Profile: ambrosia

Personal background
this one time my father woke me up when it was dark, and he let me eat just the icing off a pop-tart for breakfast! so i knew something important was going on. we drove somewhere, and we looked through a telescope way bigger than my plastic fisher-price one, and he showed me things:

here's the moon love. . .and that's mars, do you remember how far away they are? and here it is. . .halley's comet. . .it won't be back until you're 80. . .no, i won't be here, but you might see it. . . .

so many things in motion in space and time and a little girl's brain. of course i kept wondering.

i'm jade ambrose: i write, go to upenn [soon moving back to nyc], do freelance anything-i-can-get. i am also the goddess of soap bubbles, standard-bearer of the beggars' cavalry and the former second-smartest kid in delaware. for further information, try http://caffei.net.
Thoughts about SETI and SETI@home
sure i'd like the nyc2600 guys to encounter intelligent female lifeforms, but this is the closest i'll come to being personally involved in the process. . .

no really though. the truth of it is, i'm just incurably curious. if there is something out there that wants to teach us, i'd be more than willing to learn.

i've never had much faith in the human race, but the spread of this sort of collaborative effort to see what's out there implies, to me, that at least bits of it are interested in moving forward.

i'd also like to note that cryptographrix has not had any difficulty getting dates as of late; however, i have no comment regarding what that implies about my place of origin.

p.s.: shepherd, love, for the last time, i am not a sheep. bah.
Your feedback on this profile
Recommend this profile for User of the Day: I like this profile
Alert administrators to an offensive profile: I do not like this profile
Account data View
Team nyc2600



 
©2024 University of California
 
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.