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Placeholder [message #49011] Wed, 04 April 2012 19:28 Go to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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http://robinmckinleysblog.com/2012/04/04/placeholder/
Re: Placeholder [message #49012 is a reply to message #49011 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 00:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Diane in MN  is currently offline Diane in MN
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Your condition reminds me of the last time I had real, honest-to-goodness influenza, a couple of decades ago. I made it worse by attempting to go to work on the days I felt marginally better--that was the first week; the second week I just stayed home. My husband had been out of town the first week, but since he caught it as soon as he got home, we were both knocked out the second week, barely able to stagger downstairs to heat up soup. I hope you do NOT have honest-to-goodness flu and see the end of your current affliction very soon.

Oh reckless dog owner beware of precedent.

Don't I know. Smile

yesterday’s blog [ . . . ] roused comments about what on the forum? Knitting.

But there you were, in automatic-ribbing mode--it clearly needed congratulating! Smile Smile



"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
Re: Placeholder [message #49013 is a reply to message #49011 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 02:45 Go to previous messageGo to next message
CathyR  is currently offline CathyR
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It was after noon by the time I managed to make and drink my first cup of perilously strong tea

Gosh, you really ARE poorly! Wink

Seriously, it sounds completely and utterly horrendous. I do hope that you're soon feeling better.

As a non-knitter, I was most impressed by your dedication to the handbell workshop despite your lurgy, btw. And annoyed on your behalf that it wasn't so much better organised.


Just when the caterpillar thought the world was over, it became a butterfly.
Re: Placeholder [message #49014 is a reply to message #49011 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 08:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mockorange  is currently offline Mockorange
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Sorry to hear you're still feeling rough. These viruses can't half take their time to clear off. These days, bugs I used to shake off quite quickly when I was younger linger for weeks.

It was after noon by the time I managed to make and drink my first cup of perilously strong tea

Have you thought of training the hellhounds to carry a thermos flask down to the Mews so Peter can make you some tea and send it back with them?

But may I just say that it amuses me that yesterday’s blog, preoccupied as it was with not only handbells but the miseries of illness, roused comments about what on the forum? Knitting

Well, naturally. Some of us are knitting again for the first time in years entirely due to your proselytising on this blog. Let's see if we can derail to knitting again. KNITTING! KNITTING! KNITTING! KNITTING!
Re: Placeholder [message #49015 is a reply to message #49011 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 11:54 Go to previous messageGo to next message
PamAdams  is currently offline PamAdams
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Then I went back to bed (which was popular with hellhounds†)

I find that cats are equally helpful in an emergency such as this. During my own bout with the Martian Death Bug earlier this year, I was constantly surrounded by and/or covered in cats.

† Oh reckless dog owner beware of precedent.

On the other hand, they do make adequate substitutes for the electric blanket......
Re: Placeholder [message #49016 is a reply to message #49014 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 14:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Mockorange wrote on Thu, 05 April 2012 13:41


Have you thought of training the hellhounds to carry a thermos flask down to the Mews so Peter can make you some tea and send it back with them?

Great idea! Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Placeholder [message #49017 is a reply to message #49011 ] Thu, 05 April 2012 14:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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Quote:

I’m also at the my-nose-has-been-running-for-so-long stage that smiling makes the entire centre of my face crack painfully.

Oh you poor honey! *there there* *sends warm and supportive hug*

Are you able to use E45 cream? I find that does wonders for made-sore-by-a-cold areas.

Quote:

I am an obsessive listener to Radio 3

I'm more of a Radio 4 addict - sleep comes peacefully after listening to the Shipping Forecast. Smile


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Placeholder [message #49023 is a reply to message #49011 ] Fri, 06 April 2012 05:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mrs Redboots  is currently offline Mrs Redboots
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So sorry you're still feeling ghastly - and sorry I wasn't able to come on to the forum and say so yesterday, but my internet was playing sillybuggers, so I gave it best and returned to my book and my knitting!

Radio 3 is what got my daughter through labour, apparently! She said it was lovely, because it was just music and no chat, and just exactly what her body craved.... she didn't say what happened when they started the talking bit at 6:00 am! I'm afraid I'm a Classic FM sort of woman as, while I do enjoy classical music, mostly, I am not fond of the gurble that Radio 3 seems to like - the being profound about what the Composer May Have Meant!

And Easter Weekend is always the Classic FM Hall of Fame, which we are enjoying the early parts of even as I type!


