From john at johneverson.com Mon Jun 1 00:01:44 2009 From: john at johneverson.com (John Everson) Date: Mon Jun 1 00:02:01 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug's Girlfriend on the Cover of Pen NamedBook In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Hmmm... words to live by, it seems... -----Original Message----- From: Mike Hemmingson [mailto:avantpop@hotmail.com] Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 10:27 PM To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Subject: RE: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug's Girlfriend on the Cover of Pen NamedBook Move to L.A., fuck nasty, talk sweet nothings, seek sin, deliver gentle pain. ;) _____ From: john@johneverson.com To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Subject: RE: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug's Girlfriend on the Cover of Pen Named Book Date: Sun, 31 May 2009 21:19:05 -0500 Hey - how do I get me one of those bed toys??? Yours in Dark Arts, John Everson --------------------------------------------------- SACRIFICE Sometimes Death Is Not The End NEEDLES & SINS 19 Tales of Twisted Redemption www.johneverson.com -----Original Message----- From: Mike Hemmingson [mailto:avantpop@hotmail.com] Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 12:04 PM To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug's Girlfriend on the Cover of Pen Named Book The Thug has been writing a series of "studies" for Olympia Press under the nom de plume of Dr. Garth Mundinger-Klow. The Thug's bed toy in Los Angeles is on the cover of one: http://www.amazon.com/SWAPPING-Swinging-as-Lifestyle/dp/B0022VV0W2/ref=s r_1_3?ie=UTF8 &s=books&qid=1243789236&sr=1-3 Other: http://www.amazon.com/Paying-Oldest-Profession-Garth-Mundinger-Klow/dp/1 596548525/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8 &s=books&qid=1243789236&sr=1-2 Forthcoming titles on: BDSM Incest Dog/Horse Sex and Women Women in Prison Women Who Like Badges Pony Training Golden Showers/Scat Lesbians Buddy Packers _____ Windows LiveT: Keep your life in sync. Check it out. _____ HotmailR has ever-growing storage! Don't worry about storage limits. Check it out. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090531/5290557c/attachment.htm From toxbs at yahoo.com Mon Jun 1 10:33:29 2009 From: toxbs at yahoo.com (Bruce Young) Date: Mon Jun 1 10:33:49 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood Message-ID: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Congrats! Why are all these coming out at the same time? Cosmic coincidence or the writing equivalent of getting a bowel stone removed? Bruce "Edit this!" Young --- On Sun, 5/31/09, Mike Hemmingson wrote: From: Mike Hemmingson Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug Writes Cheezy Bad Prvate Eye Porn Novel and dedicates it to Carter Brown To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Date: Sunday, May 31, 2009, 11:00 AM #yiv201953607 .hmmessage P { margin:0px;padding:0px;} #yiv201953607 { font-size:10pt;font-family:Verdana;} http://www.amazon.com/Yacht-People-Michael-Hemmingson/dp/1434477657/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1243788880&sr=1-4 Hotmail? goes with you. Get it on your BlackBerry or iPhone. -----Inline Attachment Follows----- _______________________________________________ Cpaod-discuss mailing list Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090601/df0d4d21/attachment.htm From freakyzappo at yahoo.com Mon Jun 1 11:12:27 2009 From: freakyzappo at yahoo.com (Laszlo Panaflex) Date: Mon Jun 1 11:12:49 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Fear and Loathing: The Board Game Message-ID: <387900.41520.qm@web53603.mail.re2.yahoo.com> Hmm, the chaperon reading the rules on the inside of the box ... I like that idea. Though as your attorney I must express some trepidation as the games the chaperon typically reads up on are quite different: There is the concern that the chaperon could become confused and we'll all end up freezing to death somewhere in Finland in 1939... Of course there is already the danger of that, particularly if we get into the ether and phenethylamines... Savage commies with frozen toes and herring breath confronting authentic 21st-century crazed junkies with fucked minds, fire for eyes, and wearing Acapulco shirts, high on ether and drooling on our sleeves. They'll slather us with mustard and harvest our peneal glands! bt --- On Sun, 5/31/09, Jasmine Sailing wrote: > From: Jasmine Sailing > Subject: Re: [Cpaod-discuss] Fear and Loathing: The Board Game > To: "Discussion About CP-ish Topics" > Date: Sunday, May 31, 2009, 7:04 PM > Laszlo Panaflex wrote: > > but first I shall go on a spiritual quest to a desert > oasis, where I will imbibe seven elixirs, seven potions, and > seven herbs, preparing me to ... read the rules on the > inside of the box > >??? > > Oh, sheesh...? There aren't enough elixirs, potions, > and herbs in > the world for me to handle reading the rules to > something.? Or > instructions of any sort...? Isn't that the chaperon's > job anyway? > I think he kind of reads them as we go along, and then says > "Oh, > oops, you weren't supposed to..." every now and then.? > And aside > from that we all just kind of do lots of... and then lots > of... > > > snake eyes!? menacing vibrations... > >??? > > EEP!? *Hastily popping Valium, Klonopin, and Vicodin* > > (Latter was because I was afraid the snake eyes would hurt > me.) > > (Former was because the fear caused me to smoke a bowl, > which > caused me to feel anxious so of course I needed Valium and > Klonopin.) > > (All of this is making my stomach ighs and downs some acid because it is all getting way > out of > control and a little focus is required* > > *downs a few drinks because the acid peak was too speedy, > and a > little downing was required* > > (That wasn't the end, but she wasn't heard from for a > while...) > > -- > @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net > @ > ???@ Me, I'm still just a heretic.? I'm > no Apostate.? I may > have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice > man-made > ???things.? This seems appropriate in > this day and age, when > ???man-made things have overly consumed so > much of nature. @ > ?????@ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ > > > _______________________________________________ > Cpaod-discuss mailing list > Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss > From avantpop at hotmail.com Tue Jun 2 09:08:39 2009 From: avantpop at hotmail.com (Mike Hemmingson) Date: Tue Jun 2 09:08:52 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood In-Reply-To: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Message-ID: "Artistic" vomit. or.. The Buddy Packer was finally removed and what comes spraying out from the depths of my bowels? Michael Hemmingson Date: Mon, 1 Jun 2009 07:33:29 -0700 From: toxbs@yahoo.com To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood Congrats! Why are all these coming out at the same time? Cosmic coincidence or the writing equivalent of getting a bowel stone removed? Bruce "Edit this!" Young --- On Sun, 5/31/09, Mike Hemmingson wrote: From: Mike Hemmingson Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] The Thug Writes Cheezy Bad Prvate Eye Porn Novel and dedicates it to Carter Brown To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net Date: Sunday, May 31, 2009, 11:00 AM http://www.amazon.com/Yacht-People-Michael-Hemmingson/dp/1434477657/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1243788880&sr=1-4 Hotmail? goes with you. Get it on your BlackBerry or iPhone. -----Inline Attachment Follows----- _______________________________________________ Cpaod-discuss mailing list Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss _________________________________________________________________ Lauren found her dream laptop. Find the PC that?s right for you. http://www.microsoft.com/windows/choosepc/?ocid=ftp_val_wl_290 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090602/00a0c090/attachment.htm From jsailing at netonecom.net Tue Jun 2 14:57:41 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Tue Jun 2 14:57:54 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood In-Reply-To: <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net> Mike Hemmingson wrote: > The Buddy Packer was finally removed > and what comes spraying out from the depths of my bowels? I try to remember to remove the Buddy Packer every day or two at least, to keep things on an even keel. Avoid changing the colour of the world all in one long foul gush... Avoid the embarrassment of the odor detector on my air purifier getting a little TOO worked up for too long... (Sounded a while back like Chris probably needed to plug his home with the Buddy Packer, though. Sometimes... it's for the best...) *drifting off wondering why I'm talking about defecating right before making myself a nice spicy burrito for lunch* -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From avantpop at hotmail.com Tue Jun 2 20:29:18 2009 From: avantpop at hotmail.com (Mike Hemmingson) Date: Tue Jun 2 20:29:31 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood In-Reply-To: <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net> References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net> Message-ID: Burriotos and spice make the Buddy Packer feel nice. Michael Hemmingson > Date: Tue, 2 Jun 2009 12:57:41 -0600 > From: jsailing@netonecom.net > To: cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > Subject: Re: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood > > Mike Hemmingson wrote: > > The Buddy Packer was finally removed > > and what comes spraying out from the depths of my bowels? > > I try to remember to remove the Buddy Packer every day or two > at least, to keep things on an even keel. Avoid changing the > colour of the world all in one long foul gush... Avoid the > embarrassment of the odor detector on my air purifier getting > a little TOO worked up for too long... > > (Sounded a while back like Chris probably needed to plug his > home with the Buddy Packer, though. Sometimes... it's for the > best...) > > *drifting off wondering why I'm talking about defecating right > before making myself a nice spicy burrito for lunch* > > -- > @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ > @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may > have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made > things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when > man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ > @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ > > > _______________________________________________ > Cpaod-discuss mailing list > Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live? SkyDrive?: Get 25 GB of free online storage. http://windowslive.com/online/skydrive?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_SD_25GB_062009 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090603/e49e49c8/attachment.htm From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 3 00:38:46 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 3 00:39:06 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Thug's Flood In-Reply-To: <11700608.1243989535937.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net> <11700608.1243989535937.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A25FE56.2010800@netonecom.net> Mike Hemmingson wrote: > Burriotos and spice make the Buddy Packer feel nice. Perhaps we should consider the conventional old route of smearing hot pepper juice all over the Buddy Packer, and not go through the hassle of passing it through the body first. Spices tend to lose some of their oomph that way, though necessarily not all of it. I think I know this because I'm still thoroughly addicted to spicy foods, yet I don't often have those notably burning bowel movements. And, sadly, none of the times I did have burning ones did it occur to me to see if anyone wanted to play with it and let me know how hot they think it is. (Oh, the things we forget to do in our life times... It must be a shame to waste a good spicy burning pile of feces, *sigh*. Just flushed down the toilet and forgotten, like a ... well, like a pile of poop.) -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From chris at robotmandala.com Wed Jun 3 09:17:54 2009 From: chris at robotmandala.com (Chris whY) Date: Wed Jun 3 09:18:28 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Fire(arms) Sale! References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net><11700608.1243989535937.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A25FE56.2010800@netonecom.net> Message-ID: <004901c9e44d$bcd54d00$7c02a8c0@ceres> Julia and I are in a serious mess regarding a storage space where we have stored her family heirlooms, including her grandmother's piano, and most of my video and musical equipment and most of my collection of original video and musical output since 1980, of which I have no copies. We have a few days to come up with the money to rescue it, before it goes up for auction. The financial value of some of those items is well in excess of what we owe, and the personal items we have there are priceless. My employer, who has severely suffered from the recession and has been unable to pay me for several months' work, has offered me the following guns to sell to raise funds for this. He is a true weapons expert and takes very good care of his guns, so I am certain that all are in very good condition. Must be paid in cash, as our bank account is overdrawn and they would take too much of the money to cover the overdraw if we deposited a check. (And banks can suck my lilly-white ass anyway. Moneygrubbing thieves.) Prices are somewhat negotiable, although the less I get for them, especially if I can't sell them in time, the further we are from paying off the storage bill. The guns are located near Lake George, CO, but employer will deliver them to me here in Denver when I get serious offers, so the buyer(s) can inspect them and conclude prompt transactions. (1) An SKS carbine that takes AK-47 magazines. Deal will include 3 AK-47 magazines and 250 rds of ammo, and an AK-47 chest mag pouch. Price $360. 2) A Thompson Renegade Black Powder rifle with double set triggers. He paid $567 for it. He says that this is as good as is made of this type of rifle. Price $240 3) An 1858 CSA reproduction Black Powder revolver in .44 caliber. It shoots well, too. Price $100. Photos available on request. Only available to Colorado residents due to time (and in the case of the SKS, legal) constraints. Sorry, Thuggo. -Chris whY - email at chris@rmcat.com or phone (though my phone is not very reliable so you may have to leave a voicemail with your number) at 720-329-0830. From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 3 09:52:22 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 3 09:52:31 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Fire(arms) Sale! In-Reply-To: <25978508.1244035442777.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <342761.96324.qm@web31505.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <13737183.1243948223087.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A257625.2010103@netonecom.net><11700608.1243989535937.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A25FE56.2010800@netonecom.net> <25978508.1244035442777.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A268016.1070706@netonecom.net> Chris whY wrote: > The guns are located near Lake George, CO, We were just over there last weekend... (Not to this person's house, but in the Lake George area.) Or, no, that was Memorial Day weekend. > (1) An SKS carbine that takes AK-47 magazines. Deal will include 3 AK-47 > magazines and 250 rds of ammo, and an AK-47 chest mag pouch. Price $360. I drooled, but we have our own financial problems. Which didn't stop me from asking Bruce, but he said no. Well, I THINK it's the financial problems. Maybe he actually has the sense to not want me to have one. Especially when I'll be quitting smoking later this month. ;) I even tried to protest "But how will we play Fear and Loathing the board game without an SKS?". Ah well. We'll both mention them around. Good luck... -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Tue Jun 9 12:10:52 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Tue Jun 9 12:11:01 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover Message-ID: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> Ron and Peggy are at Disneyland sometime around now, I think. I started wondering if I should've asked them to puke on the Peoplemover for me, for old time's sake. That's always been my favourite memory for any time people are talking about feeling sick on scary rides at amusement parks. "I puked on the Peoplemover". For anyone who doesn't know, the Peoplemover is as slow, sturdy, and unscary as a ride can possibly be. Or at least it was back then. The funny thing, though, was when the attendants were cleaning it up, one said "Don't worry, it happens all the time". Even having just puked on the Peoplemover, I could not at all begin to comprehend how people could possibly puke on it all the time. Now, in retrospect, I think I can. Disneyland was always packed with trashed teenagers. Much like I was a very trashed teenager when I did it. I was literally almost blind when I got off the Peoplemover. My friend (nice of her, since we'd only met about 2 days earlier -- but had been through a lot of being trashed at Disneyland together since then -- AND I'd also puked on her boots in the Peoplemover) had to hold me by my shirt and lead me around. Damn, those Peoplemovers are DANGEROUS! Made me puke AND made me blind! If such things happen ALL THE TIME, they should really consider whether this ride is a menace to society! ;) -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From avantpop at hotmail.com Tue Jun 9 16:47:26 2009 From: avantpop at hotmail.com (Mike Hemmingson) Date: Tue Jun 9 16:47:33 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> Message-ID: But did they take The Cup and the Buddy packer? Michael Hemmingson > Date: Tue, 9 Jun 2009 10:10:52 -0600 > From: jsailing@netonecom.net > To: Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > CC: > Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover > > Ron and Peggy are