King Charles – Love Lust

Since I stumbled upon King Charles’s Wikipedia page a little more than a month ago in which he was described as an “occasional shaman who tramples the boundary of cool/not cool,” I knew I had found my next favorite singer/songwriter. Since I visited his page this January, the guy has been getting quite the buzz and with the buzz of a soaring music career comes a combover of one’s Wikipedia page which dispensed with the aforementioned description.

But with lyrics like this, who could stay away?

“Never let a woman go
Even when you know
She can always be replaced
She can always be replaced.”

and

“You’ve the strength of the Greeks
You are God’s masterpiece
You’re every triumph, every victory
I believe in every breath you breathe.”

 

Check him out:

or

The Little English Teacher

There once was a little English teacher in China who mistook himself for a linguist. Yeah, I know, horrible, right? He was often asked questions about English that he had no idea how to answer (i.e. What’s the difference between use and usage?).

So he did what every other expert around him has done at one time or another: He acted like he knew the answer and provided a highly ambiguous yet sobering academic response that confused and confounded his students — or colleagues — into never asking any more questions — ever! After all, when it comes down to securing a paycheck, it is better to stifle learning and creativity than being honest about your inability to perform professionally as an English teacher.

(The bad side of “fake it until you make it” is that you might have to fake it for the rest of your life, which is actually surprisingly easy to do as long as your bank account is refilled monthly.)

But he didn’t stop there. Oh no. At times he thought himself a philosopher and at others a theologian. Living in China has its perks beyond the obvious. When you look around everyday and you see so many people living such different lives, thinking such different thoughts, eating such different foods, and not being angry about such obvious nerve-wracking things, you can’t help but wonder about God and his (non)existence.

What was the little English teacher thinking? Doesn’t he know he’s just a little English teacher in China? Maybe he should stick to what he knows — although it may be greatly overestimated, I hear.