I was delivering the spare tire to S., who got a flat (i.e. shredded) halfway to work. He took the spare out last week when he went to get the Christmas tree, and never put it back in.
Need more caffeine now please.
Buffy ,'Empty Places'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I was delivering the spare tire to S., who got a flat (i.e. shredded) halfway to work. He took the spare out last week when he went to get the Christmas tree, and never put it back in.
Need more caffeine now please.
So I take it we are supposed to use stairs so we won't have fat babies or something.
At big bball tournament with DH's team. Just won 79-62 against Philly team. Guess we stay another day Woot!
Still half asleep. Working on coffee. And, scarily enough, I have already taught 1 class today.
I HATE calling customer services. hate, hate hate.
You mean the same maintenance company that was working on the elevator a few hours before the accident? Yikes!
Yeah but we fired them! Our elevators are totally safe! Pinky swear!
North Korea's new dictator is reportedly a big comic book geek.
It looks like the Jewish Week took this article off their website after people complained, but a rabbi wrote an article about Tim Tebow that may be one of the most paranoid things I've ever read.
"If Tebow wins the Super Bowl, against all odds, it will buoy his faithful, and emboldened faithful can do insane things, like burning mosques, bashing gays and indiscriminately banishing immigrants."
He then goes on to suggest that, while he has advanced degrees in theology and knows how to resist missionaries, other Jews who don't have those advanced degrees might be susceptible to believing that a Broncos Super Bowl win is miraculous, and thus converting to Christianity under the "new gospel of Tim."
edit: the newspaper issued an apology: [link]
He then goes on to suggest that, while he has advanced degrees in theology and knows how to resist missionaries, other Jews who don't have those advanced degrees might be susceptible to believing that a Broncos Super Bowl win is miraculous, and thus converting to Christianity under the "new gospel of Tim."
Well, that's... creative.
Is Tim Tebow really that much more religious than sundry other pro athletes? I'm thinking of Curt Schilling, for instance. I get that he's a great QB, but why the huge public emphasis on his religiosity?
ION, I'm camped in my bed with a pot of tea and a chapter of a medical textbook to edit for my brother, because the lurking head cold pounced on me during the night and I spent half of it upright in bed so my sinuses would drain enough for me to breathe.
After I finish this chapter I will drag myself to Walgreens for all sorts of meds, and tissues. And then the grocery store to stock up on food to leave in the house for my brother's family, who will be staying here over the holiday (I'm moving to my sister's spare room for the interim). What do toddlers eat, anyway? Eggs, string cheese, Cheerios...
Eggs, string cheese, Cheerios...
... apples, pasta, yogurt ...
Sorry about the cold. My sinuses and head are attacking, too, and I think it's definitely the fault of the Christmas tree. Pretty as it is, it's a menace.
Is Tim Tebow really that much more religious than sundry other pro athletes? I'm thinking of Curt Schilling, for instance. I get that he's a great QB, but why the huge public emphasis on his religiosity?
I don't know whether or not he's more religious, but he's definitely more public about expressing his religion than the average athlete. And a segment of the population has taken him to heart for that very reason.