She can't have her slice of bread or her "dessert" (a piece of fruit) if she hasn't tried everything. So far it works.
William ,'Conversations with Dead People'
Natter 76: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Foaminess
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.
Dessert was a small price to pay for the righteousness of my cause to never consume creamed corn.l
I was the same way, Connie, but at least for now ltc is using her stubborness in other areas.
I could yell at people about the flu on Twitter, but instead I'm going to attend a talk on what's on my San Francisco ballot so I know how to vote on all these propositions.
I think it's just No on 5, 6, and 11.
Oh, you parents will appreciate this: on the train the other day, there was a woman with a toddler, and another woman struck up conversation. Her child was some amount younger than the kid on the train. The first woman said (not so the kid could hear), "Oh, is he still sweet, or has he become an asshole? Because this one...."
Ha! Toddlers are little assholes.
ltc was such a ridiculously easy and joyful infant that I was in no way prepared for what was to come.
Timelies all!
We are at OVFF. The trip here wasn't too bad.
There is a book called "Toddlers are assholes". I know this because my MIL gave it to us.
ltc was such a ridiculously easy and joyful infant that I was in no way prepared for what was to come.
Emmett was neither an easy infant, nor an easy toddler. However, about age 4 when reason arrived he started an ascending path of Betterness which continues to this day.
After what amounted to a multi-day anxiety attack, I hauled myself to my primary care NP whom I have been avoiding because my ability to cope with diabetes in a reasonable fashion went out the window this summer. One nifty thing is, whatever the heck I have been eating, my A1c (indicator of average blood glucose over the course of several months) is not horrible. It was 6.9 which is at the upper end of good glucose control. And since Lexapro I was using earlier this year was causing insomnia, and I have tried damn near everything else on the market, we are trying Effexor. NP explained the possibility of weird withdrawal symptoms should I miss a dose, but stated she was confident that as a professional caregiver, I don't have a problem with forgetting or skipping doses. I refrained from laughing in her face. And those times I decide to take my own care as seriously as I take my work, I do quite well for myself.
Rather hoping the Effexor does not make me unconquerably drowsy on the grounds that sometimes I have to work an overnight shift and won't be able to just take it will-she-nill-she. Also hoping that it works.
I appear to have had an ocular migraine, which is weird on several levels, including that I've never gotten an actual migraine. It was over in my peripheral vision, so I kept driving, figuring that it was maybe something like a floater, and five minutes later it went away.
Between this and phantom itches -- one of which woke me up the other week, and some that I have this morning, I'm wondering if something allergic-like is going on.