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I wasn't ready for [chat]

NecoNeco In My Restless DreamsRegistered User regular
Oh geth, I thought we weren't doing this anymore!

Anyway I have two Sephora gift cards in my wallet and I need to spend them soon.

I wasn't ready for [chat] 85 votes

Caught with my pants down
0%
Caught with my skirt up
4%
FeralZilla360CasualKruite 4 votes
I unironically love Neco!
10%
HenroidMrMisterKid PresentableRhesus PositiveHi I'm Vee!Couscous21stCenturyBeNarwhalA Kobold's Kobold 9 votes
I unironically unironically love Neco!
14%
SanderJKGimElldrenP10wanderingCasual EddyArchDesktop HippiedescEddyKamirocredeiki 12 votes
Fuck yeah Halloween!
4%
MulysaSemproniusMagicPrimeSleepDr. Flamingo 4 votes
My favorite horror movie is The Shining
1%
Donnicton 1 vote
I need a fucking drink after this week
15%
Rear Admiral ChocoiTunesIsEvilCorbiusDelmainOrcaVoid SlayerDuke 2.0AuralynxzepherinthatassemblyguyNecofedaykin666discrider 13 votes
No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
12%
syndalisElendilDarkPrimusTTODewbackVishNubAbdhyiusronyanavgooseQanamilKaplarTumin 11 votes
OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
36%
redxRedTideLudiousDoodmannHappylilElftyrannusjungleroomxAiouaBrodyoverride367AtomikaTcheldorHahnsoo1DemonStaceyZampanovCaptain InertiaHonkPowerpuppiesJubal77mysticjuicer 31 votes
«13456798

Posts

  • CouscousCouscous Registered User regular
    I unironically love Neco!
    https://www.eurogamer.net/amp/2018-10-25-the-human-cost-of-red-dead-redemption-2
    For night shifts, UK employment laws state a person can only work eight out of every 24 hours, but Rockstar employees sign agreements to waive this condition. Over the course of a week, night staff can work the same amount as those on days. Regardless of when they work, the many Lincoln staff I spoke to talked of getting home physically and mentally exhausted, with little time to do anything before heading to bed and getting up to do the same thing the next day. The overriding sense is that, while extended hours have been accepted as a temporary burden in the past, the long period of crunch for Red Dead Redemption 2 has defeated people.
    Kind of not worth a ton if you can just get employees to waive it.

  • DoodmannDoodmann Registered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    This was the most difficult poll I've ever participated in.

    Whippy wrote: »
    nope nope nope nope abort abort talk about anime
    I like to ART
  • navgoosenavgoose Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    Why are you hoarding Sephora money?

  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    I refuse to participate in a poll I could just as easily answer one way or the other

  • wanderingwandering Russia state-affiliated media Registered User regular
    edited October 2018
    I unironically unironically love Neco!
    Coinage wrote: »
    My face needs a reboot

    FAT FARM

    The receptionist was surprised that he was back so soon.

    "Why, Mr. Barth, how glad I am to see you," she said.

    "Surprised, you mean," Barth answered. His voice rumbled from the rolls of fat under his chin.

    "Delighted."

    "How long has it been?" Barth asked.

    "Three years. How time flies."

    The receptionist smiled, but Barth saw the awe and revulsion on her face as she glanced over his immense body. In her job she saw fat people every day. But Barth knew he was unusual. He was proud of being unusual.

    "Back to the fat farm," he said, laughing.

    The effort of laughing made him short of breath, and he gasped for air as she pushed a button and said, "Mr. Barth is back."
    He did not bother to look for a chair. No chair could hold him. He did lean against a wall, however. Standing was a labor he preferred to avoid.

    Yet it was not shortness of breath or exhaustion at the slightest effort that had brought him back to Anderson's Fitness Center. He had often been fat before, and he rather relished the sensation of bulk, the impression he made as crowds parted for him. He pitied those who could only be slightly fat-- short people, who were not able to bear the weight. At well over two meters, Barth could get gloriously fat, stunningly fat. He owned thirty wardrobes and took delight in changing from one to another as his belly and buttocks and thighs grew. At times he felt that if he grew large enough, he could take over the world, be the world. At the dinner table he was a conqueror to rival Genghis Khan.

    It was not his fatness, then, that had brought him in. It was that at last the fat was interfering with his other pleasures. The girl he had been with the night before had tried and tried, but he was incapable-- a sign that it was time to renew, refresh, reduce. "I am a man of pleasure," he wheezed to the receptionist, whose name he never bothered to learn. She smiled back.

    "Mr. Anderson will be here in a moment."

    "Isn't it ironic," he said, "that a man such as I, who is capable of fulfilling every one of his desires, is never satisfied!" He gasped with laughter again.

    "Why haven't we ever slept together?" he asked.

    She looked at him, irritation crossing her face.

    "You always ask that, Mr. Barth, on your way in. But you never ask it on your way out."

    True enough. When he was on his way out of the Anderson Fitness Center, she never seemed as attractive as she had on his way in.

    Anderson came in, effusively handsome, gushingly warm, taking Barth's fleshy hand in his and pumping it with enthusiasm.

    "One of my best customers," he said.

    "The usual," Barth said.

    "Of course," Anderson answered. "But the price has gone up."

    "If you ever go out of business," Barth said, following Anderson into the inner rooms, "give me plenty of warning. I only let myself go this much because I know you're here."

    "Oh," Anderson chuckled. "We'll never go out of business."

    "I have no doubt you could support your whole organization on what you charge me."

    "You're paying for much more than the simple service we perform. You're also paying for privacy. Our, shall we say, lack of government intervention."

    "How many of the bastards do you bribe?"

    "Very few, very few. Partly because so many high officials also need our service."

    "No doubt."

    "It isn't just weight gains that bring people to us, you know. It's cancer and aging and accidental disfigurement. You'd be surprised to learn who has had our service." Barth doubted that he would.

    The couch was ready for him, immense and soft and angled so that it would be easy for him to get up again.

    "Damn near got married this time," Barth said, by way of conversation.

    Anderson turned to him in surprise.

    "But you didn't?"

    "Of course not. Started getting fat, and she couldn't cope."

    "Did you tell her?"

    "That I was getting fat? It was obvious."

    "About us, I mean."

    "I'm not a fool."

    Anderson looked relieved. "Can't have rumors getting around among the thin and young, you know."

    "Still, I think I'll look her up again, afterward. She did things to me a woman shouldn't be able to do. And I thought I was jaded."

    Anderson placed a tight-fitting rubber cap over Barth's head.

    "Think your key thought," Anderson reminded him. Key thought. At first that had been such a comfort, to make sure that not one iota of his memory would be lost. Now it was boring, almost juvenile. Key thought. Do you have your own Captain Aardvark secret decoder ring? Be the first on your block. The only thing Barth had been the first on his block to do was reach puberty. He had also been the first on his block to reach one hundred fifty kilos.

    How many times have I been here? he wondered as the tingling in his scalp began. This is the eighth time. Eight times, and my fortune is larger than ever, the kind of wealth that takes on a life on its own. I can keep this up forever, he thought, with relish. Forever at the supper table with neither worries nor restraints.

    "It's dangerous to gain so much weight," Lynette had said. "Heart attacks, you know." But the only things that Barth worried about were hemorrhoids and impotence. The former was a nuisance, but the latter made life unbearable and drove him back to Anderson. Key thought. What else? Lynette, standing naked on the edge of the cliff with the wind blowing. She was courting death, and he admired her for it, almost hoped that she would find it. She despised safety precautions. Like clothing, they were restrictions to be cast aside. She had once talked him into playing tag with her on a construction site, racing along the girders in the darkness, until the police came and made them leave. That had been when Barth was still thin from his last time at Anderson's. But it was not Lynette on the girders that he held in his mind. It was Lynette, fragile and beautiful Lynette, daring the wind to snatch her from the cliff and break up her body on the rocks by the river. Even that, Barth thought, would be a kind of pleasure. A new kind of pleasure, to taste a grief so magnificently, so admirably earned.

