Aimee, that's awful. Add mine to the Internet hugs.
Mom-ma, MG.
[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.
Aimee, that's awful. Add mine to the Internet hugs.
Mom-ma, MG.
I declare a "redo" for today. Everyone go home, crawl back into bed, and when I yell, "GO!" - start the day over.
Ready?
Now.
REDO!
REDO!
Ack! I was waiting for "GO!" Did I miss it?
Go get in bed and don't get out til I yell "GO!".
Sillyhead.
Go get in bed and don't get out til I yell "GO!".
::does what Aimee says but also puts in earplugs so I won't hear her start the day again and I can stay in bed all day::
(psssst...watch me not yell "GO!" for a couple of hours, if not days)
Laura, if one were going to be arriving in Miami at 9:00 pm on Thursday February 9th, and not leaving until Friday February 10th at 6:00 pm, could one perhaps impose on you for entertainment of some sort on the 10th?
You betcha! We might try and keep you here though. Fair warning.
Pardon my ignorance, but is high school a big improvement? How so -- is it the structure of the captivity that changes, or the people?
High school is way more stratified. The college-track kids are less prone to physical violence, at least in my experience. No doubt this reflects discrimination by social class, but I was grateful for it: I had far, far fewer classes with students who didn't want to be there, and therefore were bored and destructive.
As Trudy notes, the pond is a lot bigger, too. And the experience of going from ruling the middle school to being freshmen in the high school can through the bullies off their game long enough for the kids who had a hard time with them to find their niche.
You betcha! We might try and keep you here though. Fair warning.
Yay! Except for that keeping me thing, since I will be heading to the Galapagos. Maybe kidnap me on the way back, instead?