Apparently I was run over by a truck in my sleep. Does not make a good argument for going to bed at a not-unreasonable time.
'Safe'
Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I am in a awkward situation at work right now- my student came in and her shorts are WAY to short, so I need to talk to her. The only problem is that I somehow lost my sweater, so my outfit is also somewhat inappropriate. I am uncertain of what to do!
I feel like one of the prerogatives of being a boss is telling people what to do, regardless of what you yourself are doing!
it was an excellent end to the weekend
YaY! Perchance excellent weekends in the near future too.
Ugh Sophia. Although arms showing seems a lesser offense.
Condolences, DCJ
Yay, meara!
I went for a run at dawn and it was already kinda too hot and muggy. Then when I got home and looked at the time it was actually time to drive to work. So, came in late, and now it seems without my phone. Monday.
But the new adhesive strips I got for my FasTrak appear to be holding, so I got that going for me which is nice.
That's weird. My phone just called itself. My landline phone and the caller ID showed my name and the number of the phone itself. I answered and no one was there. Is this an omen?
Clone!
Or robot duplicate! Or evil twin!
They're calling from inside the house!
That's weird. My phone just called itself. My landline phone and the caller ID showed my name and the number of the phone itself. I answered and no one was there. Is this an omen?
It's a phone scam where the caller spoofs your number on the caller ID. It's weird as hell to see it pop up, but that's all it is: [link]
t edit It happened to us the other day, and I read about it a couple of weeks ago. My aunt (who lived with my grandfather until he passed away, and still lives in the house, and never transferred the phone number out of my grandfather's name) got a call like this where the caller ID showed my grandpa's name, and she is CONVINCED that it was God (or my grandpa) sending her a message. She was so happy about it that I didn't want to tell her it was a phone scam. Is that wrong?
It's a phone scam where the caller spoofs your number on the caller ID.
Bastards.
Somewhat relatedly, in the entire history of the universe, has anyone ever received an automated call that starts out saying, "This is not a sales call" and the call was actually not a sales call?