    And then the tingling in his head stopped.

    Anderson came back in.

    "Already?" Barth asked.

    "We've streamlined the process." Anderson carefully peeled the cap from Barth's head, helped the immense man lift himself from the couch.

    "I can't understand why it's illegal," Barth said. "Such a simple thing."

    "Oh, there are reasons. Population control, that sort of thing. This is a kind of immortality, you know. But it's mostly the repugnance most people feel. They can't face the thought. You're a man of rare courage."

    But it was not courage, Barth knew. It was pleasure.

    He eagerly anticipated seeing, and they did not make him wait.

    "Mr. Barth, meet Mr. Barth."

    It nearly broke his heart to see his own body young and strong and beautiful again, as it never had been the first time through his life. It was unquestionably himself, however, that they led into the room. Except that the belly was firm, the thighs well muscled but slender enough that they did not meet, even at the crotch. They brought him in naked, of course. Barth insisted on it. He tried to remember the last time. Then he had been the one coming from the leaming room, emerging to see the immense fat man that all his memories told him was himself. Barth remembered that it had been a double pleasure, to see the mountain he had made of himself, yet to view it from inside this beautiful young body.

    "Come here," Barth said, his own voice arousing echoes of the last time, when it had been the other Barth who had said it. And just as that other had done the last time, he touched the naked young Barth, stroked the smooth and lovely skin, and finally embraced him.

    And the young Barth embraced him back, for that was the way of it. No one loved Barth as much as Barth did, thin or fat, young or old. Life was a celebration of Barth; the sight of himself was his strongest nostalgia.

    "What did I think of?" Barth asked.

    The young Barth smiled into his eyes. "Lynette," he said. "Naked on a cliff. The wind blowing. And the thought of her thrown to her death."

    "Will you go back to her?" Barth asked his young seff eagerly.

    "Perhaps. Or to someone like her." And Barth saw with delight that the mere thought of it had aroused his young self more than a little.

    "He'll do," Barth said, and Anderson handed him the simple papers to sign-- papers that would never be seen in a court of law. because they attested to Barth's own compliance in and initiation of an act that was second only to murder in the lawbooks of every state.

    "That's it, then," Anderson said, turning from the fat Barth to the young, thin one. "You're Mr. Barth now, in control of his wealth and his life. Your clothing is in the next room."

    "I know where it is," the young Barth said with a smile, and his footsteps were buoyant as he left the room. He would dress quickly and leave the Fitness Center briskly, hardly noticing the rather plain-looking receptionist, except to take note of her wistful look after him, a tall, slender, beautiful man who had, only moments before, been lying mindless in storage, waiting to be given a mind and a memory, waiting for a fat man to move out of the way so he could fill his space.

    In the memory room Barth sat on the edge of the couch, looking at the door, and then realized, with surprise, that he had no idea what came next.
    "My memories run out here," Barth said to Anderson. "The agreement was-- what was the agreement?"

    "The agreement was tender care of you until you passed away."

    "Ah, yes."

    "The agreement isn't worth a damn thing," Anderson said, smiling.

    Barth looked at him with surprise. "What do you mean?"

    “There are two options, Barth. A needle within the next fifteen minutes. Or employment."

    "What are you talking about?"

    "You didn't think we'd waste time and effort feeding you the ridiculous amounts of food you require, did you?"

    Barth felt himself sink inside. This was not what he had expected, though he had not honestly expected anything. Barth was not the kind to anticipate trouble. Life had never given him much trouble.

    "A needle?"

    "Cyanide, if you insist, though we'd rather be able to vivisect you and get as many useful body parts as we can. Your body's still fairly young. We can get incredible amounts of money for your pelvis and your glands-- but they have to be taken from you alive."

    "What are you talking about? This isn't what we agreed."

    "I agreed to nothing with you, my friend," Anderson said, smiling. "I agreed with Barth. And Barth just left the room."

    "Call him back! I insist--"

    "Barth doesn't give a damn what happens to you."