at Disneyland sometime around now, I think. > I started wondering if I should've asked them to puke on the > Peoplemover for me, for old time's sake. > > That's always been my favourite memory for any time people are > talking about feeling sick on scary rides at amusement parks. > "I puked on the Peoplemover". For anyone who doesn't know, > the Peoplemover is as slow, sturdy, and unscary as a ride can > possibly be. Or at least it was back then. > > The funny thing, though, was when the attendants were cleaning > it up, one said "Don't worry, it happens all the time". Even > having just puked on the Peoplemover, I could not at all begin > to comprehend how people could possibly puke on it all the time. > > Now, in retrospect, I think I can. Disneyland was always packed > with trashed teenagers. Much like I was a very trashed teenager > when I did it. I was literally almost blind when I got off the > Peoplemover. My friend (nice of her, since we'd only met about > 2 days earlier -- but had been through a lot of being trashed > at Disneyland together since then -- AND I'd also puked on her > boots in the Peoplemover) had to hold me by my shirt and lead > me around. > > Damn, those Peoplemovers are DANGEROUS! Made me puke AND made > me blind! If such things happen ALL THE TIME, they should really > consider whether this ride is a menace to society! ;) > > -- > @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ > @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may > have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made > things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when > man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ > @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ > > > _______________________________________________ > Cpaod-discuss mailing list > Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live? SkyDrive?: Get 25 GB of free online storage. http://windowslive.com/online/skydrive?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_SD_25GB_062009 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090609/5c45965a/attachment.htm From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 10 12:20:14 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 10 12:18:31 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Bizarre... (Provocativeness) In-Reply-To: <32834740.1239486579368.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <49E0B119.7020403@netonecom.net> <32834740.1239486579368.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A2FDD3E.60509@netonecom.net> Ron Howerton wrote: > > This is ludicrous! Let?s hear it for the ACLU, not only bastion of > American freedom, but loathed by all Republicans and conservatives > (making them doubly worthy of protection by Cnidarians everywhere)! > Not sure about that... My Dad is my opposite on much of this, and as far as I can remember we both mutually respect ACLU and Amnesty International. I would think at least the moreso libertarian end of Republicans would appreciate the ACLU guard- dogging on the interference of government in personal matters front. Conservatives, sure, if by conservatives we mean people who want the government to clamp down on anything they find morally offensive. Conservative used to mean something else... Neither conservative nor liberal should mean "We want the government to have more and more control over our personal choices", but somehow the terminologies seem to like heading in those directions. I still like to think conservative means "conservative", but, well, you know... politics are funny... hard to say anymore... But, sure, of course Cnidarians should protect the ACLU. We'll need them to protect our rights to profaning too many things. ;) (Response to a very old post... from April... must protect my right to be slow...) -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 10 12:27:58 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 10 12:26:04 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Gay Marriage In-Reply-To: <26301084.1239487000905.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <49E0B21F.3040009@netonecom.net> <26301084.1239487000905.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A2FDF0E.9010405@netonecom.net> Ron Howerton wrote: > Except that now they're talking about changing their constitution to make discrimination legal anyway. Currently there's talk of overturning DOMA, which at least would remove some things from the federal level. -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 10 13:34:57 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 10 13:33:04 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Gay Marriage In-Reply-To: <22725577.1239738634745.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <22725577.1239738634745.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A2FEEC1.6030509@netonecom.net> Tom Lyon wrote: > I fail to see the big uproar over same-sex marriages. While it > certainly isn't in agreement with my core values, attempting to force > an arbitrary set of values on others just seems too far out there. > Too many do-gooders, with good intentions, end up compromising > freedoms for everyone. It doesn't particularly make sense to me. If there's a moralistic opposition to gay marriage, then it boils down to saying gay sex is fine but gay marriage isn't. Go out and screw anyone you want, just don't marry them. Which is, legally, exactly what gay people are stuck with. Maybe I'm silly in my moralisms, but, uh... ;) I can't help but somehow find the concept of settling down and marrying the person you love a bit more wholesome than marrying someone for whatever benefits and running off to have sex with the people you really want to be with. Or, of course, simply not getting married and having sex with whoever you want to. Not that moralisms SHOULD matter so much. It SHOULD be pragmatism rather than morals that enter the legal realms. Pragmatically speaking, if a gay couple wants to be together they will be whether they can be married or not. BUT it may pragmatically not be in their best interest, as of yet, because they lose out on those