Interesting how the combinations of things people talk about and the words and symbols they use can serve something like a fingerprint or DNA - an identifying market. A name is a trivial example, but there are much more, and not just identifying people. Genealogies and relationships of combinations are also among the things revealed if one knows how. A genetic engineering of words is too clinical for many tastes, better call it poetry or storytelling. Some stories are very predictable and formulaic, some are predictable only to the dedicated, and some are predictable only to their authors.
This isn't even the topic.
>>18503113
You gotta melt the butter into the toasted bread, and then liberally layer the ham.
Finish with a swirl of the HP.
>>18503057
>>18503117
Boy.
The best way to hide something from someone is to give it to them and tell them it's something other than what they are looking for. They will search endlessly never suspecting that they have what they seek. If in searching they find a better thing than the one you hid/gave to them, you can then point at the thing you gave them, tell it is what they seek, and take the better thing they found for yourself. Rinse and repeat until you have an army of finders.
http://www.karlremarks.com/2013/04/study-confirms-that-lebanon-is-indeed.html
This is from 2013.
>>18503533
I have transcended beyond the ham.
I am now invisible.