You're right. He's evil. But you should see him naked. I mean really!

Buffybot ,'Dirty Girls'


Spike's Bitches 48: I Say, We Go Out There, and Kick a Little Demon Ass.  

[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.


Connie Neil - Jan 23, 2015 5:42:43 am PST #16192 of 30002
brillig

I made a fair amount of money typing up kids papers when I first moved to Utah after graduating. The only typewriters most students had access to were in the student center, and they were busy and badly maintained.


msbelle - Jan 23, 2015 5:45:54 am PST #16193 of 30002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

Never took typing. My mother bought books for me to learn on an electric typewriter we had, but I never really did them. I still type incorrectly and can't really type more than 35 wpm on a test. BUT if I sm typing as I am composing, I type much faster. Also only use the left hand shift.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 23, 2015 5:46:07 am PST #16194 of 30002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Keyboarding was required in my high school for all tracks, but I was excused because I was the copy editor for the school paper, and that job included typing all the handwritten stories that the reporters handed in, on a computer. We then printed them out, and pasted them on the paste up sheets.

Long story short, I type fairly fast and semi-accurately, but not at all correctly!

When I was younger (like say age 7 - 12) I used to practice typing on a typewriter with my moms old typing books. I also tried to learn shorthand, but I was unsuccessful.


askye - Jan 23, 2015 5:55:45 am PST #16195 of 30002
Thrive to spite them

This day sucks. I went to the store for supplies (tissue, water, cat food, stuf flike that). I went to the small town general store type deal because its smaller and not as overwhelming. Plus it doesn't trigger my anxiety over being "caught" out when I'm supposed to be sick.

I normally buy Penny Blue Buffalo grain free cat food, which isn't available in grocery stores but there are some grain free alternatives so I fgured i'd get one of those. I can't get a couple of cans of cat food because she will refuse to eat canned food.

So I got what I needed, plus a few things I didn't (fancy rootbeer! Damnit i need a treat. Organic locally made vanilla pudding, easy on the throat!) and came home.

Where I promptly dropped my keys between the deck and the house. The deck is all enclosed underneath and I was looking under there, trying to reach, lying on the freezing ground (my phone was inside the house, i didn't take it, why would i need it?) and finally I saw an old plastic coat hanger under neath tehre and tried that. Didn't work. Tracked down a neighbor who was home, she warily leant me another coat hanger (also plastic) but longer. Didn't work.

By the way it's like 19F outside and i don't have any gloves on because I can find 1 glove from 4 different pairs.

I went to the shed - hey it's unlocked, pried the door open (it was frozen shut) found nothing. Trudging back and I looked at some fallen branches and started berating myself for not picking these up sooner when it hit me. Branch, thin. Long.

After two tries of more lying on the freezing ground I got my keys.

I really need to hide a key outside.

And Penny is refusing to eat her food, I mixed it in with what little of her regular food I have but she's meowing and trying to cover it up.


Tom Scola - Jan 23, 2015 5:56:56 am PST #16196 of 30002
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

Like David, I took a typing class in high school on IBM Selectrics. They ruined me for every other keyboard I've used since. I loved the way when you pressed down on a second key, the first key you pressed would get pushed back up.


sj - Jan 23, 2015 5:58:06 am PST #16197 of 30002
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

{{{{{askye}}}}} That is a very bad no good way to start your day. I'm sorry.


Connie Neil - Jan 23, 2015 6:06:09 am PST #16198 of 30002
brillig

I would look at Mother's shorthand books and think "I will never learn this." I had a hard enough time with cursive, I had no faith in doing coded cursive correctly. I was also dreading slide rules, but technology advancements saved me from both those fears.


askye - Jan 23, 2015 6:07:01 am PST #16199 of 30002
Thrive to spite them

That's exactly what it's like.

When I was driving to the store I was thinking "even though I feel like crap I will try to match up at least one pair of gloves" and now I'm like...fuck it that's too much thinking. I'm going to put on comfy clothes, drink water and...do something. Maybe finish up the Librarians or rewatch Leverage.


Toddson - Jan 23, 2015 6:17:14 am PST #16200 of 30002
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

I took typing in high school - on manual typewriters. I remember I was sick the day we learned about the top row (numbers) and I still have minor problems with them.

I went off to college (in 1969) with my mother's 1930something L.C. Smith Corona typewriter (manual, of course). Nice big keys to hit, although they did tend to tangle.


JenP - Jan 23, 2015 7:53:47 am PST #16201 of 30002

askye, may your day go nothing but up from here on.

I took typing in HS, too, and it was probably the skill most directly linked to earning income for several years of anything I did in school. And mighty useful for college. Also, there was something super satisfying about those electric typewriters... I think we had the ball kind? I don't remember. I sort of slacked off when it came to the numbers, though, MUCH to my regret.