Um yes that's my SLNRLBF...
What does it stand for? And Welcome!
Hugs and best wishes to libkitty, happy birthday Daniel, happy anniversary to the Reasons!
Still stubbornly being computerless at home, so I'm posting this after work then hitting the road and hoping the houses are still lit up in my neighborhood for the kids...
I had the weirdest experience last night watching Grey's Anatomy, where a character was telling a story almost word for word that I've told about myself, in here for one place. (I'm a dotty old bird, so I'm sure I've repeated it here and there.) It's my story about getting glasses in 2nd grade, and driving home with my parents in the back seat of the car and realizing that there were individual leaves on the trees. I'd never seen them before, I knew they were trees, but they were green blobs. On Grey's, Erica Hahn tells the same story.
It was very bizarre to hear it. That is all, I just wanted to tell y'all.
SLNRLBF sounds like Slartibartfast in my head. Welcome!
Happy birthday, Daniel!
welcome SecondLifeNowRealLifeBoyFriend!
translation and welcome in one small greeting!
not a really active halloween.(rain) but at least one teeny one awed by the fact that people were giving her candy. and all the older kids in costume.
Java - it stands for: Second Life Now Real Life Boyfriend. He and askye became acquainted over at Second Life, hit it off, have met up in meatspace and are all loved up. There's photographic evidence a while back in the thread - they make a cute couple!
Meanwhile - belated Anniversary wishes for HMS Jeeves!
You know, this has been the most unspooky Halloween I can remember! Last year the PTG at school organised a Halloween party which took place at school after schooltime. It was great fun - bouncy castle, spooky haunted room, candyfloss, fancydress, yada yada yada. This time around...they weren't up for organising it, apparently. And there was no way that the head was going to make
us
organise it all - given that we're writing reports, doing assessments, and being inspected by Mr Cheat'em this week.
The little little kids celebrated it in-class (I'd made Year One a huge picture of a witch on a broom a couple of weeks ago,at their teacher's request, as I'm a capable artist and love that kind of thing) but the rest of us? Nada.
In fact what we DID celebrate yesterday was Divali. So it was saris and sequins as far as the eye could see, and the PTG put on a Divali assembly.
We always have a Divali assembly, of course. But usually it's organised by teachers.
This time it was the Indian parents who organised it. And, unfortunately, it appears that they didn't have a scrap of directorial instinct or grasp of their audience's needs between them.
8 kids stood at the front holding little scripts and read out a very very dull description of what happens on various days of Divali. There was, apparently, no explanation of WHY there was a Divali festival in the first place. The vocab was pretty damn complex. I say apparently, because it was only audible to people at the front - you have to DRILL the kids into yelling like hell when they're in a big hall, otherwise they'll default, what with being shy, to speaking at only-slightly-louder-than normal. Alas, this had evidently not been something the PTG thought about.
And then there was a dance. It was, in fairness, very long and complicated. But because the dancers were aged 9-12, and mostly not all that GOOD at dancing, it mostly looked like badly synchronised epileptic fits - and it's a miracle that the tiny wee Nursery kids sitting at the front didn't get kicked in the heads.
So that was my Halloween.
On the bright side, though, the PTG did bring in yummy samosas and Indian sweets! And I pretty much ate my own body weight in them, having not had any breakfast. In fact, that's all I ate for breakfast and lunch - Indian sweets. Nom nom nom nom nom!
Welcome, SLNRLBF. I'ma have to shorten that one, assuming no objection. SL?
SLNRLBF sounds like Slartibartfast in my head.
Oh, good, I'm glad I wasn't the only one. Anyway, nice to meet you Slart SL.
Libkitty, much ~ma to your mom.
On the bright side, though, the PTG did bring in yummy samosas and Indian sweets!
Ooooh. Yum.
Oh! That reminds me. On last week's episode of Little Mosque on the Prairie, someone ate samosas with ketchup. The character who ate it is Pakistani (I think), and the character who served it is Nigerian. And they live in Canada. I've never seen samosas with ketchup before, and had kind of figured that putting ketchup on stuff was mostly an American thing. So the ketchup on samosas -- Pakistani thing, Nigerian thing, Canadian thing, or weird character quirk?
Ketchu on Samosa on Youtube. [link]
I have to say weird character thing -- but that has more to do with how I feel about ketchup
I have created a Barack Obama Lolpic: [link]