Seska, that is just ridiculous. I say laugh and sue.
Aims, tons of ~ma for your sister and the baby.
The house elves did not come and finish the clean up job while I slept last night. I guess that means I should finish it.
[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.
Seska, that is just ridiculous. I say laugh and sue.
Aims, tons of ~ma for your sister and the baby.
The house elves did not come and finish the clean up job while I slept last night. I guess that means I should finish it.
I'm still very seriously rattled, but I don't think "witnessed someone get run down" would be considered a viable reason to go home. The work ethic around here is "unless the CDC has declared you a plague vector or you're actively oozing bodily fluids that can't be contained, we'd really prefer you stay, but if you feel you have to, well, I guess that's all right, but are you sure you can't stay?" I console myself with knowing today is my Friday.
I say laugh and sue.
I really want to go to the conference! Maybe I'll sue afterwards. Cake and eat it, and all that.
{{{Connie}}} I'm sorry you had to witness that. It must have been very traumatic for you, and it really should be a good reason to go home.
I really want to go to the conference! Maybe I'll sue afterwards. Cake and eat it, and all that.
Yeah, that is what I meant, go, laugh, and then sue. Where is the conference?
I think the buddy you bring should also be in a wheelchair, Seska.
So it's accessible, as long as you have someone to carry you up the stairs?
You can't have those handicapped people wandering around without a keeper. Who knows what they'll do?
I think the buddy you bring should also be in a wheelchair, Seska.
If I were on the right continent, I would totally go with you, with my crutches of course.
I think the buddy you bring should also be in a wheelchair, Seska.
I vote for this!
I think the buddy you bring should also be in a wheelchair, Seska.
Genius idea! I completely know a few people who'd come along just to see the reaction, too. I occasionally go to the cinema and use my free 'carer' ticket for my friend Lisa. (She can carry drinks and popcorn - her hands work.) They look at her in the wheelchair, then at me on my walker, boggle for a minute, then hand over the tickets. We're always willing them to ask "Who's the carer," a question The Girl fundamentally objects to, but they're usually too distracted. Heh.