User:Jumbos nemesis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


___ I did my first ever edit in 2003, and basically have now retired from WP, but only for a while. I plan to make many more edits later this year (2007). Since about 2005 I have edited heavily under a different name, and maybe have made about 2000 edits. I am very proud of many of my edits, and most of them still stand to this day. All in all I have been reverted about 40 times. Not bad considering that I chiefly edited on historical and cultural articles. I remember once being involved in a debate that sparked several newspapers to take up the issue, but can only remember one of the newspapers now, that was the Irish Times. But secondary mentions were made in a house of parliament. No, I'm not going to say the topic, because that is in the past, and I got a right bruising from that debate, and so did everyone else involved, including three Admins, two of whom have now since departed WP.
___ If one wants a long life as a Wikipedian, then stay away from contentious issues that might induce the wrath of other editors.
___ That's me and my advice,
___ Happy editing.
  • And then one day I fell in love with another Wikipedian. She knocked me flat on my face, and made me laugh, all at the same time. It wasn't a love I pursued of choose. I tried to avoid it, I stayed away, but I encountered her two more times, and each time I loved her more. What's love but a feeling, one knows it when it appears. I never even met this lady, but I loved her, and whether that love was good or bad, only the gods can tell. It hurts, and it still hurts, for many reasons. And only God and me know why. Send my love out through the internet and let it touch the world out there. All my love. ~~~~
    It wasn't my fault, I promise.

Today's featured picture

Wheat Fields

Wheat Fields is a series of dozens of paintings by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh. The close association of peasants and the cycles of nature particularly interested Van Gogh, such as the sowing of seeds, harvest and sheaves of wheat in the fields. Van Gogh saw ploughing, sowing and harvesting as symbolic of man's efforts to overwhelm the cycles of nature. This oil painting on canvas titled Wheat Fields, also sometimes known as Wheat Field with Alpilles Foothills in the Background, was painted in June 1888 and is now in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

Painting credit: Vincent van Gogh

Recently featured:

Today's featured picture above