TGWTG The Spoony One / Spoony / Noah Antwiler and Rachel Baker / @RaeAngel07 - The touching romance between a washed-up videogame reviewer throwing a decade-long pity party and his delusional Canuck stalker. #weaknotsick #donttellmehowtosulk

It reads like something out of the New Yorker magazine.


A high quality leather couch , such as a Lazy Boy , could easily go for 3500, it is not that unusual. I have a Lazy Boy power reclining loveseat that cost a little under 2000. It is high priced but they are so soft and comfortable, it is worth it and they will last a very long time. I personally love a couch that is big and soft, the kind that you like sleeping on.
 
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<( Happy Friday 13th, #weaknotsick #donttellmehowtosulk !)

Spoony.gif Spoonay_150.png
 
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Highlights from Anjuli's blog.
I would say that I still suffer at times, but much less so. Torments of the past and extreme states of emotional distress have left my life almost completely.
Wow! The depression has left her life almost completely! I wonder what the next paragraph will say...
I can’t manage to bring myself to bathe him more than once a month due to my depression.
Oops. I guess she isn't cured.
a life which includes the trauma, now healed,
Or is she all healed from the trauma? I'm getting mixed messages here.
Perhaps never, perhaps, one day, when I am fully healed and suicide attempts are a thing of my distant past
Now she's saying she isn't fully healed.
I had come up with a brilliant strategy to complete my impending death sentence, one that I had never thought of before, only to chicken out at the very last millisecond
Brilliant strategy? She tried to kill herself with a shopping bag.
I am wearing a baseball hat, so-to-speak
What? You are either wearing a baseball hat or you aren't. You can't wear a baseball hat "so-to-speak".
I had my obligatory weekly shower
Bitch takes one shower a week. Must be a delight to be around her.
There was a time in my life back in 2012 whence I was so incredibly suicidal and unable to work, that I would see him three times a week just to keep myself alive and from killing myself. Because inevitably, as all my attempts at my life have been, another attempt would be unsuccessful and land me in the hospital for a number of weeks
If you have dozens of failed suicide attempts, you're doing it wrong. Almost like she's doing it for attention...
I had so many hospital visits and bills that I filed for bankruptcy in 2015.
Literally went bankrupt from pretending to kill herself too many times.
My brother inadvertently mocked me for going to bed at 7 PM one night, asking if I was a baby. I quickly changed the subject but I was hurt and I know he will be able to hear my complaint one of these days, to repair that minor damage to our relationship
The nerve of that guy! Making a joke because his sister went to bed at 7:00. Will they ever be able to repair their relationship?
 
Bitch please, is it once a month or once a week that you shower? I'm sure your lakeside office coworkers really enjoy the stench.

To be fair, if a song I like was included in a bad movie, I wouldn't freak out, I'd consider it a small, saving grace for an otherwise bad film. The film's plot and action stink, but hey, good music!

I also thought it was weird that Noah and his brother flipped out over Leonard Nimoy quoting his previous character Spock when he played as Sentinel Prime in Transformers 3. (Nimoy's Sentinel Prime, at one point, says "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few".) Miles and Noah treated that as an act of nerd sacrilege, that this "unworthy" movie dares to reference something sacred and pristine, when really, it was just a cute nod to the fact that one of the three giants of Star Trek was a voice actor for the film.
(It starts at 23:15)


They really see nerd stuff as their religion, instead of something fun to turn to for entertainment. They acted as if their childhood got raped (Spoony even says that Nimoy "raped the line") just because some fancy robot film referenced the Wrath of Khan.

Granted, I see a lot of nerd stuff from my childhood as sacred, too, but I wouldn't flip out if some B-movie referenced them, I'd feel honored that the stuff I liked as a child is getting some nods from the mainstream entertainment industry. I can't count how many times other movies and cartoons referenced Star Wars one way or another, and I had no problems with that.

My reaction when I see a mainstream film or cartoon reference something I liked as a kid.
The Transformers 3 vlog timestamp didn't work, the first minute really says it all though, Miles went to see the movie with friends while Spoony went alone with a notebook to record all of the moments that pissed him off.
 
