polyarcturus
Well-Known Member
we need a quote of the day thread, jesus fucking christ unc, i ablout pissed myself when i read this. best post of the day. maybe even the month.you're like a retarded dog that barks at sounds that don't exist.
we need a quote of the day thread, jesus fucking christ unc, i ablout pissed myself when i read this. best post of the day. maybe even the month.you're like a retarded dog that barks at sounds that don't exist.
we've had a senile dog that would bark at nothing before. reminds me of stormfront red.How do sounds not exist? Retard...
flyswatter suddenly, with the exception of two browned cornish game hens-
error 404? but i have homework.
and then suddenly i was in marana arizona chilling with a sliced egg.
fifteen minutes and four seconds. nothing.
Still ducking the question. Waiting for Obama to tell you what your opinion is?we've had a senile dog that would bark at nothing before. reminds me of stormfront red.
you're the one ducking my question, stormfront red.Still ducking the question. Waiting for Obama to tell you what your opinion is?
I don't pay that much attention to what you say. The question was "Are you endorsing guns for home defense?" You seem unable to answer yet. Unless you consider your senile dog some how an answer. A simple yes or no is required. Afraid to express an opinion what Obama to tell you what it is?you're the one ducking my question, stormfront red. have i ever said a gun was not meant for self defense? ever? even once? even in joking?
You know dogs can sense shit that we (humans) can't see or identify with... They are also capable of reading your thoughts... Dogs not people....we've had a senile dog that would bark at nothing before. reminds me of stormfront red.
oh, i know. but this one was just old, senile, and would bark at the door when no one was there and the other dogs weren't alarming.You know dogs can sense shit that we (humans) can't see or identify with... They are also capable of reading your thoughts... Dogs not people....
Yeah they start getting it wrong in their old age but I wouldn't have it any other way, especially if your dog has been with you since a pup....oh, i know. but this one was just old, senile, and would bark at the door when no one was there and the other dogs weren't alarming.
you're like a retarded dog that barks at sounds that don't exist.
As a nine year old, I was deemed too young to watch my dad working in the shop where he was a mechanic. Being that he only saw me on every other weekend and Wednesdays when possible (that was the custody agreement), he made sure to bring me to work with him. It was hard for us to just have a 'hangout' weekend when he had to hold down two jobs. The compromise was that I would hang out in his boss's often vacant office - the owner spent most of the day on job locations and traveling, and knew I stayed in his office. He knew my dad's situation, and sympathized, and he saw no problem with me being left alone around his things as I tended to be quiet, respectful, and fairly content with spending the entire day drawing on steno-pads. This arrangement meant that on two days that I would otherwise be unable to see him on due to his work I'd get to ride with him in the morning, eat my lunch with him, occasionally have snacks, and get to go straight to dinner with him so that we could have as much time together as possible. One day, in an unusual mood, I got a bit antsy and just began walking loops of the office. I went about peering at things, but not touching - the picture of the boss's son above his desk, the view of the lot out the window, etc. I had looped the room so many times I had begun to get dizzy. I rounded the corner of one desk too fast and the stapler that was sitting on the edge clattered to the floor. It had sprung into pieces. I began to panic - would I get in trouble? Would my dad get in trouble? What could I do? I calmed myself and decided to fix it - I had tinkered with and repaired a VCR, so it seemed easy enough to put the parts back into a stapler. It was a heavy-duty stapler, meant for fixing thick stacks of paper together, but even so it was a thankfully quick fix. I was awash with relief at how easy it had been as I gripped the top of the stapler to squeeze the stapling mechanism and it's cover together... ...And stapled both my thumbs side-by-side. The pain was so sudden and sharp that I couldn't even process it. It was like my hands had gone numb. I carefully set the stapler down, examined the wound, and gingerly bit down on the staple and pulled it out. My thumbs began bleeding immediately, and the pain became less sharp and more a hot terrible awareness of the soft tissue in both thumb pads. I fled the office: out on the shop floor there was welding going on somewhere, the sound of a pneumatic drill, a grinder, someone cutting sheet metal - would I even be heard? Where was my dad? I cried out, "I'm bleeding!" One of my dad's coworkers, a huge man I had only met once previously in passing, rounded the corner. He was 6'8" and had a huge tangle of red hair that blended seamlessly with a bushy red beard. He was scarred, scraped, and covered in grease: he had a lazy eye, and spoke mostly in grumbles and growls. He had the demeanor and vague appearance of a solid, somewhat confuse and irritable bear. I froze with nervous terror, unsure of him. He reached down gently and took my hands, and in a gruff voice said, "oh, sweety, let's find you some band-aids." He found the first-aid for me, and after carefully and precisely bandaging my thumbs, got me a cold Sprite from the vending machine and told me to press my thumbs up against it. He said he'd be right back. A moment later he returned with my worried father, who was amused to find me too shocked by the whole experience to cry, though my thumbs hurt terribly. He made sure I was alright, and got me laughing. "Just do your best not to let your mom notice that, okay?" She didn't notice when I got home after that weekend, but she did notice the last of a round of fresh bandages a few days later. I lied and told her I hurt my thumbs at school playing with a thumb-tack. She bought it, and just rolled her eyes at me after seeing that they were okay - they had already healed down to tiny, dark pin pricks. I knew she would have blamed my dad for me getting hurt, and I didn't want him to carry the blame for something I had done to myself. I learned three things from the experience: 1) Huge hairy lumberjack-looking guys sometimes have little girls of their own whom they love very much. 2) I could lie to my mother and get away with it. And of course, 3) Staples really hurt.you're like a retarded dog that barks at sounds that don't exist.
