Friday, July 29, 2005


Seuss-a-go-round. Posted by Picasa

New Picture of me. Posted by Picasa

Thursday, July 21, 2005


Cover of the CD I'm working on. Posted by Picasa

I'm so freaking happy. And Gay looking. But rest assured I'm a super hero. Posted by Picasa
THE skin-tight outfit stretched across his defined body as he zipped through the air ready and willing to fight off villans and serve the community as a super hero; he is not only a super hero, but a super human. Is it not odd that heros are not super? You have to BE super to be a super hero. What seperates a normal average hero from a super hero. It is not super hero powers because Batman is a super hero and he is a regular human being. These observations turn my brain on standby to brain in think mode. Is it possible that we are all super heros in our own ways? The answer is --------> YES. If you think you are a dull human, guess what, you are a super hero at being dull!

Rest assured all you humans who are socially handicapped, for you are a super hero at being that way! Congratulations those who are boastful and proud, because, yes, you are a super hero! So if you are having a bad day, pick yourself up by telling yourself that you are a super hero at having bad days! Good day fellow super heros!


Nathaniel Drew Kimmel

From here to satisfaction is only a short distance away, it is how you decide to get there that determines how long it takes---Ned Kimmel

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

WHEN life hands you circumstances that seem overwhelming and unsurpassable, we often look to the wrong places to solve them. Why is it that we, as a human race, continue to indulge in frustration to the point of supidity and incongruousness in our times of need and unsatisfactory affairs; this we may never know. Its the small things that personally make me laugh; watching a person punch a soda machine all due the fact that it gulped up $0.55 of their budget. It is a sad day when somebody spends their last few cents on a soda. Thats the only explanation that I can think of getting angry enough to thrust a clenched fist into a machine that will not respond in return to retrieve your life savings. Poor soul.

IT never ends well. The person that punches the soda machine will have bruised knuckles and will still be out fifty-five cents. Just the other day I observed an old obese lady waiting in line at a buffet, and waiting in and apparent impatient fassion. Toe-tapping and uttering swears were her appearance, and she was making it obvious to all. She was upset at a young broad helping her young daughter get a petite portion of lettuce and other veggies in hopes of creating a salad. When finally the fat began to bulge enough that I could see her double chin turn into at least a quadruple chin, the old lug reached in front of the little girl and grabbed the lettuce forks and grabbed a generous portion of leafy greens and knocked the young girl into her apalled mother and spilled the lettuce onto the other side of the buffet. No salad for you tubs.

NEXT time you feel tempted to anger or frustration in a trying time, think of the consequences first. Handle each situation with wisdom and maturity and you will be rewarded with a happier less stressful day.



Nathaniel Drew Kimmel