235: Kite
Kite |
Title text: It's easy to regret your awkward conversations but hard to regret the ones you didn't have. |
Explanation
This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Please include the reason why this explanation is incomplete, like this: {{incomplete|reason}} If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks. |
The title text explains that you can lament on a bad conversation you had, but it's still worse when you did not begin a conversation.
Transcript
- [Cueball readies a kite.]
- [Cueball starts to fly the kite.]
- [Cueball continues to fly the kite.]
- [Cueball ties the kite string to a tree.]
- [Cueball grabs the string.]
- [Cueball starts to climb the string.]
- [A scene showing Cueball holding onto the string at a high altitude, against a colour backdrop of the ground, clouds, water and the sky.]
- [Black and white again. Megan comes into view holding onto a small blimp.]
- Cueball's thought bubble: Hey, there's someone else up here. I wonder what her story is.
- [Megan floats to the other side of the panel.]
- Cueball's thought bubble: Maybe I should say hi.
- [Cueball is alone holding onto the string.]
Discussion
I believe you are backwards on your interpretation of the title text. If it is hard to regret; you do not regret. Therefore you can regret awkward communication, but can't regret communications that never occurred. In this, Randall seems to be at odds with the tone of other pages, such as the choices arc.138.163.106.71 01:50, 11 October 2013 (UTC)
Agree on this and I have changed the explanation - I do however, believe that it is not the point that Randall tries to make - and have thus added that you can regret the missed conversation even more than a possible awkward one... Kynde (talk) 18:15, 9 January 2014 (UTC)
Pi day
How has everyone missed this.
Not one notices that the day relates to Transcendentalism, and that relates to Life in the Woods, which relates to Thoreau, who put it quintesentially:
- "I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived."