| Basic Arithmetic |
[Nov. 18th, 2008|12:34 am] |
I'm not trying to mislead anyone here. Mathematics are truly not my strong suit, but I assure you. I can handle the basics.
A few days ago I was standing in the customer service line of a major department store chain waiting to return an item.
In front of me a woman was having a heated discussion with the store associate:
"Yesterday I purchased this suitcase and it was 50% off. Today I see that the suitcase is buy one, get one free!"
She looks at the associate earnestly and continues:
"This was a VERY expensive suitcase, so you can understand how upset I was!"
At this point I'm hoping the associate says something like "No, I really don't understand why you're upset", but no luck. The store associate instead tells her that she wants to verify the price of the suitcase today. At this point the customer turns around and gives me a knowing glance. I respond with a blank look.
The suitcase is scanned and on the screen that I can see from where I am standing two prices pop up: The 'list' price of $259 and the 'sale' price of $129.
At this point it's pretty obvious to me, as I expect it would be to most people, that today the suitcase is half price. Quickly it becomes clear that this is not the case for the customer and the store associate.
The store associate addresses the customer: "let me see what percentage off this is" and proceeds to start looking for what ends up being a calculator. This takes longer than I would like as the whole situation is beginning to make me feel restless.
After a few button punches the associate proclaims proudly to the customer that the suitcase is 50% off and not 'buy one, get one free' as the customer had indicated earlier in the conversation.
This seems to resolve the issue and the customer picks up her suitcase and walks off.
Now, like I said, math is really not something I would consider myself good at - but I'm left thinking. What exactly IS the difference between 50% off and 'buy one, get one free'. I know at some grocery stores that the 'buy one, get one free' means you have to get two items or you pay full price for the first one.
But really, if I pay $259 for two suitcases my price per suitcase is $129, (I'm dropping the change here to make this easy) or pay $129 for one suitcase (where I could purchase a second for another $129 bringing my total to approximately $259) what is the real difference here?
And why did I have to wait 15 minutes for two adults to come to an agreement of some sort without even figuring this out - just to return a sweater?
I suspect that is my punishment for not trying on clothes in the store. Sigh. |
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| In the news.. |
[Nov. 18th, 2008|12:24 am] |
This in the news:
"SAN FRANCISCO – Yahoo Inc. co-founder Jerry Yang is stepping down as chief executive, ending a rocky reign marked by his refusal to sell the Internet company to Microsoft Corp. .....
Yang, who started working on Yahoo with Stanford University classmate David Filo in 1994, will revert to "Chief Yahoo," a titular role he filled before replacing former movie studio boss Terry Semel as CEO in June 2007."
He must be so proud.
"NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. economy fell into a recession last spring and will contract sharply this quarter as more than 200,000 workers per month are added to the rolls of the unemployed, a survey said on Monday. ....
It said the U.S. economy entered a recession in April and that it will last 14 months, which would make it one of the longest recessions since the Great Depression of the 1930s."
So, this 'recession' - if it started in April and lasts 14 months...that means it's over by the end of June? We're already half way through? And the media is talking about how long that is...I'm confused.
How do we miss something that makes as much news as a recession for 7 months? It's like having a python coming up over your hips before you realize you're being eaten by a snake? |
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| Repost - ahh. The first time I was arrested. Memories, Memories. |
[Jul. 13th, 2008|04:58 pm] |
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
So, I am in Omaha, Nebraska. Bear with me here as I am doing this the old fashioned way without Dreamweaver. I had a bit of trouble finding a hotel for Wednesday night. When I got here I overheard something about a Mutual of Omaha convention. What are the odds? Tomorrow I head to Des Moines, Iowa. Exciting week since I have never actually been to Nebraska or Iowa.
What isn't going to be so swell is that I have a paper that I need to write at night in one of these hotel rooms. The paper isn't really the problem, but sometimes I like to print things to reference with writing...and I don't have a printer.
Pamela should also be pleased to know that I am procrastinating on said paper by working on her scarf.
I had a devil of a time getting to the hotel. I managed to pick the hotel next to the exit ramp construction. Good news is that they do have high speed internet and it is working.
Take care.
Monday, November 22, 2004
My news from last week for those of you that don't already know is that I have been offered and have accepted a new job. The job is similar to what I do now, selling in the broadcast industry, except the company I will be working for is a manufacturer of hardware including routers and master control switchers. They are based out of the UK and their US headquarters are in Grass Valley, CA. I am quite excited and really like the people I will be working with. I start on December 6. You can check them out at www.quartzus.com.
My friend Nina had her son Ben on Wednesday, November 17 at 4:34 p.m. He weighed 7 pounds 8 ounces.
I have seen a lot of things talking about the new map of north america. They all seem to be the green one that designates most of North America as 'Jesusland'. I think this other one is a lot funnier.
Click here to see the new map of North America
Finally, for those of you that are aware of my adventure in Iowa the video of the news story is up on the video page. Anyone planning a vacation in Iowa may also want to give it a gander. Let's just say that it's pretty clear that Iowa is not looking to be a vacation hot spot. (I need to find the video, I think I may put it up on myspace, but if you're dying to see it let me know and I'll put it somewhere accessable). |
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| Repost of Dating Blog from Blue Velvet Ant |
[Jul. 13th, 2008|04:44 pm] |
I was speaking with someone about this 'incident' a few days ago - and having found it I feel compelled to repost it somewhere that it can be found. This is still in the archives at Blue Velvet Ant, but a bit of hunting would be involved.
Basically, I went on a speed dating thing over three years ago now - and there were a few dates that came out of it. At the time I was 30 and this guy was 42. I'm not so good at dating and really not good at telling someone it just didn't work for me.
When I finally did that I ended up with a critique from this 'date'. I figure that if someone wants to write an evaluation of me when I don't want to see them again - whatever they write becomes fair game. Might be why this guy was still single at 42. I hope he's figured that out in the last 3 years....
(and I never gave him my website so I am guessing he never saw that I posted this?)
Read on:
Sunday, April 10, 2005
So it's April. A lot has happened, but with all the traveling I haven't really been in a position to elaborate. When I last updated I was about to go on my first speed date. Well, it was pretty dreadful. The guy was a bit weird. I suppose I should have been clued in by the long emails and phone messages he had a tendency to leave me. I ended up going to a blues concert with him and dinner with the blues artist. Ended up with a terrible headache that may or may not have been related. He asked me on a second date before the first had even started and then again to a movie later that week (that he had as a free preview flier stored in his pocket) somewhere in the middle of the date.
It was awkward. He seemed to be more defined by his activities (works at the Shaw radio station as a volunteer and had little cards printed with his show time) than an actual personality. At the end of the evening he took me back to my car and I panicked and told him I would make him dinner before NAB. Didn't want to then and as I thought more and more about it I really regretted it. He wrote me an email later and weeks went by and I didn't respond hoping that the problem might just go away. So then on Thursday I start getting those long messages (to each of my phones) and another long email asking me about dinner. It was a bit freaky and stalker like. So anyway I was sick enough of the 20 minute phone messages that I responded hastily in the form of a 'Dear John' email. The really funny thing about this is that it seems that he responded to me in the form of suggestions and advice. I won't be responding to him, but my advice to him would be: Don't start planning our lives together before the first date. Don't make a date feel like a field trip. Don't ask me on a second date before we start the first. Don't ever leave me a phone message more than 45 seconds long. Don't include links and other information on our 'field trip' activities in your email. Do get a clue when the girl that you went on a date with doesn't return your call. Do not respond to her rejection with an evaluation of the date.
For your entertainment the correspondence from this gentleman follows:
This is the first email and should have been a clue:
good morning, i enjoyed talking & would like for us to get to know each other better. on that note, we could do something fun some evening! saturnite looks very promising for a great time if u r free? as a single i stay pretty busy so here's my current sched:
tonite i'm hosting a movie for the alliance française Ciné-club chez moi! (parlez-vous?)
frinite is a full-moon/bday party hosted by a reiki master that i *may* attend (i'm open to other options/ideas so please share any suggestions, ok?) saturnite i'm taking a famous blues musician to dinner & then going to his show: http://www.artscenterlive.org /write/calendar.html March 26, 2005 Corey Harris 8 p.m.
In Scorsese's film, "Feel Like Going Home," Corey Harris visits Niafunke, the Sahara Desert hometown of Malian master musician Ali Farka Touré, known around the world as the king of African blues. His latest album "Mississippi to Mali" was inspired by this project and recorded on location. "Harris bravely wanders the edge between African-American and African folk sounds. Hauntingly primitivist and intellectually exhilarating" The Boston Globe. Part of our American Roots Series. $15, $13 ArtsCenter Friends
corey harris webinfo: http://www.rounder.com/index .php?id=artistDisplay.php &musicalGroupId=6645
i suspect we are going to tyler's in carrboro since it's next to the concert venue but we may do weaver street if he wants/prefers organic... so please consider joining us! here's an irony: i once took anoth famous blues musician to eat at south end brewery before he played on my show & the restaurant unintentionally/coincidentally played one of his songs on their music system while we ate!
sunday 4pm-8pm is my radioshow, i actually have a blues musician coming from california to play onair ~5pm but i was also considering a nice easter brunch buffet somewhere, tho not sure where yet, let me know if u have ideas! :)
here's my blues host info:
http://www.wshafm.org/about _waha_volunteers.htm
here's info on the musician playing sunday:
andy has a couple cd's out & occasionally plays locally he's coming from calif, here's his website for more info:
www.andycoats.com
let me know what u think/prefer then we can make some plans... -jeff
This is the post first date email:
