I am waiting eagerly for this day to arrive. I’m tired of the chasing but still do it, but not as often. That’s definitely a good thing. 

I try to fix fewer things, which is also good, because I’m more likely to be successful and actually accomplish something. Doesn’t do much good to try to fix everything yet not end up fixing any thing at all. 

However, I don’t see my need for certain people, despite heaps of baggage, issues, what have you, to go away anytime soon. Wish it would.

I am waiting eagerly for this day to arrive. I’m tired of the chasing but still do it, but not as often. That’s definitely a good thing.

I try to fix fewer things, which is also good, because I’m more likely to be successful and actually accomplish something. Doesn’t do much good to try to fix everything yet not end up fixing any thing at all.

However, I don’t see my need for certain people, despite heaps of baggage, issues, what have you, to go away anytime soon. Wish it would.

(via theawesomeretard)

Everyone has probably reblogged Marco’s stuff Round and Round and Round Again, particularly something that’s a few months old. But I start laughing every time I read this excerpt! Every time I even THINK about it I smile, it is so sweet and funny!  

via marco of tumblr:

Even geeks (like us) have their limits of reasonability. At some point, we often decide that what we’ve been doing or what we think we should enjoy just isn’t worthwhile.
Ever build a carputer? (Yeah, that’s a computer in your car.) I attempted it when I was 18: it was a bunch of old PC parts inside a Dremeled-out Rubbermaid tub with a gamepad next to my parking brake to control Winamp so I could play MP3s. It was ridiculous. I had to wait until my carputer booted Windows 98 before it could play music. Even I couldn’t take this thing seriously. It lasted about 3 days until I drove over a speed bump and the CPU fell out of the slot. I scrapped it and just bought an MP3-CD player (the second one ever released) instead.

(Source: benjaminstein, via marco)