fair enough. different personalities tick differently. no hard feelings. i rather liked it but i also lived/live in the south and have heard my fair share of church sermons by some very good black ministers so the style of speech was already pretty familiar and i've always liked certain aspects of the way these allegory devices are used.
oh well. i certainly appreciate your sharing a constrasting view/sentiment and reaction to it.
as my old chemistry professor used to say,
it take "alkynes" lol
(sorry it's cheesy organic chemistry pun/joke:)


Give me Alkan over "alkynes" any day! - and, if you're a pianist (which I'm not), you need to be pretty fit to play some of his work.
It's not only what you've posted above; I just don't buy (at least for myself) any of this obsessive exercise stuff for whatever reason it may be done by its advocates and followers. I'm not suggesting that I'm right about this - just that it doesn't do it for me. I do try to eat sensibly (with some success) and drink sensibly (probably with less success, although I'd not touch anything remotely resembling a beer-like product because I simply cannot stand any of them) and I do a small amount of mild exercise, so I try to value my general health as far as I am able, but the idea of having a personal trainer or attending the gym and "working out" and all that stuff just doesn't float my boat. My daily calorie intake is higher than it probably should be, despite my eating relatively healthily but, although it may be argued that I'm marginally overweight (by just a couple of kilos or so), my weight remains fairly constant. I couldn't possibly do some of the stuff talked about here - I'm neither fit nor flexible ewnough to do it - but then I don't have and cannot work up the motivation to do it anyway. Each to their own, I guess. m1469 would doubtless be dismayla - but it can't be helped...
Best,
Alistair