Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Chicken Noodle Soup

0 views
Skip to first unread message

luthe

unread,
Dec 31, 2003, 11:38:55 AM12/31/03
to
Beauty,

I'm sorry to hear you're sick again. Sending virtual chicken noodle soup and
green jello your way.

n

--
For more information about this posting service, contact:
he...@asarian-host.net -- for all info about our server.
If you want an anonymous account, visit our sign-up page:

https://asarian-host.net/cgi-bin/signup.cgi

Celeste

unread,
Dec 31, 2003, 1:16:02 PM12/31/03
to
ohhhhhh chicken noodle soup sounds so good, any spare? mmmm
C

"luthe" <lu...@asarian-host.net> wrote in message
news:d952bcb8277fc89.2...@asarian-host.net...

Beauty

unread,
Jan 1, 2004, 3:29:35 AM1/1/04
to
dear n - been eating the chicken noodles even before reading this -
three cans already!!!!!!!! so i miust have gotten thems from you!!!!!!!

(normally, we'd pass on the green jello, but since it a gift from you we
eat it and enjoy the cool sweetness.)

thanks you - n - you everlasting friend.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 1, 2004, 3:30:47 AM1/1/04
to
And hwer we are going spare again - Cleeste sister, keep it together,
girl - and - yes - I can spare a can (cause mines comes in a can, sorry,
even though the husb. cooks big pots of it, I still like tinned better -
that makes me a real plebian, doen'sit?)

Beauty.s

Celeste

unread,
Jan 1, 2004, 4:50:39 AM1/1/04
to
mmmm sounds good tinned or not, ta. oh n me dont think u get to be a pleb
bcos of it bein tinned. :) esp when ur ill. it sounds v good. cant quite
imagine wot
sort of flavor it would have but can imagine the warmth which be v good.
thx sis,
C.

"Beauty" <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message
news:XUQIb.40584$BN7....@news02.roc.ny...

Beauty

unread,
Jan 2, 2004, 1:31:29 AM1/2/04
to
Okay, then, how bout we eats it in our bed w/tin-opener and tin and a
bowl - cold - but - yes, we does use a spoon anyhow. How bouts that? Are
we slummin yet?

(P.S. - we runned out. Phooey. But we had some Chesire cheese. Funny
silly nephew, his mthr is English, but he grew up here, he said, is
"Chesire" just a fancy way of pronouncing "Cheddar?" Um, no. Kind of two
different places, which is why they are called two different cheeses.
Cheshire is the kind that makes kitty cats smiles. Heh.)

Beautys.

Beautsisters.

Celeste

unread,
Jan 2, 2004, 6:02:24 AM1/2/04
to
hehehe

"Beauty" <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message
news:4f8Jb.43648$mK4....@news02.roc.ny...

> Okay, then, how bout we eats it in our bed w/tin-opener and tin and a
> bowl - cold - but - yes, we does use a spoon anyhow. How bouts that? Are
> we slummin yet?

well if u are, i do to cos i like tinned carrots cold from tin, the ones in
sweetend salt water,
n like u i do use a fork ;p when we were pr*n*nt ppl saw us eatin it n
thouht it was a cravin lol
n i said nah i always do this :)

>
> (P.S. - we runned out. Phooey. But we had some Chesire cheese. Funny
> silly nephew, his mthr is English, but he grew up here, he said, is
> "Chesire" just a fancy way of pronouncing "Cheddar?" Um, no. Kind of two
> different places, which is why they are called two different cheeses.
> Cheshire is the kind that makes kitty cats smiles. Heh.)

LOL, dont get me started on alice in wonderland always loved that film,
watched
it again other wk cos was on tv. dont like the naf cartoons that have been
done but the
proper 70s film is beyond prase.

C.

