Take jobs as they come -- and we'll never be under the heel of nobody ever again. No matter how long the arm of the Alliance might get, we'll just get ourselves a little further.

Mal ,'Out Of Gas'


Natter 40: The Nice One  

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.


sarameg - Nov 01, 2005 4:38:03 am PST #463 of 10006

That is an aww moment.

My nephew has way too many stockings. I think it is the hazard of being born Christmas Eve. At the Ft. Hood hospital, they had a standard issue one. Then the nurses got him one. And of course, in the scramble of his early arrival my mother got him one. And his other grandmother, who was en route, had also brought one (thinking it wouldn't be used until the next year, since he wasn't due until January.)

Scary thing is, between the doting overboard grandparents, all get filled.

I actually think some of my rebellion against receiving christmas gifts of late is born of the excess that is showered on the kid. His mom is pretty sensible though, and rotates the stock in and out of play, and as soon as he starts losing interest, it is garage saled or donated. But still. So much stuff.

This morning's commute was sponsored by Baltimore drug busts drive through!


Theodosia - Nov 01, 2005 4:49:19 am PST #464 of 10006
'we all walk this earth feeling we are frauds. The trick is to be grateful and hope the caper doesn't end any time soon"

I was born at 5 AM on the day after Christmas, so the nurses presented me to my Mom in a red Christmas stocking. You would have thought my Mom would have been all sentimental and saved the stocking, wouldn't you? Ah well for sentimentality and my Mom.


§ ita § - Nov 01, 2005 5:14:44 am PST #465 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I had my first Ambien last night. Are they supposed to make you sleepy, or to just knock you out? I'm not sure it did either, but I'm curious.


bon bon - Nov 01, 2005 5:19:55 am PST #466 of 10006
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

I'm sure there will be BMECT! but I can stay awake on Ambien pretty easily-- like everything else I've taken for insomnia, it doesn't force you asleep so much as shut down your brain. If I stay awake on Ambien it just starts to get psychedelic.


§ ita § - Nov 01, 2005 5:25:10 am PST #467 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

So how does it make sleep easier? I'm having the weirdest insomnia ever. My mind's not racing, nothing. But the best bit about sleeping, the fuzzy parts where you're melting into the pillow and your blanket is completely missing. Saturday and Sunday I lay down for over an hour and a half before falling asleep (and then it was out like a light) -- not sure about last night, which was when I took the Ambien, but I'm also waking right up, bolt upright every few hours almost, and the Ambien didn't seem to have affected that either.


Volans - Nov 01, 2005 5:27:36 am PST #468 of 10006
move out and draw fire

I was born at 5 AM on the day after Christmas, so the nurses presented me to my Mom in a red Christmas stocking.

This is so cute! I totally would've saved the stocking. I did save the little terry nightgown they gave us for Mallory, since it's got the hospital's name in Greek on it.

I was given a script for Ambien, and have never taken a single one. My DH has taken all of the starter pills they gave me (not all at once) and says it's sort of the stealth sleeping pill. It stops the brain-hamster from running on the wheel. Not at all like NyQuil or Benadryl.


§ ita § - Nov 01, 2005 5:32:44 am PST #469 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Bah. I have no brain hamster. I guess I'll put the bottle away for when I might. Annoyingly enough, the anti-nausea medication he also prescribed makes me way loopy and sleepy, but when that wore off, I woke straight up. Sleepy enough that I don't want to take it during the day, not sleepy enough to get me through my strange insomnia.


askye - Nov 01, 2005 5:33:05 am PST #470 of 10006
Thrive to spite them

Ambien always made me feel weird, very very relaxed and goofy, but I could fight it and stay awake (although I wouldn't be very coherent). Dad takes it and he fights it and then ends up staggering to bed and running into the walls because he can't walk right.

After awhile though I needed to take more and more in order to get the same effect so I stopped taking it, well that and I couldn't really afford that copay in addition to the necessary meds.


Trudy Booth - Nov 01, 2005 5:33:40 am PST #471 of 10006
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

So how does it make sleep easier?

My understanding is that it drops you right into REM sleep and skips the stage before it where a lot of people end up stalled out.

But I could be entirely wrong in this recollection.


sarameg - Nov 01, 2005 5:37:11 am PST #472 of 10006

I'm at that fuzzy, melting into the pillow stage right now. Unfortunately, I'm at work.

The hazards of the meds I had to take this morning for the stupid sinus irritation caused by this weather. Since they now appear to be doing the "may cause drowsiness" while I'm under the influence, this means when they wear off I'll be a bit jittery. I like it better when it is the reverse.