essentials of financial life (health insurance, tax breaks, the various legal protections that married couples are lucky enough to get). If we are going to say married couples deserve all of this, it should be possible for people to be married couples. At least in some cases you could beat the system. A lesbian couple and a gay couple could intermarry, if 2 people in different sets have good health insurance and if they want the tax breaks. They would still have a lot of trouble if they wanted kids. Plenty of people would scream "They should NOT have kids!", but what about all of the kids who will spend their lives in group homes and would've loved a home and parents even if it was 2 Moms or 2 Dads? I think the worst I've ever seen out of that type of scenario was kids with 2 over- protective Moms who became over-sheltered. (Though any parents of any gender and sexuality is bound to be human, there are way too many heterosexual bad parents in the world. Abusive, neglectful, uninterested. All in all kids should go to parents who seriously WANT them.) The "sanctity of marriage" is already sufficiently destroyed. Divorce is common. Infidelity is common. Marrying for legal or financial purposes is common. Me, I've done all of the above! My Mom was married twice. My step-dad and my Dad were married 3 times (or maybe it was 4 for my step-dad... can't recall if he was married to the girlfriend before my Mom... I don't think so...). I've been married 3 times. I'm always looking at Bruce funny because his parents are married (even though they don't live together) and I've hardly ever heard of such a strange thing. Heck, I've even officiated a marriage that was a secret and strictly for financial reasons. ;) There are always exceptions. My Mom's Mom and Dad only married each other. They stuck with each other. When granddad died, grandma never moved along with anyone else. She remained married to him through many many years of being a widow. Near 3 decades later, she died on the exact same date as he did (it looks so neat on their shared headstone... same date, but so many years apart). Grandma had been in the hospital for a long time... then that day she was talking to no one anyone else could see and said granddad was there telling her she could let go and be with him again. And so she died. Who knows if she was delirious or if that really did happen, but that was a real marriage. They had their fights like any couple, but they seriously were committed to each other. Wouldn't it be nice if everyone could follow their hearts and try to find someone like that? Most will fail, as is the nature of relationships, but they could try instead of practically being told they should marry someone else and have affairs with the person they want to be with. The necessity for heterosexual marriages was in the days when family legacies had more need for being built. With that need, it was perfectly normal to marry as a business agreement and sleep around on the side. Now... quite clearly humans have over-populated. Maybe the Pope and the Mormons will get with the times and notice that within the next 5 centuries. Procreation is not a necessary part of marriage. Wives typically don't come with dowries. There's no need to pick the wife with the best dowry, spawn legitimate heirs with her, and spawn 50 back-up heirs with the maids. There's been a lot of loss of respect for the concept of marriage overall. Perhaps if it is a thing you can choose because you've found someone you honestly want to commit yourself to it will become more popular. Seems the average population simply does not even bother with marriage unless they come up with a financial or legal reason for doing it. So... why stop people who really really want to make vows with each other, even when it's difficult and when they are blocked from getting the normal benefits out of it? Maybe I'm just too much of a romanticist while the rest of the world realizes everything is sex and business and nothing else matters. ;) (Which knocks moralisms STRAIGHT out of the equation, anyway.) (I'm just tired and overwhelmed by allergies and rambling inanely, if anyone hadn't noticed. Obviously I'm bisexual, pro-gay, pro- gay marriage, and... anti-human expansionism. But I am married to a guy with great health insurance, heh. Which was not why I married him, I did that for legal kid reasons, then the health insurance became a great reason to stay married. BUT at this point in our lives I think we both WANT to be married to each other and stick it out. So that's nice, too.) -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Wed Jun 10 13:44:41 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Wed Jun 10 13:42:58 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Bizarre... (Provocativeness) In-Reply-To: <32233307.1239738634942.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <32233307.1239738634942.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A2FF109.2050400@netonecom.net> Tom Lyon wrote: > Agreed, and even us conservatives despise conservatives. That's > because there are no *true* conservatives left. The ACLU is the > closest thing to conservatism out there anymore, I think. Kind of > ironic, no? Yeah... I kind of think that, too. Maybe as evidenced by the confusion in my previous post about what exactly a conservative is these days, and feeling at least libertarians would approve of ACLU. I'm glad I never in my entire life managed to figure out how to label myself politically (unless you count "wacko" and "environmentalist"). If I had, I would've needed to change my labelling at least every other year or so. -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From ronaldhowerton at comcast.net Sun Jun 14 12:35:51 2009 From: ronaldhowerton at comcast.net (Ron Howerton) Date: Sun Jun 14 12:35:59 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Fear and Loathing: The Board Game In-Reply-To: <4A232905.2070703@netonecom.net> References: <25664404.1243784245981.