dreamt at 2:37 AM
dreamt at 10:19 PM
confession : this is pretty much my favorite picture.
Upcoming: CHEERLEADING AND SPORTS HEATS, where I, Hanis Khairunnisa, shall be running 100m and trip and fall right after the whistle has blown and embarass myslef and drown in the laughter of the fellow Tkgians who I had, once upon a better time, labelled them as 'friends'
Bye then, and have a great valentine's week ahead. -Muackz- ;)
dreamt at 4:23 AM

HANIS=ORIGINAL!!!!
Available at all convenience stores.
Get yours now.
My thoughts are weird. .
dreamt at 6:52 PM

27 dresses.
A story as sweet as it is boring.
Honestly speaking, I only bothered going through the rest of the movie because of the ultimate funny-ness Amelia and Robyn were producing on either side of me. And there's always, of course, James Marsden to drool over.
The storyline was a tad too predictable, although one might argue that that was the same sad case with previous movie Enchanted, said previous movie had an element of magic to balance it out nicely. Unfortunately, 27 dresses was centered more on the leading actors and actresses (AskMen.com's Most Desirable Woman of 2007 Katherine Heigl and Adorable sexy hot delicious tanned blue-eyed eye-candy James Marsden.) and although the movie was diabetically-sweet, I wouldn't be surprised if this isn't exactly what the general audience wants.
But the outing with the TKGians was pretty cool. Because we are, after all TKGIANS, and are therefore needed to hold up all moral etiquttes and values when we go out.
RULES.
1. All TKGIANS are expected to make as much noise as possible in all venues, especially shopping malls.
2. All TKGIANS must not act like a lady, and must leave people around us with impressions that we are seriously confused as to what our gender is.
3. All TKGIANS have to hog stores and restaurants and intimidate all the poor younger generation who have yet to learn how to even suck a lollipop.
There's the gist of the outing. Let's just say that we abided by all the rules. We are such good, upholding citizens of the nation. :)
I had to leave early however, for I had something coming up later that day. I stopped by a CD shop to buy The Grudge, even though I'd seen it a few times, and was trying to tell my mind not to go on one of my crazy-impulsive shopping seizure again (I very nearly bought Bratz, The Haunting, Titanic, Hairspray and Saw) when I saw Amelia and Yim Qi (yet again). I suppose they were on their way home. But thank god for their appearance. I think I would have caved in to my movie cravings if it weren't for them.
James Marsden. Hmm. I have only ever seen him in Hairspray and X-Men as Cyclops.
yesterday was my first day in LDS, too. It was somewhat entertaining, for we had debated upon the motion : Ban video games which depict violence. I was on the opposition team, meaning that I disagree. Which I do, strongly.
Why SHOULDN'T we ban violent video games? There are certainly lots of aspects to look at, but I seem unable to phrase them properly. So I called up my dear friend Aisyah Isabelle, who incidentally was the Debate President of her debate team in school, Katong Convent. She helped loads, and our conversation was a rather interesting one.
Me: Kay, one of the strongest points in the preposition team is that 'Prevention is better than Cure'. Therefore they're asking us to actually ban the whole thing altogether rather than risk people be inspired by these displays of graphic violence in video games. What do you think?
Aisyah: Yeah, but that case could also be applied to drugs, sex, smoking, alcohol, porn, and mature movies. But do we ban them? No. Alcohol is a cool beverage, but it only becomes dangerous to those who don't know how to use it properly.
Me: Cool, true. And someone said something about the students unable to concentrate on studies because of these video games...
Aisyah: Then they don't know how to differentiate between game addicts and those who are REALLY affected by these games. There is a major difference, but with the same concept of understanding underneath-Both can be prevented, and this is where external surroundings matter a lot-Parents, teachers, blah blah blah...
Me: Kay. Anything else?
Aisyah: You can't BAN violent video games. You have to research on what they mean by violent- coz games like Need For Speed, you've got cars crashing into each other- that's also a form of violence. Do you ban these sort of things, then? And if you do, what are we going to be left with? Barbie dressup? Spongebob? Flowers and Bunnies are really fun?
Me: Haha yeah they did mention something about that....
Aisyah: You can tell them that's why there are such things as censorship and ratings. Cool?
Me: -snickers- My friends were like, "Violent video games are too stressful! When you come back from school you shouldn't play these kind of stuff! You should instead play Solitaire!"
Aisyah: Yeah you can tell them to go fuck themselves.
Me: And- whhatt?? haha.
Like I said, very interesting conversation.
But time has surpassed me again, and I still need to bathe. Tsk tsk. So thanks to everyone for making Tuesday an awesome day, and I hope ya'll had one too. Toodles! Do you think toodles is too gay? I think it is. I should probably change it to goodbye...nah. too prissy. toodles it is then.
dreamt at 7:12 PM
dreamt at 5:45 PM
your profile here.
xhoodies xjackets xsneakers xfriends
your archives here.
your links here.
Do not remove this, thanks. (:
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