The MeMeMeMeMe section hasn't been changed for a long time, since its creation
near the beginning of this site. So I'm renovating the entire complex. I'm using a
seeming bland template, but I think it looks nice.

Let's start from the beginning:
I am Dolen Le, I am from nowhere, and I go to school in noschool land. The one
thing I hate most is Spam (I seem paranoid on the contact us page).
The only thing I have hid are my interests. Call me cool, a geek, nerd, jock, freak or
whatever, I've heard it all. One day I do something right and get rained with
compliments. The next day I do something wrong and all of hell breaks loose.
Unfortunately, I usually do things wrong, but not wrong morally, just wrong to
everybody else.
It's my personal experience that others expect that you agree with them, so
wherever I go, I find the constant need to be somebody else. Evolution has made us
into creatures with resentments, love, and the ability to change our world. In my
eyes, this is a deadly combination. People are now homeless, pregnant while
penniless because someone somewhere had told them what was "cool." What is
cool, in truth, is what you yourself find cool.
Other animals may not like a distasteful plant or like a sweet insect, but we have the
luxury of understanding. Our understandings aren't always moral, and they never fit
together, and thus we have human nature. Human nature is fueled by greed. Greed
for power, money, fear and revenge. We will always have our enemies and friends,
no matter where you look.

I like doing things where there is an end result. For example, typing this web page.
Or maybe making the CVS one time use digital camera into a many use camera.
One large field where this can happen is technology. Call me a geek, but I have an
iBook and a Dell laptop. There are numerous other computers in my house.

I've been typing websites for longer than you think. It's fueled by my creativity, and
so it all started with my first classroom newspaper and geocities page several years
ago. It was called the TGIF Times. Today, I look upon my past as an
embarrassment. However, you can still visit my ancient pages from my home page,
Tunnels To Nowhere.

If I'm bored, I'll watch my fish, content on eating, or use the computer for whatever
reason it may be. I was never really good at games, although I have touched on
everything from guns to cars, even bubbles. I was never good at any of them.

I have three aquariums. A five, ten and twenty nine gallon. My five inhabits my
overweight (but not overfed) small turtle, Chica. My 29 has around 8 fish. I used to
have a tankful of the gleaming strips, until a disease combined with a rapid
temperature hike caused them to bleed. This wiped the lot of them. Now I have three
gouramis, and a few other tropical fish interestingly, the angelfish is still here.. I'm
done with goldfish, because they simply can't live through the summer. You can see
my fish
Here.

A Lesson in Site History
This site was born originally as a small geocities site about pencil psychology. The
web address, http://www.geocities.com/pencil_psy/index.html was too long to
remember, so the site had few visitors. I credit (or perhaps blame) myself, Daniel
Mayer and a boring science class for this site.
At first, the site itself was pencil psychology and nothing else. Soon, I started
playing the game, N-ball for Macintosh. I created a few levels for the game, which
can now be downloaded at this site. I tried selling them, but I soon found competition
in the market and quit after making around $2. Not that great, considering the
amount of testing required.
I posted a section to the site advertising the levels. The section still exists today, but
what was once four different pages is now one. At the original site, it still says, "Will
be deleted by August." This called for a home page that would tie the two unrelated
sections together, or an index. The old home page was the pencil Psychology page,
but it was renamed to "indextrue." That name is still used in the current pencil
psychology site because I cannot change it.
The new home page had two links and nothing more. One was a link to pencil
psychology, the other to N-ball levels. Next to them, I wrote a little message that
really wasn't about any of the site's content. I titled the page, "The Fork In The
Road." Today, that page has a background but is not updated.
After a while, I realized that the site could not grow from the limits that I had. So I
began using Yahoo! Web Hosting. "The Fork In The Road" became "Tunnels To
Nowhere." And the site grew to the way it is today.
Thought this site's duration, numerous people have helped me write it. Daniel, for
one, quit after he failed to produce any more new ideas. Then, York Chen wrote a
relatively useless piece on mechanical pencils that consisted of nerdy unhumor and
was hastily pasted into the site. Finally, Charles Pan contributed several articles and
pitched ideas, eaning him the rights to the homepage.
Me Me Me Me Me!
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