    And he knew that it was true.

    "You said something about employment."

    "Indeed."

    "What kind of employment?"

    Anderson shook his head. "It all depends," he said.

    "On what?"

    "On what kind of work turns up. There are several assignments every year that must be performed by a living human being, for which no volunteer can be found. No person, not even a criminal, can be compelled to do them."

    "And I?"

    “Will do them. Or one of them, rather, since you rarely get a second job."

    "How can you do this? I'm a human being!"

    Anderson shook his head. "The law says that there is only one possible Barth in all the world. And you aren't it. You're just a number. And a letter. The letter H."

    "Why H?"

    "Because you're such a disgusting glutton, my friend. Even our first customers haven't got past C yet."

    Anderson left then, and Barth was alone in the room. Why hadn't he anticipated this? Of course, of course, he shouted to himself now. Of course they wouldn't keep him pleasantly alive. He wanted to get up and try to run. But walking was difficult for him; running would be impossible. He sat there, his belly pressing heavily on his thighs, which were spread wide by the fat. He stood, with great effort, and could only waddle because his legs were so far apart, so constrained in their movement.

    This has happened every time, Barth thought. Every damn time I've walked out of this place, young and thin, I've left behind someone like me, and they've had their way, haven't they? His hands trembled badly.

    He wondered what he had decided before and knew immediately that there was no decision to make at all. Some fat people might hate themselves and choose death for the sake of having a thin version of themselves live on. But not Barth. Barth could never choose to cause himself any pain. And to obliterate even an illegal, clandestine version of himself-- impossible. Whatever else he might be, he was still Barth. The man who walked out of the memory room a few minutes before had not taken over Barth's identity. He had only duplicated it. They've stolen my soul with mirrors, Barth told himself. I have to get it back.

    "Anderson!" Barth shouted. "Anderson! I've made up my mind."

    It was not Anderson who entered, of course. Barth would never see Anderson again. It would have been too tempting to try to kill him.

    * * *

    "Get to work, H!" the old man shouted from the other side of the field.

    Barth leaned on his hoe a moment more, then got back to work, scraping weeds from between the potato plants. The calluses on his hands had long since shaped themselves to fit the wooden handle, and his muscles knew how to perform the work without Barth's having to think about it at all. Yet that made the labor no easier. When he first realized that they meant him to be a potato farmer, he had asked, "Is this my assignment? Is this all?" And they had laughed and told him no. "This just preparation," they said, "to get you in shape." So for two years he had worked in the potato fields, and now he began to doubt that they would ever come back, that the potatoes would ever end.

    The old man was watching, he knew. His gaze always burned worse than the sun. The old man was watching, and if Barth rested too long or too often, the old man would come to him, whip in hand, to scar him deeply, to hurt him, to the soul.

    He dug into the ground, chopping at a stubborn plant whose root seemed to cling to the foundation of the world. "Come up, damn you," he muttered. He thought his arms were too weak to strike harder, but he struck harder anyway. The root split, and the impact shattered him to the bone.

    He was naked and brown to the point of blackness from the sun. The flesh hung loosely on him in great folds, a memory of the mountain he had been. Under the loose skin, however, he was tight and hard. It might have given him pleasure, for every muscle had been earned by hard labor and the pain of the lash. But there was no pleasure in it. The price was too high.

    I'll kill myself, he often thought and thought again now with his arms trembling with exhaustion. I'll kill myself so they can't use my body and can't use my soul.
    But he would never kill himself. Even now, Barth was incapable of ending it.

    The farm he worked on was unfenced, but the time he had gotten away he had walked and walked and walked for three days and had not once seen any sign of human habitation other than an occasional jeep track in the sagebrush-and-grass desert. Then they found him and brought him back, weary and despairing, and forced him to finish a day's work in the field before letting him rest. And even then the lash had bitten deep, the old man laying it on with a relish that spoke of sadism or a deep, personal hatred.
    But why should the old man hate me? Barth wondered. I don't know him. He finally decided that it was because he had been so fat, so obviously soft, while the old man was wiry to the point of being gaunt, his face pinched by years of exposure to the sunlight. Yet the old man's hatred had not diminished as the months went by and the fat melted away in the sweat and sunlight of the potato field.

