Harken: You fought with Captain Reynolds in the war? Zoe: Fought with a lot of people in the war. Harken: And your husband? Zoe: Fight with him sometimes, too.

'Bushwhacked'


Spike's Bitches 42: Which question do you want me to answer first?  

[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.


EpicTangent - Aug 06, 2008 10:52:36 pm PDT #101 of 10001
Why isn't everyone pelting me with JOY, dammit? - Zenkitty

The lingering cough part of my "little" cold can stop lingering any frickin' time now...want to be sleeping, not hacking.

Stoopid respiratory system.


vw bug - Aug 07, 2008 2:00:17 am PDT #102 of 10001
Mostly lurking...

meara, you've gotten great advice. I too would suggest starting with your PCP.

{{{Hil}}} Hang in there.

Wow. Matilda is just gorgeous. And yes! Emmett is totally handsome! Wow. They are just getting so big.


Barb - Aug 07, 2008 2:45:00 am PDT #103 of 10001
“Not dead yet!”

Timelies, all.

JZ, Matilda is just a stunner. And Emmett's definitely got that trapped between two worlds look going on. I see it in Nate a lot, where one minute I look at him and he's looks like a total little man and in the next second, he's back to being my baby boy and I can breathe a sigh of relief. For at least a minute or two.

Whoa, Barb. At least my family puts the fun in dysfunctional. Your family sounds like it is less...fun.

No kidding. There's a reason that even though I really like Miami, I won't live there. And that's without even adding the Prince of Darkness, AKA My Brother into the mix. I always want to hold him up as the human equivalent of the old "Blood on the Highway" movie they used to show about the dangers of drunk driving, except in his case it would be, "This is what happens if you go the majority of your life undiagnosed, unmedicated, and with the most enabling mother on the planet."


Jessica - Aug 07, 2008 2:51:13 am PDT #104 of 10001
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

citalapram (Celexa -- I didn't know it was also called Lexapro, huh)

Lexapro and Celexa are slightly different. (Two jobs ago I worked for a company that did corporate videos for pharma clients, and Lexapro was one of ours, so I used to know way too much about the chemical differences between the two. Most of it's still there but fuzzy - fortunately I'm sure Tep can correct whatever innaccuracies I'm about to post.)

Basically, Celexa/citalopram is a molecule with two mirror-image halves, kind of like an open book. L-citalopram/Lexapro is that same molecule, but just the left side, the idea being that that half was the "active" half (bonding to seratonin channels and blocking reuptake) and the other side was probably causing most of the side effects (bonding to other receptors in the brain and being generally unhelpful). It was also (not that we put this in the video) an attempt by the drug-maker to effectively extend the patent for Celexa which was about to expire by replacing it with a new but almost identical drug.

t /brain full of trivia


Nora Deirdre - Aug 07, 2008 3:56:29 am PDT #105 of 10001
I’m responsible for my own happiness? I can’t even be responsible for my own breakfast! (Bojack Horseman)

You are not eloping so that you can have two weddings.

SRSLY.

{{meara}} and {{Hil}}

OK, I never thought I'd say this, but WTF? Where is my August heat?


Aims - Aug 07, 2008 4:13:51 am PDT #106 of 10001
Shit's all sorts of different now.

So, I've been spending the past 15 hours in a crazy making, tear inducing, fear mongering holding pattern.

We have a landline w/machine that we almost never check. Last night Em was messing with it and I heard a message from my OB/GYN (I had my annual 2 weeks ago). I replay the messages and sure enough, they've been trying to get ahold of me for a couple of days. I'm to call the office as soon as possible and speak to the nurse.

Cue freak out.

If it was a billing issue, I'd call the billing person. You only have to call the nurse if your hoo-hah is about to fall out.

This morning, I spend 45 minutes trying to get through to their office. One website says they open at 8, one website says 8:30, the after hours message says 8:30. WTF. WHICH IS IT I AM FREAKING OUT??? At 8:45 I finally get the nurse who informs me that the lab was "unable to make any diagnosis as there weren't enough cells."

WTF.

So now, I have to go back to the Dr's office and have a new smear done on the 22nd. at 7:10am. In two weeks. Wherein I can stress myself into a frenzy.

Up until 7:00-ish, yesterday sucked a big asshole. Then Ihad pizza and was happier.

I have since declared to day backwards day whereas I am eating my lunch for breakfast (pizza) and my breakfast for lunch (yogurt, granola, berries).


Steph L. - Aug 07, 2008 4:20:59 am PDT #107 of 10001
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

citalapram (Celexa -- I didn't know it was also called Lexapro, huh)

Lexapro and Celexa are slightly different. (Two jobs ago I worked for a company that did corporate videos for pharma clients, and Lexapro was one of ours, so I used to know way too much about the chemical differences between the two. Most of it's still there but fuzzy - fortunately I'm sure Tep can correct whatever innaccuracies I'm about to post.)

Basically, Celexa/citalopram is a molecule with two mirror-image halves, kind of like an open book. L-citalopram/Lexapro is that same molecule, but just the left side, the idea being that that half was the "active" half (bonding to seratonin channels and blocking reuptake) and the other side was probably causing most of the side effects (bonding to other receptors in the brain and being generally unhelpful). It was also (not that we put this in the video) an attempt by the drug-maker to effectively extend the patent for Celexa which was about to expire by replacing it with a new but almost identical drug.

Jess got here before me, and my work is done before I ever started. I wish my *real* job was like that!

All I can add is the nerdy bit of knowledge that Lexapro's generic name is escitalopram, whereas Celexa's is citalopram. (Which is essentially what Jess said, but without the es- part of Lexapro.)

Need moar coffee.


Ginger - Aug 07, 2008 4:24:00 am PDT #108 of 10001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Where is my August heat?

It's here. I'd be happy to send it all to you.

That's crazy-making, Aims, but the odds are they just didn't get a good sample. (Have I ever mentioned that I found out about the breast cancer from a phone message that said, "You have a lump in your breast. I'm making an appointment with a surgeon.")

I say you should start with dessert.

Hil, that's a long weary road and well worth the occasional freak out, but you can do it.


Jessica - Aug 07, 2008 4:33:46 am PDT #109 of 10001
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

escitalopram

See, I *knew* "L" was wrong, but I couldn't remember for the life of me what that extra syllable actually was.


Cashmere - Aug 07, 2008 4:46:08 am PDT #110 of 10001
Now tagless for your comfort.

Go Team Lexapro!

Aims, ugh. Sorry I missed you on FB last night. Night was craxy. Ended up getting my haircut & colored. I'm now a red head again and slightly closer to the sexy, stacked bob I'm longing for.

{{Hil}}

I also had to squoosh a spider yesterday. I found it crawling ON MY THIGH. Liv laughed at my shriek of terror.