I'm lazy. Hee. Yeah, but you're a more motivated kind of lazy. See, my lazy, avoiding way of getting the comics involves tippy-tappy on the laptop whilst reclining in bed. You actually want to go out and go somewhere. I'm a rung below you on the lazy ladder.
I feel like there's no life in San Diego. I do profiles for arts events for my internship and it's the same old play or museum exhibit every time. This makes me feel like I'm not fully appreciating how good I have it. I mean, the Museum of Fine Arts is just a bus stop down the way from work and Thursdays are free. I could be thisclose to Renoir and van Gogh and I'm not availing myself of it like I should. Must change that STAT.
SD county is a lot bigger than that and very disconnected. LA's a big city, but all the areas have a connection. As Houston has grown, it's become a lot more connected. It isn't any big thing to spend an hour on the freeway going from one end of the city to other. The only problem is that public transportation hasn't kept up with that growth (as it is rather sprawled out) so Houston is a very car-centric city (hence, Chicago's initial appeal). And don't even get me started on the stupidity of utilizing a ground rail system in a city that is below sea level and as a result floods regularly. During Allison, the medical center had riverfront property, a river formally known as Holcombe Boulevard.
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Date: 2007-03-15 08:02 pm (UTC)Hee. Yeah, but you're a more motivated kind of lazy. See, my lazy, avoiding way of getting the comics involves tippy-tappy on the laptop whilst reclining in bed. You actually want to go out and go somewhere. I'm a rung below you on the lazy ladder.
I feel like there's no life in San Diego. I do profiles for arts events for my internship and it's the same old play or museum exhibit every time.
This makes me feel like I'm not fully appreciating how good I have it. I mean, the Museum of Fine Arts is just a bus stop down the way from work and Thursdays are free. I could be thisclose to Renoir and van Gogh and I'm not availing myself of it like I should. Must change that STAT.
SD county is a lot bigger than that and very disconnected. LA's a big city, but all the areas have a connection.
As Houston has grown, it's become a lot more connected. It isn't any big thing to spend an hour on the freeway going from one end of the city to other. The only problem is that public transportation hasn't kept up with that growth (as it is rather sprawled out) so Houston is a very car-centric city (hence, Chicago's initial appeal). And don't even get me started on the stupidity of utilizing a ground rail system in a city that is below sea level and as a result floods regularly. During Allison, the medical center had riverfront property, a river formally known as Holcombe Boulevard.
God, I cannot wait to get out of this city.