Buffy: You tossed that vamp like he was a... little teeny vamp. Riley: You wanna go again? C'mon. I bet this place is just teeming with aerodynamic vampires.

'Help'


Spike's Bitches 40: Buckle Up, Kids! Daddy's Puttin' the Hammer Down.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


vw bug - May 09, 2008 10:06:56 am PDT #8482 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

Ok. I quit life. I'm gonna go crawl into bed and come out maybe never. That, or I'm gonna go find a cave that my breakdown kiddo and I can share.


vw bug - May 09, 2008 10:10:22 am PDT #8483 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

Totally unrelated, because you know I won't actually quit life, even if I say it, do we think that "Lila Caufield" is a good bad-guy-who-turns-out-to-not -be-a-bad-guy name?


brenda m - May 09, 2008 10:13:58 am PDT #8484 of 10001
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Doesn't stike me as a guy name at all, really. That aside, is it meant to be a callback to Cathcher in the Rye? If so, cool, if not, that might be something to think about.


vw bug - May 09, 2008 10:15:20 am PDT #8485 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

Oh, sorry...not a guy name. Bad guy woman. And, no hadn't thought about the Catcher in the Rye. Yeah. Definitely need to think about that.


Fred Pete - May 09, 2008 10:33:22 am PDT #8486 of 10001
Ann, that's a ferret.

I like the name, regardless of whether she's good, bad, or indifferent. And I went to Angel before Catcher in the Rye.


beth b - May 09, 2008 10:33:59 am PDT #8487 of 10001
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

hugs all around

all my problems are 1st world today.

1) dentist day. actually better than expected. No idea why, it isn't like I've been the goddess of dental hygiene.

2) wireless i snot behaving. I am on slow desktop

3) I spent money on a cellphone. - that less than two months later , I can't find. No , I can't call - it is dead. We heard it give its dying beep. It has to be in the house. But where? Really, I'm not that good at hiding things.


vw bug - May 09, 2008 10:37:57 am PDT #8488 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

And I went to Angel before Catcher in the Rye.

Yeah, that's more where I thought people would go.


Susan W. - May 09, 2008 11:35:41 am PDT #8489 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

OK, WTF?

In the ongoing saga of Schrodinger's Inheritance, DH's mom called the accountant today. For some reason, he says tax purposes, he wants to wait until six months out from the death to start distributing the stock to the heirs. Which would mean early July, instead of any time now as we'd been expecting/hoping.

Does this make any sense at all to those who are familiar with such things?

Grr. It's driving me crazy to have all this money in a single stock and have no power to get it safely diversified.


-t - May 09, 2008 11:49:16 am PDT #8490 of 10001
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

We waited to distribute my grandmother's estate but I don't remember why. It's possible that waiting will mean you don't have to differentiate between short-term and long-term holdings which could save a bunch in taxes. It's also possible, though I'm just guessing, that keeping the estate in stocks rather than converting to cash will keep the estate taxes lower (if they even apply at all). In any case, it definitely sounds like a normal thing to happen.


Susan W. - May 09, 2008 11:54:12 am PDT #8491 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Thanks, -t. It sounded fishy to me, but I've never inherited anything myself, and I've never even been around anyone who dealt with an estate of this scale. What we're due is a tiny, tiny fraction of the whole, and assuming the stock doesn't collapse it's enough to change our lives.

Which is why I'm so anxious about this. I'm afraid it's somehow going to disappear, because why should we magically get out of debt, have a down payment for a house, and a college fund for our kids? It's not like we earned it.

ETA as I was just telling DH, the whole thing feels like something out of a book, and not one set in this century or the previous one. It's only marginally more real to me than if we suddenly got a call from a British lawyer telling us he's the 8th cousin and only heir to the recently deceased Duke of Shaftington (Roderick, Duke of Shaftington being our joke name for the stereotypical aristocratic romance hero), and we now own a sprawling estate, a fortune in pounds sterling, and I'm suddenly Her Grace and my daughter is Lady Annabel. So I feel like that now that I've finally started believing in the money and making plans for how best to spend and invest it, of course it's going to disappear somehow.