Way to go, Kate! So pleased for you.
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.
Tep, are you around for a bit? If you got on IM I could feed you the rest of that Jazz et Cinema album.
I'm busy drinking coffee and taping Venture Brothers from TiVo. I've got to make some room. I could be very content to have four hundred hours on my TiVo. Because, dang way more convenient than pulling out tapes. I want all my shows on TiVo.
I'll be around for a bit, though I need to hop in the shower soon-ish. Let me get on IM.
- meara should not feel guilty
- we should all have 400 hours of TiVo space
- this whole vertigo thing is kind of fun. I feel like I'm constantly sliding down a long hill
this whole vertigo thing is kind of fun
In a strange way, it can be. If you don't have to do anything, and it doesn't make you want to vomit.
Right, well I am trying to balance my checkbook and pay bills, which is a bit difficult given the vertigo.
I was nauseated earlier this weekend, but I seem okay right now. I'm a little feverish and have an earache though.
this whole vertigo thing is kind of fun
In a strange way, it can be.
I wouldn't want the kind Laura Hillenbrand had, where it felt like her bed was spinning so violently that she'd go shooting off and into the wall. That lasted for two years without abatement, and she started to wonder if she'd died and was in hell.
Hey there. Given all the talk of religion around here recently, I thought I'd give a little heads-up for those who might be interested. My local PBS is airing an hour documentary (starting in about 5 minutes) on Koinonia Farm in Georgia. In the early nineties I lived at what used to be called a commune that was a later offshoot of Koinonia. If you want to see people living their faith in the modern era, and showing incredible courage and fortitude in the doing, there's no better example than this. In my completely unbiased opinion, of course.
Briars in the Cotton Patch: The Story of Koinonia Farm
A commune in Southwest Georgia struggles with white society deeply rooted in old Southern culture.
If your affiliate is carrying it, I'm sure it will be really fascinating.
(Oh, and I'm taping it anyway, so if you see this later and are interested, I can copy.)
You lived in a commune, Brenda? That's so unusual/neat! Sadly, it does not seem to be airing right now on my PBS.
I knew people who lived at Koinonia in the '70s.