Whose Yur Planner
Cyburbian
- Messages
- 14,092
- Points
- 60
I agree with that and acknowledgment that I do it as wellAs humans, we tend not to value things until we begin to lose them or no longer have them at all.
I agree with that and acknowledgment that I do it as wellAs humans, we tend not to value things until we begin to lose them or no longer have them at all.
You kinda get used to it, but the first years are rough. Summer used to be get outside and do things. Now, it's stay inside and try to hold out until October. The weight loss did help out with that somewhat. However my Nordic ancestors give me rude reminders that the genes they gave me are definitely for a far colder and less sunny environment.As a youngster, August wore two faces for me: the early part included my birthday, which of course is a good thing to a kid. But the end saw the approach of school (the day after Labor Day), and that was a bad thing. While I didn't ever really hate school, I did dislike surrendering my autonomy to some stranger authority figures. The more August passed, the worse the feeling of impending doom.
As an oldster, August wears only one mask now, and it is not favorable. I don't need to be reminded of my own aging, so birthdays aren't necessarily a good thing anymore. (Being above ground to note their coming and going is better than the alternative.) It is the heat and humidity I can no longer abide. It won't abate this month and is sometimes the absolute worst month for it. (The heat index here yesterday was 108', for crying out loud, and it's only August 1!) With climate change, the nights won't even begin to cool until mid-September so that there are 31 dreadful days before one can even begin to hope for fall. Misery, I tell you.
How folks in the south (sorry @Whose Yur Planner and others) tolerate such a clime is beyond me.
That sounds like the same TN DL office I remember from 1995.Hour later and I have still yet to speak to someone.
FTR I was always the one on the right. Usually followed by a comment like 'Eh, sharpshooter. Good enough'
FTR I was always the one on the right. Usually followed by a comment like 'Eh, sharpshooter. Good enough'
I could never hit the broad side of a barn with a pistol. Rifle? Expert when I was trying. Pistol? I missed the target entirely on occasion.I had a roommate who shot perfect on the rifle range one year and got asked to try out for the competitive shooting team on Okinawa. He lasted about two weeks.
He was consistently shooting between 295 - 300 with the rifle and then they moved on to the pistol. They were still using .45 for competition and could only use one hand and had to keep the other hand in their pocket, just like the guy in the photo on the right. He had never shot a .45 at all before the try outs and said he was totally unprepared for that style of shooting with a pistol with that much kick. We he moved back into our barracks room a lot sooner than I was expecting he said something to the effect of, "I would have been more accurate if they had just let me throw the pistol at the target!"
FWIW, he said that was pretty common and they really thin the herd of the people trying out when they start working with the pistols.
Our company requires us to charge our time to the particular contract or overhead account that we're doing work for. A project was started with several sub-projects; they gave out one charge number for the whole thing. Now they're asking for us to break that out to the different sub-projects.
Sorry, sweetie, that ship has sailed. If you wanted it broken down by the different sub-projects you needed to provide different charge numbers, because I'm not going to start guessing now.
I saw Three Dog Night about 10 years ago. They played for three hours without a break. I love their music.
With a 1911 .45, if having fixed sites, it not hard to miss. Great defense within 20 feet, which is really the purpose of a handgun. 230 grains of lead at 850 FPS proved will enough in our military history. I have a mil-spec 1911 with fixed sites and would rather have adjustable but wanted the style of what was historically used. Problem with fixed, and I assume this is what you had, is that it becomes a guessing game to adjust for not having sites lined up at the point of aim.I could never hit the broad side of a barn with a pistol. Rifle? Expert when I was trying. Pistol? I missed the target entirely on occasion.![]()
Sorry I read Magna, but mind thought of this:The halfway point of my commute takes me through the main drag of a little town called Magna. Terrible name. Cute town. The town ends and gives way to hay fields as I take a left to connect to I-80 (eventually). Does anything smell sweeter than alfalfa on a hot morning late in the year when it's rained the night before? Maybe, babies feet; it's hard to say. I love that moment of my drive, each morning.
I see you fields of sweet alfalfa and raise you the giant fields of roses they grow near me. Yes Phoenix does have farming. No, it really shouldn't.The halfway point of my commute takes me through the main drag of a little town called Magna. Terrible name. Cute town. The town ends and gives way to hay fields as I take a left to connect to I-80 (eventually). Does anything smell sweeter than alfalfa on a hot morning late in the year when it's rained the night before? Maybe, babies feet; it's hard to say. I love that moment of my drive, each morning.
Magna
Not to be confused with:A character in Marvel's Star Wars comics:
![]()
Magna Tolvan
Magna Tolvan was a female human who served in the Galactic Empire in various positions, first as a captain and subsequently as a lieutenant within the Imperial Military, then as an Lieutenant-Inspector and Captain-Inspector of the Imperial Inspectorate, and later joined the Alliance to Restore...starwars.fandom.com
Halloween is almost three months away!I was walking past the CVS in our downtown the other day and saw displays of Halloween candy through the windows.
Too soon!
fifyHalloween is only three months away!
Depends where they are moving from.You say that like it's a good thing.
![]()
Depends where they are moving from.
Small time crooks
At a big grocery today, as I was reviewing my ticket in a big come and go foyer that held a large free standing display of sale items, a man pushed a cart right in front of me and loaded about a dozen six-packs of some kind of bottled ice tea, said something to nobody, and pushed it out the door. A lady just entering saw him with me, and she told me she was shocked.
I was surprised, but when she asked me if I saw the act, I shrugged and that was a thirsty man.
She said she was going to rat on him and strode through the doors to alert someone in charge.
How many here have witnessed similar situations?
Is it possible she already paid for it at the register and had a receipt in her purse, like they do with bags of salt and other bulky items they keep out front?While working a summer job at Walmart I saw an old lady grab a geranium off an outdoor display and hop into her car with her elderly husband as the getaway driver.
Nope. I worked in the garden area and they didn't buy anything there. I saw her grab it, look around, and do the elderly equivalent of jump into the car.Is it possible she already paid for it at the register and had a receipt in her purse, like they do with bags of salt and other bulky items they keep out front?
Been out of pocket for a few days as I try to get my feet under me with my new job. My new boss is awesome and most of my coworkers are terrific.
Yesterday I had a coffee meeting at 5:30 before work. Usually I leave for work at 6:30. Yesterday I woke up at 6:55So I usually nap on the sofa but yesterday I laid down on my bed after getting home from work. I woke up a 9:00 and thought I was late for work, but it was dark out. I was really confused, then I realized I still had my clothes on and remembered I only took a nap. So I went back to sleep and woke up when my alarm went off this morning. I guess I needed the sleep.