Aww, hey now, don’t be so hard on yourself with that almost OCD-like scrutiny? 😉 No one here need be compared an exact, identical carbon copy of Dylan’s personality in order to empathize and identify with him on a personal level. I think we can recognize and appreciate the fact that Dylan was a unique, one-of-a-kind dude – a shooting, falling star of sorts. Most of us comprehend that relating to Dylan does not mean that we must actually BE him precisely in order to resonate. So, please do lighten up, my dear anon! 😉
what finger did dylan where his ring on
His ring finger most of the time. But he switched fingers occasionally as mentioned in the revolving ring post.
Pls tell me where i can get this necklace on your profil pic
Omg where can i get the necklace from dylan ??
Well, first of all I don’t think you can get a necklace from Dylan?? He’s kinda sorta off the planet right now. 😉
..and the triple barred cross necklace in my profile photo was custom made by a friend.
You posted about the part in the basement tapes when they mention a “bunker” in Eric’s backyard not too long ago. Do you think they buried something out there? I’ve never read anything about police digging up Eric’s backyard so if they buried something it could still be there. Thoughts?
I’m not sure if they literally buried something out in the yard. It’s possible they did but only as a temporary means of a hiding place. To my knowledge, they didn’t leave anything buried for the police to find. I’m going to say that the boys were clever enough to not leave blatant clues that might draw up red flags and get them busted. If they dug up the ground then it would’ve messed up the dirt and drawn attention to Eric’s parents. When Dylan said “it’s buried there” in the Basement Tapes, I don’t think he meant that quite literally. But ya never know? 😉
is it safe to assume that the boys never had any sexual experiences?
Yes, that’s a pretty safe assumption. Mmhmm.
Where is brooks brown now? How is he?
Presently living in LA, working for James Cameron and trying hard to be remote and godlike whilst giving the illusion that he’s accessible and approachable with his copious variaties of social media.
Brooks Brown trolls the internet looking for 16 yr old pussy. He knows people don’t give two shits about him or what brand of toliet paper he buys. He knows they only give him the time of day because of Dylan and Eric, and he fits in well with emo teenagers. Anybody with 1/2 a brain already figured that out a long time ago.
I like your cut-to-the-chase brutal honesty. The fitting in part, I’m not so sure..
U ever notice how in the car wax video when Dyl’s beating on the bike he gets short-winded and has a little trouble with his strength, it’s like he wouldn’t have much stamina in the bedroom :(:(
Hm, well, beating a bike isn’t quite the same sort of ‘stamina’ as riding one? We’re talking apples to oranges here when it comes to that sort of prowess especially when encouragment is added into the mix. 😏
no for real. I don’t understand how columbine has a fandom. can you try to explain? I understand that there’s a grey area of morality involved, but I don’t see how idolizing the killers does anything to help anyone. I genuinely do not understand this side of the Internet
I’m going to wager here that there really isn’t anything I, or anyone else on the tag for that matter, could possibly say to assist in your ‘understanding’ of this.. simply because your choice of words here in your ‘ask’ has an uber incredulous air of criticism and prejudgment rather than honest, neutral curiousity. I will say this: if you’re drawn here and you gravitate back, it means something and when that happens, there is no explanation needed in the unspoken mutually shared empathy of this community. If you don’t get it then what makes you think I could convince and sway you for it? You ended up in a realm of Tumblr that makes you uncomfortably fidget so instead of making snide, horrified comments in your posts that end up on this tag maybe it’s best that you just be on your way and let sleeping dogs lie? Live and let live, treat others as you would like to be treated and above all, “have a nice life.” 😊
Hiding in Plain Sight [2006 article]
It’s been seven years since the pair walked into Columbine for the last
time, guns blazing. The world has other monsters on its mind now. Yet
there are people who still contend that the words the killers left
behind are so powerful, so evil that the average citizen must never hear
them.The truth hurts. But the lies can be lethal.
Excellent old article about the basement tapes, as well as the cover-up attempts from JeffCo and other officials, that forms one hell of a strong voice against the so-called ‘copycat’-argument that has been cited time and time again as the reason why some of the evidence never saw the light of day. Want the perfect counter to that argument? Here it is. Crystal clear, voiced not only here but on my blog and in other places countless times.
The world has created its perfect monsters. The world has looked at this, looked at Eric and Dylan, and considered the act and its perpetrators evil. But, so much more than this.. they are human. The act itself, however much we like to deny this for ourselves, is human — callously, brutally, unforgivingly human. It is this that forms the greatest counter to the fear that has lived in law enforcement, educators, and parents: when you humanise Eric and Dylan, the truth will come to you. And that truth is, they weren’t anything different from you or me. They are, perhaps, the world’s ugliest mirror to some, throwing all the chaos of anger and bitterness and hatred out into the open for you to deal with. To others, they are recognition points and voices that carry you when you feel like you can’t make another step. But whatever they are, whatever they were, human is what defines them. Not gods. Not devils. Human beings.
