And I wonder, what possible catastrophe came crashing down from heaven and brought this dashing stranger to tears?

Drusilla ,'Conversations with Dead People'


Spike's Bitches 47: Someone Dangerous Could Get In  

[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.


meara - May 05, 2012 9:05:12 pm PDT #12807 of 30001

Oh good grief. I have OKcupid set up to show newest people first, since I usually feel like I've seen everyone who's already on. And just opened it up and the first person? Someone I hooked up with like, twice, after meeting at a friends party and then she was an ass via text. The third person is someone I'm always crushing over on the rare occasions she comes to dancing (but im pretty damn positive ahes not into me at all sadly) It is too small of a lesbian world. (also, now I clicked on both their profiles before I realized, so they'll both see I looked at them. Argh.)


Liese S. - May 05, 2012 9:07:10 pm PDT #12808 of 30001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

I got in so much trouble all the time, and all my travel was church sponsored! My favorite one was when I and my two girlfriends had snuck off during a main session at a convention to clandestinely meet up with our boyfriends. We then went to McDonalds, as one does on your clandestine outings when you're thirteen. And...at the McDonalds were our sponsors. Who had snuck off from the main session since we were putatively under other supervision at the time.

Ha! We both agreed to just drop the matter and we all had a nice lunch together.

When I snuck off from camp (I was supposed to be helping to *lead* the camp at this point, obviously still not to that level of maturity yet) in the jungle in Venezuela, I was the one who got us all caught. There were four of us who were coupled up, although we weren't allowed to date on the trip. But seriously, people, hot Venezuelan guys taught us how to merengue. We were powerless against it!

Anyway, one of the girls stayed back, because she was smart, and never got in trouble. Two of the girls had already made it to the meetup spot, where there was lots of booze (again, legal for the kids that age there, but not for us.) and dancing and general fun. I had left and rendezvoused with my boy, but he was more straight-laced than the other kids and was arguing with me to go back to camp. I was going with or without him. But apparently I can't argue in Spanish without raising my voice and we all got caught. I got in the least trouble of the girls who went, but I was still pretty busted.

So.

When it was my turn to sponsor, my kids were so screwed. They didn't have a chance, because I knew all their tricks.


Stephanie - May 06, 2012 2:26:46 am PDT #12809 of 30001
Trust my rage

I had never heard of this taping thing.

I was part of the ski team in school and all our meets were coed. We were good friends with the guys and so all our overnight meets meant sleeping in each others rooms and watching scary movies. I know some were having sex but I never saw alcohol or drugs. Maybe because we were such serious athletes?


billytea - May 06, 2012 2:38:50 am PDT #12810 of 30001
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

My mother attended a boarding school in Sydney run by nuns. She and a group of her friends got in trouble once for climbing down a cliff by the school to go and pick lemons (which apparently grew at the base of the cliff). They didn't get in any trouble for the risks they took climbing the clifff; the nuns thought they were off meeting boys.


Sue - May 06, 2012 2:44:13 am PDT #12811 of 30001
hip deep in pie

I have never heard of taping the doors, either. Of course, my one school trip (to London) was chaperoned by a teacher we called Wild Bill, so my experience definitely varies.


Connie Neil - May 06, 2012 3:04:27 am PDT #12812 of 30001
brillig

The only non-family overnight trips I took before college were to church camps, where we all slept in bunkhouse type things, with a monitor/matron/supervisor/guard sleeping in with us. It was a co-ed camp, but I have no idea if anyone slipped out. I wasn't invited, in any case, and it would never have occurred to me. I probably would have said "Why?" if someone had suggested sneaking out.


Strix - May 06, 2012 6:52:47 am PDT #12813 of 30001
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Morning, all. WOW -- THUNDER!!!!

No yardwork for me today; I think I shall clean my office, organize my closet and do some laundry.

After coffee, of course.


Liese S. - May 06, 2012 7:20:33 am PDT #12814 of 30001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Sounds like a good plan for my day, too. Plus Avengers.

I think it's finally time to swap out my winter clothes for summer.


Scrappy - May 06, 2012 7:50:55 am PDT #12815 of 30001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Buffistas, I have a a problem I'm wrestling with and I was hoping for some hivemind wisdom. Last year, I reconnected with an old friend from college. She is in her late 50s and founded a small company in her 30s which allows her to travel and so she leads a very peripatetic life--I see her when she's in L.A.

She just discovered she had cancer (stage 1, luckily) and needs a hysterectomy. She doesn't have insurance and has asked her friends to donate to cover the cost--she suggested $1,000 per person. This weirds me out a little. Partly, I guess, because I have been tied down to a corporate job for 10 years, mostly for the insurance. Partly because I have seen her maybe 6 times in the last two years--although they were six really nice times.

I don't think she's pulling a scam or anything--she's very honest. We could scrape together the money, I think, but the DH is pretty strongly against it. I don't know. I'm really struggling with this.


Dana - May 06, 2012 7:53:01 am PDT #12816 of 30001
I haven't trusted science since I saw the film "Flubber."

She doesn't have insurance and has asked her friends to donate to cover the cost--she suggested $1,000 per person.

Uh, no. I think it's one thing to ask for help, and another thing to "suggest" a donation level. It makes it sound like public radio, not a friendship.