It's a real burden being right so often.

Mal ,'Bushwhacked'


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.


bon bon - Nov 22, 2005 9:44:37 am PST #6404 of 10006
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Nog is gross but delicious.


Kate P. - Nov 22, 2005 9:46:59 am PST #6405 of 10006
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Egg nog! Actually, what I like even more than egg nog (heresy!) is Silk Nog. Oh, so good: sweet and rich and creamy. I need to stop by Whole Foods tomorrow and see if they still have any!

edit: bon, I pretty much agree, which is why Silk Nog (delicious and yet not gross!) is so good. t /evangelist


Nilly - Nov 22, 2005 9:48:08 am PST #6406 of 10006
Swouncing

I was a much more rational 5 year old than many of you.

I think I've already told here about one of my most vivid childhood memories, of a Passover holiday we spent at my grandmother's. I was four years old, and my father took me to bed before the 'Seder' was over, because I nearly fell asleep at my seat. Ever since then, and for years, I couldn't shake the feeling that all that is happening to me is, in fact, part of the dream the four-year-old me is dreaming at my grandmother's, and that I can wake up at any minute from it.

It's still strange for me to realize that I actually know people who celebrate both THanksgiving and Christmas. For me they are both holidays that only characters in books and movies are celebrating, not real people, since they're so much not a part of my everyday life in any way.


amych - Nov 22, 2005 9:48:41 am PST #6407 of 10006
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

The looniversity shortened Thanksgiving week for students this year (and not, I'll not for staff, the bastages), going from three days of class to two. The funny part is that they are shocked, shocked!! that an even shorter week would encourage more of them to take off early for the vacation.


Jesse - Nov 22, 2005 9:50:47 am PST #6408 of 10006
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

A friend of mine left yesterday to spend the week at her parents'. In New Jersey!! If my parents were in commuting distance, I don't think I'd ever spend more than one night sleeping there. Of course, I have the whole lost-my-bedroom, sleep-on-a-pullout-sofa-in-the-den issue, which maybe she doesn't have, but still.


Calli - Nov 22, 2005 9:51:50 am PST #6409 of 10006
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

I'm kinda meh on egg nog. Those orange chocolates you wack and eat, on the other hand, are yummy. As is mom's venison mincemeat. And the Christmas pudding with hard sauce. Mmmmmmmm. Hard sauce is a blob of softened butter with a dash of vanilla and a metric buttload of powdered sugar mixed in and I eat the pudding mostly to get to the sauce. So good.


bon bon - Nov 22, 2005 9:52:58 am PST #6410 of 10006
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

I'm afraid no one can convince me to drink soy again.


Jesse - Nov 22, 2005 9:53:14 am PST #6411 of 10006
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Hard sauce is a blob of softened butter with a dash of vanilla and a metric buttload of powdered sugar mixed in and I eat the pudding mostly to get to the sauce. So good.

I thought it was booze that put the "hard" in hard sauce.


Kate P. - Nov 22, 2005 9:55:50 am PST #6412 of 10006
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

I'm afraid no one can convince me to drink soy again.

Bad experience? I almost never drink regular soy milk straight (though I use it on cereal and in tea), but the nog is a whole 'nother thing altogether.


DavidS - Nov 22, 2005 9:59:38 am PST #6413 of 10006
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

This is very good for daydreaming: London Walks.

THE WESTMINSTER NOBODY KNOWS 10:55 am on Mondays from Green ParkTube Stop, the Ritz exit

And now for the real gold - narrow streets, secret courtyards, and superb, old-fashioned shops - hidden away behind all the tinsel of the West End. The ingredients speak for themselves: the "Embassy of the Republic of Texas"!; a hideaway where the last duel in London was fought; Henry VIII's cowshed; Princess Diana's ancestral home; Christopher Wren's only West End church; the capital's finest Georgian shopping arcade; the Queen Mother's handsome old mansion; London's swishest, oldest and most exclusive gentlemen's clubs (including the one that boasts the most stirring American association in London); a splendid old stables and wine vaults; the "Queen's own grocers"; 18th-century shops lost in a time warp (but still trading); the Square that launched the West End. And that's not to mention London's most intimate palace. But don't expect the peerage - or the royals - to be on their best behaviour: the route is peppered with scandal! And at walk's end - well, you're placed to pop into London's grandest old art gallery or grab a spot of lunch at the delightful Cafe in the Crypt at St.-Martin-in-the-Fields.

*****

David, you just made me SUPER excited for Christmas to come.

I'm glad! I like Christmas but that's partly because I shifted my focus to Emmett a while ago so my expectations for myself are relatively low. They have ice skating on Christmas day in San Francisco - that's cool. I like going to movies on Christmas too. The first time I did that was to see Close Encounters with my parents. I've also seen Brazil, Babe (the pig), and Children of Paradise (in Boston) on Christmas Day.

I think they should start showing the entire extended edition trilogy of LotR every Christmas day. Maybe on Boxing Day too.