Don't you have an elsewhere to be?

Cordelia ,'Lessons'


Spike's Bitches 35: We Got a History  

[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.


Amy - Apr 12, 2007 5:06:39 am PDT #4690 of 10003
Because books.

Isn't sarameg in Baltimore?


hippocampus - Apr 12, 2007 5:07:44 am PDT #4691 of 10003
not your mom's socks.

- my mother doesn't like jelly-like candy, and thus was I brainwashed.

No gummy worms?? Really? oh, aunt M.

yes, Happy Beans. though, 'lellow' for yellow is still my #1 favorite. as in "can I have one of those lellow peeps?'

Durn - workside reindeer games need squishing (again) ... though I'm working from home, so no one can hear me scream.


Topic!Cindy - Apr 12, 2007 5:08:04 am PDT #4692 of 10003
What is even happening?

Okay, the thought of Cindy licking the bottom of the Peeps box just cracked me up, and the other librarian came to see what was so funny

I'm 40, now. I didn't lick the box. I licked my fingers and then pinched some sugar from the bottom of the box.

Chocolate is my one true candy too, Sparky. It's the only one I'd actively seek if it wasn't in the house. I don't really love Peeps or Jelly Beans, but I do. I have a problem with them. It's almost like I have to have one during the season, and then having that one sets off a spiral. Also see candy corn, which I almost actively loathe, but eat just the same. I also think I have a little sugar rush going on, right now.

My kids have turned into night-time freaks. Owen will wake up a couple of times a week at 2:30 a.m. and not got back to sleep until 6:00 a.m. Then, of course, he sleeps until after 10. He's asleep right now.

Oh you poor thing. Would mass destruction or other life threatening situations result if you didn't sit with him?


Ginger - Apr 12, 2007 5:09:59 am PDT #4693 of 10003
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Mom is better, Cindy, but some of her health issues are just not going to go away. My mother is all about doing stuff: sewing, cleaning, baking, antiquing, and then more cleaning. You'd never know by looking at my house that I was raised by a woman offended by a speck of dust. Now all those things exhaust her, but she keeps trying to do them.


Sparky1 - Apr 12, 2007 5:13:59 am PDT #4694 of 10003
Librarian Warlord

I think my dislike of anything jelly-sticky-like is two fold -- the above mentioned brainwashing by my mother and the fact that I have a dentist phobia so I've convinced myself that the pure sugar stuff sticking to my teeth will lead me to more time in the chair having cavities filled.

For Easter growing up my mother hid the little chocolate easter eggs for us to find, and for the hunt we were handicapped by age until my middle sister became quite vicious and then had to wait until both I and my oldest sister had had a chance at the eggs before she was allowed down the stairs.


Topic!Cindy - Apr 12, 2007 5:14:46 am PDT #4695 of 10003
What is even happening?

I'm glad she keeps trying, Ginger. May she get to a place where she can do enough of her things to feel like her, while realizing she has to allow herself to make some adjustments.


Cashmere - Apr 12, 2007 5:19:30 am PDT #4696 of 10003
Now tagless for your comfort.

I didn't lick the box. I licked my fingers and then pinched some sugar from the bottom of the box.

Dainty.

Would mass destruction or other life threatening situations result if you didn't sit with him?

Probably not. But we were in the midst of getting him back on a bedtime schedule and DH's idea was to sit quietly in his room for about 10-15 minutes until he started falling asleep. This was working up until 3 days ago (of course we went away for the weekend so that's probably screwed us up.) Now it's kicking, screaming, crying fits that wake up his sister if we leave him by himself. I swear, sometimes I think we should sound-proof their rooms and pad the walls and toss them in there at bed time.

May she get to a place where she can do enough of her things to feel like her, while realizing she has to allow herself to make some adjustments.

Yes. This.


Topic!Cindy - Apr 12, 2007 5:20:41 am PDT #4697 of 10003
What is even happening?

Now it's kicking, screaming, crying fits that wake up his sister if we leave him by himself.

In the middle of the night, that's close enough to mass destruction for me.


Cashmere - Apr 12, 2007 5:26:49 am PDT #4698 of 10003
Now tagless for your comfort.

In the middle of the night, that's close enough to mass destruction for me.

DH told me before he left for work that he broke down and brought Owen downstairs around 6 a.m. He cried for a few minutes but when he calmed down he sniffed, "I'm ready to go to bed." Gah. We'll get through it, I'm sure. But these night time disruptions make for very long, tiring days.

Speaking of, Ima go wake up Prince Charming right now so he doesn't sleep the morning away.


hippocampus - Apr 12, 2007 5:28:00 am PDT #4699 of 10003
not your mom's socks.

Cashmere - M&Ms for breakfast sounds like the future I'm rushing towards. Share, please!

I'm with you about the sleep deprivation training-by-force too. Sox-baby (Iris) has not slept past 6 am (and usually not past 5) since she was born. She usually sleeps through the night now, with maybe a call for 'juuuuuiiiiccee!' somewhere in there. But we are NOT morning people. Our dog (13 years old in 3 weeks) has never gotten out of bed until 10. This is brutal. Jet-lag 24-7. We did our own (faulty) version of sleep training, but leaving her to work it out herself got a lot harder once she moved into a toddler bed. Now the party is mobile. And often, brutally cheerful. I suspect DH's main reason for taking an interview in another state tomorrow is so that he can get a hotel room, pull the shades, and sleep.