happythatiamnotunhappyaboutbeingallowedtonotusespacestosayinonewordhowifeel.
when i think about it, when i hear a sentence being said, people's voices do not go quiet between each word they say. they say their series of words as if it was one giant compound word with no pause between them.
computers utter each word separately, and that is why i can understand computer speech better than human speech. most humans (while talking) engage their vocal cords from the moment they have finished inhaling until the moment they run out of breath. it is like a long unfathomable warble that emanates from their throats that is powered by compressed air that they have stored in their lungs from their previous inhalation.
i find it very amusing when a person is not correct in estimating their lung capacity when they embark upon a sentence that they eventually discover that they have not sufficient breath to complete.
i once saw a female news reader (on TV) talk her self out of breath, and she had to inhale (vigorously (with a gasp sound)) before she could complete her sentence. i also experienced respiratory distress when i saw that. sometimes i can laugh to the point where i am scared that my body is deprived of oxygen because i have not taken a deep breath for many minutes during my laughter meltdown. uncontrollable laughter is kind of dangerous i think. it is like a self fulfilling meltdown.
sometimes, eventually, my laughter is like a forest fire and everything i see is ablaze with mirth. at that point i do not know what i am laughing at. it is like a seizure in a way. it squeezes the breath from me and i find it hard to battle in order to return to seriousness (the thought of which is also insanely hilarious to me when i am in a "laughter vortex").
the fact that i am laughing at essentially nothing is the most hilarious aspect of it, and it causes very sore throats and breathlessness and abdominal cramps, and in some cases heart attacks i would suspect. i hope i do not laugh so intensely when i get old because it is very physiologically taxing.
anyway, i have slid off the tarmac and come to rest before hitting any substantial objects so i guess that is all for this thread.