My phone's ringtone is a ring. Like ones telephones make. Because it's a phone. And it's ringing. All I want to know is that someone is calling me. I don't want to suddenly be treated to a rendition of any music. I just want to be notified, so I can pick up the phone and say, "Hello?" in an irritated voice.
</curmudgeon with tech tendencies>
I love Liese. That is all.
Not being embarassed if it went off inappropriately was a key factor in my song choice.
this is generally the case, except for the ringtone for my friend L, which begins "It's Britney, bitch"
Or, as they said on Criminal Minds:
Hotch: The maximum distance an attacker with a knife can close in the time it takes to react, draw your sidearm and fire is twenty-one feet.
John Blackwolf (cool native american guest star who also played Bobby on Saving Grace): Inside twenty-one feet, I win. Outside twenty-one, I have other options besides shooting a man.
Reid: Like negotiating.
Blackwolf: Like running.
But suppose someone else's phone rang the same way, Liese? Then you wouldn't be an individual anymore!
Knives don't run out of ammo, either. And something about the light glinting off a sharpened edge of metal is
pretty
intimidating.
I know you guys are probably right about the gun stuff, but a close friend was shot 12 times in her back when she ran from armed robbers in her home. Miraculously, she lived. This was about 18 years ago and we were waitresses together, in Oakland. She parked her car in her driveway, and the robbers came up to her with loaded guns as she was walking to her door. She gave them everything she had, including wallet and jewelry. They followed her into her house, and started ransacking and taking what they wanted. They told her that they were going to kill her, so she ran out the back sliding glass door and got about 10 feet from the house when they shot at her.
Jesus, javachik. That's terrifying.
Hotch: The maximum distance an attacker with a knife can close in the time it takes to react, draw your sidearm and fire is twenty-one feet.
We use this stat at krav too, but honestly, it's cheating. It's assuming the knife person has already drawn their weapon
and
reacted, but the gun person still has to. I want to see more equal numbers. Not just already-drawn knife attacker against unwary gun defender.
The krav example is to try and take an unsheathed tube of lipstick away from a resisting five year old. You're gonna get it on you.
That's an excellent example! A sticky lollipop works, too. All too well.
Jesse, it was. I still remember visiting her in the hospital after about a dozen surgeries.
The worst part is they never caught the thugs, and she ran into one in a store about a year later. I don't think he recognized her, but I can't remember the details.
I lost touch with her, and I've tried searching for her but she had a very common name.