    A sharp sting across his back, the sound of slapping leather on skin, and then an excruciating pain deep in his muscles. He had paused too long. The old man had come to him. The old man said nothing, just raised the lash again, ready to strike. Barth lifted the hoe out of the ground, to start work again. It occurred to him, as it had a hundred times before, that the hoe could reach as far as the whip, with as good effect. But, as a hundred times before, Barth looked into the old man's eyes, and what he saw there, while he did not understand it, was enough to stop him. He could not strike back. He could only endure.
    The lash did not fall again. Instead he and the old man just looked at each other. The sun burned where blood was coming from his back. Flies buzzed near him. He did not bother to brush them away.

    Finally the old man broke the silence.

    "H," he said.

    Barth did not answer, just waited.

    "They've come for you. First job," said the old man.

    First job. It took Barth a moment to realize the implications. The end of the potato fields. The end of the sunlight. The end of the old man with the whip. The end of the loneliness or, at least, of the boredom.

    "Thank God," Barth said. His throat was dry.

    "Go wash," the old man said.

    Barth carried the hoe back to the shed. He remembered how heavy the hoe had seemed when he first arrived. How ten minutes in the sunlight had made him faint. Yet they had revived him in the field, and the old man had said, "Carry it back." So he had carried back the heavy, heavy hoe, feeling for all the world like Christ bearing his cross. Soon enough the others had gone, and the old man and he bad been alone together, but the ritual with the hoe never changed. They got to the shed, and the old man carefully took the hoe from him and locked it away, so that Barth couldn't get it in the night and kill him with it.

    And then into the house, where Barth bathed painfully and the old man put an excruciating disinfectant on his back. Barth had long since given up on the idea of an anesthetic. It wasn't in the old man's nature to use an anesthetic.

    Clean clothes. A few minutes' wait. And then the helicopter. A young, businesslike man emerged from it, looking unfamiliar in detail but very familiar in general. He was an echo of all the businesslike young men and women who had dealt with him before. The young man came to him, unsmilingly, and said, "H?" Barth nodded. It was the only name they used for him.

    "You have an assignment."

    "What is it?" Barth asked.

    The young man did not answer. The old man, behind him, whispered, "They'll tell you soon enough. And then you'll wish you were back here, H. They'll tell you, and you'll pray for the potato fields."

    But Barth doubted it. In two years there had not been a moment's pleasure. The food was hideous, and there was never enough. There were no women, and he was usually too tired to amuse himself. Just pain and labor and loneliness, all excruciating. He would leave that now. Anything would be better, anything at all.

    "Whatever they assign you, though," the old man said, "it can't be any worse than my assignment."

    Barth would have asked him what his assignment had been, but there was nothing in the old man's voice that invited the question, and there was nothing in their relationship in the past that would allow the question to he asked. Instead, they stood in silence as the young, man reached into the helicopter and helped a man get out. An immensely fat man, stark-naked and white as the flesh of a potato, looking petrified. The old man strode purposefully toward him.

    "Hello, I," the old man said.

    "My name's Barth," the fat man answered, petulantly. The old man struck him hard across the mouth, hard enough that the tender lip split and blood dripped from where his teeth had cut into the skin.

    "I," said the old man. "Your name is I."

    The fat man nodded pitiably, but Barth-- H-- felt no pity for him. Two years this time. Only two damnable years and he was already in this condition. Barth could vaguely remember being proud of the mountain he had made of himself. But now he felt only contempt. Only a desire to go to the fat man, to scream in his face, "Why did you do it! Why did you let it happen again!"

    It would have meant nothing. To I, as to H, it was the first time, the first betrayal. There had been no others in his memory.

