Bryan Barber
There are several variations of this poem. One variation is, "Excuses are tools of the incompetent. And those that use tools of incompetence never accomplish anything in life worthwhile."
Nice try but the actual poem is "Excuses are tools of incompetence, that build monuments of nothingness, and those who specialize in using them seldom do anything else." Excuses are tools of nothingness build bridges that lead to nowhere and are masters of no one.
I don't know the author's name, but I remember my younger brother memorizing it in elementary school as: Excuses, excuses, excuses! Excuses are tools of incompetence that build monuments of nothingness. Those who specialize in them, accomplish nothing at all, but excuses, excuses, excuses. Not as the first responder suggests here: "Excuses are monuments of nothingness, They build bridges to nowhere, Those of us who us these tools of incompetence, Seldom become anything but nothing at all."
Im not 100% sure, but the first time I heard it was from Tiffany on Bad Girl Club season 3
The author is anonymous. The full content is: "Excuses are monuments of nothingness, They build bridges to nowhere, Those of us who us these tools of incompetence, Seldom become anything but nothing at all."
It means excuses are things used by people who are incapable of doing things. And they keep using them/ building them on top of each other, making monuments. Monuments of nothingness, because excuses mean nothing. So those who specialize in excuses are seldom masters of anything. Meaning they'll never master or be good at anything as long as insist on using excuses.
no thing; not anything; naught or nonexistence; nothingness
It is an example of nothingness: the absence of anything at all.
Nothingness, in the sense of a complete absence of anything, does not exist in the universe. The universe is filled with various forms of matter, energy, and space, so there is always something present in some form.
Yes, sound can travel through anything except nothingness like in space.
"Nothing" typically refers to the absence of something or the lack of anything, while "nothingness" often conveys a more abstract or philosophical concept, suggesting emptiness or non-existence. "Nothing" is more concrete and specific, while "nothingness" can have deeper implications or be used in a more metaphorical sense.
nothingness. no light. no sound. no sense of sight, or anything else. just...nothingness. after a while, the senses start to return (although I'm assuming the sense of balance was never there during the tesseract) and eventually the place she has traveled to becomes part of the nothingness, taking over the darkness until it is all gone. Sound and sight are back to normal by now, but feeling is a bit off for the first moments.