Lorne: Snakes? Uh-huh. And they came out of your what? Okay. Okay, well, did they get up there themselves or is this part of a, you know, a thing? No, I'm not judging...Do we fight snakes? Angel: Only if they're giant. Or demons. Or giant demons. Are they giant demon snakes? Lorne: Well, unless this guy's 30 feet tall, I'm thinking they're of the garden variety.

'Lineage'


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.


Holli - Mar 26, 2011 9:01:34 am PDT #419 of 30001
an overblown libretto and a sumptuous score/ could never contain the contradictions I adore

How do people organize their clothes?

Zenkitty, I keep out-of-season stuff in storage, and rotate it out onto my clothing rack and into my dresser as seasons change. I also use the seasonal rotation as a chance to weed out stuff I'm not wearing-- if it hasn't been worn since I took it out at the start of the season, I think long and hard about whether I really need it. I'm also lucky that my friends hold clothing swaps on a regular basis, so I can get rid of the stuff I'm not wearing and pick up some new things for free.

I still have way too many clothes-- I keep a rack in my room because my closet is too full-- but this methods seems to keep things from getting completely out of hand. It would probably also help if I went to the thrift store less.


Juliebird - Mar 26, 2011 9:12:49 am PDT #420 of 30001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

ZK,

I have the hope and fear clothing as well! Those I keep in storage (up in the attic) along with the unseasonable clothes and go through them once a year along with the rest of my wardrobe, shift things around as needed. I pretty much try everything on again, find that styles and my tastes have changed, and find it easier to part with the currently non-wearable items that much more easily.

I have a tiny apartment with one 4' wide closet for hanging and another 4' wide closet with shelves and another one out in the living room for coats and emergency sweaters during the warmer months. I don't even have a dresser. The shelves have baskets for socks and undies and jammies. and if I can't fit my work and play pants and shorts on the shelves, then I simply have too many pants and shorts and have to purge/move to the attic.

I think you just need to organize with the space you have. Start from scratch, get it sorted and organized, and only keep on hand what is immediately needed for the current season. If storing the unseasonable and unwearables is not really an option, there are low risers to prop beds on that allow slim tupperware tubs to slide under.

Be realistic, practical. Bring a friend over and have a fashion show and purge. If I haven't touched something in more than two years, definitely donate it. Be more ruthless with your hope/fear piles. Because really, styles/tastes change. I had some fearsome baby-girl/slutty clothes that were far too sparkly/girly for me and I couldn't believe I'd worn them at one point.


Juliebird - Mar 26, 2011 9:17:10 am PDT #421 of 30001
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

bagels: man, I miss the apartment where I had fifteen feet of hanging closet space and changing out for the seasons meant grabbing coathangers from one closet and walking over two feet.


Beverly - Mar 26, 2011 9:22:17 am PDT #422 of 30001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

depths of what I would like to call the Gibson-Sheen Abyss.

I'm grabbing this phrase and running away to stuff it into my personal lexicon, along with geographical descriptors like "Mariana trench" and "Gobi desert."


Holli - Mar 26, 2011 9:24:28 am PDT #423 of 30001
an overblown libretto and a sumptuous score/ could never contain the contradictions I adore

Julie, I think now I miss that apartment too, despite never having lived there.

I'm at the point where I want to start selling more vintage clothes on Etsy, but I literally have nowhere to put them, short of setting up a rack in the dining room. It's very troublesome.


erin_obscure - Mar 26, 2011 9:31:15 am PDT #424 of 30001
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

not to belabor the point, but as a sort of PSA: 911 is entirely appropriate for any crime in progress or need for fire or medical. When in doubt, best to call 911 and explain the situation as succinctly as possible (ladder on the freeway! people fighting! wierd smell in the air!) and expect that you might be referred to a non emergency number. Because if there is any doubt in your mind as to whether an immediate response is needed, get the info out there rather than waiting and looking for another number. I love that buffistas are concerned about tying up a 911 line unneccessarily (love you guys!!!) but i can assure you that anyone answering a 911 line is well practiced at quickly assessing the situation and blowing you off the to non-emer line when appropriate. Seriously, we have a button that transfers the caller to a recording that repeats the non-emer number ad infinitum until the caller hangs up. I can triage most calls in about 10 seconds and then make the transfer with a quick "here's the right number to call." We can make that decision for you!

ION, my darling little cat is so thoughtful. He knows i've been very concerned about his "output" since the overnight vet stay so he left his latest poops on my bed where i'd be sure to see them. While i appreciate the thought, he has THREE clean litter boxes as his disposal.


Cass - Mar 26, 2011 9:57:59 am PDT #425 of 30001
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

The only annoying thing, for me, was that if I have a message telling me to say, "emergency" if it is an emergency, I REALLY ASSUME that not saying it will get my call transferred to a nonemer place or hear nonemer options, not hung up on.

Clearly next time I will go about it differently but really I just was frustrated and I know that when I've called with actual emergencies, I've waited for an operator and I didn't want to be the person tying up the line.

Live, ask the hivemind and learn...


Hil R. - Mar 26, 2011 10:04:32 am PDT #426 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

I love that buffistas are concerned about tying up a 911 line unneccessarily (love you guys!!!) but i can assure you that anyone answering a 911 line is well practiced at quickly assessing the situation and blowing you off the to non-emer line when appropriate.

I just always remember the commercial that played all the time when I was a kid that shows a shadowy guy breaking into a woman's bedroom, and the woman grabs her bedside phone and calls 911 and gets a busy signal. I swear, in the late eighties and early nineties, they must have shown that commercial at least once an hour on every channel.


Dana - Mar 26, 2011 10:17:01 am PDT #427 of 30001
"I'm useless alone." // "We're all useless alone. It's a good thing you're not alone."

Sad to hear about Dianna Wynne Jones.

I am posting from the SLC aiport. They have good wireless.


Atropa - Mar 26, 2011 10:33:28 am PDT #428 of 30001
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

And I would have thought Jilli! and made sure that you saw the link.

Awwww, you know me well!

What is this clothing organization you people are talking about? I have vague memories of it ...