@ms4merica When I was in 5th grade one of the old teachers fell off the stage during a spelling bee and got hospitalized, had a neck brace on for months after she came back
@FENDlSBLUNT@1lyjayy Guessing he just didn’t want to get out of the car. I give decent tips and I am ordering food in for a reason usually, so I’ve started just ignoring drivers who message me asking me to come out. I reiterate how to get to my door and wait for the knock 🤷♂️
Yes, it was a reversal. The reason I rejoined is simple: various Discord servers are where a lot of the community actually talks. They're where I hear what people are working on, what's frustrating them, what's sparking, what's falling flat. I built this hunt for the hunters -- all of them -- and Discord is one of many places I get to hear them in their own words: in person at Seekers Summit, on podcasts, in messages, in the rooms. Staying out of one of those channels for appearances wasn't worth giving up that pulse. That's the call I made.
On the book: someone asked what books I loved as a kid. I said "The Eleventh Hour," among others. It's a famous puzzle book from 1988, sitting on library shelves everywhere -- not a hidden manual, not a secret tip. The accusation is that sharing it gave Misfits a clue because the book has ciphers in it and the title mentions a clock. Two things. The cipher Misfits actually solved isn't in that book and isn't anything like what's in that book. And the puzzle obviously involved clocks -- they were on screen for millions of viewers. Nobody needed a children's book to notice them.
The bigger issue is what this kind of accusation does. If the treasure turns up near any city, trail, restaurant, or book I've ever mentioned liking in my entire life, someone can call it a leak in hindsight. That's not how leaking works. That's just pattern-matching after the fact. The answer isn't for me to stop talking about my childhood books. The answer is to recognize that a normal answer to a normal question isn't an inside track.
@Nia_mp4 in the eyes, would often say he saw me in places I was not. Most unsettling example: I was watching TV, he came down, doubled back, then said he thought he saw me smiling down at him from the top.He once had his finger nails sharpened to a point and asked if I thought it was cool
@Nia_mp4 One of my college roommates got into a knife fight and bled all over the apartment before disappearing for months. Turns out he was arrested, returned briefly with a large scar down his face.
Another was paranoid toward me in a schizophrenic way. Told me to always look him…
Usually when these trends are going around I click through and everyone has the same pictures pretty much, or similar variants. But these all seem pretty unique! I am quite pleased with that.