Buffy: How bored were you last year? Giles: I watched 'Passions' with Spike. Let us never speak of it.

'Beneath You'


Natter 65: Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Hil R. - Feb 27, 2010 4:34:47 pm PST #11844 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Emeril has a show on the Green Channel where he helps people who are having various sorts of food problem. One episode was a family where the parents were not vegetarian, but the two oldest kids had both, around age five, announced that they would not eat dead animals anymore, and so the parents talked to their pediatrician about nutrition and let them be vegetarian. They had a third kid, about age three when the show was filmed, who they just never bothered feeding meat to -- when you're already making a meat meal for the adults and a vegetarian meal for the kids, you're not going to also make chicken nuggets for the toddler. The mother went on Emeril's show for advice on how to get out of serving them grilled cheese every day for lunch. He showed her how to make some kid-friendly vegetarian soup and pasta dishes that had actual vegetables in them.


Stephanie - Feb 27, 2010 4:35:44 pm PST #11845 of 30001
Trust my rage

Bobsled is the one sport where those suits look really bad. It's funny how what makes an Olympic athlete varies so much by sport.


Hil R. - Feb 27, 2010 4:37:59 pm PST #11846 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Kind of related: [link]

Crafty Ann Duran, 55, took pity on hens left featherless after being rescued from a battery farm.

And she came up with eggs-actly the right answer to keep them warm - hand-knitted tanktops.

Chickens lose their feathers after being cooped up in hot sheds at battery farms.


Hil R. - Feb 27, 2010 4:40:52 pm PST #11847 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Davis and White's exhibition music: the hell?


Vortex - Feb 27, 2010 4:42:26 pm PST #11848 of 30001
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Usually we'd sell all our bull (male) calves shortly after they were born, but occasionally we'd let one grow to near-maturity, and then have it slaughtered. Then we'd have a big freezer full of steak and hamburger.

I read an article about a farm family where they would name the animals after food items to remind the kids what would happen. It's hard to get attached to a pig named Bacon.


Cashmere - Feb 27, 2010 4:44:27 pm PST #11849 of 30001
Now tagless for your comfort.

I'm glad it sounds like a typical developmental stage. We're pretty open about explaining things as truthfully as we can. The steer we bought last year was named Rupert so we tend to rave about how delicious he is when we cook steaks.

Owen remains a little sensitive about the thought of people dying, which I try to work through with him. I want to think that we'll always be there for him but I just explain that we won't die for a loooooong time.

I just have to watch about using idioms like "you're killing me" or "I'm dying over here."


Hil R. - Feb 27, 2010 4:45:54 pm PST #11850 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

I'd actually feel more comfortable with eating an animal that I killed than one I bought already cleaned up at a supermarket. If I'm going to be sacrificing a living creature for my food, the least I can do is confront the reality of that, rather than letting someone else handle all of the messy stuff. (I still wouldn't, except in an emergency, but I'd feel better about it if I killed it myself. As long as someone told me how to do it so that I wouldn't just add to the animal's suffering by not knowing how to handle a knife.)


Cashmere - Feb 27, 2010 4:46:43 pm PST #11851 of 30001
Now tagless for your comfort.

When Christopher was five, his great grandmother took him out to collect eggs from their hen house. A chicken pecked him and they had chicken for dinner that night.


Barb - Feb 27, 2010 4:48:03 pm PST #11852 of 30001
“Not dead yet!”

More importantly, she informs me that if I sleep with someone, and he is not my true love, I am Doomed Forever. Becuase I am Ruined, and have Given Away All My Goods.

All of them? Damn, you got busay!

Apparently, milkshake brings all the boys to the yard.


Stephanie - Feb 27, 2010 4:49:21 pm PST #11853 of 30001
Trust my rage

I just have to watch about using idioms like "you're killing me" or "I'm dying over here."

I have noticed this too. I guess I shouldn't expect them to know the difference. Ellie is mostly curious I think. Our fish dying didn't phase her at all. I try telling her that Grandma's mom is still alive so I should be here for a long time.