So if you keep dying, but grab a life each time, you can take a few minutes and just stock up on
a ridiculous number of lives.
Not exact matches
In some sense, indeed, Kierkegaard's
life could be written as a kind
of dark comedy; despite his premature death, and a great
number of sadnesses that afflicted him along the way, there was something enchantingly absurd about his character, a certain benign perversity that often prompted him to make himself willfully
ridiculous, and a peculiarly touching element
of the ludicrous that clung to him all the way to his early grave.
The idea that you will have difficulty forming a bond with your eventual
life partner because you are actively addicted to a
number of previous partners at the same time is utterly
ridiculous.
I'd love to blame it on the romanticism
of married
life, but truly, I have been insanely busy, commuting out to New Westminister for audiobook recording, researching for my thesis, and trying to keep up with the
ridiculous number of professional commitments I've signed up for.
It would take a
ridiculous number of pages to chronicle all the fascinating revelations embedded within Anbinder's brick
of a book, a sprawling chronicle which
lives up to its subtitle: The 400 - Year Epic History
of Immigrant New York.
I didn't actually mind Capcom's approach (though it was a shame about the game) and found that the regular releases were a lot more palatable than with something like
Life is Strange, or the Telltale games, which can have a
ridiculous number of months between episodes.