cleverlymadeup said:
as my friend father, an english teacher, said "you only need to know 2 things for english class and that is bull and shit"
never have truer words been spoken about that class
I have felt that way for a long time. So far as I'm concerned, English lost me after the sixth grade. At least up until then, they also had spelling, and spelling is useful. When the hell am I going to need to know the complete soliloquies of Shakespeare, outside of pursuing that as a career?
More to the point though, I do like to read, but I have selective tastes, and very little comes out on my areas of preference, so I usually end up reading the same things over and over... and over. These forums help: usually intelligent discourse, topics in one of my areas of interest, plus I can chime in with my own perspective, plus it gives me a good excuse to keep playing Zero Punctuation in the background. I don't think reading is really a shunnable offense so much as it has fallen out of favor in light of everything else there is to do, but reading still has it's place, and I'm not referring simply to power outages.
As for suggesting reading a book, that might also be bit hard to do what with the broken fingers, but attempting Halo is just idiocy plain and simple. Sitting back with a good DVD might not be as stimulating as reading or gaming, but at least it's easier, all things considered.
[EDIT] Meant to mention, at some point, I hate to use the whiny phrase "when am I ever going to use this?" but it made my point. Frankly, in Calculus, when the teacher mentioned something new we were doing had no real world applications what-so-ever, it was actually quite refreshing, and I did well finally having an answer to that tired question, and an acceptable one at that. If she'd've said something about on the odd chance we choose such and such career field, I'd've tuned right out.
And I did well in French, because that was what English class once was: something potentially useful, although I have forgotten most of it now through, of course, lack of use.
C'est dommage.
Also, the spell check here seems to dislike my double contractions she'd've and I'd've. Tough.