User:Kipras Is Present: Difference between revisions
User has enrolled in Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018). |
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{{dashboard.wikiedu.org student editor | course = [[Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018)]] | slug = College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018) }} |
{{dashboard.wikiedu.org student editor | course = [[Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018)]] | slug = College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018) }} |
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This is a new user who has not yet made any contributions or edits, major or minor to any articles as of yet. |
This is a new user who has not yet made any contributions or edits, ''major'' or minor to any articles as of yet. Though there are plans to make contributions to the Wikipedia article entry for the video game [[Bloodborne]]. |
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Favorable Quote: "A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it." - G.K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man. |
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Though I am not a christian devout, I like the quote because it reminds me of my greatest fear, which is not necessarily the loss of life or limb, or induction of pain and hunger. It reminds me that one of the most diluting things in this world is stagnation, and the realization and enduring of it as one of the most sobering and gnashing. To have familiarity is a blessing and for humans, a necessity, but when nothing new happens we fade into nothingness. |
Revision as of 23:10, 1 April 2018
This user is a student editor in College_of_DuPage/ENGLI-1102-LC045_Research_as_Narrative_(Spring_2018). |
This is a new user who has not yet made any contributions or edits, major or minor to any articles as of yet. Though there are plans to make contributions to the Wikipedia article entry for the video game Bloodborne.
Favorable Quote: "A dead thing can go with the stream, but only a living thing can go against it." - G.K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man.
Though I am not a christian devout, I like the quote because it reminds me of my greatest fear, which is not necessarily the loss of life or limb, or induction of pain and hunger. It reminds me that one of the most diluting things in this world is stagnation, and the realization and enduring of it as one of the most sobering and gnashing. To have familiarity is a blessing and for humans, a necessity, but when nothing new happens we fade into nothingness.