    Barth watched as the old man put a hoe in the fat man's hands and drove him out into the field. Two more young men got out of the helicopter. Barth knew what they would do, could almost see them helping the old man for a few days, until I finally learned the hopelessness of resistance and delay. But Barth did not get to watch the replay of his own torture of two years before. The young man who had first emerged from the copter now led him to it, put him in a seat by a window, and sat beside him. The pilot speeded up the engines, and the copter began to rise.

    "The bastard," Barth said, looking out the window at the old man as he slapped I across the face brutally.

    The young man chuckled. Then he told Barth his assignment.

    Barth clung to the window, looking out, feeling his life slip away from him even as the ground receded slowly. "I can't do it."

    "There are worse assignments," the young man said.

    Barth did not believe it.

    "If I live," he said, "if I live, I want to come back here."

    "Love it that much?"

    "To kill him."

    The young man looked at him blankly.

    "The old man," Barth explained, then realized that the young man was ultimately incapable of understanding anything. He looked back out the window. The old man looked very small next to the huge lump of white flesh beside him. Barth felt a terrible loathing for I. A terrible despair in knowing that nothing could possibly be learned, that again and again his selves would replay this hideous scenario.

    Somewhere, the man who would be J was dancing, was playing polo, was seducing and perverting and being delighted by every woman and boy and, God knows, sheep that he could find; somewhere the man who would be J dined.

    I bent immensely in the sunlight and tried, clumsily, to use the hoe. Then, losing his balance, he fell over into the dirt, writhing. The old man raised his whip.

    The helicopter turned then, so that Barth could see nothing but sky from his window. He never saw the whip fall. But he imagined the whip falling, imagined and relished it, longed to feel the heaviness of the blow flowing from his own arm. Hit him again! he cried out inside himself. Hit him for me! And inside himself he made the whip fall a dozen times more. "What are you thinking?" the young man asked, smiling, as if he knew the punch line of a joke.

    "I was thinking," Barth said, "that the old man can't possibly hate him as much as I do."

    Apparently that was the punch line. The young man laughed uproariously. Barth did not understand the joke, but somehow he was certain that he was the butt of it. He wanted to strike out but dared not.

    Perhaps the young man saw the tension in Barth's body, or perhaps he merely wanted to explain. He stopped laughing but could not repress his smile, which penetrated Barth far more deeply than the laugh.

    "But don't you see?" the young man asked. "Don't you know who the old man is?"

    Barth didn't know.

    "What do you think we did with A?" And the young man laughed again.

    There are worse assignments than mine, Barth realized. And the worst of all would be to spend day after day, month after month, supervising that contemptible animal that he could not deny was himself.

    The scar on his back bled a little, and the blood stuck to the seat when it dried.

    * * *

    by Orson Scott Card

    wandering on
  • VishNubVishNub Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    navgoose wrote: »
    Why are you hoarding Sephora money?

    its better to go only once so you don't have to deal with the smell more than once

  • NecoNeco In My Restless Dreams Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    Ludious wrote: »
    I refuse to participate in a poll I could just as easily answer one way or the other

    rude!

  • TTODewbackTTODewback Puts the drawl in ya'll I think I'm in HellRegistered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    I think this poll secretly targets alcoholics

    Bless your heart.
  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    Neco wrote: »
    Ludious wrote: »
    I refuse to participate in a poll I could just as easily answer one way or the other

    rude!

    ok then, tell me how to answer, neco

  • Jubal77Jubal77 Registered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    ^ Neco

  • NecoNeco In My Restless Dreams Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    navgoose wrote: »
    Why are you hoarding Sephora money?

    two different people gave me Sephora gift cards for my birthday but I haven't had a chance to go there yet

  • MazzyxMazzyx Comedy Gold Registered User regular
    Staying home today was the right choice. Standing produces nausea. And the sudafed has turned my sinuses into death valley. Its going to be a long day.

    u7stthr17eud.png
  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    Ludious wrote: »
    Ludious wrote: »
    OK guys how about RDR2 but instead of cowboys, not cowboys, and literally any other historical setting than the old west but otherwise exactly the same

    So GTA

    no, I said historical setting and certainly not a game where one of the main characters forces you to commit torture..for laughs

