In case ita hasn't seen this: David Beckham Shirtless: Soccer Star Shows Groin, Thighs And New Tattoo (PHOTOS)
'Dirty Girls'
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.
In case you ever wanted to live in a pod thingie, now's your chance: Egg Shape Mobile Living Space – Blob VB3
After 18 months, the mobile living space – blob VB3 is finally finished. This unit is build by architectural firm dmvA for the office of xfactoragencies. The blob is mainly made by polyester, and holds all necessary items one could possibly need as bathroom, kitchen, lighting, sleeping space and several niches for storage. Moreover, the nose can be opened automatically and functions as a porch. While being closed, it blends into a complete smooth blob.
I don't (currently) have shirtless.provocateuse.com, you know. But I do see a nice hands pic there I might grab when I get home...
OMg, for a day I spent the whole thing in meetings, such a clusterfuck.
Mac therapist met with me before seeing him and wants me on meds post-haste.
Also I apparently need to get him into a new afterschool since that is where all of the breakdowns are happening weekdays. Oh and he gets more meds too.
Oh shiiiiiiiiiiit.
Too much TV may mean earlier death:
The more time you spend watching TV, the greater your risk of dying at an earlier age -- especially from heart disease, researchers found.
The study followed 8,800 adults with no history of heart disease for more than six years. Compared to those who watched less than two hours of TV per day, people who watched four hours or more were 80 percent more likely to die from heart disease and 46 percent more likely to die from any cause. All told, 284 people died during the study.
Oooh, it's another one of those "Sensational headline, obvious conclusion" stories.
I hope something helps, msbelle. I feel so bad for your and the poor noodle, to have such rage inside him.
My handwriting has always been unreadable, and I got my first typewriter when I was about 14. People talk about writing out drafts by hand, but to me, writing by hand is sheer labor, but it feels like I think with the ends of my fingers.
The Royal Standard is the ultimate in the evolution of the manual typewriter, while the Selectric II is the pinnacle of the electric typewriter. (Not the Selectric III, which sucked.)
Also I apparently need to get him into a new afterschool since that is where all of the breakdowns are happening weekdays.
Um, wasn't that also true of the old afterschool? I'm guessing it's not location-specific...
Msbelle, I am so sorry that this is all happening, but so glad Mac has you to be there for him.
msbelle, hoping things improve for you and Mac.
My mother had (and may still have) the typewriter my grandfather took with him to college in 1926.
I think I got my first (manual) typewriter when I was 12 or so. It was practically a toy, it was such thin plastic.
56 years later, I was so glad that one of my housemates brought a good, solid Selectric to college. I lived among English majors and there was much typing. I fell asleep to the sound of that typewriter on many occasions.
For grad school I had one of the original Brother word processors. It displayed 70 characters at a time! You could go back and correct things before it put the words on the paper! Such advanced technology...