ā¦and the security state is Lenny (Of Mice and Men.)
We are also George.
Metaphors are confusing. ![]()
Especially when they are coming from you ![]()
Seems to be somewhat on topic, so I am re-posting this video.
Thatās one big mouse ![]()
I have a Golden Retriever, but many of my neighbors have cats. I donāt mind when those cats lounge on my porch.
You canāt expect much from Lennie the Frog. ![]()
I guess they are welcome as long as they keep rodents at bay ![]()
Had to Google Lenny ![]()
This link may offer some enlightenment. Is this what you found?
Cāmon, arenāt we the mouse? Weāre the mouse! ![]()
Big mice imply precious and/or lazy cats. One big mouse does not a pestilence make. Although it has to start somewhere, I guess. In the old days, they would hitch to new digs on a Greyhound. These days, I donno. 15 minute cities are tough. And Real ID. Their glory days may be over.
Correct! We are Lenny as well! ![]()
Two people who were mostly themselves were John Muir & Teddy Roosevelt. Neither would have had much truck with this metaphorical trio. They had trails to blaze. ![]()
Nope, this is what came up:
āLennie the Frogā likely refers to the character from the childrenās book Lenny the Frog: A Tale of Perseverance and Kindness by Holly Davis. In this story, Lennie is depicted as a frog with big blue eyes and a croaky voice who loves to sing and hop. The book focuses on Lennieās resilience and kindness, particularly how he perseveres through challenges like being excluded by his friends and staying focused in school despite distractions. Thereās also a comic book series titled āTrue Swamp: The Memoirs Of Lenny The Frogā by Jon Lewis.
The way I see it and this is probably wrong. Metaphors can create a constructive confusion, a little challenge, when things straightforward get hard to understand.
Thatās where we are now: things straightforward are hard to understand.
Sometimes the spinning of a blurry spider is all ya got. ![]()
@peepeep is the the Frog version of Lennie from āOf Mice and Menā that is why everyone
's him. ![]()