The post-autobiography of The Great Adventurer, Leif E. Greens, and his journeyings through the second dimension
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As our pen leaves the paper, an idea is juxtaposed on innocent line. A circle becomes a face, a cross becomes arms. This “stickman” lives by our gift of life, human intelligence (or lack of), and truth.
They live in the 2nd dimension, and they, though simple and admittedly crudely drawn, lived lives like ours. I present to you the story of Leif E. Greens, a person that hopefully you can see more likeness than just the two lines representing eyes, or the curve representing a smile.
In truth, like most adventurers, he finally realized that the world was much, much, much bigger than him. He wasn’t bigger than life or possessed of great powers, but his story is a story that deserves telling. He fought pirates, crossed jungles, dived to the depths of the ocean, went through space, and was almost as cool as S. McDuck, but that is not why his story is worth telling.
Because we can only understand a tiny fraction of a universe that is bigger than our sight is limited, I leave you with one short story that can hopefully tell you a lot.
But not too much.
Being the post-autobiography of the Great Adventurer and part time kazoo player Leif E. Greens.
Edited by Colton Johnson.
They live in the 2nd dimension, and they, though simple and admittedly crudely drawn, lived lives like ours. I present to you the story of Leif E. Greens, a person that hopefully you can see more likeness than just the two lines representing eyes, or the curve representing a smile.
In truth, like most adventurers, he finally realized that the world was much, much, much bigger than him. He wasn’t bigger than life or possessed of great powers, but his story is a story that deserves telling. He fought pirates, crossed jungles, dived to the depths of the ocean, went through space, and was almost as cool as S. McDuck, but that is not why his story is worth telling.
Because we can only understand a tiny fraction of a universe that is bigger than our sight is limited, I leave you with one short story that can hopefully tell you a lot.
But not too much.
Being the post-autobiography of the Great Adventurer and part time kazoo player Leif E. Greens.
Edited by Colton Johnson.

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