seven rungs of work hell (an interactive pastiche):
7. passive-aggressive copy machines that know when your meetings are.
6. decaf, flavored coffee in the group machine.
5. "oh. I thought you were going to take care of that."
4. "Who is supposed to be in this meeting again?"
3. People who feel that saying "we need x to happen" is all it takes.
2. [fill in the blank here]
1. [fill in the blank here]
Also, consider a white chicken chili with cannellini beans.
Heroin is Schedule I. Oxycodone is Schedule II.
I was prescribed something similar to Oxycodone for pain after I had my wisdom teeth removed, and it turns out that Codeine is also Schedule II (I got that, in the nastiest-flavored solution evar, for cough a year ago). I didn't have to sign any narcotics contracts for either of those.
(I'm a little surprised to discover that Valium is only Schedule IV, considering the hoopla you have to go through to get a scrip filled. Can't do it over the phone, oh no; in person only, with paper scrip in hand.)
Mmm, chili. The cafeteria has chili today (and they make a pretty decent pot of it, too), which I think I'll be having with some salad. That'll hit the spot on a cold wintery day like today.
I have achieved chicken noodle soup. I don't think it will do much for the gronk, but the ick is feeling substantially less icky.
Whoops. I only had to have a (verbal) contract for Schedule II drugs when I was to be prescribed them regularly, not in response to an ad hoc incidents.
I think that hoopla starts once drugs have a schedule IV or above, but that's not set in stone, oddly. I've had Vicodin prescriptions called in for me, for instance. I don't know what the rhyme or reason is there.
I've had Vicodin prescriptions called in for me, for instance.
Grr! Why can't your doctor call up my dentist and explain these things!
Also, consider a white chicken chili with cannellini beans.
Clearly I need to add tahini and cannellini beans to my grocery list.
from before, if you have been a legal resident for 5 years OR married to a US citizen for 3 years, you can apply for US citizenship.
I'm still weirdly sad for Heath Ledger. Maybe becuase as a parent, the idea of leaving my kids behind is so awful.
ita, have you ever wanted to get US citizenship?