hi jill, i enjoyed last nite & glad we got to spend more time togeth hope u have safe trip(s) & i look fwd to dinner (even if i don't help cook) :) i found a dvd i could bring if u want to do that after dinner:
'around the bend' - http://imdb.com/title/tt038481 0/
or we can just visit + spend time with a half dozen animals!
oh, u mentioned u had a website but i forgot to ask the url please send it & i'll check it out, thx!
p.s. i am impressed at your thoughtfulness, i like that.
This is my 'Dear Jeff' letter
Jeff,
I apologize for not getting back with you sooner, but I have been quite busy and are still on the road. I just received your messages and realized I had not yet responded and must apologize for my thoughtlessness.
Although I had fun going to the blues concert last month, I find that I really can't see you again. You are a very kind and thoughtful person but for me the spark I am looking for just wasn't there and I have so little personal time that I need to use it carefully.
As a busy person yourself I am sure you understand and wouldn't want to waste your time on someone that wasn't interested in a relationship.
Good luck in your future dates, thank you for the new experience last month and I hope you had a Happy Birthday.
Take care,
Jill Walters
This was his super weird response:
dear jill, i guess i felt the same way & later realized i didn't treat the concert like a real date sorry about that & thx for replying, i was concerned about whether u were ok! good luck jill in the dating world & again i'm sorry i was so casual- guess it was sort of like taking things TOO slowly, oh well, it was a good learning experience... practice makes perfect, right? :) sincerely, jeff mcdermott p.s. may i suggest (for future dating) to just end it that nite instead of inviting someone to dinner? as a result i had been thinking of your positive qualities i had gleaned from our mtg. having taken these notes i was looking fwd to actually getting more acquainted but i understand your response, given how i was so casual last time! just for fun, here's the summary of my impressions: mature/experienced in life/arts/travel/cuisines/etc. cook thai
calm/confident/flexible /content/secure/sincere /sensitive
from orlando (didn't like cold in c'boro!) pleasure island, disney, oldest, taking care of sib ling (martha-sheraton)
smart-biol ogy +mba, wow!
snorkel+asked me when i was going to carib as soon as she got in my car
:)
attractive kate winslet type -great eye contact & nice 'interested' opening remarks at southend smokehouse!
(very honest about sharing that she wanted me to come over to the table when m-f ratio was uneven)
trusting - willing to meet at my house! (i.e. possibly less baggage than some women)
mentioned 'we' in reference to st.croix - may have gone with a boyfriend so may be bouncing back? (end of email)
Sooooo....
The interesting thing here to me is that somehow he got the idea that I was taking care of Martha. I think that must have come from hearing that Martha moved up here and lived with me for a while. Perhaps he thought we still lived together? I also find it funny that he assumed that the 'we' with St. Croix was a boyfriend. As those of you who know and have seen this site know, St. Croix was with my family. No bouncing there. But I am alarmed that he remembered these things and Martha's name. Guess he has a great memory. I had forgotten my opening line at speed dating. He was at a table by himself since his first date didn't show. I felt bad for him. I had forgotten that.
Overall, he was a bit creepy and definitely came on too strong. Somehow I feel like part of a science experiment. I know that he seems to have friends (I met a few of them) and he also has several siblings. Perhaps one of these people could help to steer him in the right way when it comes to dating. (Curiously he is the 2nd person in a week to tell me I look somewhat like Kate Winslett.)
He is correct that I shouldn't have said anything about dinner, but I am bad about hurting people's feelings and he had asked me out twice already. I guess at the time I wasn't against seeing him again but ultimately decided I couldn't force myself to like this guy and he might be a stalker and I didn't want him to know where I lived. For the first post Bryan date that didn't involve Lloyd who I already knew and was a friend thing anyway, I was doing my best.
That's my defense anyway. |
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| Life and Limb |
[Jul. 4th, 2008|11:03 pm] |
Driving up capital blvd. tonight, it was raining and the streetlights, strip malls and headlights were reflected in the black mirror that asphalt becomes when it rains. It's the forth of July and fireworks were just ending. I could see their last big flowers twinkling overhead as they faded. Thin crackles of lightning stretched across the sky, its eerie white light besting what remained of the fireworks. I could barely hear a boom over the thunder.
This evening I decided to go for dinner and a movie. First stop, Steak and Shake. A lot of people I know aren't big fans, but growing up it was one of my mom's favorite places and I guess I ended up liking the thin burger too. Not to mention it's a good way to satisfy a craving with a relatively normal sized burger portion. I ordered the same thing I always order: single cheeseburger, lettuce, tomato, pickle, onion, mayo, ketchup and added something I don't usually -bacon. I went with the platter so I could get a small side of fries (they are the really thin shoe-string variety) and a side of salad (they've improved the salad). I brought a book I've been working on, Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell and read that as I ate, taking my time. The movie wasn't until 7:40. Later I watched another waitress dump a glass of water on an adjacent guest. I thanked my lucky stars she wasn't my waitress. My careful, conscientious waitress got a $5 on an $8 meal just because she didn't drop anything on me and I felt she should be rewarded.