Kristi

unread,
Jan 2, 2004, 10:50:28 AM1/2/04
to
<huge cheddar grin>
(scurrying away giggling like crazy!!!!!}
Kristi

sascha

unread,
Jan 2, 2004, 6:39:40 PM1/2/04
to
Ummmmm... food straight from the can!!! My fave. I think it has to do
with the mother having a certain spot in the fridge where us kidlets
could graze and not eat up ingredients she was counting on being
there. Totally love cold food of most kinds. Cold leftover turnip
being a very big favorite. mmmmmmm making me hungry. My out of the
can thing is mush. soup, spooned onto bread. Now I'm ravenous!!!!!
can't eat it anymore, there being wheat in it, but I still crave it.
And I'm not preggie either. :o) Impossible to be. Have always eaten
mush. soup this way when allowed. I've eaten veggie soup too and
actually have eaten chickienoddle soop cold from the can as well. so
you see, beautysister, we have another similarity. jane who wishes
you health and calmness for this new year.

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<4f8Jb.43648$mK4....@news02.roc.ny>...

rainstar

unread,
Jan 2, 2004, 7:38:42 PM1/2/04
to
We eat Chef B*yardee ravioli straight from the can. :) YUM! :)

Might have to try the mush soup thing.. we love mush. soup. :)

Val

>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>

--
For more information about this NNTP posting service, contact:

Beauty

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 12:44:47 AM1/3/04
to
Love that book - it scares the husb., can you imagine? Still scares
him!! Disorients him! Would you believe that I haven't seen the movie
you mention, even though I *know* it has to be wonderful (and I agree
about naf cartoons - like riding in a convertible w/a top up - what's
the point???). I think we may even own it!!!!!!!! Duh!

Hey, I like your honesty. You're my kind of real. I tell it like it is,
too. Like, once at a street fair, someone mistook me for a model from a
local antique shop - I said, "No, darling, this is just me, the way I
always dress." No harm done, because they were admiring me, all the
same. But I'm sooooooo glad to be older and able to just swoop around
and enjoy my own style and not give a hang what anyone else thinks. One
of the benefits of age!!!

Okay, nuff said.

Best -

Beautys.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 12:45:20 AM1/3/04
to
Would that make you - um - a mousie? No wonder you scurryings.

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 12:50:47 AM1/3/04
to
Anything I can eat hot I can eat cold just as happily, I think. And
anything I can eat at any other time of the day I can just as happily
eat at any other. Thus, I am a total free-floating eater. Um, I do have
a funny thing about certain kinds of foods, though, so I have to draw
the line at your mush. soup and bread for a coupla reasons - but - hey -
you enjoy, sisterone. I used to eat can upon can of C*mpbells Chili Beef
right from the can - uncondensed - as a child. Also, of course, goes
w/out saying, unheated pork and beans. Yum. Belly food. Soul food. Now
here's one that makes me weep w/nostalgia, because of its regionality
and its connection to childhood sense of well being: my grandfather's
skillet cornpone - oooohhhhhhhh!!!!!!! - and also soup beans, boiled
forever on the stove w/a piece of salt pork for seasoning. Ummmmmmm. And
big, fat, bursting summer tomatoes that can only grow in the ripening
gardens of KY . . . yargh. Slices as big as a man's palm, and as full of
flavor as anyone could imagine.

Sigh.

Beauty.

Kristi

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 12:51:25 AM1/3/04
to
squeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeek!
:o)))))))))))))
Kristi

Beauty

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 12:51:44 AM1/3/04
to
You guys. You oughta be Brits. Baked beans or spag. (tinned) on toast
for "tea." Yick!!!!

Beauty.

sascha

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 11:29:48 AM1/3/04
to
Ooohhhh our favorite favorite!!! How did we forget that!!! Ours is the
minibites with cheese ones. Can gulp down two small cans of that and
be satisfyingly ill-feeling. Mmmmmmmm jane

rainstar <rain...@asarian-host.net> wrote in message news:<b97fb8ae6f34a9.03...@asarian-host.net>...

sascha

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 11:30:54 AM1/3/04
to
Love those. Am englsh from one grandmother and scots from one
grandfather and irish from another grandmother. Will that do it?
LOL... gonna go make lunch! jane

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<QLsJb.44455$Jt1....@news02.roc.ny>...

sascha

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 11:33:11 AM1/3/04
to
We have to stop this thread before I break my ny's diet!!! Am doing
verrry well at keeping to dietitian prescribed blood sugar leveling
and weight losing diet. And here we are yakking about the best foods
in the world!!!! Am making beans on toast for dinner tonight...
husband's fave. And opening can of chickpeas for lunch... hungry now,
jane

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<XKsJb.44453$Jt1....@news02.roc.ny>...

