What? I'm not allowed to hit people? Wesley: Not people capable of genocide. Angel: Those are exactly the types of people I should be allowed to hit!

'Just Rewards (2)'


Spike's Bitches 22: You've got Angel breath  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Lilty Cash - Feb 18, 2005 3:15:36 pm PST #1996 of 10001
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

I want junk food, possibly something in the chocolate cupcake family, but I'm not sure I can actually justify leaving the house to buy them.

I will be spending the evening watching 'A Hole in the World' and chopping up each and every one of my credit cards. Is that enough?


Steph L. - Feb 18, 2005 3:20:32 pm PST #1997 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

You know what I realized?

(Chorus of "What, Tep?")

My laptop plays DVDs. Laptops are portable.

I can take a bath and watch a DVD at the same time!!!! (Yes, w/the laptop on the counter so as not to electrocute myself and/or destroy the computer.)


tommyrot - Feb 18, 2005 3:23:20 pm PST #1998 of 10001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Well said, Typo Boy.

I can take a bath and watch a DVD at the same time!!!!

You can also use your laptop to watch movies in a hotel, or while on a train.

And for about $20, you can buy an adaptor that will let you play DVDs (or whatever) on a TV.


Stephanie - Feb 18, 2005 3:24:54 pm PST #1999 of 10001
Trust my rage

I think my Powerbook came with this adapter. I watch most torrents on my TV now.


Strix - Feb 18, 2005 3:29:29 pm PST #2000 of 10001
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Hee. See, I'm totally the opposite; I watch everything on my computer, cause my PC looks quite a bit better than my rather elderly TV.

And for a bit of mememe...I tried on pants I haven't worn since 1998, and THEY FIT!!! I have a cameltoe in them, so they are not quite fitting well, but they are on me, zipped, and loose in the thighs. I am so weirdly happy.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 18, 2005 3:30:19 pm PST #2001 of 10001
What is even happening?

That was fantastic, Gar.

if you can't find rational arguments for your emotional bias then you need to find a way to change it; mind you I don't think proof in any absolute way will ever be found; but I try to have a reasonable argument why my viewpoint is not insane or stupid.
I agree with this. And I think it touches on such an important point. When any person holds a belief they are afraid to question, I think it needs questioning.

The day will come when I am not in heaven or hell or reincarnated or drifting around on a different plane. I will be gone. There won't even be a little bit of me left to know that I'm gone. That was not an easy thing to accept, and once made that leap is made, belief it an afterlife seems kind of like a kindly lie told for people who can't bear a harsh truth.
I think the fear of the above (or unacceptance of the above) is more common than not, regardless of any belief in the supernatural, but surely must play into mankind's quest for answers. Does that sort of extinction of being freak out other people here?

It hasn't bothered me, but I wonder if that's because I came to my personal beliefs so young, but always had sort of a "if this isn't true, nothing is, and there's nothing after death" as my back-up understanding, if you will. Well more specifically, I always thought there was a God. I always thought that if there was a God, the Christians were most likely to be right, and if they were wrong, then I thought the Jews were 2nd most likely to be right, and then I thought the atheists were third most likely to be right. Now granted, as a American child, my most-likely-scenario-#1 and my most-likely-scenario-#2 were at least partially a by-product of how I was raised, and the culture in which I was raised. Today however, I still think the same things are likely to be true, and in that order, if anything is true.


tommyrot - Feb 18, 2005 3:32:55 pm PST #2002 of 10001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Does that sort of extinction of being freak out other people here?

It used to. But now I pretty much deal with it. It does make me live more in the moment because of the realization that I only have a finite amount of time to do stuff....


Strix - Feb 18, 2005 3:33:42 pm PST #2003 of 10001
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Ha! Cindy, that cracks me up! I totally now see religion as a cosmic horserace in your teeny wee head:

"ANNNNNDD now we have Christianity in the the backstretch, followed closely by Atheism! Wait...wait...is that JUDAISM burning up the track, catching up with, NO WAIT -- passing Atheism! It's a hot race, folks!"


Topic!Cindy - Feb 18, 2005 3:34:20 pm PST #2004 of 10001
What is even happening?

Does it give you a feeling that nothing much matters, tommyrot (Gar, and anyone else who believes in this idea). Because I think that's why it doesn't freak me out. There's an appeal in it. Where people think faith is comforting, I think of atheism as comforting.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 18, 2005 3:35:24 pm PST #2005 of 10001
What is even happening?

"ANNNNNDD now we have Christianity the the backstretch, followed closely by Atheism! Wait...wait...is that JUDAISM burning up the track, catching up with, NO WAIT -- passing Atheism! It's a hot race, folks!"

Hee. Pretty much. The thought process was, "There's gotta be a God. Okay, if there's a God, it's *that* God, in one way or another, or there's no God.