After I left I went to the shopping center with the theater and took a detour through Target. My intention being to purchase the firewire sync cable I need for the classic iPod. I had no such luck. Instead, I purchased a bottle of water and headed upstairs for the movie: Indiana Jones. Of course now that I've seen Indiana Jones the only thing coming up that I am looking forward to is the new Batman. But really, I don't go to the theater much. And it had to happen sometime.
Indiana seems to be at the end of its theater run. It was in the smallest of the stadium theaters and I took a seat in the top row, just a few in from the edge. From here it gets a tad unusual. A few rows down I see a stroller. And in that stroller is – you guessed it – a stroller sized child. I find myself thinking 'haven't these people heard of baby sitters?' and 'if that kid starts crying….'. It seemed like the child was asleep and for some reason these people thought/hoped that the child might remain asleep during the 'mild' action movie? Personally, if I have to pay $9 for a movie ticket and who knows how much for food, I'll shell out what it takes for a sitter or wait for the DVD. At least they didn't lock their child in a crate in the back of their truck, right (trust me, it was in the news. Google it)? The child in question slept through the previews and awoke just as the movie was beginning. The mother couldn't get the stroller out of the row, dad had to run around the other row and come up from the bottom and they carried it down the stairs together. I didn't see the rest. I noticed later they were back, or at least one of them was. And when the movie was over, the man came back to the original seats to retrieve the woman's purse and look for a toy. I would also not want to come in and out only seeing bits. Certainly that would ruin it enough that you could never truly enjoy it from beginning to end?
The other strange thing was a man and woman a few seats down on the other side. They came in towards the end of the previews. At some point early on in the movie, the woman got up and walked through the row to the far side (the side I am sitting on) and walks to the last row (where I am sitting). The man with her sits down in one of the three empty seats to my right that didn't involve shuffling past me. The woman on the other hand, shuffles two seats past me. The man follows and sits down next to me. They continue to sit there for most of the movie. I think there was someone to the other side of them, but I am not entirely sure, but at some point near the end of the movie, she gets up again and the moves down a few more seats (maybe 4?) and sits there for the remainder of the movie. I think the people on the other side had moved - I suspect she may have been annoying them. As we are leaving the theatre I am walking behind her. I hear her say to the man "I wish we could have gotten those seats on the end". ????? She moved three times during the movie and she still didn't have seats she liked? It's not like there were more than 12 of us in the theatre. I've never moved during a movie, except maybe once when some kids kept kicking my seat. I've never seen anyone else move. She seemed squirrelly.
I almost forgot the couple with the ice cream. Somehow they smuggled ice cream into the theater. They didn't buy it there because it wasn't being sold, but somehow they had two pretty frozen ice cream something or other's on sticks. Cold enough that they didn't pop off the stick when being eaten. I've seen people smuggle in their own candy, even popcorn...but ice cream?? That takes commitment.
Tomorrow I'll check the news and see what kind of stupid thing someone did to kill themselves this year. Independence Day is really the day to do something stupid and die, or at least lose a limb. People do things like look into the canisters they just put a large, illegal and professional firework in and have it go off in their face. Kids have arms blown off when they don't let go soon enough. Even professionals have some terrible things happen. My first fireworks display after I left Florida was in Greensboro for the 4th of July. I don't recall the specific year. Having been well acquainted with the Disney fireworks displays and the displays that Orlando did to compete, I was really quite disappointed and probably even said something disparaging about the short and relatively uneventful 'event'.
When I read in the paper the next morning that the man who was in charge of the fireworks display had blown his arm off, I felt like a jerk. Following years displays were far better and I remember that incident every time I've seen a short one. Silently I wonder who lost a limb this year.
Hope it's not you. |
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| Some Amazon Insects |
[Jan. 11th, 2007|10:42 pm] |
(Well I started a report the other night and when I was about half done – not saved, of course – Word said it had encountered a problem and needed to close. Was steamed and didn’t redo it or ever get back. Now I guess I’ll save them.)
Animal sightings in the wild in the Amazon were about what I expected – few and far between. It would have been nice to have seen more than I expected, but we did see a few things, even though many couldn’t be photographed. Pink river dolphins don’t surface and show off like their bottle-nosed cousins, though they really are pink. Poison arrow tree frogs simply won’t sit still, even on your guide’s hand or neck, so all the frog photos are fuzzy. The sleeping snakes, the sleeping hummingbirds, the fishing spiders, and the gigantic owl moths were all sighted from the little wooden boats on the night trips. The famous blue morpho butterfly of the Amazon also wouldn’t sit still either, but I got good pictures of some very pretty others., three of 4,000 or more species in Peru.
***bva: The butterfly on the left is a Malachite - (scientific name - Siproeta stelenes) they are easy to breed and common in many butterfly museums. The butterfly on the right is some sort of kite swallowtail. I will check into this further***