    So assassins creed

    TBF I didn't say it, but I also was implying that it would still be good

  • NecoNeco In My Restless Dreams Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    Ludious wrote: »
    Neco wrote: »
    Ludious wrote: »
    I refuse to participate in a poll I could just as easily answer one way or the other

    rude!

    ok then, tell me how to answer, neco

    NO

    NOW I DONT WANT TO

  • skippydumptruckskippydumptruck Registered User regular
    what should I do for my inaugural stand mixer run

    something not too hard

    was thinking maybe a spice cake of some sort

  • NecoNeco In My Restless Dreams Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    but if you want a cheat sheet, options 5-9 are real, unfiltered Neco feelings this morning

  • SleepSleep Registered User regular
    edited October 2018
    Fuck yeah Halloween!
    what should I do for my inaugural stand mixer run

    something not too hard

    was thinking maybe a spice cake of some sort

    Make Butter

    Sleep on
  • navgoosenavgoose Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    VishNub wrote: »
    navgoose wrote: »
    Why are you hoarding Sephora money?

    its better to go only once so you don't have to deal with the smell more than once

    I've been in an Ulta. Is it like that?

  • AbdhyiusAbdhyius Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    I was aimlessly browsing the webs for something to make a backup [chat] out of and ended up going for one that would hurt you emotionally so it is good that you didn't flake on us Neco. Or maybe I'd just have gone with some landscape photos. Anyway.
    Fulfilling a promise to an old friend, keeping watch one last time.

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    On New Year’s Eve 1968, just before the dawn of 1969, Master Sgt. William H. Cox and his buddy First Sgt. James T. Hollingsworth were holed up in a bunker in the Marble Mountains of Vietnam.

    Rockets and mortars were raining down all around them, or as Cox puts it, “Charlie (the nickname for the North Vietnamese) was really putting on a fireworks show for us.”

    As they hunkered down, the two Marines made a pact: “If we survived this attack, or survived Vietnam, we would contact each other every year on New Year’s,” Cox recalled.

    For nearly five decades, Cox, who lives in Piedmont, and Hollingsworth, whose nickname was Hollie, kept their promise to each other.

    And earlier this year, Cox kept another promise: He stood guard at Hollingsworth’s casket and then delivered the eulogy at his funeral.

    Standing guard, without the cane that the 83-year-old normally uses, Cox was paying tribute, one Marine to another.

    But in giving the eulogy, he fulfilled his final vow to his friend.

    When he learned that Hollingsworth was terminally ill, Cox went to visit, and his old friend Hollie asked Cox to give the eulogy at his funeral.

    “I said, ‘Boy, that’s a rough mission you’re assigning me to there,’” Cox said.

    The military forges strong bonds among the men and women who serve, but for Marines, that connection is even stronger.

    “There’s a bond between Marines that’s different from any other branch of service. We’re like brothers,” he said.

    The two men met on their way to Vietnam in 1968. After his service Hollingsworth settled in Georgia, while Cox spent 20 years in the Marine Corps and went on to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross for his service.

    They served in VMO-2, a Marine helicopter squadron, where Hollingsworth was a mechanic and a door gunner, and Cox was an ordnance chief and a door gunner.

    They flew many combat missions together, and at the end of each mission, they had a saying, which Cox repeated at the close of Hollingsworth’s eulogy: “Hollie, you keep ‘em flying, and I’ll keep ‘em firing.”

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  • NecoNeco In My Restless Dreams Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    Except I don't actually think I would call The Shining my FAVORITE horror movie, but I don't think I have a favorite.

    It's very good though.

  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    Mazzyx wrote: »
    Staying home today was the right choice. Standing produces nausea. And the sudafed has turned my sinuses into death valley. Its going to be a long day.

    Chelle has called in sick 2 days in a row now. She's just having a flareup. I worked from home yesterday to take care of her but needed to come in today. I feel like shit myself.

