orbits of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself. - Las Ruinas del Corazon, Eric Gamalinda
because the water doesn't like you and you abused it and it might be really warm there. Or you might have spilled it. 42 would also answer that question.
*Why am I playing with my little brothers lego knights whilst I type?*
Because you are. Possibly also because you are trying to annoy your brother.
Why do places like MySpace exist? :[
because memory moves in orbits of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself. - Las Ruinas del Corazon, Eric Gamalinda
*Why is my brother standing there smiling at me stupidly and trying to make me "happy" when i really don't care and am already as happy as I'd like to be tonight?*
[s]Because he does. It's the way he's been programmed.[/s]
Because it's Saturday night. Nothing to do.
How the hell do you get this computer to stop erasing my Internet windows? >:E
because memory moves in orbits of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself. - Las Ruinas del Corazon, Eric Gamalinda
It's like Marvin, only more spiteful and more aggressive. It hates the world in general, so don't worry. It's not just you.
What is the difference between nectarines and peaches other than the name?
because memory moves in orbits of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself. - Las Ruinas del Corazon, Eric Gamalinda
Do you know what 42 actually is subtext to, or are you just copying?
because memory moves in orbits of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself. - Las Ruinas del Corazon, Eric Gamalinda
'The Answer to the Great Question... Of Life, the Universe and Everything... Is... Forty-two,' said Deep Thought, with infinite majesty and calm. — Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy