I'm just trying to tell you that we have nothing in common besides both of us liking your penis.

Anya ,'Dirty Girls'


Natter 69: Practically names itself.  

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.


Hil R. - Oct 27, 2011 7:40:13 am PDT #3422 of 30001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Apparently, here there are different Trick or Treating nights scheduled for different neighborhoods. One assumes to maximize candy collection. I call foul.

Around here, each county has a different trick-or-treat night, with official times. My county at least has it scheduled on actual Halloween. I don't understand the point of rescheduling it to a different day, especially when most of them are just moving it from one weekday to a different weekday.


§ ita § - Oct 27, 2011 7:48:38 am PDT #3423 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

This is an incredibly frustrating lottery ticket.

We just had the benefits 2012 con call. Basically the same as 2011, except more expensive. I expect that last part is mainly my fault. Oops. But I better pay careful attention to the short and long term disability options this time round, just in case. If I let my employer's contributions to my LTD (100%) be taxable, then my actual LTD will be untaxable--that sounds like a decent gamble, right?

Man, there's so much to consider, and it's all gambling.


Allyson - Oct 27, 2011 7:56:30 am PDT #3424 of 30001
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

Lucky me!

Seriously, when I was melting down over the car thing, your DH was so patient and cool about it all, I felt calmer for hours after talking to him about it. Just like it was going to be completely ok, and not in a platitude sort of way.


sarameg - Oct 27, 2011 7:56:57 am PDT #3425 of 30001

Have to remember to come home early on Monday. I have a big bucket of candy now.

So, I've got a passed out kitten on one side of me, and a curled up Devi on the other. They are not aware of each other. Loki's trying to get into the top cabinets and MK just climbed on my lap. Um. I'm trying to work here.


meara - Oct 27, 2011 8:00:15 am PDT #3426 of 30001

If I let my employer's contributions to my LTD (100%) be taxable, then my actual LTD will be untaxable--that sounds like a decent gamble, right?

Yes. And I generally do the buy-up on LTD and not on STD--I figure if I have short term disability, the difference is not huge and I can probably cover it. But on the off chance I ever need LTD, I figure I'll be in deep shit and hurting for every penny I can get.


sarameg - Oct 27, 2011 8:01:32 am PDT #3427 of 30001

And now MK's butt is in front of Pumpkin. She's growling, he's ignoring her. I'm not sure he knows she's even there.


hippocampus - Oct 27, 2011 8:02:44 am PDT #3428 of 30001
not your mom's socks.

Thanks, Amy & everyone.

I'm glad it was peaceful, too. And it's what she wanted. Well, minus the hospital part.

I'm going to hang out quietly in here and watch y'all be wise. I soaked up the Atlantic conversation and its tangents like it was sunlight, let me tell you what.


§ ita § - Oct 27, 2011 8:05:21 am PDT #3429 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I figure I'll be in deep shit and hurting for every penny I can get.

Yeah, LTD and 60% of income scares the hell out of me. 80%? That will be difficult, but some severe lifestyle changes and no more socking away into savings will have to cover that.


Tom Scola - Oct 27, 2011 8:08:08 am PDT #3430 of 30001
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

Jeez, it's raining out! Could you give the drum circle a rest?


Kate P. - Oct 27, 2011 8:20:06 am PDT #3431 of 30001
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Sox, my condolences to your DH & family. It's never easy, but it sounds like it was as peaceful as it could have been, and I hope that's a comfort.

The truth is that I didn't. I was never good at it and actively disliked doing the cute thing to get boys. Always have. But it meant that I wasn't part of the cadre of chicks reading "the Knot" and planning the perfect Napa wedding the next summer.

javachik, reading about those women, I also wonder how many of them are actually happy in their marriages (or still married) now. I mean, I certainly hope they are; I don't wish them unhappiness. But I'd guess it's not uncommon for someone who really, really wants to get married NOW -- in other words, someone for whom the goal is "marriage," not "finding the right person" -- to end up marrying someone with whom they're not super happy or compatible, long-term.

I love reading Burrell's and Teppy's and beth's and Scrappy's stories of finding the right person. I sometimes think about how M and I were at just the right stages in our lives to meet and fall in love with each other; if we'd met five years earlier, we might not even have liked each other all that much, and we probably wouldn't have had enough experience to understand all that was right about each other. We both did a lot of growing up in our 20s, and it got us to the place where we *could* be right for each other.

(As a side note, it does sometimes feel strange to have moved across the country together, less than a year into the relationship. Strange in the sense that, while to us it's still unexpectedly wonderful that we found each other, to our friends in Nashville we're just... Kate & Mark. Just another couple. Whereas our friends back home *know* how long it took, and how frustrating it was for both of us to be single for so long while they all got married and started having babies, and consequently they still tell us sometimes how happy they are for us.)