While walking in the rain forest we saw the transparent-winged butterfly. Lucky to be able to get it because the camera lenses kept fogging up in the humidity and sometimes the focus sensors got so damp those of us with zoom lenses couldn’t get the cameras to focus automatically or manually. The moth below, one of 20,000 moth species known in Peru, was about the size of my hand and kept flying around the room crashing into things and making a lot of noise. We tried to catch it and put it outside but had no luck – a somewhat odd thing to try, I suppose, since we had no ceiling and were, for all purposes, outside anyway. When we turned the lanterns down for the night, it quieted down some and the next morning it was settled down on my shirt.
***bva note: The moth in question is a sphynx moth (on the right), a smaller size of this species can be found in North America***
 The fuzzy photos are of a tiny poison arrow frog on Paul’s neck and a small ground frog that looks like the mud where it lives.
The caterpillar is a stinging variety, of course. ***bva: looks like some sort of silk worm caterpillar***
 The grasshopper is huge and one of a large variety of species of grasshoppers and katydids.

We saw thousands of ants, including leaf cutters, busily going about their jobs, but they were also impossible to photograph because of movement and lack of light. (There is amazingly little light in the rainforest.) But I did get photos of these walking sticks, a male and a female (but I don’t remember which is which).

Next time some reptiles and mammals. |
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| Yaqua |
[Jan. 11th, 2007|10:37 am] |
The rum "factory" and "bar", the bar being the open living area of the house.