    But on the upside I got my demon hunter to 120 and already at 299 item level because I did nothing but run battlegrounds all day because of the bonus and I got a shitton of lockboxes including a 335 ring

    also Battlegrounds are awesome and our wow group really needs to get over their pvp fear..at least for battlegrounds

  • iTunesIsEviliTunesIsEvil Cornfield? Cornfield.Registered User regular
    I need a fucking drink after this week
    what should I do for my inaugural stand mixer run

    something not too hard

    was thinking maybe a spice cake of some sort

    Pretzels! The big soft kind. Really, any bread, or thing that requires the dough-hook attachment (assumin' you've got one).

  • 21stCentury21stCentury Call me Pixel, or Pix for short! [They/Them]Registered User regular
    I unironically love Neco!
    Neco wrote: »
    Except I don't actually think I would call The Shining my FAVORITE horror movie, but I don't think I have a favorite.

    It's very good though.

    My favorite horror movie is Ready Player One.

  • QanamilQanamil x Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    Neco yay!

  • skippydumptruckskippydumptruck Registered User regular
    My favorite horror movie is Ready Player One.

    I watched this on the plane yesterday and it was not good

  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    my favorite horror movie is Steel Magnolias

  • Jubal77Jubal77 Registered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    If I had to pick a horror movie that changed rock history for me it would be tough.

    But I would still have to settle on Night of the Living Dead orig.

  • Sir LandsharkSir Landshark resting shark face Registered User regular
    @elki nah I think I have a bunch of weekly ones left

    Please consider the environment before printing this post.
  • AbdhyiusAbdhyius Registered User regular
    No, but really, I WANT A DRINK
    Kansas City fire department rescues Kansas City police department from a stuck elevator
    iyfp4cj1h0r11.jpg

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  • CoinageCoinage Heaviside LayerRegistered User regular
    Thank God I'm lazy and didn't accidentally read a short story by Orson Scott Card

    Happiness is within reach!
  • 21stCentury21stCentury Call me Pixel, or Pix for short! [They/Them]Registered User regular
    I unironically love Neco!
    My favorite horror movie is Ready Player One.

    I watched this on the plane yesterday and it was not good

    i actually liked it.





    i liked it way too much, in fact.

    I'm probably one of those bad nerds. :(

  • BogartBogart Streetwise Hercules Registered User, Moderator Mod Emeritus
  • DoodmannDoodmann Registered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    Mazzyx wrote: »
    Staying home today was the right choice. Standing produces nausea. And the sudafed has turned my sinuses into death valley. Its going to be a long day.

    HOT TAWDIES FOR EVERYONE

    Whippy wrote: »
    nope nope nope nope abort abort talk about anime
    I like to ART
  • HenroidHenroid Mexican kicked from Immigration Thread Centrism is Racism :3Registered User regular
    I unironically love Neco!
    This poll is a no-brainer.

  • ElkiElki get busy Moderator, ClubPA Mod Emeritus
    @elki nah I think I have a bunch of weekly ones left

    I swear man just give me that login and let me do it.

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  • Mojo_JojoMojo_Jojo We are only now beginning to understand the full power and ramifications of sexual intercourse Registered User regular
    Having read Ready Player One out of morbid curiosity, I'm not sure I could stomach the film

    Homogeneous distribution of your varieties of amuse-gueule
  • ElkiElki get busy Moderator, ClubPA Mod Emeritus
    My favorite horror movie is Ready Player One.

    I watched this on the plane yesterday and it was not good

    Seems like a great plane movie.

    smCQ5WE.jpg
  • wanderingwandering Russia state-affiliated media Registered User regular
    I unironically unironically love Neco!
    Neco wrote: »
    Except I don't actually think I would call The Shining my FAVORITE horror movie, but I don't think I have a favorite.

    It's very good though.
    e7o1ovpvjjv0.gif

  • LudiousLudious I just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered User regular
    OMG GIRL GO SPEND YOUR SEPHORA MONEY AND GET PRETTY
    there I voted neco but I didn't like it

    so this is what it feels like to be a third party

  • ArchArch Neat-o, mosquito! Registered User regular
    I unironically unironically love Neco!
    man, neco, this poll

This discussion has been closed.