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A232905.2070703@netonecom.net> Message-ID: <009a01c9ed0e$2f2aa9e0$8d7ffda0$@net> I just want it made clear that I have nothing to do with chapeRONing! Now if you're talking CRAPperoning that's another story... -----Original Message----- From: cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net [mailto:cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net] On Behalf Of Jasmine Sailing Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2009 7:04 PM To: Discussion About CP-ish Topics Subject: Re: [Cpaod-discuss] Fear and Loathing: The Board Game Isn't that the chaperon's job anyway? From ronaldhowerton at comcast.net Sun Jun 14 12:43:15 2009 From: ronaldhowerton at comcast.net (Ron Howerton) Date: Sun Jun 14 12:43:24 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> Message-ID: <009b01c9ed0f$389f5bf0$a9de13d0$@net> We boarded numerous strange torture devices, but nothing called a "Peoplemover." Nobody puked in any case, sorry. :-( They renamed the Swiss Family Robinson tree house the Tarzan tree house. Another icon of our youth forever gone.... The Peter Pan ride was closed for repairs. But Winnie the Pooh was open. Oh Heffalumps and woozles! A splendid time was had by all, especially by my credit card company. -----Original Message----- From: cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net [mailto:cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net] On Behalf Of Jasmine Sailing Sent: Tuesday, June 09, 2009 10:11 AM To: CPAOD- Discuss Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover Ron and Peggy are at Disneyland sometime around now, I think. I started wondering if I should've asked them to puke on the Peoplemover for me, for old time's sake From avantpop at hotmail.com Sun Jun 14 15:00:22 2009 From: avantpop at hotmail.com (Mike Hemmingson) Date: Sun Jun 14 15:00:34 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Gay Marriage In-Reply-To: <4A2FEEC1.6030509@netonecom.net> References: <22725577.1239738634745.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A2FEEC1.6030509@netonecom.net> Message-ID: True marriage is between a man and a gold fish. Michael Hemmingson _________________________________________________________________ Lauren found her dream laptop. Find the PC that?s right for you. http://www.microsoft.com/windows/choosepc/?ocid=ftp_val_wl_290 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090614/80f47d49/attachment.htm From avantpop at hotmail.com Mon Jun 15 14:01:23 2009 From: avantpop at hotmail.com (Mike Hemmingson) Date: Mon Jun 15 14:01:41 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <009b01c9ed0f$389f5bf0$a9de13d0$@net> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> <009b01c9ed0f$389f5bf0$a9de13d0$@net> Message-ID: Ee-Gads the Clown, from Snuff Flique: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=2114218&id=728127335&comments= _________________________________________________________________ Lauren found her dream laptop. Find the PC that?s right for you. http://www.microsoft.com/windows/choosepc/?ocid=ftp_val_wl_290 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.netonecom.net/pipermail/cpaod-discuss/attachments/20090615/f5355471/attachment.htm From jsailing at netonecom.net Tue Jun 16 11:53:11 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Tue Jun 16 11:53:21 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <4047035.1244998035259.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> <4047035.1244998035259.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A37BFE7.8040202@netonecom.net> Ron Howerton wrote: > We boarded numerous strange torture devices, but nothing called a > "Peoplemover." Nobody puked in any case, sorry. :-( > It is (or was, if it's no longer there) the slow tram that moves people from one spot of the park to another. So you can go from the front entrance area to way over on the side or whatever. It has one set path with various stops (in case you don't want to walk to whatever ride, or in my case COULDN'T walk to where you were going to meet people). They had a Peoplemover in season 3 of Venture Bros, in the episode with the day camp for kids. Sadly, I don't recall anyone throwing up on it. ={ It was a smaller Peoplemover than the Disneyland one, and it didn't have a set path. I can't recall the rides at Disneyland. There was the mountain one and the water one (going on a boat through some scenic show or movie or something). Then there was always the black knot of weirdos in one corner of the dance place. ;) It's all a blur. When I was a teen they did 60 hour crawls. The place would be open for 60 hours straight. It was the middle of the 2nd night of one when I managed to puke on the Peoplemover and went blind. I was 15, and I had only recently moved to California... so I wasn't aware of how dangerous Disneyland and the Peoplemover were. I should've petitioned for a warning sign: "People puke on this ride ALL THE TIME, and some even go blind!". -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Tue Jun 16 11:55:34 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Tue Jun 16 11:55:43 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Gay Marriage In-Reply-To: <18306724.1245006459523.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <22725577.1239738634745.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A2FEEC1.6030509@netonecom.net> <18306724.1245006459523.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A37C076.2020303@netonecom.net> Mike Hemmingson wrote: > True marriage is between a man and a gold fish. Very true. I'm sure no one would ever try to come between a man and his goldfish, or a woman and her sea cucumber. -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From ronaldhowerton at comcast.net Tue Jun 16 17:15:19 2009 From: ronaldhowerton at comcast.net (Ron Howerton) Date: Tue Jun 16 17:15:27 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <4A37BFE7.8040202@netonecom.net> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> <4047035.1244998035259.