I'm thinking I don't need a tetanus booster. I'll get one next time I go to the doctor, but the blade had been washed in the dishwasher and was just sitting in a drawer. It wasn't rusty or dirty at all, and the cut was deep, but not deep enough to need a stitch.
'Beneath You'
Spike's Bitches 43: Who am I kidding? I love to brag.
[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.
How is it feeling today, Kristin? The "good thing" about a knife cut is that it is usually neat enough to heal quickly.
And because it deserves its own post, Shir, I wish I could say something remotely comforting. The situation is just awful.
ouch Kristin! I think someone did say upthread that their doc thinks tetanus shots are overused and he rarely gives them to adults so I bet you'll be fine. Just keep an eye on it for swelling or opaque seepage . yum.
Laura, it's a bit sore and is going to make grading a bit tricky today, but it isn't too bad. It looks like it's healing relatively cleanly.
ETA:
I think it was Kristin that said the Fit was lotsa fun.It is! Cutesy and makes you want to smack it at times, but the best way to trick me into exercising I've ever found.
Just think how impressed your students will be when you return their papers to them marked in blood.
I have a Fit, but I haven't set it up yet. I'm going to do that sometime this coming week.
Harvey is purring endlessly for me this afternoon. If I could bottle his purr and ship it overseas, it could solve world peace. It's impossible to want to hurt any other being while listening to it. All you want to do is hug and snuggle.
I finally got an email back from my advisor with comments on my conference talk slides. Actually useful comments, too. (Including pointing out two typos. Oops.) And one place where he said that I could get rid of a sentence, because "it would be absurd to assume anything else." OK. I can fix all of this.
Anxiety level slowly declining from "terrified" to "scared, but I can do it."