snagged from
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Go to your calendar and find the first entry for each month in 2008. Post the first line/sentence of it in your journal, and that's your "Year in Review." (Commentary is in bold)
( year in review )
![]() This year I've been busy! In May I pushed ![]() ![]() ![]() Overall, I've been naughty (-5034 points). For Christmas I deserve a lump of coal! Sincerely, Santa won't hear you unless you... Copy the letter to your LJ: Click in the pane above, press CTRL-A to select all, press CTRL-C to copy, and click here to go update your LJ (then click in the big edit box and type CTRL-V to paste)! |
Book meme! Stolen from
1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open the book to page 123.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the next 4-7 sentences on your LJ along with these instructions.
5. Don't you dare dig for that "cool" or "intellectual" book in your closet! I know you were thinking about it! Just pick up whatever is closest (unless it's too troublesome to reach and is really heavy. Then go back to step 1).
"You need more than a doughnut," Lula told her. "You need your head examined. You just shot up a dead man. What were you thinking?"
Jackie was rummaging in her pockets, looking for doughnut money. "I guess I got a right to shoot someone if I want to."
"Nuh-uh," Lula said. "There's rules. This man was already dead, and you showed disrespect for the deceased."
"The deceased didn't deserve no respect. He stole my car."
From: Three To Get Deadly, A Stephanie Plum Novel, by Janet Evanovich. These books are hysterically funny. I recommend them.
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I survived my hair cut. There are 12 inches of my hair in a ziplock baggie that will soon be on it's way. My hair is so short! I may still be in shock y'all. It's above my shoulders....not even touching my shoulders. ACK! But, I think I like it. I'm told it's cute and very becoming of me. (what? it wasn't before?)
I can't take a pic yet, as I am away from home (my roomie has a dig camaera, I do not) for the next week house-sitting for my uncle. Which I always enjoy. His house is in the Berkeley hills and it's so quite and peaceful up here. And he has a hot tub. So my old bones are quite happy.
This morning, I sat in the sunroom, reading the Sunday paper with a cup of coffee, enjoying the view of the backyard, filled with Japanese maples and azealas. The fog was burning off, and it was a beautiful swirly mist that was moving through the yard. I then I realized how creepy that was, thinking of Stepehn King's The Mist. Why do I always go and ruin things like that?
This is a meme!
THE RULES:
1. Leave me a comment saying anything random, like your favorite lyric to your current favorite song. Or your favorite kind of sandwich. Something random. Whatever you like.
2. I respond by asking you five personal questions so I can get to know you better.
3. Update your LJ with the answers to the questions.
4. Include this explanation and offer to ask someone else in the post.
5. When others comment asking to be asked, you will ask them five questions.
I got asked these questions by
And these questions by
More questions!!!! This time by
This painting was created by: tiffosis
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gakked from trekkiegrrrl
Countess-Palatine Tiffany the Formidable of Nether Wombleshire
Get Your Peculiar Aristocratic Title, so you too, can sound very superfluous.
You are Charles VI of France, also known as Charles the Mad or Charles the Well-Beloved!
A fine, amiable and dreamy young man, skilled in horsemanship and archery, you were also from a long line of dribbling madmen. King at 12 and quickly married to your sweetheart, Bavarian Princess Isabeau, you enjoyed many happy months together before either of you could speak anything of the other's language. However, after illness you became a tad unstable. When a raving lunatic ran up to your entourage spouting an incoherent prophecy of doom, you were unsettled enough to slaughter four of your best men when a page dropped a lance. Your hair and nails fell out. At a royal masquerade, you and your courtiers dressed as wild men, ending in tragedy when four of them accidentally caught fire and burned to death. You were saved by the timely intervention of the Duchess of Berry's underskirts.
This brought on another bout of sickness, which surgeons countered by drilling holes in your skull. The following months saw you suffer an exorcism, beg your friends to kill you, go into hyperactive fits of gaiety, run through your rooms to the point of exhaustion, hide from imaginary assassins, claim your name was Georges, deny that you were King and fail to recognise your family. You smashed furniture and wet yourself at regular intervals. Passing briefly into erratic genius, you believed yourself to be made of glass and demanded iron rods in your attire to prevent you breaking.
In 1405 you stopped bathing, shaving or changing your clothes. This went on until several men were hired to blacken their faces, hide, jump out and shout "boo!", upon which you resumed basic hygiene. Despite this, your wife continued sleeping with you until 1407, when she hired a young beauty, Odette de Champdivers, to take her place. Isabeau then consoled herself, as it were, with your brother. Her lovers followed thick and fast while you became a pawn of your court, until you had her latest beau strangled and drowned.
A severe fever was fended off with oranges and pomegranates in vast quantities, but you succumbed again in 1422 and died. Your disease was most likely hereditary. Unfortunately, you had anywhere up to eleven children, who variously went on to develop capriciousness, great cruelty, insecurity, paranoia, revulsion towards food and, in one case, a phobia of bridges.
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