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A37BFE7.8040202@netonecom.net> Message-ID: <000001c9eec7$8e5fdec0$ab1f9c40$@net> I looked around a little online and discovered the PeopleMover was removed a few years back to make room for some other ride. So I didn't just over look it. I watched a video on YouTube that showed it and it did look vaguely familiar from my previous visit to DL back in '86. -----Original Message----- From: cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net [mailto:cpaod-discuss-bounces@mailman.netonecom.net] On Behalf Of Jasmine Sailing Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 9:53 AM To: Discussion About CP-ish Topics Subject: Re: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover Our Blasted Lady wrote: It is (or was, if it's no longer there) the slow tram that moves people from one spot of the park to another. So you can go from the front entrance area to way over on the side or whatever. It has one set path with various stops (in case you don't want to walk to whatever ride, or in my case COULDN'T walk to where you were going to meet people). From jsailing at netonecom.net Thu Jun 18 11:54:08 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Thu Jun 18 11:54:20 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <2016650.1245187356213.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <4A2E898C.7060409@netonecom.net> <4047035.1244998035259.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A37BFE7.8040202@netonecom.net> <2016650.1245187356213.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A3A6320.6020905@netonecom.net> Ron Howerton wrote: > I looked around a little online and discovered the PeopleMover was removed a few years back to make room for some other ride. Ooh, they lie. They must've removed it because it's DEADLY to teenagers who have been getting drunk and sleep-deprived for 30+ hours. Though I shudder to think what would've happened if I'd gone on a ride that actually... does something... I think I only went to Disneyland that once despite living so close to it for a couple of years. I might have gone one other time... but there was a final time when they wouldn't let me in because of my clothes, and I was waiting in the parking lot being a surly teen. Scaring the tourists to live up to the way I was being treated, or whatever. ;) Or maybe that was one of the times I tried and failed to get into Knott's Berry Farm (never could get into that one), and then only managed to get into Disneyland if I took my belt off... they did have more lax dress codes than Knott's did, but at some point they got a little less lax. I didn't have any interest in those places. The later attempt(s) was because if someone came all the way out from Long Beach or wherever it was a novel place to go in the area. I think I went to the 60 hour Crawl partially because it was a good opportunity to spend a few days blitzed and partially because a guy I had a crush on was going to be lurking there. I remember bumping into him at some late bedraggled point and shyly saying my hair looked like a mop. He said he likes mops. New slogan: "Disneyland! Home of guys who like mops, and girls who puke on PeopleMovers!" -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From jsailing at netonecom.net Thu Jun 18 18:09:48 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Thu Jun 18 18:10:01 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Fear and Loathing: The Board Game In-Reply-To: <1043272.1244997613599.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <25664404.1243784245981.JavaMail.root@n13> <4A232905.2070703@netonecom.net> <1043272.1244997613599.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A3ABB2C.3080105@netonecom.net> Ron Howerton wrote: > I just want it made clear that I have nothing to do with chapeRONing! Now if you're talking CRAPperoning that's another story... > Nah, you're the official Cr*pman's Chaffeur Service. Obviously the Chaffeur is an important part of the game, and should be very deeply mentally obliterated. Otherwise we wouldn't have any hope for the rebirth of scientifically experimental driving! St. Young remains The Eternal Chaperon. -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From freakyzappo at yahoo.com Thu Jun 18 21:54:49 2009 From: freakyzappo at yahoo.com (Laszlo Panaflex) Date: Thu Jun 18 21:55:12 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover Message-ID: <993552.61527.qm@web53603.mail.re2.yahoo.com> When I was about five, we went to LA to meet my father coming home from Vietnam - no spitters that I recall. We went to Disneyland, and while I don't remember a people mover, I do recall a Monorail into the park from the hotel (which was in North Haverbrook). I was too small for the Matterhorn, the big attraction then, and a nervous stomached lad as well. I recall being frightened by some lame little ride where you go around in a Model T. Chances are pretty strong that I threw up at some point. I did ride in a Peoplemover at Dulles Airport, and from the smell of the thing, throwing up on them is not uncommon. Most assume it is from the "mover" part, but I think it has to do with being in a large vehicle with lots of other people. Makes me queasy every time. bt --- On Thu, 6/18/09, Jasmine Sailing wrote: > From: Jasmine Sailing > Subject: Re: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover > To: "Discussion About CP-ish Topics" > Date: Thursday, June 18, 2009, 9:54 AM > Ron Howerton wrote: > > > I looked around a little online and discovered the > PeopleMover was removed a few years back to make room for > some other ride. > > Ooh, they lie.? They must've removed it because it's > DEADLY to > teenagers who have been getting drunk and sleep-deprived > for > 30+ hours. > > Though I shudder to think what would've happened if I'd > gone on > a ride that actually... does something... > > I think I only went to Disneyland that once despite living > so > close to it for a couple of years.? I might have gone > one other > time... but there was a final time when they wouldn't let > me in > because of my clothes, and I was waiting in the parking > lot > being a surly teen.? Scaring the tourists to live up > to the > way I was being treated, or whatever. ;)? Or maybe > that was > one of the times I tried and failed to get into Knott's > Berry > Farm (never could get into that one), and then only > managed > to get into Di des than Knott's did, but at some point > they > got a little less lax. > > I didn't have any interest in those places.? The later > attempt(s) > was because if someone came all the way out from Long Beach > or > wherever it was a novel place to go in the area.? I > think I went > to the 60 hour Crawl partially because it was a good > opportunity > to spend a few days blitzed and partially because a guy I > had a > crush on was going to be lurking there.? I remember > bumping into > him at some late bedraggled point and shyly saying my hair > looked > like a mop.? He said he likes mops. > > New slogan:? "Disneyland!? Home of guys who like > mops, and girls > who puke on PeopleMovers!" > > -- > @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net > @ > ???