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StoryJunkie

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Everything posted by StoryJunkie

  1. StoryJunkie

    Title Share

    Heartbreaker (song)
  2. g? not really a follower of the KB dude. However, I think that pretty much anyone that goes on stage or in front of a camera is a brave person. G/NG: has a sore leg today.
  3. because, wisdom comes later rather than sooner. Why?
  4. Hey, didn't you read the "slippery when wet" sign? I found it over there.
  5. 3072
  6. ONce. It was enough to deter me ever again from laughing. ever. I've never thought that there were so many people at once with injured legs. My husband & mine are both our left legs. (His left ankle, my left knee, which i've re-injured three times now)
  7. My dog, maybe. Otherwise, no. Do we really have to worry about details?
  8. bites
  9. StoryJunkie

    I Am...

    Sweet Chan of the Silvery-foxy type, I am waving back. I am sighing. I am considering the very long journey of tomorrow. I am thinking that I won't be back on the forum for a couple three days. I am hoping that the house won't blow up, since I'm leaving 2 teenagers behind all on their lonesome. I am raising an eyebrow.
  10. just lying there, all innocent-like. UNTIL YOU STEP ON IT THAT IS! Should we step on it?
  11. StoryJunkie

    I Am...

    I am having sympathy leg pains. (In the knee, though, not the hip) Poor thing. I am letting you know that we're not the only ones either, since my hubby twisted his ankle today, and had to take something for the pain, poor thing. I am sure it's collective disbursement of karma. somewhere someone is falling, and we're taking the brunt of it. It's the only explanation.
  12. me either! I just watch now. The game thingys got too complicated for me anyway, and tossing them around, well, I'm no longer allowed to do that!
  13. ^ has been in my mailbox < dreamily reminiscing on SDK V no idea what SDK is
  14. StoryJunkie

    Mens Woes

    I'm not sure that what you're describing is an actual physical pain that puts you in bed for a day or two, although I guess you can say its a lifetime ailment that kind of goes on and on and on. (that was fun to type) Anyway, I remember my mom saying my dad was complaining about being unable to stop thinking about sex, even though at this point in his life, with age and health problems (and frankly, probably the drugs the doctor perscribed), he couldn't physically do anything. The mind was alert, the body, deflated, so to speak. What a cross to bear. Poor thing, I thought!
  15. as much as I love recieving, there is nothing I love more than posting a review. I am so full of myself I'm dazed for a couple of days after leaving a particularly good review. (Sheesh, I'm so preachy!) The elements of a good review: 1) NEVER say: "I know what's going to happen to so and so, you're going to do such and such, aren't you?" This is the worst review, aside from a flame that one person can give to an author. Muses get chased away by good guessers. So even if you know where the story is headed, DON'T SAY IT. 2) DON'T tell the author what to do with their story, even if they ask. If you can't hold back, email them, don't tell them in a review. "Oh, please let the mother live!" when obviously, she's doomed. 3) Always describe how the work made you FEEL, even if it was negative. An author might have been going for that feeling, and to hold back here is death to the story. For example, a certain passage grossed you out, so just say so, then bring up another example of how the author evoked another feeling from you. Authors are trying their best to connect to their readers, not just trying to connect to themselves. If no one is telling that author how that story made them feel, then they might think that the story isn't worth telling. 4) Hey, poster below me, what's another element of a good review?
  16. Our tech geek built our business' server, attaching 4 other computers to it, plus one other for internet use only. It was the price of a good used vehicle. (I recently paid about 6000 for one) Then the server program was 1/2 again the cost of the system. The new software hadn't been used by anyone except the mill, so we had to consult with the mighty computer geek from the mill, (we put a really nice wood stove in for him) No one in town knew how to get the glitches out (like locking everyone out every morning) It took a half a year (I swear, this was frickin ridiculous, I even had a dream about it) Office Mess (If you've read it already, give it a skip, it's a one-shot.) I am so happy with the screens, though, and the keyboards are really light (I prefer them with some solidity) But man, what a rigamarole. I don't even want to know about band-width. I just want to put it to work so that it pays for itself. If everyone here donated a dollar, I'm sure I'd be 1/5 of the way paying for it! I'm so surprised when people are surprised when sites go down. The cost is ludicrous, and one virus, and you're out! (Remember that one that emailed everyone on your address book? and saturated the servers, crashing systems everywhere? Ah, those were teh days!)
  17. Not at all. Can it be possible for two objects to share the same space?
  18. Drip
  19. Do you suppose she'll leave us gasping? I'm agog
  20. rump
  21. Guilty, when I first found out about "Waltzing Matilda" (although I'm not Australian) g/ng: gets misty when anthem is sung (like at hockey games or olympics and such)
  22. you are a hound! Nanaea?
  23. 4051
  24. me neither I've never been to any kind of rock concert.
  25. The Swiss are famous for what? A horde of Mongolians
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