If my skin falls off, I'll try to live-blog it.
Have The Boy bind a book in it!
watches while the rest of the thread edges away from her
Harmony ,'First Date'
[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.
If my skin falls off, I'll try to live-blog it.
Have The Boy bind a book in it!
watches while the rest of the thread edges away from her
I did mainline a lot of Benadryl at that time.
I love Hawaiian McDonalds because you can get eggs and portuguese sausage.
And saimin!!!!!
If my skin falls off, I'll try to live-blog it.
Have The Boy bind a book in it!
He totally would. I should never have shown him The Pillow Book.
I did mainline a lot of Benadryl at that time.
Benadryl is my friend. It pretty much doesn't even make me sleepy anymore.
Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis [a less-severe form is called Stevens-Johnson Sydrome].
Hey that's side affect of Lamictal!!
And our cancer drug!
t weighs hands
Cancer .... Winner of the Warren Look Alike Contest...
What's the prize for the contest?
Stepping in to once again sing the praises of Benadryl "itch stopping cream". Rashes from something you've touched? mosquito bites (they think I'm yummy)? it takes care of them
Teppy, at what point is the itch/rash NOT the zoloft? And then you could go back on it? I'm just wondering. I mean, how long, if it were due to the zoloft, would it take to go away? (And surely if it were Evil Skin Falling Off Syndrome (didn't Kathy's Mom have that?) it would've happened by now, since you already stopped?)
If my skin falls off, I'll try to live-blog it.
Attagirl.
Semi-relatedly, I just got a prescription for Zoloft! My p-doc says he thinks I'm due for a med to actually, you know, work. I didn't get the deadly rash from Lamictal, so here's hoping I don't get it from Zoloft.
I understood from my doctor that the deadly rash could occur at anytime, even after you've been taking the drug for a number of years. And it doesn't kill instantaneously. One of his patients had the killer rash for months before he mentioned it to the doc and he recovered.