I need to learn (different lesson from the above) is that if I wake up at 2 or 3 am and think maybe taking a painkiller might be a good idea, I should just get up and do that, not toss and turn until it's actually time to get up
It certainly seems like every time I stand at my front door thinking "I feel like I'm forgetting something" I am, in fact, forgetting something. At least it wasn't something very important today. That one's just an observation, I don't think I can put that knowledge to use in any way.
What does that mean, ND, what do professional credentials get you?
I should just get up and do that, not toss and turn
I have finally learned that laying in bed in the middle of the night wondering if I should get up an pee for, like, 45 minutes is worse than just peeing when I wake up and going back to sleep. You'd think the learning curve on that would be shorter.
The power of the warm bed cocoon is hard to thwart.
A movie filming here is looking body doubles for Chris Pratt and Lawrence Fishburne. Aren't we all?
Hee.
When I get up to pee in the night, I try to only open one eye.
What does that mean, ND, what do professional credentials get you?
I don't have to pay to attend, and it makes access to some areas and panels a little easier.
No license to kill?
It's in the fine print and phrased as "extra baggage on a case by case circumstance."
I sometimes wonder how it is that some people are actually able to spend the whole night in bed. I always wander a bit.
My little town's library has had (since Oct 1) reading/drawing in the children's room: Ben Hatke, Oliver Jeffers, Eoin Colfer, Matt Davies and tonight is Tam O'Shaughnessy. K is getting quite the collection of signed books.