Unless the BigBoss is leaving/retiring, no.
It's her birthday! And not even a big round one.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Unless the BigBoss is leaving/retiring, no.
It's her birthday! And not even a big round one.
hells to the no. never to early to introduce people to the philosophy of Whitney.
My big boss gets extremely uncomfy if I give him anything, even if it's something I got for free or cheap, like books for his kid at the Book Expo (free!).
For his birthday last year I gave him an issue of Popular Science from the month/year he was born. I got it for a dollar at the flea market, which i had to tell him because he was so uncomfy taking it even though he clearly loved it and wanted to put it in a shadow box frame.
I think it's odd. I mean, it was a bday gift! I've been working for him for 7 years! It was a DOLLAR!
I gave my boss gum for Christmas. He gave me nothing. I'm ok with that. I mean it's gum and it was my choice. being asked to contrinute is just no way in hell.
Being asked is totally different, agreed.
I stopped collecting for baby gifts at JPL because it really did seem to make a lot of people uncomfy.
For his birthday last year I gave him an issue of Popular Science from the month/year he was born.
That's awesome. And for a dollar, even better!
We usually chip in to buy our big bosses a Christmas present each year, but my feeling is that everyone who works here likes them. (I'm related, so of course I don't have a problem with it.) Also, they tend to take us out to really nice dinners when everyone's in town for meetings when they could just send all the local staff home at the end of the workday to fend for themselves, so it's not like the flow of giving is all one way.
I like her, but I still feel ooky about it.
Supposedly this cat knew that its human had lung cancer. I have my doubts. Cat nips owner's lung cancer
Now recovering from surgery to remove cancer from his lung, Adams, 59, is crediting his eight-year-old feline friend Tiger for alerting him and his family doctor to a mass in his lung.
"He would climb into bed and take his paw and drag it down my left side -- he was adamant there was something there," he said.
"And it was right where the cancer was."
Adams, who has suffered from bronchitis, asthma and emphysema, had showed no symptoms of lung cancer before his kitty's bizarre examination.
But about seven months ago, after mentioning the cat's strange behaviour to his family doctor, he was referred to a specialist who caught the disease at stage one in his left lung.
"They did an X-ray, they spotted something on the left side," he said.
There have been other instances of dogs and cats detecting cancers, but I'm too lazy to look them up.