The cane grinder is normally operated by oxen, not by Amazon naturalists as in the photo.

Well-to-do family with chickens, some horses, oxen, etc. We assume no one has died or even been sickened by the rum since Explorama has had a relationship with the family for the 30 yrs. they've been in the area.

Third picture is of a typical house belonging to a well-off Riberenous family; some are smaller, not stilted.



Three of the photos of kids are from the village where I bought most of the necklaces. And, in fact, you can see that one of the girls has the very basket/gourd I sent you, along with some necklaces, hanging on her arm.

The two boys and the girl sitting in a doorway are from another village but are also Yaqua. |
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| Camp Creatures in the Amazon |
[Jan. 11th, 2007|10:12 am] |
If you stay in an Explorama eco-lodge, you are sure to see some local animals because each camp has some that hang around. Not necessarily tame but used to people, not adverse to a handout of food or a scratch behind the ears. Most of these animals seem to arrive very young and are brought to Explorama by the indigenous people. At the Lodge, there is Nellie, the tapir, whose mother was shot for meat. ExplorNapo has Charlie the Capybara and three hyperactive guinea fowl types. At Ceiba Tops, there is another Charlie (not much imagination in naming – I never saw that one) and a pair of turkey relatives, Pamela and Ari. At all the lodges, there are parrot family birds, though they seem to be less in evidence in Ceiba; this is probably because at the other lodges the rooms are open at the top and the birds are able to go anywhere. Many of the children in the villages have pet parrots.

Nellie roams around and generally does her own thing. But occasionally she becomes curious about someone and pursues them (slowly). Or maybe she just wants a back scratch.

Charlie, the giant guinea pig (about 25” at the shoulders), isn’t adverse to some petting but since he’s semi-aquatic and fond of mud, he’s not all that cuddly. Also, his hair is pretty stiff.

The two female guinea-hen type birds. Male is prettier but also nuttier.

Pamela (right) is very people oriented and can’t stand for a group to go for a walk without her. She even walked with just me for awhile but prefers a group. Ari (with his crest raised) isn’t as interested in being with people.

Not sure how “tame” the parrots are – they might let you touch them and they might take your finger off. But they hang around on the walls of the bedrooms, the railings, the banana bunches hung around for the animals.

Some of the parrots appear to talk, including one of the greens above, but since they speak Spanish, I’m not sure what they say.

Other camp visitors include iguanas in the trees and monkeys that come for the bananas. Unfortunately, the iguanas don’t try to make themselves available for clear photos and the monkeys can’t sit still. Between the common cloud cover necessitating long exposures and the tendency of camera lenses to fog up in the humidity (and occasionally to stop focusing because of humidity), it can be difficult to get decent photos of moving creatures. One of the male monkeys got annoyed at me after awhile and "grinned" a face that certainly wasn't a smile - showing those pointy teeth was more of a death threat, I assume. Too bad it was over faster than the digital lag. |
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| On our third morning in the Amazon |
[Jan. 1st, 2007|10:07 pm] |
-Notes from my parents trip to the Amazon-
On our third morning in the Amazon, we – along with one other couple and an extra husband from our group of 8 – went out on a 6AM bird-watching trip in the dingy.
Birds were pretty scarce but we had an encounter with little Juan and his brother and sister. Juanito was 9, his brother 5, and I think their sister was about 6. Juanito had been out in the family dugout checking the fish nets and traps before school. He was pleased with his haul and the children along the river are doubtless raised to check out every photo (and tip) op if they encounter gringos on the river. Juan said he could swim but neither of the other two could. (Neither of the other two said anything, in fact.)
Juan’s father is one of the better parents along the Amazon because he will take the children into the larger community of Indiana (where there is electricity from 8AM till 10PM) and buy them milk with the $2 we gave him. According to our guide, many of the other parents use any cash they get for liquid refreshment of another kind.
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| What a way to die.... |
[Nov. 28th, 2006|11:20 pm] |
Some woman in FL, only 38, fell behind a bookcase and died.
It took her family over a week to find her. They assumed she had been kidnapped. They figured it out when she started to smell. I smell foul play. I mean, she was behind a bookcase? for over a week? How dumb can a whole family be????
According to my research, I will not die this way. Instead: At age 52 you will be shanked in prison, becoming fatally wounded.
(this had changed since last time - I am now older and have one fewer pet and they have 'enhanced' the prediction technology)
Want to know if you will smother to death behind a bookcase or get in the kiddie pool? The Death Predictor has ALL the answers:
http://evil.berzerker.net/death_predictions.php |
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