Pharma-ffistas!
Though that sounds a little like South American drug runners.
'Heart Of Gold'
[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.
Pharma-ffistas!
Though that sounds a little like South American drug runners.
Oxyclean also helps when rerunning a load of laundry left in the washer too long.
*waves arms* Hey, amyth! I just went to the website, and it looks like the Farm Tour is an afternoon thing (1-5), so I'd love to go. Would you mind driving, though? I'll be on my feet for hours soliciting voter registrations and being yelled at by old Republican guys who think I'm trying to sign up illegal aliens.
Well, Burrell, it is a steroid...so, sure, it could. I suspect it's a symptom that probably goes away as you get used to taking it, though.
I use white vinegar when the cloth diapers get stinky. I usually use about a cup although I don't think more would hurt. I think they would just smell like vinegar maybe.
Well, Burrell, it is a steroid...so, sure, it could.
Ha, really? I thought that, but then I thought, come on, you're being racist against steroids.
Well, Burrell, it is a steroid...so, sure, it could. I suspect it's a symptom that probably goes away as you get used to taking it, though.
I was going to say that the non-steroid component (the salmeterol) might be making you a bit speedy. It's similar to albuterol, which tends to make me jittery.
Well, Burrell, it is a steroid...so, sure, it could.
Ha, really? I thought that, but then I thought, come on, you're being racist against steroids.
Do inhaled steroids cause speed freakiness? I've had it with oral steroids, definitely, but not inhaled. But albuterol always makes me jittery. I don't actually know *why* a beta2 adrenergic agonist makes me jittery, but it does.
In contrast to freaky controlling Christians: A Quiverfull dad becomes a woman. Happily ever after, too.
Oh, duh. Yes, I'm not entirely awake--albuterol totally makes me jittery, so yes, that's more likely. I figured inhaled steroid was possible, if not completely common. I mean, on the "different folks/strokes" (wherein sudafed makes me weird and jittery, and benadryl does nothing to put me to sleep)