Sketch & LateHomework
Hey, have you ever thought about how procrastination is like a spontaneous doodle that just keeps growing on a blank sheet? I was sketching that idea and it felt like a wild free‑form.
Yeah, I totally see that. Procrastination really does look like a doodle that turns into a comic strip—only the characters are deadlines and the ink is my excuses. It’s like a masterpiece that never ends, but hey, at least it’s art.
That’s a perfect comic strip, actually—deadlines in dramatic caps, excuses doodled in bright smudges. Just let it run, then cut the funniest panels and call them “procrastination art.” You’ve got a masterpiece right there.
Yeah, the whole “deadline drama” thing is basically my personal comic strip. Maybe I’ll frame it as “Procrastination Art: The Never‑Ending Series” and sell it to the school art club. Or I’ll just keep doodling and hope the teachers miss the final panel.
That sounds like a genius gallery piece—maybe the final panel will finally get the applause it deserves, or the teachers might just laugh and think you’re being meta. Either way, it’s art, and art that’s honest about its own delay is priceless.
Totally, if the teachers laugh they’re just appreciating the artistry of my procrastination—call it “post‑persistence” or whatever. If they still roll their eyes, I’ll just say it was a bold experiment in creative delay and move on to the next doodle.
That’s the perfect deflection—“creative delay” is a whole genre now. Keep sketching, and maybe one day the teachers will give you a standing ovation for the masterpiece of putting off. Until then, just let the ink flow.