I am Catch, and my number's sixty-seven. I come in different definitions, but the surest thing in me is that i like to call myself a fountain of ideas.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

they say that decisions are made when one gets too emotional about something. i say, we're just being humans. the inescapable reality mandates us to be followers of a drifting life. and the funny thing is, everything we do - when we talk, when we cry, when we are with our better half, when you crash down on a predicament, when people care about other people, when pen meets paper, when writer comes across enlightenment, when actors are on a performance level, when subtlety turns into sarcasm - all these are punchlines of what we are.

we sometimes make sense, and we do find our purpose, but something in us would always say "don't brag about it, you havent seen the denouement to all of these, the rest is yet to come." so with this scenario, having fate on oneself through cliches and quotes can never be crime. though it sometimes sound a little out-of-context, when one seeks happiness from senseless things, it is but humanistic freedom. simply put, no person can tell superman when not to fly, and charlie crocker when not to do the italian job. because this is what makes us senseful.

cliches, quotes, and bandwagons, superman and charlie crocker, in the end we can all be like william wallace. and that's my cliche.

they say that decisions are made when one gets too emotional about something. i say, we're just being humans. the inescapable reality mandates us to be followers of a drifting life. and the funny thing is, everything we do - when we talk, when we cry, when we are with our better half, when you crash down on a predicament, when people care about other people, when pen meets paper, when writer comes across enlightenment, when actors are on a performance level, when subtlety turns into sarcasm - all these are punchlines of what we are.

we sometimes make sense, and we do find our purpose, but something in us would always say "don't brag about it, you havent seen the denouement to all of these, the rest is yet to come." so with this scenario, having fate on oneself through cliches and quotes can never be crime. though it sometimes sound a little out-of-context, when one seeks happiness from senseless things, it is but humanistic freedom. simply put, no person can tell superman when not to fly, and charlie crocker when not to do the italian job. because this is what makes us senseful.

cliches, quotes, and bandwagons, superman and charlie crocker, in the end we can all be like william wallace. and that's my cliche.