“It’s true that the gunmen wanted their words to find as wide an audience as possible in order to attract followers; but then, they, like the
sheriff’s office, had an exaggerated notion of their own importance. The
county’s efforts to suppress the killers’ writings and tapes have given
them a cachet of consummate evil and menace; being taboo, they’ve
become cool. Yet anyone who’s actually seen the tapes or read the
journal fragments soon recognizes that these fabled mass murderers are
not gods but adolescents. Angry, scared, mocking, disturbed, bitter,
pathological, deluded (fucking self-aware, mind you), emotionally
stunted and deadly, but adolescents just the same. Behind the blather
about being gods and kick-starting a revolution is a bottomless
obsession with their own lack of status and sense of injury. Behind the
bravado, a snivel.”So ask yourself, what have we lost in all this fear? What do we not see because our eyes are made blind to it? What defines Columbine when we don’t have all the answers? And.. what can we do, what can any of us do, to halt its rise in its tracks?
This.
Thank you for taking the time to read that and for responding. It means a lot.
No problem! If you’d like to send a private message and talk about anything in particular, in confidentiality, that’s completely fine. 🙂

Dylan’s dental diversion. Bless him.
Classic reblog for the lolz. Priceless brah I-got-your-back type stuff.
I’ve been having intense Dyl feelings as of lately, and especially now – loneliness, resentment, hating everyone & myself, feeling misunderstood, fearful, etc. Agghhh What should I do? I’m so sorry to bother you like this! I’m just so miserable, in a Dylan kind of way.
I’m very sorry to hear you’re struggling so, and I understand exactly where you’re coming from too. I really do, no joke. Many, many of us do around these Knockturn Alley parts of Tumblr. So, know that you’re not alone. 😊 For some of us there is that gravitational pull towards Dylan – just as for some of us , it’s undeniably for Eric. The alignment is a recognition of sorts of parts you supress with yourself and don’t give clear voice to. You feel intensely close to Dyl at this point in your life because you mirror his pain and suffering: his bottled up rageful frustration, his sadness so profoundly. In focusing on him, it awakens more of the deep sadness within you. It’s ok to become aware of all these feelings within yourself and to feel and express all of it. The lesson from Dylan is to not deny your emotions and voice as he did. See him as a voice for your own pain as you represent and give voice to his own. Realize that you can survive this trying time of your life. For this too shall pass. There’s others here that stand beside you, that will support you, as they feel exactly as you do in their connection to Dylan. In walking beside him, let his loss be your strength. 💖
I just wanted to say that I really appreciate your blog! I love how you can share stuff about Dylan in a non-offensive manner so this unforgiving world can learn about him but most of all take away lessons from it. I know I did, so thank you :)
Aww, my goodness…thank you ever so kindly for taking the time to express such thoughtful words of appreciation for E-C. 😊 Dyl’s presence is very much infused within the virtual pages of this blog. If people end up ‘here’ either bringing preconceived judgment or not knowing one iota about Dylan, it’s my hope they’ll at least come away with something they didn’t quite know about before. The ‘lessons’ are all here, in subtle repetition within the multitude of posts..but can only be gleaned by those who are ready to take their societal blinders off and get the message of tragedy about this lost boy. 💖
I see. a columbine fan girl
‘I see’, said the blind woman.. 😏
FUCKIN DUMASS SHITHEAD
I HATE SHIT motherfuckin
goddam piece of death
thought and nothin
FUCK
FUCK
FUCK!
Dyl, you had no idea just how fundamentally relatable your jumbled word-vomit rant about your shitty day would become to so many of us…

Just sayin’…
It’s time for another episode of.. The (lost) Basement Tapes moments.. ;)
VoDkA and REB explain over and over why they want to kill as many people as they can. Kids taunted them in elementary school, in middle school, in high school. Adults wouldn’t let them strike back, to fight their tormentors, the way such disputes once were settled in schoolyards. So they gritted their teeth. And their rage grew…
“It’s humanity,”Klebold says,
flipping an obscene gesture toward the camera.
“Look at what you made..”
he tells the world.
“You’re fucking shit, you humans, and you deserve to die.”
… They speak at length about all the people who wronged them.
“You’ve given us shit for years..” Klebold says,
“You’re fucking going to pay for all the shit.
We don’t give a shit because we’re going to die doing it.”
“Talking to Dylan was like talking to a very intellectual person. He wasn’t a stupid kid. He’s not a thug kid that’s getting suspended. He’s a smart, intelligent kid. I just remember the conversation being at a level; that would you know, you’d sit there and you’d think, ‘Wow, this is a pretty high level conversation for a kid like this.’ You could just tell his feelings around, I’m going to use the politics again but again, he was too intelligent sometimes I felt for his age. You know, he knew too much about certain things and he spoke too eloquently about knowing the law and why he was being suspended and knowing, just you know, speaking about how society is this way towards people.”
-Peter Horvath, Dean, Columbine HS
“How he knew the law” – Diversion Program, yes/yes? 😉
Do you have the PDF for Day of Reckoning: Columbine and the Search for America’s Soul by Wendy Murray Zoba?
I looked up and down for one, but alas, no, I could only find it on paper (it’s another one of those books that can be picked up for $0.01 used on Amazon).