Mrs Redboots
I love my computer because my friends live in it!
Re: Placeholder [message #49043 is a reply to message #49017 ] Sat, 07 April 2012 18:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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I pinched the Shipping Forecast for the blog and forgot to say: E45! Avert! Evil petroleum-based product!! No, it gives me a rash. But what I finally *thought* to use is the Barefoot Botanicals stuff I use anyway--the SOS body rescue cream and a couple of the rosa fina things (one oil, one cream). The stuff costs shockingly--especially if you're used to buying a gallon of E45 the next time you pop into Boots--but it is AMAZING. I think I've mentioned it on the blog before. I found it originally when I was desperately trying to get Peter off steroid creams for his eczema. And then I started using it. I'm going through the rosa fina oil at a third-mortgage rate right now but . . . wow. At least I can smile. Smile

http://www.barefoot-botanicals.com/

Re: Placeholder [message #49051 is a reply to message #49043 ] Sun, 08 April 2012 14:29 Go to previous messageGo to next message
AJLR  is currently offline AJLR
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That looks lovely, although I see what you mean about the price! I get small patches of eczema on my face occasionally, so I think I'll have to try it when they recur.


"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
Re: Placeholder [message #49101 is a reply to message #49011 ] Tue, 10 April 2012 15:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
claning  is currently offline claning
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Quote:

And I’m sure my mayonnaise has gone off.

And as usual I get the giggles when I read something like this. Separated by a common language indeed!

(Just in case anyone doesn't know -- "gone off" on the USA side of the Atlantic means that whatever it was exploded.)


O Chris Laning <claning@igc.org> - Davis, California
+
Re: Placeholder [message #49110 is a reply to message #49101 ] Tue, 10 April 2012 17:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Well . . . no. Maybe it depends on your area? I've used 'This has gone off' and similar all my life for things like dubious mayonnaise. I think of it in that usage BEFORE things that explode. Although this may be because there has been more dodgy mayonnaise and overaged chicken in my life than bad chemistry experiments or water balloons. . . .
Re: Placeholder [message #49139 is a reply to message #49011 ] Wed, 11 April 2012 13:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
shalea  is currently offline shalea
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I think it's a regional usage in the US -- I've heard "gone off" for dubious mayonnaise (or other perishable) at least as frequently as for things that explode (though I suppose if it went far enough off, then the resulting pressure from gas build-up in the dubious mayonnaise might cause an explosion).
Re: Placeholder [message #49146 is a reply to message #49139 ] Wed, 11 April 2012 17:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Robin  is currently offline Robin
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Snork. Zombie overage chicken!!
Re: Placeholder [message #49162 is a reply to message #49139 ] Wed, 11 April 2012 19:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
b_twin_1  is currently offline b_twin_1
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shalea wrote on Wed, 11 April 2012 13:52

I think it's a regional usage in the US -- I've heard "gone off" for dubious mayonnaise (or other perishable) at least as frequently as for things that explode (though I suppose if it went far enough off, then the resulting pressure from gas build-up in the dubious mayonnaise might cause an explosion).


?
Dunno about it being regional. ?
Here you can have a party/event "go off" ie. boomingly fantastic
You can have food that has "gone off" ie. spoil
Not to forget explosives that "go(ne) off" Very Happy
Or you could have "gone off" in a huff.

Okay, I'm stopping now... LOL


I've got a plan so cunning you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel ~ Blackadder
Re: Placeholder [message #49201 is a reply to message #49162 ] Fri, 13 April 2012 11:37 Go to previous message
blondviolinist  is currently offline blondviolinist
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b_twin_1 wrote on Wed, 11 April 2012 19:23

shalea wrote on Wed, 11 April 2012 13:52

I think it's a regional usage in the US -- I've heard "gone off" for dubious mayonnaise (or other perishable) at least as frequently as for things that explode (though I suppose if it went far enough off, then the resulting pressure from gas build-up in the dubious mayonnaise might cause an explosion).


?
Dunno about it being regional. ?
Here you can have a party/event "go off" ie. boomingly fantastic
You can have food that has "gone off" ie. spoil
Not to forget explosives that "go(ne) off" Very Happy
Or you could have "gone off" in a huff.

Okay, I'm stopping now... LOL


Yup, I've heard all four of those usages in the US Midwest. (Though second & third are by far the most common.)


"Purity of heart is to will one thing." Kirkegaard
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