If you take sexual advantage of her, you're going to burn in a very special level of hell. A level they reserve for child molesters and people who talk at the theater.

Book ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


Natter 31 But Looks 29  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Lee - Jan 10, 2005 7:17:04 pm PST #4661 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Shimmy shimmy co co pop!

Earwormed now

Me too, but I am also eyewormed with Lori's hand gestures, from one conversation I had with her in person about earthquakes.


Lee - Jan 10, 2005 7:20:23 pm PST #4662 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Also, I am watching the Bachlorette. Somebody help me?


beth b - Jan 10, 2005 7:33:03 pm PST #4663 of 10002
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

that was a big rock.

In large public parking lots - keys in fist

at work - I have my keys and phone out. And I get in the car ,lock and start the car before I call home ( usual routine since moving out to a place where it was really easy for me to get lost) Mostly, I am just aware.

Oddly - I seem to be mostly invisible to people - I have stood in lines where a guy was begging for money - asked people in front of me and skiped me - to ask the people behind me. But I think it is something I can do in crowds, not standing alone. and it was more effective in NYC than it is in the SF.

DH talks to anybody. Teh older I get - the easier I am about strangers talking to me. - Unless they touch me. The library is pretty much like home - my ground - I'm in charge , I'm in control. Or at least that is my illusion. The other day - a guy touched my shoulder - in a concilliatory way ( another word I can't spell) - and I suddenly knew I wasn't home- because if I was home there would have been more than a murderous sideways look - there would have been volume and more than an escape - more of an exagerated overblown shrug. Or possibley- there would have been less reaction - because I would have felt truely safe.


Kat - Jan 10, 2005 7:38:33 pm PST #4664 of 10002
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

others (which now seems to include me) will get folks running the second there's enough space.

YAY RUNNING! Also, did you see Sunday's Boondocks. Made me laugh. I can't find a broadcast of it, but it's hysterical.

I think tornado/earthquake/hurricane is one of those personality things. Someone make an internet quiz.

Sarameg, dear god, no.

Shimmy shimmy co co pop!

They played then when we were having breakfast at Bob's yesterday. I think that's why lori posted it.


Consuela - Jan 10, 2005 9:07:16 pm PST #4665 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

That's a big rock. And my friend DOES have a rock that big, because I think that's her neighborhood, she lives in Topanga Canyon and works in Santa Monica.

Eeeks.

And now that I've caught up, it's time to go to bed. Night Natterinos!


Lee - Jan 10, 2005 9:20:01 pm PST #4666 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Ah darn, I missed Consuela. I have a Farscape question too. I've watched about 8 episodes from the first season now. I like the premise, and I liked one or two of the episodes, but have been kind of meh about most of them. Would people advise me to keep watching, if I am meh at this point (do things get better?) or should I just chalk it up as not for me and stop?


aurelia - Jan 10, 2005 10:08:52 pm PST #4667 of 10002
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

I've been on that Topenga Canyon road. Of course, there wasn't a big rock in the road then.

I've been trying to decide if I can cut my expenses enough to start taking Krav and now ita is tempting me further. I did get a letter offering a discount on the 1st month of classes.

In terms of natural disasters, I think tornados are awsome (in the evoking awe sense of the word). NSM in the death and destruction aspect, but in the raw, concentrated power. Watching a funnel cloud develop is amazing. I like that it is possible to watch this force of nature develop fairly quickly and, more often than not, still have time to make it to the basement. Plus, they do the most random, freaky things. One street away from the house I grew up in a tornado turned one house into a split-level (one half was raised up about 2') and twisted a tree out of another front yard, depositing it in the same place with the roots twisting to a point, and didn't touch another thing.

My favorite tornado story is from some 40 years ago when my high school was mostly destroyed. The front facade was left standing, and where it had said "RUSKIN HIGH SCHOOL" the tornado left the letters "RU IN."

If aurelia wants to talk about designing home lighting, I'm all ears. After all, she's a heck of a lot closer to me geographically than ND. I'd even be willing to shop at the Ikea in Schaumberg with her.

Shopping with Sail? Cool. Just say when, and I'm there.


Edain - Jan 10, 2005 10:34:15 pm PST #4668 of 10002
"Being hungover is like winning the lottery, except they pay you in regret!" - T-Rex

I was meh on Farscape until somewhere past the half-way mark of watching the first season. I'd say give it another 5 or 6 episodes, Lee.


billytea - Jan 10, 2005 11:59:57 pm PST #4669 of 10002
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

One of the things that struck me about living in the US was that the weather so often headlined the news. We get bushfires (South Australia is being hit right now, 9 people dead), and the far north gets some crazy weather, but around here? NSM.

In Philly, OTOH, I had ice storms, a hurricane or two, and even a tornado. And Philly is hardly ground central for any of those weather patterns.


Nilly - Jan 11, 2005 12:05:26 am PST #4670 of 10002
Swouncing

Lee, from Consuela "Natter 30: Piss off, Bitches!" Dec 15, 2004 7:47:19 am PST

The first part of the first season starts out a little slow, with a run of one-offs that don't entirely showcase what the show and its cast are capable of. But after about episode 11, it really begins to take off.

(I haven't watched as many episodes as you did, but my response is still pretty similar to yours. I will continue, though, after the semester is over. Which it hadn't done yet. Which is how come I'm not really here).

t Waving at everybody

t *poof*ing away

[Editing to wave especially in the direction of billytea, while poofing. It's not an easy task, to wave and to poof at the same time. However, I had to practice it, so I'm getting, sadly, better at it]