Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Coldplaying

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

What are you thinking right now?

Featured Replies

Oh Iris..

Im not sure..I just didnt do anything useful today!!

I sat around doing nothing...I nned to find something constructive to do! :\

  • Replies 84.1k
  • Views 3.2m
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

oh, but sometimes is good not to do anything special or useful... only chilling out!!! Believe me, its much better than spending the whole day studying - that's really stressful! :(

My sister is crying in the bathroom right now and I don't know why.

 

Another emotional outburst after a talk with her boyfriend, most likely.............. I always leave her alone when she gets really sad or angry...

Now she's playing "For You" really loud. :thinking:

mmm... I don't see to my love for three days, he's sick. I'm not a sentimental girl but, you know, this things changes the people. And I have to read a lot of books, study for a lot of tests and continue with my real life. I hate it! Atenea_brit.

I'd have thought that your mind would be full of new programme ideas Alan.

So I wrote this depressing story for my literature final that was about this 19-year-old kid that unknowingly was a catalyst to his mother's eventual death. :uhoh:

 

I'm twisted. :sick:

^^^lemme read! :nice:

 

Well... it's all on my final test... which is with my teacher... haha.

 

I can type out what I remember... hehe. Hold up. :P

I'm always thinking of new ideas but this lack of sleep thing is starting to weight heavy on my mind. Than all of a sudden, i spared a thought for my beloved fish.

Well... it's all on my final test... which is with my teacher... haha.

 

I can type out what I remember... hehe. Hold up. :P

 

 

:embarassed: don't worry about it if its a big problem or anything like that.. just ... if you can...i t sounds good :blush:

:embarassed: don't worry about it if its a big problem or anything like that.. just ... if you can...i t sounds good :blush:

 

haha, it's okay. i found a file with half of the story i wrote. :D I thought I didn't save it, heh.

 

and, it's lame, haha. really lame.

 

and, the first scene was inspired by a mic convo I had with Eric in which I heard his dad ask him to buy Chinese food... and get that shrimp stuff. :laugh3:

 

and I couldn't think of any names so I just named the kiddos Greg (House :laugh3:) and Hayden (Christensen :laugh3:)

 

uber lame, lol.

 

i'm gonna type out the rest of the story, haha.

haha, it's okay. i found a file with half of the story i wrote. :D I thought I didn't save it, heh.

 

and, it's lame, haha. really lame.

 

and, the first scene was inspired by a mic convo I had with Eric in which I heard his dad ask him to buy Chinese food... and get that shrimp stuff. :laugh3:

 

and I couldn't think of any names so I just named the kiddos Greg (House :laugh3:) and Hayden (Christensen :laugh3:)

 

uber lame, lol.

 

i'm gonna type out the rest of the story, haha.

 

 

:dance: you should finish it..seeing as it has a familiar feel to members I know...specially the shrimpy Eric part ! :laugh2:

Okay, here's lame-o story.

 

July 12, 2002. 19-year-old Greg sits alone in his room, chatting on the internet from his home in New Jersey. He lived with his father, and his younger brother Matt. The mother, who left some years ago to live with her other family, was pretty much forgotten in their family.

 

“Hey Greg, can you go get some Chinese?” his dad asks from the doorway of his room. “I know you drove to get it last time, but Matt is busy with a school project.”

 

“Yeah, sure thing,” Greg sighed. A school project? Sure. It was probably just another lame excuse from his younger brother to get him to go get food and not use his own gas.

 

“Oh, and I want that shrimp stuff... the one with the... actually, just get what we get all the time, and get whatever you want... and go to the place on the corner of Cherry and 3rd. I forgot what it’s called,” his father added as he handed him thirty dollars. Greg grabbed a jacket, slipped a grey beanie hat over his brown hair, grabbed the keys to his beat up ’95 Toyota Tacoma and set off.

