Does anybody else miss the Mayor? 'I just want to be a big snake.'

Xander ,'End of Days'


Natter 68: Bork Bork Bork  

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


bon bon - Apr 02, 2011 9:03:32 am PDT #1371 of 30001
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Spasticity just means that the muscles tighten and can't relax. My sister's brain damage was one-sided, and her right hand draws up into a claw and her right leg muscles tightened so that she was on tiptoe on that side, at least prior to several surgeries. Spasticity has nothing to do with jerky features, but contributes to the awkward gait.

Yes, but I think when kids use it they mean hyperactive, not in the same sense as in spastic CP.


beekaytee - Apr 02, 2011 9:05:19 am PDT #1372 of 30001
Compassionately intolerant

I should add, Bartleby casually chewed on exactly one thing in my house. Roughly 10 minutes later, the place was coated in Bitter Apple. He never chewed on anything else.

With one weirdly notable exception. He dug under a stack of books/papers, to chew up my 1999 'book'. Three times.

His permanent record in one vet office states "Destroys financial records."

I still have the book in a big ziplock just in case I get audited for that year. I suppose I could throw it out, but it's a good story.

Must have been a tasty glue, or something.


§ ita § - Apr 02, 2011 9:13:13 am PDT #1373 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Doing things like naming the CP association the Spastic Society doesn't lean to casual distinction between the types of CP. Even though spastic CP is a subdvision of the disease, it's also a synonym for them all.


Amy - Apr 02, 2011 9:16:31 am PDT #1374 of 30001
Because books.

Thanks, guys. I can't do aluminum foil for the wire S. just had to splice to get to work (which will be taped when he finds the electrical tape), but I will for other things. AND get the apple spray. He's a big chewer, and this isn't the first cord he's chewed all the way through.

Uh, the cat is the big chewer, not Stephen. To be clear.


le nubian - Apr 02, 2011 9:21:06 am PDT #1375 of 30001
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

good gravy. I would NEVER have known that "spastic" and CP has a connection. I don't use "spaz" very much if at all, but it was all the rage in the 80s when I was in high school. There was no connection to CP in our use of it. It would be more likely to be associated with hyperactivity.


Sophia Brooks - Apr 02, 2011 9:22:18 am PDT #1376 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I get why not to use it anymore, but when I was a middle schooler, spazzing out or spazz had the same meaning as "wigging out", possibly with more jumping about. I didn't even get the connection with the word "spastic". Language is fascinating.


Ginger - Apr 02, 2011 9:24:21 am PDT #1377 of 30001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Steampunk office: [link]


Zenkitty - Apr 02, 2011 9:25:37 am PDT #1378 of 30001
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

His permanent record in one vet office states "Destroys financial records."

Bartleby can chew my 1999 to pieces instead. It wasn't a great year.

I need to get some of that Bitter Apple stuff to keep Percy from chewing the strings off the blinds. What is it with that cat and string? Is he an obsessive flosser? I wish I knew more of what his life was like before I got him.


Kat - Apr 02, 2011 10:06:52 am PDT #1379 of 30001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I would never think to use spastic to pertain to CP because it's completely NOT even used diagnostically or clinically here (you get hypertonic, which I guess would be spastic, and hypotonic). Grace has hemiplegic hypotonic CP.


Connie Neil - Apr 02, 2011 10:21:22 am PDT #1380 of 30001
brillig

The only medical use I've ever heard for spastic is re: spastic colons, which are in spasm. I've always assumed spastic was just another form of the word spasm.