If you want me to leave, you can put your hands on my hot, tight little body and make me.

Spike ,'Get It Done'


Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.  

[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.


erin_obscure - Feb 07, 2010 3:43:01 am PST #9362 of 30000
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

kids bounce back faster. plus, you get stuck taking care of both of you while she has only herself cause non-healing-helping stress.


Anne W. - Feb 07, 2010 3:45:56 am PST #9363 of 30000
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

Doctor said stay home til Tuesday for me, but that Em could go back Monday. I wonder why that is?

Don't kids supposedly bounce back faster from illness than adults? Plus, it sounds like you had a worse case of the ick than she did.

Stay at home tomorrow. The rest-n-recovery will make it less likely that you'll catch something else in the short term.


WindSparrow - Feb 07, 2010 3:57:11 am PST #9364 of 30000
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

Dear Lord. I... didn't mean to claim that. Sigh damn you, relativism. One cannot argue that cohesiveness is good to a society without being suspected in fascism anymore, can't she?

Shir, can you specify that you mean voluntary cohesion within the culture? Or does that even make sense?

Stay at home tomorrow. The rest-n-recovery will make it less likely that you'll catch something else in the short term.

Anne is wise; listen to Anne. Signed, someone whose sister the nurse got rheumatic fever by ignoring her own strep throat while taking care of her sons.

ETA: for accuracy, and to add that she wasn't actually a nurse yet at the time it happened.


Shir - Feb 07, 2010 4:10:04 am PST #9365 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

Shir, can you specify that you mean voluntary cohesion within the culture? Or does that even make sense?

I think I know how to pull this one through. Not by suggestion any voluntary cohesion (cause, umm, a cohesion is a cohesion. The voluntary part may manifest in different forms of expressing said cohesion, but society needs one), but by different ways on which the individual define himself/herself in a society, and the set of boundaries between the private and the public and their relation to the notion of "self".

And by that, I hope to make my suggestion less fascist.

Anne is wise; listen to Anne

This.


Calli - Feb 07, 2010 4:21:28 am PST #9366 of 30000
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

Yes! And it's now my desktop background.

Mine, too.

Much health~ma to your mom, Shir.

I just made my first batch of orange-cranberry-pecan muffins. They're reasonably yummy but not quite as moist as I'd like. I'm thinking I should up the fat content a tad the next time.


Shir - Feb 07, 2010 4:27:48 am PST #9367 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

Thanks for all the ~mas.

They're reasonably yummy but not quite as moist as I'd like. I'm thinking I should up the fat content a tad the next time.

You know what to do, now. All that's left is to get rid of the less-than-perfect-muffins and start working on a new bench of super-perfect-muffins. Also, that's entirely up to you, but I wouldn't mind getting these less-than-perfect-muffins. Just, you know. Toss them away over here.

It's a burden, but somebody's gotta have those reasonably yummy but not very moist orange-cranberry-pecan muffins.


Laura - Feb 07, 2010 4:37:31 am PST #9368 of 30000
Our wings are not tired.

Health ~ma for them that needs it.

I saw the Northern Lights a few times as a kid. I need to experience it as an adult.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Feb 07, 2010 4:50:04 am PST #9369 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

Shir, do you have to use Durkheim (I don't know enough about the others to comment on their contribution to social theory)? He's fascinating, but I can't stand functionalism - it can indeed lead to conclusions that are akin to fascism, and is generally Of The Devil in my extremely humble opinion. I don't know how much I can suggest, because social cohesion isn't my area of research - but depending on the subject, I think the symbolic interactionists have more to say about a relativist society. (As you know, I'm a rabid Marxist, but that's a British thing.)


Shir - Feb 07, 2010 5:25:00 am PST #9370 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

Shir, do you have to use Durkheim

Yes. It's either him, Freud or Bentham. So I'm taking few things out of Bentham and blending it with him, because, yes, functionalism is a yick factor (and oh, honey, please tell me that you've studied Durkheim directly and not via what Parsons made out of him.

I'm a rabid Marxist, but that's a British thing.

Heh. I thought it was a more European thing, not strictly British.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Feb 07, 2010 5:30:05 am PST #9371 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

functionalism is a yick factor (and oh, honey, please tell me that you've studied Durkheim directly and not via what Parsons made out of him.

Of course. (I don't read Parsons. He makes me violently ill.) Durkheim rocks - he's far better than all the rest of the functionalism/social positivism stuff. His work on religion is fascinating. Although the suicide study less so.

Edited to say more about Durkheim.