@ Me, I'm still just a heretic.? I'm > no Apostate.? I may > have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice > man-made > ???things.? This seems appropriate in > this day and age, when > ???man-made things have overly consumed so > much of nature. @ > ?????@ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ > > > _______________________________________________ > Cpaod-discuss mailing list > Cpaod-discuss@mailman.netonecom.net > http://lists.netonecom.net/mailman/listinfo/cpaod-discuss > From jsailing at netonecom.net Fri Jun 19 13:01:00 2009 From: jsailing at netonecom.net (Jasmine Sailing) Date: Fri Jun 19 13:01:08 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] Disneyland Peoplemover In-Reply-To: <4491675.1245377029955.JavaMail.root@n13> References: <4491675.1245377029955.JavaMail.root@n13> Message-ID: <4A3BC44C.3020801@netonecom.net> Laszlo Panaflex wrote: > I recall being frightened by some lame little ride where you go around in a Model T. Chances are pretty strong that I threw up at some point. > Heh. I was an iron-stomached mountain goat, always hanging off cliffs and capable of handling any ride, which made it all the more ironic that the PeopleMover was the one that finally got me. There was ONE real ride that almost got me. Can't remember what it was called. It was at 6 Flags over Texas (nothing at Magic Mountain got me, and nothing at Elitch's here after it became 6 Flags... so it was just Texas). I remember them giving us barf bags for the ride... it was battering my sister and I, and making us both mad, and it did make me queasy. I didn't throw up. Trying to remember if my sister did... it's possible. Mostly I remember feeling quietly hostile after the ride, due to the battering. But then we went to Mexico and I began my habit of collecting Armadillo figurines, so all was well. ;) > Most assume it is from the "mover" part, but I think it has to do with being in a large vehicle with lots of other people. Makes me queasy every time. > Yeah, I've gotten queasy on plenty of bus rides. Especially on the 15... where you too often wind up with suspicious liquids rolling your way... The Disneyland PeopleMover was better designed than airport ones. Airport ones, you have no choice if you want to make some flights on time. Disneyland... you could just walk, so the ride needed to be more pleasant. It was like a long train of individual 4- seater cars, so you could just sit with your friends or family. There was only one person (my friend) in the car with me when I and her boots had the unfortunate moment. ;) Sadly, I was too young and inexperienced to know you could, say, puke down the outside of the car instead of inside it. The only other time I can think of was when I escaped HWA in New York and was in a cab to Joe Christ and Nancy Collins' apartment. I think I said I needed to puke and they said it was only a few more blocks, but I couldn't manage a few more blocks. But I did roll down the window and hit the side of the cab instead of the people in it. *phew* I had... really bad alcohol poisoning that weekend. (As evidenced by my bloated naked corpse in Acid is Groovy Kill the Pigs, heh. Trying to eat that morning was scary, but I did okay on the packed subway ride to JFK. And on the airport. I was having some kind of seizures for a week afterward, though. But, then, I had already been throwing up for 2 days prior to the cab ride and I still kept drinking non-stop anyway. I never had any sense while drunk. I remember plenty of bad bar moments of throwing up and then walking out of the restroom and getting another beer.) Hmm. I was seeing a podiatrist recently and he asked if I'd ever had a seriously heavy drinking habit. I said I had moments of partying too hard, and even getting serious alcohol poisoning a couple of times. He clarified "No, I mean REALLY heavy chronic drinking. Like I had one guy in here who drank 6 6-packs every single night". Oh... no... fortunately that tops me. First time in my life when I could say I was a light drinker. ;) (In the past year and a half I've had 3 drinks, spread out over 2 different occasions. Which doesn't mean I'm not looking forward to Fear & Loathing the board game, heh.) *wondering if this is the kind of info people generally expect to find in Disneyland Peoplemover threads* -- @ Jasmine Sailing @ The Blasted One @ jsailing@netonecom.net @ @ Me, I'm still just a heretic. I'm no Apostate. I may have been born a Pagan Heathen, but I only sacrifice man-made things. This seems appropriate in this day and age, when man-made things have overly consumed so much of nature. @ @ http://cyberpsychos.netonecom.net/jsailing @ From genexs at bestweb.net Fri Jun 26 23:27:23 2009 From: genexs at bestweb.net (gene) Date: Fri Jun 26 23:27:35 2009 Subject: [Cpaod-discuss] coming to colorado Message-ID: <4A45919B.8070006@bestweb.net> Hey Jas & Co: I'm coming to Colorado for a few days! Sadly, it's not Denver but Colorado Springs. I'm taking a course in ancient Greek & Roman coins by the ANA. I don't know if any of you are in that area, but maybe we could get together at some suitable watering hole in the evening? My cell phone is 914-805-1931. I'll be coming in Saturday late afternoon. best, Gene -- http://www.signalwhip.org "Never underestimate the allure of the reviled and forbidden" -Brian Hodge