The Transformers 3 vlog timestamp didn't work, the first minute really says it all though, Miles went to see the movie with friends while Spoony went alone with a notebook to record all of the moments that pissed him off.
Somewhere around 23 minutes in, that's where Noah and Miles start whining about how bad it was for Leonard Nimoy to quote his Star Trek character. Spoony whines that Nimoy "raped the line" while Miles says he flipped the screen a double-bird.

They see Wrath of Khan as that sacred, that they were literally offended when a Transformers movie dared to quote it. It really goes to show how empty their lives are, to the point where they get offended when something they see as unworthy dares to make a callback to something they loved.

Whereas with me, when I see a modern movie quote something I loved as a child, I'm either amused or happy that something I liked as a kid is getting some recognition. I remembered an episode of Duck Dodgers where Dodgers blew up the Martian equivalent of the Executor from Empire Strikes Back, and he and the Cadet became Jedi Force Ghosts, and I was laughing my ass off as a kid when I saw that.
 
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Somewhere around 23 minutes in, that's where Noah and Miles start whining about how bad it was for Leonard Nimoy to quote his Star Trek character. Spoony whines that Nimoy "raped the line" while Miles says he flipped the screen a double-bird.

They see Wrath of Khan as that sacred, that they were literally offended when a Transformers movie dared to quote it. It really goes to show how empty their lives are, to the point where they get offended when something they see as unworthy dares to make a callback to something they loved.

Whereas with me, when I see a modern movie quote something I loved as a child, I'm either amused or happy that something I liked as a kid is getting some recognition.
I can see being offended by a modern movie shitting on something you once enjoyed.

The original "Longest Yard" is a funny, bitter sweet, amazing movie.

The Adam Sandler remake is a fucking abortion and I refuse to believe that anyone involved with the film saw the original, including Burt Reynolds.
 
Somewhere around 23 minutes in, that's where Noah and Miles start whining about how bad it was for Leonard Nimoy to quote his Star Trek character. Spoony whines that Nimoy "raped the line" while Miles says he flipped the screen a double-bird.

They see Wrath of Khan as that sacred, that they were literally offended when a Transformers movie dared to quote it. It really goes to show how empty their lives are, to the point where they get offended when something they see as unworthy dares to make a callback to something they loved.

Whereas with me, when I see a modern movie quote something I loved as a child, I'm either amused or happy that something I liked as a kid is getting some recognition. I remembered an episode of Duck Dodgers where Dodgers blew up the Martian equivalent of the Executor from Empire Strikes Back, and he and the Cadet became Jedi Force Ghosts, and I was laughing my ass off as a kid when I saw that.
Noah has a bad case of "he's only happy if he has something to complain about". If Miles has it too, it could be hereditary. Maybe they got it from their mom.

We don't have much info on Mother Antwiler. I know more info about Warthog's adopted mom and even Anjuli Nunn's scientist mom.
 
It reads like something out of the New Yorker magazine.


A high quality leather couch , such as a Lazy Boy , could easily go for 3500, it is not that unusual. I have a Lazy Boy power reclining loveseat that cost a little under 2000. It is high priced but they are so soft and comfortable, it is worth it and they will last a very long time. I personally love a couch that is big and soft, the kind that you like sleeping on.
She definitely gives me some sort of Patrick Bateman vibes with her descriptions
 
I can see being offended by a modern movie shitting on something you once enjoyed.

The original "Longest Yard" is a funny, bitter sweet, amazing movie.

The Adam Sandler remake is a fucking abortion and I refuse to believe that anyone involved with the film saw the original, including Burt Reynolds.
But the thing is, Nimoy and Bay weren't shitting on Wrath of Khan, they were just referencing it. A slight little nod. It wasn't as if Nimoy and Bay got up and said that Star Trek II sucked; they just made a cute little nod to that movie in Bay's third Transformers flick, because Sentinel Prime is voiced by Spock.

What Noah and Miles did was the Trekkie equivalent of a Star Wars fan getting pissed off at a movie for having Harrison Ford say "I have a bad feeling about this" while he's not playing Han Solo.

Noah has a bad case of "he's only happy if he has something to complain about". If Miles has it too, it could be hereditary. Maybe they got it from their mom.
But the thing is, he wasn't happy. He acted as if the movie genuinely hurt him.......just because the script made a nod to a previous movie that one of the voice actors played a part in. Which really seemed strange to me, to be so offended by that.
 
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