I Am Loving and Capable
  • J. Kyle H.
    January 22, 2010

    Drawing, making wry observations.

  • Stealth
    January 22, 2010

    Ditto….
    ::sigh::

  • Emily
    January 22, 2010

    Holla back, Girl.

  • Thrifty
    January 22, 2010

    ‘My IALAC shield will protect me!’

  • Cristian
    January 22, 2010

    My life story.

  • David Thomsen
    January 22, 2010

    I like to think that somewhere there’s the perfect job for me, something with creative freedom where I don’t have to deal with too many people and I can make my own hours.

    I like to think that this job isn’t worth the effort it takes to find it.

  • Melissa
    January 22, 2010

    Slouching. Girl needs a chiropractor or some yoga so bad.

  • Krepta
    January 22, 2010

    I turn 30 today– what a wonderful gift to remind me that I’m not alone in my feelings of utter inadequacy to compete in the world. Thanks for your accidental present, Dorothy.

  • Ritchie
    January 22, 2010

    Thanks for the lighthouse.

  • Billy Fore
    January 22, 2010

    This is simply wonderful. I resonate with this to the nth degree.

  • yachris
    January 22, 2010

    Mmmmmmmmmm… lemon squares…

  • CJ
    January 23, 2010

    I like to draw and I can make curry. I can play the clarinet and competitive Pokemon and I can carve a pumpkin and beat a pickle and patch an electrical cord. But what I really want to do is direct.

  • addtadd
    January 23, 2010

    she is almost so determined.

  • Bug
    January 23, 2010

    Oh come on, girl. Your weak enthusiasm is pretty cute, but let’s cut to the part where you build a 4-story hamster cage and bring people from five different counties to watch Woodchip run a mile of plastic tubes.

    As for me…I’m going to raise my own army of digi-tatoes with a computer mind-game the likes of which earth has never seeeeeen! And then I’ll swap everyone’s players with their polar opposites on the tatersphere and watch them wriggle in awkwardness…(of course sending half of the proceeds to the survivors of the coming catastrophe upon the small, forgotten country of Blarkovinschia)

  • DoubleW
    January 23, 2010

    I unwrite books.

  • Mr Lapin
    January 24, 2010

    Are you sure you want to know? Hardly anyone is ever paid well (if at all) for what he or she is good at.

  • Sprayette
    January 25, 2010

    I’m good at making comparisons, I make comparisons as a tachyon makes me confused about photons.

  • isaac
    January 25, 2010

    Man, D, you’re on a roll

  • rocketbride
    January 25, 2010

    i like to write and i can make delicious rice and legume dishes. i can design knit and crocheted items. i can read music. i take good photos at concerts. i can change a diaper on a wiggling baby and nurse standing up on a busy streetcorner. i can explain how to write an essay in a dozen different ways. i’m an intermediate ATS belly dancer.

    so why is it so hard to believe that any of it matters?

  • a thom
    January 25, 2010

    reminds me of http://catandgirl.com/?p=1534

  • Nny
    January 25, 2010

    “A weed is a plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered”-Ralph Waldo Emerson

  • Nny
    January 25, 2010

    people used to think tomatoes were poisonous.

  • Offendi
    January 30, 2010

    Love the subtle shifts in mood using nothing more than background changes.

  • hapto
    February 1, 2010

    IALAC!

    This was a program at our school — where you had your IALAC (I am Loving and Caring) and each time someone hurt your feelings they “tore” off a piece of your ialac.

  • A
    May 29, 2010

    We had IALAC (lovable and capable) in our camp counselor training! I had forgotten all about that.

  • Fren
    June 7, 2010

    I miss the good old days. If you had feelings of inadequacy, you merely drank until you were blind. Blotto-therapy. Nowadays everyone just cries into their pillow, gobbles Zoloft and Wellbutrin like a toddler in a candy factory and tries like hell to fit into some odd social mold. You lot and your IALAC. Get some damn bourbon and drink it out like your grandpappy!

  • Abdullah the Gut Slasher
    June 11, 2010

    And the moral of the story is… you have to be good at skinning things, since that makes furry coats!

  • dartigen
    August 2, 2011

    The funny thing is, I’m good with technology and philosophy and language and all these apparently required skills in the modern world…

    …yet every time I see someone catch and gut a fish for dinner or make their own pickles or shoot a deer and butcher it and have near-free meat for six months, I feel inadequate. (I can sort of grow vegetables though. And raising chickens can’t be that hard. You just stick them in their little cage-thingy and feed them and give them water and eventually they make eggs, right? It’s probably harder than that.)

    And then I remember how there’s laws that say you’re not allowed to fish here and here, and how most people won’t let you go hunting on their property anymore even if you’re hunting feral animals that are stealing the livestock feed or digging up the ground anyway, and how the local council won’t let anyone keep chickens because they’re somehow more of a nuisance than dogs that won’t shut up at 3am.

    We’re going to need a deity if there’s ever a zombie apocalypse.

  • Ralph
    January 20, 2014

    The secret isn’t being good at something. One can achieve success being -bad- at something if one is dedicated enough, and can draw a crowd.

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