That is either one hell of a good memory or you are one HELL of a fictional writer. Either way, good story. Not questioning your authenticity because I have a few memories that vivid. Just ayin', if that's not real, you should be writing. If it IS real, you might think about writing.As a nine year old, I was deemed too young to watch my dad working in the shop where he was a mechanic. Being that he only saw me on every other weekend and Wednesdays when possible (that was the custody agreement), he made sure to bring me to work with him. It was hard for us to just have a 'hangout' weekend when he had to hold down two jobs. The compromise was that I would hang out in his boss's often vacant office - the owner spent most of the day on job locations and traveling, and knew I stayed in his office. He knew my dad's situation, and sympathized, and he saw no problem with me being left alone around his things as I tended to be quiet, respectful, and fairly content with spending the entire day drawing on steno-pads. This arrangement meant that on two days that I would otherwise be unable to see him on due to his work I'd get to ride with him in the morning, eat my lunch with him, occasionally have snacks, and get to go straight to dinner with him so that we could have as much time together as possible. One day, in an unusual mood, I got a bit antsy and just began walking loops of the office. I went about peering at things, but not touching - the picture of the boss's son above his desk, the view of the lot out the window, etc. I had looped the room so many times I had begun to get dizzy. I rounded the corner of one desk too fast and the stapler that was sitting on the edge clattered to the floor. It had sprung into pieces. I began to panic - would I get in trouble? Would my dad get in trouble? What could I do? I calmed myself and decided to fix it - I had tinkered with and repaired a VCR, so it seemed easy enough to put the parts back into a stapler. It was a heavy-duty stapler, meant for fixing thick stacks of paper together, but even so it was a thankfully quick fix. I was awash with relief at how easy it had been as I gripped the top of the stapler to squeeze the stapling mechanism and it's cover together... ...And stapled both my thumbs side-by-side. The pain was so sudden and sharp that I couldn't even process it. It was like my hands had gone numb. I carefully set the stapler down, examined the wound, and gingerly bit down on the staple and pulled it out. My thumbs began bleeding immediately, and the pain became less sharp and more a hot terrible awareness of the soft tissue in both thumb pads. I fled the office: out on the shop floor there was welding going on somewhere, the sound of a pneumatic drill, a grinder, someone cutting sheet metal - would I even be heard? Where was my dad? I cried out, "I'm bleeding!" One of my dad's coworkers, a huge man I had only met once previously in passing, rounded the corner. He was 6'8" and had a huge tangle of red hair that blended seamlessly with a bushy red beard. He was scarred, scraped, and covered in grease: he had a lazy eye, and spoke mostly in grumbles and growls. He had the demeanor and vague appearance of a solid, somewhat confuse and irritable bear. I froze with nervous terror, unsure of him. He reached down gently and took my hands, and in a gruff voice said, "oh, sweety, let's find you some band-aids." He found the first-aid for me, and after carefully and precisely bandaging my thumbs, got me a cold Sprite from the vending machine and told me to press my thumbs up against it. He said he'd be right back. A moment later he returned with my worried father, who was amused to find me too shocked by the whole experience to cry, though my thumbs hurt terribly. He made sure I was alright, and got me laughing. "Just do your best not to let your mom notice that, okay?" She didn't notice when I got home after that weekend, but she did notice the last of a round of fresh bandages a few days later. I lied and told her I hurt my thumbs at school playing with a thumb-tack. She bought it, and just rolled her eyes at me after seeing that they were okay - they had already healed down to tiny, dark pin pricks. I knew she would have blamed my dad for me getting hurt, and I didn't want him to carry the blame for something I had done to myself. I learned three things from the experience: 1) Huge hairy lumberjack-looking guys sometimes have little girls of their own whom they love very much. 2) I could lie to my mother and get away with it. And of course, 3) Staples really hurt.
sounds like an episode of 'The Wonder Years'Was a pretty good story, I edited it for a better reading experience.
