Elle & Lui - Life in a Post-Apocalyptic City I.

Jul 26, 2006 01:00

What to do when one cannot get home with public transport? Which line to expect to arrive when nearly all tram-lines are damaged/being in the process of renovation and your home is sort of cut off from the rest of the city? How to arrange route plans successfully?

+1: How to survive annoying, nagging colleagues?

You'll find tips and answers in the next entry, where I'll show you all the hidden public transport lines illustrating difficulties and annoyances with maps and charts.

Until then, the usual changelog:

Today my calves woke me up. No mistake, I felt such intense cramps in my calves that I spent half an hour avoiding my usual reaction: screaming and moaning in agony.

Later on, in the afternoon I felt super-smart finishing a report on contracts dating back to 1999 in half an hour. What a pity that the difference is not significant to be sure the company can avoid administration outsourcing to India. Now it all depends on the British HQ.

I ordered a pizza after work - this made me feel like being an adult to a ridiculous degree.

The wittiest 2 hours of the day was spent at G's where I got all the admiration (strictly for my wit and humour) I wanted so really badly for a change. I also had the opportunity to feel smart again - luck comes in a double package, with this 2 in 1 sales campaign, 1 for free - as I tried to tell straightforwardly everything about his new script. I like it a lot even now, but the changes will make it more dense, full of tension and anxiety to some degree, at least I hope so. As I am looking forward to the shooting in the blue room.
There was this weird story about Saturday night's party; it made G. laugh, it makes me feel accomplished.

NANA is fascinating. It's so real I tend to forget it's fictious. A familiar problem also experienced in my early teens with Berusaiyu no Bara.
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