Oh, it can be easily Taught.I got good grades in geometry class, but I'd have to google how to do it today.
--Patrick
Oh, it can be easily Taught.I got good grades in geometry class, but I'd have to google how to do it today.
That is... a good point.
I sometimes have a Head Pud ( or close to one) when I'm on the couch or sleeping, but he's a baby about going outside. Especially in the winter. The door was open the other day and he stood there and blinked his eyes and backed away.Tired of your human hair? Want a new look for your on-the-go lifestyle?
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Seriously, @Squidleybits, that sucks. <hugs>
Have you tried that white stuff someone sprayed all over the place?! It's cold. And wet. And did I mention COLD?I sometimes have a Head Pud ( or close to one) when I'm on the couch or sleeping, but he's a baby about going outside. Especially in the winter. The door was open the other day and he stood there and blinked his eyes and backed away.
Absolutely, though for best results, I would recommend getting two Head Weasels(TM).Does Head Weasel (tm) work when there's not much - if any - hair left to work with?
Godsdammit, that was supposed to read "pewter".Also, is it supposed to be 2x sable in the color listing?
Yes and then you can be like this satisfied customer:Absolutely, though for best results, I would recommend getting two Head Weasels(TM).
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I am not an outdoor cat. I am an indoor cat. Where it is warm and there is no risk of water falling from the sky!I sometimes have a Head Pud ( or close to one) when I'm on the couch or sleeping, but he's a baby about going outside. Especially in the winter. The door was open the other day and he stood there and blinked his eyes and backed away.
Be careful! I know all of your embarrassing secrets. There are many![DOUBLEPOST=1518065455,1518065404][/DOUBLEPOST]I'm talking to my cat. Can I blame the meds?I am not an outdoor cat. I am an indoor cat. Where it is warm and there is no risk of water falling from the sky!
Not unless the cat starts talking back.I'm talking to my cat. Can I blame the meds?
When in doubt, hash and salt.Unsalted nuts are the worst.
Macadamia? Peanut (not technically a nut)? Brazil? Almonds? Cashew? Hazel? Pecan? Pistachio? Scrotum?Unsalted nuts are the worst.
It was an assortment.Macadamia? Peanut (not technically a nut)? Brazil? Almonds? Cashew? Hazel? Pecan? Pistachio? Scrotum?
'Cause I disagree about most of those
WARNING 3042: Check order of operations.When in doubt, hash and salt.
That's what I get for punning distracted.WARNING 3042: Check order of operations.
NEEEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRRRRRDSSSWARNING 3042: Check order of operations.
I would have thought the pending iHeartRadio bankruptcy would have already been enough to wake him up (CAN'T WAKE UP INSIDE).I just sent an e-mail to our owner that I am hoping will cause an epiphany/wake up call.
NEEEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRRRRRRDSSS
I still have my parents in mostly good health. Selfishly, I want them to pass quickly when the time comes. That's got to be hard man. I wouldn't even know where or how to tackle that decision. I guess I would want to know what her quality of life is. Is she frightened all the time or mean and belligerent? Since she is a fall risk, I assume she is still mobile. How much can she do on her own: eating, bathroom, bathing, etc.So we didn't kill my mom today, which is good. But since she still has Alzheimer's this goes into a rant thread, even if it's a minor one.
First, I found out today how the terminology for a pacemaker goes. Her pacemaker is at 14%. Holy shit! That's bad, right? Nope. It means that her heart only needs help 14% of the time and is 86% efficient on its own. Now if the BATTERY were at 14% we'd have a discussion, but the pacemaker itself at 14% is a good thing.
The issue we talked about today was the delicate balancing act between life quality and end of life quality. Right now she's got a slow but inexorable deadly disease that will kill her. Her blood pressure medication (they think) is causing her to become dizzy and she's a fall risk. So she's been taken off of the blood thinners, which puts her at an elevated risk for a stroke, which she's had before. So what we THOUGHT our choices were today were to either turn off the pacemaker and let nature take its course, or leave her as is and be under the possibility that she lingers for a long, long time. But we found out that the reason they took her off the thinners was precisely because she is a fall risk. Last time she fell they she had a brain bleed because of the thinners so this presents a problem. Cut down on the blood thinners and she won't bruise/bleed so badly if/when she does fall. I asked the doctor if there was a middle ground between the Coumadin (blood thinner) and taking her off completely and he said that aspirin would be a happy medium - not enough thinning to make her bruise at an angry glance, but thin enough that the risk of clot is severely lessened. So now she's on baby aspirin to see how well that works.
So we're still in a holding pattern, even though she absolutely will get worse. We're looking at a multitude of scenarios, but the two most likely are the battery in the pacemaker runs out (she's had it for 3 years and they last 5-10), she has a fall that is so damaging that we take her off of the pacemaker so she can spend less time in pain, or something else rears its head that we don't expect and we deal with it then. The doctor said turning off the pacemaker at about 25% is what he'd do. Any more than that and you start to run into physician ethical issues as turning it off would be considered killing the patient, if not right away. We just know that 50% is where most cardiologist draw the line and we don't want to get near that. If it ever reached 100% - as in it's the only thing keeping the heart beating - it would act as a de facto life support.
So for now we'll keep monitoring as her quality of life is great, if not confused.
Right, it's an hour and three-quarters (in Belgium, I guess)."estimated completion time: 175 minutes'. THAT'S NOT AN HOUR AND A HALF.
Only France ever experimented with the 10-minute hour, back in 1790-95. It wasn't a huge successRight, it's an hour and three-quarters (in Belgium, I guess).
--Patrick
At least they weren't killing kittens.Only France ever experimented with the 10-minute hour, back in 1790-95. It wasn't a huge success
3 seaweed in a food processor will make a snack that will fix that right upBlargh. Looks like Aislynn and I got food poisoning from our local diner yesterday. Now we'll have to give it a week or two before we go back (or, I suppose we could go in, tell Kathy that they need to watch the fryer temp and try to cook shrimp and beef at the same time less often, and go on eating there every few days like we have been). But I've had two very ugly trips to the bathroom so far, and Aislynn is nauseous this morning, which is usually a good indication that it was the food, and not my IBS/GERD/psychosomatic issues.
You're worse than me about getting slowly out of bed.Welp 6a, guess I should get to bed. Gotta leave for work by noon.
--Patrick