 

About 10 minutes later, Greg arrived at “that place at the corner of Cherry and 3rd,” as titled by his dad. Chinese food wasn’t exactly his favorite, but it’d do. He was pretty hungry. He pulled into a parking space and entered into the building. Immediately, he thought noticed a familiar looking figure sitting at a table, but he shrugged and went to order his food.

 

“Hey,” a young man called out to him. “Do I know you from somewhere?” he asked. Greg turned around and he immediately blanched—he did know him from somewhere.

 

“Uh, yeah... hey... Hayden” Greg said, avoiding eye contact with the larger young man standing in front of him. Though they were about the same age, Hayden towered over Greg’s height of six feet, and most likely had thirty pounds more body weight than he.

 

“You’re Greg, aren’t you?” Hayden asked, staring him down. “You’re the one that—“

 

“Hey, look, that was five years ago I swear I—“

 

“You are the one. You’re the one that ratted me out, huh? I ended up going to Juvi and my mom killed herself. Remember?”

 

“If I knew that your mom was so emotionally unstable, I wouldn’t—“but he was cut short by a punch to the face. Greg staggered back, and as soon as Hayden set up for another punch he ducked and gave Hayden a knee to the stomach. As Hayden doubled over, Greg saw him pull out a black, metallic object from the back of his pants scrambled to get away. He heard a gunshot and then the world faded to black.

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Greg woke up to the sound of beeping monitors and quiet chat coming from others in the room. He looked around at his surroundings... light green walls, a curtain dividing the room, monitors, IV poles, random tubes poking out of him... duh. A hospital.

 

He looked to his right to see his dad sleeping on the recliner near his bed. Greg began to sit up, but immediately regretted it, let out a loud groan of pain, and laid back down.

 

“Hey,” he heard someone call out. He turned to see his dad walking up to his bedside. “How are you feeling?”

 

“Uh... my side hurts... and my arm.” Greg said weakly.

 

“It’s no wonder. You got shot. Twice. Remember?”

 

“Yeah, I remember.” Greg coughed. “What day is it?”

 

“It’s Friday,” his dad answered.

 

“I’ve been out for three days...?”

 

“Mhm. But you’re alright—that’s all that matters,” his father added. “The bullets didn’t hit any organs or major veins or arteries. You’re a lucky kid, son,” he stated as he patted his uninjured shoulder. And with that, there was an awkward silence... His dad decided to break the silence by informing him about his assailant.

 

“The shooter got away. All the witnesses have a good description of him, but no name. They said you mentioned it once—what was his name?”

Greg thought for a moment, and for some reason he couldn’t recall the name. He knew that he knew his attacker’s name, but he couldn’t find it in he disorganized state of his mind right then.

 

“I... I can’t remember,” Greg admitted. His father sighed.

 

“Oh, it’ll come back to you soon,” he smiled.

 

“Where’s Matt?”

 

“Oh, he had a presentation he couldn’t miss that was worth more than half of his grade. He said to tell you he was sorry,”

 

Oh, so he wasn’t lying... Greg thought. Suddenly, he felt compelled to ask his father about someone they rarely talked about.

 

“Hey, Dad... when was the last time you talked to mom?”

 

“When she left, son. Seven years ago. I haven’t heard from her since.”

 

“Oh...” Greg sighed. That didn’t enlighten him much. “Oh, dad, I remember the name of the guy who shot me... it was a guy I ratted out for drug dealing. His name was Hayden.”

 

“Hayden? Hayden who?”

 

“Hayden Smith.” Greg said nonchalantly. His father suddenly turned a shade of grey, shocked.

 

“Hayden Smith is your half brother, Greg. Your mother left us to be apart of his family.”

 

Realization slowly dawned on Greg—He was a catalyst to his mother’s death.

 

 

 

EDIT: lmao, I accidently called that hayden dude Rick. It's fixed, haha. :laugh3: There's nothing too it, rick--i was just talking to you while I typed that.

How that new CD will sound like..

will I do well on my literature test after not studying?

why the hell is love so complicated??

i want a pololoooo :cry:

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.