I had a cheeseburger and milkshake for lunch on Sunday. Hmm.
Mmm. Steak pie. Which is possibly going to be lunch today.
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.
I had a cheeseburger and milkshake for lunch on Sunday. Hmm.
Mmm. Steak pie. Which is possibly going to be lunch today.
Does carob have caffeine?
Because normally I only can't sleep if have caffeine in the afternoon and it felt like my typical caffeine insomnia last night. However, the only thing I ate/drank was bagels and cream cheese (that had carob bean in it).
I could walk over and get that pie.
If I didn't have the second of 3.5 meetings in half an hour.
I made myself want steak pie. Please to make me steak pie. I have pie jealousy.
Also, I got a necklace in the mail that I had ordered from Lucky Me Beads on Etsy. On one side is a silhouette of Noah and on the other is Grace. It's so cool and super beautiful. Whitney, who makes them, did a great job. Even though babies have no discernible features for a good silhouette.
I'm not sure why tiramisu, but I dig it.
I'm not sure why tiramisu, but I dig it.
Hee!!! That was at my house! Sarameg was there that night!!!
With the strangely colored key lime pie!
With the strangely colored key lime pie!
blood red deliciousness!! Wait...did I finally give you back your pie plate???
Yep. And then I had it in the back seat or trunk of my car for a couple years! (er, unless it was when we went out to dinner with megan. I don't know?!)
Um, it may still be there. I don't know where it is.
LONDON (AFP) - Britons are losing their grip on reality, according to a poll out Monday which showed that nearly a quarter think Winston Churchill was a myth while the majority reckon Sherlock Holmes was real.
The survey found that 47 percent thought the 12th century English king Richard the Lionheart was a myth.
And 23 percent thought World War II prime minister Churchill was made up. The same percentage thought Crimean War nurse Florence Nightingale did not actually exist.
Three percent thought Charles Dickens, one of Britain's most famous writers, is a work of fiction himself.
Indian political leader Mahatma Gandhi and Battle of Waterloo victor the Duke of Wellington also appeared in the top 10 of people thought to be myths.
Meanwhile, 58 percent thought Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional detective Holmes actually existed; 33 percent thought the same of W. E. Johns' fictional pilot and adventurer Biggles.