About

Heya. My name is Mightelove. Most call me Mighte. Some call me Might. A couple call me Miss Love. Which I find amusing because Love was my maiden name. xD My real name is Erin and I am 33 years old. Yes, I'm an old buzzard. I'm probably older than you. Some might think I'm too old to be on this site. Before you b***h and moan, I want to remind you that I pay taxes so you can attend your learning disabled/special education classes. So back the ******** up off me and deal with the fact that I use gaia as a past time to fill the nooks and crannies of a fairly busy life. And, trust me, there's a lot of us old coots on here. We're all up in your business, invading your site. How's that bite your a**?

I am married to my best friend and I have a 7 year old baby girl and a 1 year old baby boy. They are the light of my life and are angels sent from God to revive a bitter old heart and make it new and young again. They are my world and hold my heart and soul in their sweet little hands. Doug and I are terribly big flirts and we both know how the other one acts. So don't get offended or uncomfortable. It's just how I am. I promise, I won't rape you. Unless you want me to. Ok, not even then.....>.> Besides, I already have one boyfriend. I don't need two. xD

My favorite colors on Gaia would be black, red, white and a hint of gold. I do deviate from my favorites, though. My favorite colors in real life are jewel tones. I love to read. If you have any good books or series that you would like to suggest, I would love to hear them. I'm always up for a good book. smilies/icon_smile.gif I also write, but not for publication or for anyone to really read. I know, it's weird. But I'm weird. I play bass guitar. I listen to a wide variety of music, but mostly not new music. I think most newer music is crap.

I collect art on Gaia. If you want to see my PB, comment as such. I don't post the link because I keep having art deleted off of my account for no good reason.

Drop me a PM if you would like to talk!



Arts by Lhance and profile layout by phoenixbasilisk

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Comments

Viewing 10 of 20 comments.

bouncingbustybunny

Report | 05/20/2013 1:31 pm

bouncingbustybunny

your welcome ^_^
bouncingbustybunny

Report | 05/20/2013 1:25 pm

bouncingbustybunny

your signature is awesome
and your profile is epic ^_^
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 9:02 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

Leave my cute little donkeys out of this!!! *fury*

(Yes, I absolutely adore donkeys, or rather the more congenial mules. I want one.)
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 8:37 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

Pfft, every time we ******** with the river gods (I love how the Chinese depict them as dragons!) we end up with more problems than a few hundred megawatts of power can solve. At least those Satanic Mills didn't stop or divert the flow of water!

The bottom line is population growth. Not that there's too many of us, but that there got to be so many before our knowledge and technology could enable us to sustainably negotiate with the land to provide for us without drastic and cumulative devastation.

Blah blah blah, hunk hunk hunk ... I've heard that for ... almost thirty-five years, and I'm still rolling my eyes (partly out of jealousy).
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 7:03 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

That was the third movie, Miss. cat_razz

Oh, it'll happen in the Midwest, guaranteed. Monoculture's already damn near eaten up all the topsoil, so once the aquifers are exhausted it won't be economically feasible to irrigate. So, only small hold-outs will remain, while the crops revert back to prairie ... and dry up. Once a threshold is passed, the land will be incapable of supporting any life but sagebrush and snakes, and of course the winters will kill almost any farms that remain. At least California stands a chance of retaining some of its coastal areas, but the two big valleys will probably be abandoned eventually. We in the Pacific Northwest will go the way of Italy and Greece, most likely.

cat_talk2hand Don't even ask me about Italy and Greece. Don't know, don't care; Italy stopped being cool three hundred years ago, and Greece over two thousand years ago. But, the goats ... ah, they'll manage, stubborn garbage disposals that they are. cat_wink
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 6:50 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

Definitely seeing the desertification of the Midwest and Southwest, but I've a funny feeling New Yorkers would love their city so much they'd just turn it into a new Venice, complete with submersible tours of the "old city".

*grrr* I rather disliked her being in that one, and didn't even much like that movie. My fave was the first, not the more-commonly favorited second.
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 5:55 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

At least you didn't have any four hundred years ago, when Europe was in the throes of nationalist, religious, and even some colonial wars; never mind the appalling state of nutrition and medicine. cat_mad Maybe you've a fledgling Mad Max under one of your wings, and you'll never even know. Damn, those early eighties were in many ways prescient with their post-"apocalyptic" sci fi. I used to play Car Wars ... 1983 through 1985 or -6, I think ... and it was all about desertification, city states, algae farms, and of course ... AUTODUELLING!!!
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 5:37 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

Aye, the whole paradigm shift thing. Problem with those is they're often, usually I'd even be so bold to say, necessity-driven. Cutting it close can easily become a day late and a dollar short. An advantage, I suppose, to being as old as I am, is that I'm just going to watch it begin but will probably not end up starving or getting gunned down when I die. My sparrows and bees and butterflies go before I do, I'll be pretty ready when the moment happens. I'm kinda a dilettante forest elf?

And, nope, no blitherings that I can discern. I honestly don't think a good conversation requires Oxford dons masturbating over Coleridge like some do ... cat_sweatdrop and I used to.
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 4:46 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

cat_stare Just using the term that's used even by people that know far better than you and I do.

It's certainly going to be a multimodal unraveling of a dynamic system, and there will be permanent losses. I think there should be multiple approaches to the problem, since nobody's going to do anything about it until steaks cost $30 and "economy" table wines $50 (e.g. too damn late), and even then it will be a fractional and incomplete effort at best: 1) scour the earth for specimens to gene sequence or sample and freeze, 2) engage in revolutionary agricultural techniques like the one example I gave, 3) genetically modify particularly crucial species to render them capable of living in the new world, 4) let war and famine and plagues kill off up to a third of the species to ensure the rest have a chance, and 4) encourage, and most importantly, arm popular revolutions to hope an increase in transparent and effective governance, and if that isn't feasible give Plato's philosopher king (a.k.a. benevolent despot) a shot as a second viable alternative in cases where it can't be helped and the alternatives are worse.
Lunar Real Estate Agent

Report | 05/19/2013 3:58 pm

Lunar Real Estate Agent

How about skyscraper farms? I firmly believe that global warming is going to wreak havoc on this world, killing off the lovely bees and butterflies and other delicate but crucial pollinators, not to mention wiping out subalpine forests and many plant species that grace our tables (like asparagus, not to mention the staples wheat and corn). This may hold some promise for preserving some of those species from extinction, though I honestly have no idea how to save my precious monarch butterflies, except perhaps with genetic modification.

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