Written By: Squarpush3r
As a nine year old, I was deemed too young to watch my dad working in the shop where he was a mechanic. Being that he only saw me on every other weekend and Wednesdays when possible (that was the custody agreement), he made sure to bring me to work with him. It was hard for us to just have a 'hangout' weekend when he had to hold down two jobs. The compromise was that I would hang out in his boss's often vacant office - the owner spent most of the day on job locations and traveling, and knew I stayed in his office. He knew my dad's situation, and sympathized, and he saw no problem with me being left alone around his things as I tended to be quiet, respectful, and fairly content with spending the entire day drawing on steno-pads.
This arrangement meant that on two days that I would otherwise be unable to see him on due to his work I'd get to ride with him in the morning, eat my lunch with him, occasionally have snacks, and get to go straight to dinner with him so that we could have as much time together as possible. One day, in an unusual mood, I got a bit antsy and just began walking loops of the office. I went about peering at things, but not touching - the picture of the boss's son above his desk, the view of the lot out the window, etc. I had looped the room so many times I had begun to get dizzy. I rounded the corner of one desk too fast and the stapler that was sitting on the edge clattered to the floor. It had sprung into pieces.
I began to panic - would I get in trouble? Would my dad get in trouble? What could I do?
I calmed myself and decided to fix it - I had tinkered with and repaired a VCR, so it seemed easy enough to put the parts back into a stapler. It was a heavy-duty stapler, meant for fixing thick stacks of paper together, but even so it was a thankfully quick fix. I was awash with relief at how easy it had been as I gripped the top of the stapler to squeeze the stapling mechanism and it's cover together... ...And stapled both my thumbs side-by-side. The pain was so sudden and sharp that I couldn't even process it. It was like my hands had gone numb. I carefully set the stapler down, examined the wound, and gingerly bit down on the staple and pulled it out. My thumbs began bleeding immediately, and the pain became less sharp and more a hot terrible awareness of the soft tissue in both thumb pads.
I fled the office: out on the shop floor there was welding going on somewhere, the sound of a pneumatic drill, a grinder, someone cutting sheet metal - would I even be heard? Where was my dad? I cried out, "I'm bleeding!" One of my dad's coworkers, a huge man I had only met once previously in passing, rounded the corner. He was 6'8" and had a huge tangle of red hair that blended seamlessly with a bushy red beard. He was scarred, scraped, and covered in grease: he had a lazy eye, and spoke mostly in grumbles and growls.
He had the demeanor and vague appearance of a solid, somewhat confuse and irritable bear. I froze with nervous terror, unsure of him. He reached down gently and took my hands, and in a gruff voice said, "oh, sweety, let's find you some band-aids." He found the first-aid for me, and after carefully and precisely bandaging my thumbs, got me a cold Sprite from the vending machine and told me to press my thumbs up against it. He said he'd be right back.
A moment later he returned with my worried father, who was amused to find me too shocked by the whole experience to cry, though my thumbs hurt terribly. He made sure I was alright, and got me laughing. "Just do your best not to let your mom notice that, okay?" She didn't notice when I got home after that weekend, but she did notice the last of a round of fresh bandages a few days later. I lied and told her I hurt my thumbs at school playing with a thumb-tack. She bought it, and just rolled her eyes at me after seeing that they were okay - they had already healed down to tiny, dark pin pricks. I knew she would have blamed my dad for me getting hurt, and I didn't want him to carry the blame for something I had done to myself.
I learned three things from the experience:
1) Huge hairy lumberjack-looking guys sometimes have little girls of their own whom they love very much.
2) I could lie to my mother and get away with it.
And of course, Staples really hurt.
Well it's good for you then that facts are easily backed up by links.Having a gun in your home will increase the likelihood of getting robbed. This is a fact.
I think its because of apartheid, and the fact that because of racist economic policies that were in place making many of your countrymen live in squalor.LOL,
I live in South Africa.
We have some of the most stringent gun laws on the planet (you would be lucky to get one 2 years after applying).
We also have one of the highest murder rates on the planet.
Coincidence?