
Oh, this simply made my day today.
It has been a little bit hard. It isn't easy when your parents are fighting.
It is worse when you don't know what they are fighting over, and 10 times more when you are really sure you caused it.
And easily 20 times as bad when one of them is sick, and the other is losing it.
"The Burden of Care." Learn this four word phrase, people.
Also, this skinny lass left a comment on some previous post down below:

She's rather cute but she's like 11 years my junior or something.
Still, cute is cute.
Don't judge me.
Judge her.
Then judge me.
Then help me help you help me help you help me help you help me help you help me.
K, then after that judge me.
Don't really need your help or care really yea. I go my own way, as always. You do that too, and you'll be someone I respect, and then after that you can judge me.
Think she was only trying to rattle up some hits anyway.
We'd hit that.
ALSO, I thought I could work from home today so that the cable guy could come over to install HD in my room.
But I was wrong.
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I think the cable guy was a cable gal.
Let me tell you something about HD.
I watched Heroes S02 on HD and discovered that I have never seen so many pores on so many people's face's in the span of 45 minutes.
You can tell that they shoot with prime lenses. Go Cooke!
You can also see the focus-puller guestimating every camera movement, with shots pulling into focus as late as 3 seconds after the shot is properly framed. I bet top 1st CA's daily rates have gone up with the advent of HD cameras.
After all, "In cinematography, a focus puller or first assistant camera (1st AC) is the member of a film crew responsible for keeping the camera's focus at the proper position during a shoot. This typically requires pulling the focus with a follow focus device during the take, to compensate for camera and/or subject movement[1]. This requires intimate knowledge and experience with the optical principle of depth of field, which the 1st AC must learn to exploit to his or her advantage. In extreme circumstances the depth of field may sometimes be very small, as little as 1/4 or 1/8th of an inch (3–6 mm). Since 1st ACs do not look through the camera (that is the job of the camera operator) and thus cannot see the results of their focusing in real-time, this job is considered to be extremely technically difficult."
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