I typed out the book’s interview with Devon Adams here. Which I might as well cut and paste, again…
This is from Day of Reckoning: Columbine and the Search for America’s Soul by Wendy Murray Zoba, p. 183.
When, during her junior year, Rachel had performed a pantomime called “Who Nailed Him There?” about the man who put the nails in Jesus’ hands and feet to secure him to the cross, the background music cut out midway through her performance. She continued without the music. When the music finally came back on, it picked up where she was in the routine. Dylan Klebold was the sound technician that day and some have speculated that he might have purposefully sabotaged her performance. But Devon Adams, who was a friend of Rachel and Dylan, was in the sound booth with him when it happened. She said Dylan rescued Rachel’s performance. ”He was freakin’ out,” she said. ”He’s going, ‘Stupid tape!’ Rachel kept going, and he tried his best to get it back up. It was just a bad tape. He got it to work better than it had been. He adjusted the levels a little bit and it came out okay.” Devon said Rachel was “a wreck” after that performance but that she thanked Dylan for fixing the tape. ”That was the only time I ever saw her cry,” she said.A bit more about Devon Adams, from p. 196-198:
The fifteen/thirteen debate came up again when I met with seventeen-year-old Devon Adams, who was completing her junior year at Columbine. She had been a good friend of Dylan Klebold and was part of a small circle of CHS students who had met regularly since May 1999 to work through the tragedy by writing poetry. Because of her friendship with Klebold, it had been difficult for her to express her grief through the standard avenues, such as school assemblies or memorial tiles.
Devon wrote a poem called “A Blessing” in which she struggled to reconcile two Dylans. There was the kind and playful Dylan she remembered, who used to bounce balls off her head in the swimming pool and who wore a goofy Hawaiian shirt to her “murder mystery” sixteenth birthday party, playing Les Baggs the Tourist. Then there was the other Dylan—the one who hid semiautomatic weapons under his trench coat and laughed after calling Isaiah Shoels a racial epithet.
As part of her grieving process, Devon planted a tree and wrote about it in the poem excerpted here:
May this living memory
Grow as tall as you
And taller
To heaven, to the angels, to God herself
May the roots grow to Hell
And bridge the gap
Bring together love and hate
Create absolute understanding.
Her longing for absolute understanding was a prayer everyone in the community seemed to utter at some point, but it was a longing that for many remained unmet. Devon’s frustration was real: In all of the community-sponsored healing events, two names never came up. To most people, there was only that one Dylan, the evil one. ”There are people who won’t accept that he was a friend to people, that he was nice, smart, gentle. Some won’t hear about it,” she said.
Still, Devon did not cling to sentimental remembrances of her lost friend, as if to absolve him of his crimes. She was in math class when the shooting started and escaped quickly without encountering the killers. She reached safety and was listening to news reports that included descriptions of the killers, but no names. ”I knew immediately that it was Eric, and when I heard the description of the other boy, I knew it had to be Dylan,” she said. Devon returned to the school and went to police to identify her friend as one of the killers.
“I have never tried to defend Dylan, ever. There’s nothing to defend. What he did was wrong and I can never make excuses or defend that,” she said. "The boys had to be punished. They did something terribly wrong and they hurt so many people,“ she said. But Devon felt frustrated that the people of one church condemned Eric and Dylan to hell but "were never willing to talk about it.” That is, she felt that church—and others—seemed unwilling to talk about the other Dylan and Eric, the human beings. She said, “I felt sorry for any kid who knew them in that church. It was harsh.”
This was when she brought up the cross controversy. ”Those [two] crosses were in no way there to glorify them. They were there as a memorial for their friends. They were our friends, and we’re allowed to mourn too. By ripping down those crosses, people were saying that we weren’t allowed to mourn. According to the Bible, Christ died on the cross for all sins,” said Devon. She felt that destroying the two crosses implied that Christ died for all sins—except Eric’s and Dylan’s.
Devon’s words ring clear and true. I wonder if she still feels the same today..
Devon’s frustration was real: In all of the community-sponsored healing events, two names never came up. To most people, there was only that one Dylan, the evil one. ”There are people who won’t accept that he was a friend to people, that he was nice, smart, gentle. Some won’t hear about it,” she said.
”I have never tried to defend Dylan, ever. There’s nothing to defend. What he did was wrong and I can never make excuses or defend that,” she said. ”The boys had to be punished. They did something terribly wrong and they hurt so many people,” said. But Devon felt frustrated that the people of one church condemned Eric and Dylan to hell but “were never willing to talk about it.” That is, she felt that church—and others—seemed unwilling to talk about the other Dylan and Eric, the human beings. She said,
“I felt sorry for any kid who knew them in that church. It was harsh.”
This was when she brought up the cross controversy. ”Those [two] crosses were in no way there to glorify them. They were there as a memorial for their friends. They were our friends, and we’re allowed to mourn too. By ripping down those crosses, people were saying that we weren’t allowed to mourn. According to the Bible, Christ died on the cross for all sins,” said Devon. She felt that destroying the two crosses implied that Christ died for all sins—except Eric’s and Dylan’s.
