|
|||||||
BS: stay afloat while others don't |
Share Thread
|
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Thompson Date: 30 Oct 24 - 04:52 PM Interesting piece in the Guardian about an experimental treatment for one of the most distressing symptoms of psychotic breakdown, The Voices. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Stilly River Sage Date: 30 Oct 24 - 05:24 PM Today I saw this and it doesn't take much time to contemplate the arc of what this guy is going to experience, in rapid succession, in the next few days, both socially and legally. He thought he was so smart to grab the glove and the ball, but on live TV with millions watching and he is clearly identifiable, the fans are going to crucify him while the courts spoil his day. And he'll probably be banned from attending games forever. That said, my one thought at the very end of the video is that the profile of this guy looks like Down's Syndrome - and that could be a mitigating factor. I'm curious to see if this guy stays afloat or not. (It's possible we could all be really surprised.) |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 02 Nov 24 - 12:49 PM So glad to hear that Mrrzy had a good visit with hospitalized son. Those visits have to be good for the soul. Yesterday I traded in my old car for a gently used car, never an easy move for me as I hang onto cars. But I have hopes this newer car will serve me well. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 02 Nov 24 - 02:46 PM Yes, better times ahead for Mrrzy and family, I hope. keb, what a coincidence! I bought a newish secondhand car a few weeks ago and sold my 19 year old car which I have had for 17 years. I keep my cars a long time too but this one was for longer than any of the others. She's an old friend, part of the family but luckily she has gone to a good home. I put a For Sale sign on her, parked her out the front of the house, and a neighbour couple checked her out, test drove her and then paid for her within four days. I was panicking about driving the new car but I'm used to her now. The funny thing is that I learned to drive just over 50 years ago in an FJ Holden which was as old as me, and which my Dad, a motor mechanic, owned and looked after like a member of the family, and the number plate on the new car has FJ in it. First ever car that I drove is commemorated on the last car I will ever own. (Dad's FJ was the light blue colour shown on that page of photos.) |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 02 Nov 24 - 03:35 PM I heard part of that BBC thing on Voices, Thompson, fascinating, what a great idea. Driving again taught me exactly which muscles I'd shredded at the ankle, by wow, pain up the shin and calf in truly specific fibers! But I love my stickshift. Do you all do Halloween? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Thompson Date: 02 Nov 24 - 03:55 PM Hallowe'en here is like a small echo of Gaza. Fireworks, which are, strictly speaking, illegal (from the days when people were liable to make a revolution with their contents) are ubiquitous on that night. Samhain has also become Americanised, with lots of plastic cobweb material (fatal to small animals and birds, plus plastic skulls, plastic spiders, plastic witches, etc, as well as the old-fashioned thing of gangs of children dressed up and made up going around begging for sweets - nowadays saying "trick or treat" in the American style rather than "any apples and nuts" as we used to. The kids were flawlessly polite, most taking only one sweet from my plastic boxes of plastic-wrapped chocolate, and thanking me nicely, before going out again into the explosives-riddled sunset. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Stilly River Sage Date: 02 Nov 24 - 05:41 PM No Halloween, I turn off lights and stay away from the front of the house, but I didn't hear anyone walking around in the street, so it was probably another quiet year. Most years here are quiet. My dogs don't appreciate the kids and costumes, so we hunker down to spare them the excitement. Keb, good news on the newer used car. With each couple of years a whole bunch of useful safety features come along so it's a good thing for you to have traded up. (I also miss having a stickshift; the last couple of times I bought cars I didn't have the leisure to search for something with a good standard transmission. Not all are created equal, so I drive a ubiquitous automatic.) That baseball duo I linked to seem to be staying afloat - after that stunt they were only banned from one game and their admission price to that game was refunded. There will still probably be a social comeuppance. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 07 Nov 24 - 06:21 PM The newer used car I am now driving is holding up as it ought to do. Today was time for the registration and the state inspection. Wouldn't you know, my old license plates failed the inspection -- the plates are "chipping." Everything else passed. So it was off to the department of motor vehicles in order to order replacement plates, which may take up to ten weeks, they said, to be delivered. In the meantime, I am driving with the old plates on and a paper license tag taped to the rear window. Sigh. It's always something. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 09 Nov 24 - 01:12 PM Keb, I love how minor that is, as aggravating things go! Not that it isn't aggravating, of course, but Everything passed but the plates is a pretty good inspection. i hate failing inspection on something minor like that. I once had someone put the intact but now-unattached side mirror their poor parking had apparently removed from my car onto the roof of the car, where I'd notice it, at least. Forgot about it when I went to get inspected. Passed because the guy said Well, the glass has to be intact, and it is. So sometimes it's the people, not the car. Did you have to get a Failed sticker? |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: keberoxu Date: 09 Nov 24 - 02:54 PM Right now the inspection sticker on my windshield is dated, which means it passed. There may have been a failed sticker that had to go to the DMV to be processed. I remember the DMV visit but not clearly as I was that gobsmacked by the whole thing. Then it was also distracting to be told that the replacement license plates might take as long as ten weeks to be delivered. The temporary registration I have now (paper tag in rear window) is good for three weeks, and I can get extensions if the replacement plates have not arrived by then. Of course the delivery of both plates and title will be to the apartment that is my residence, not the treatment center where I am staying. SO there will be traveling back and forth to keep up with things. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Stilly River Sage Date: 09 Nov 24 - 06:23 PM Staying afloat - ditching Spectrum is a struggle - when you try to close your account they send you to the sales folks who insist on this and that - discount offers, you're paid up and losing 10 days of service - crap - it really helps if you have a Scotch before making the call. On hold several times. The last time she came on (after telling me my router doesn't work well enough - it's blazing along at 650 on ATT, nothing to do with being deficient) I have repeated I want to simply close the account. I paid the last bill, I am aware that there are a few days to the end of the enrollment month, I don't give a phuck that I paid for service I'm not using. Ditching that 800-pound gorilla is a pleasure. Good riddance. I feel better already. I feel awful about the election results and have already dedicated these savings to monthly donations to the ACLU. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Mrrzy Date: 10 Nov 24 - 10:11 AM Yes, my credit card got compromised (well, I stupidly fell for a scam) so I am finding out about all kinds of recurring charges I forgot about, as they fail, because I canceled that card. Albatrosses, most of'm. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Donuel Date: 11 Nov 24 - 03:01 PM A little bit of stress is good for body and soul. In fact it is healthy. Stress that is unrelenting over long periods is more dangerous.? A cold bath or a hyperbaric chamber experience are both small stresses that can be good for you. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Stilly River Sage Date: 11 Nov 24 - 06:25 PM Mrrzy I'm sorry to read about your credit card adventure. I suppose looking on the bright side you can cancel the accounts you weren't using. Save some money. |
Subject: RE: BS: stay afloat while others don't From: Helen Date: 11 Nov 24 - 08:34 PM I don't know if I said this before, but when one of my debit cards was cloned and a couple of transactions for Pizza Hut and a chocolate shop in Atlanta, GA showed up on my statement the very helpful bank service person told me a good tip for online shopping. She suggested setting up a specific account and only adding money to it just before an online transaction, leaving a small amount only to keep the account open. That way, even if that account is compromised there is never enough money in it to worry about. BTW, when I saw a Pizza Hut transaction I literally laughed out loud. I haven't been to a P/Hut for decades. They don't have shops around here any more. The transaction stood out like it was lit up in neon lights. I only lost about $200 and the bank reimbursed it after a quick investigation to show my transactions around that date were close to home and not in the US. |