Celeste

unread,
Jan 3, 2004, 6:20:58 PM1/3/04
to
heheh well janesis loves em n ended up havin em for tea n me loves em so i
did em for lunch for me n son,
with melted cheese underneth the beans, mmmmm, so heres to beans on toast.
so erm, thanks for remindin us,
cos its like such a simple meal n i always forget how much i like em, so
thanks to you we had a cheap n easy lunch!
this is huge help, i hate tryin to find a meal that both of us will be likly
to eat. unless hes realy realy hungry he can be prety fussy at times. any
other things us brits eat that are common?? (common been useful word
combinin pleb meanin n readily avalable *grin*)

"Beauty" <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message

news:QLsJb.44455$Jt1....@news02.roc.ny...


> You guys. You oughta be Brits. Baked beans or spag. (tinned) on toast
> for "tea." Yick!!!!

*refrans from mentonin some
of the foul things yanks are known to eat, holdin back on my own YICK! ;p


Thanks for lunch :)

Celeste.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 6:52:26 AM1/4/04
to
(ooops - me eated sugar mousie tonight - was going to share w/son, but
mousie wouldn't yield to being split, and son didn't want to share
bites, so I got it all - didn't *really* want to eat it, but son had
taken one bite, so . . .

be glad you cheddar mouse - not so tempting, maybe, as sugar mousies)

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 6:54:18 AM1/4/04
to
That'll do. Same kind of mongrel Brit. as husb. - English mum and Scots
dad. Spag. on toast. Honestly!!!!!

Beauty, who appreciates good Brit. food (of which there is an amazing
panoply, but who draws the line at children's dishes for tea)

Beauty

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 6:56:19 AM1/4/04
to
I'm having problem of having to finish hldy foods - when I really wanted
only to eat carbs for the feast days themselves - but cannot waste
husb.'s exquisite homemade stollen, nor his beautiful dish of mashed
butternut squash w/ginger and mace, nor, nor, nor. But, as soon as I am
out of *those* woods - back to, yes, carb control.

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 6:57:48 AM1/4/04
to
Okay, so I guess soup beans and corn bread, or chili and corn bread
ain't that far off, in a way - but still. Dunno. Me's funny about bread
- gotta be really good bread.

Beauty.

sascha

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 1:38:27 PM1/4/04
to
Mmmmm that squash sounds superb. My dil makes a good one, but ginger
and mace would be wonderful! I'm a fan of ginger... jane

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<DbTJb.33203$6i2....@news01.roc.ny>...

Kristi

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 5:54:22 PM1/4/04
to
:o)))
Kristi

sascha

unread,
Jan 4, 2004, 11:23:39 PM1/4/04
to
You mean those teensy little porcelain ones with rabbits on? :o) jane

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<K9TJb.33202$6i2....@news01.roc.ny>...

rainstar

unread,
Jan 5, 2004, 9:29:08 AM1/5/04
to
no ravioli on toast.. blech.. just ravioli. *nods decisively*

rainy

Beauty

unread,
Jan 8, 2004, 10:31:25 PM1/8/04
to
Okay, snork, snork. As a matter of fact, the husb. does have a little
plate that was his when he was a child, and it is porcelain w/rabbits -
Beatr*x P*tter maybe? Silly sister. (It is considered a most precious
artifact in this house.)

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 8, 2004, 10:34:44 PM1/8/04
to
There is an incredible recipe I learned from a friend who ran a cafe for
a while, for a fresh carrot salad. You blanch the carrots ever so
briefly, then let them marinade in a dressing of olive oil, minced
onion, and minced dill. Oooohhhhhhh yummmmmm.

Yes, wonderful things can be done w/ginger. We use it copiously, as we
also do mace. The husb. makes good use of cloves, too - both mace and
cloves (well, and ginger, too) are also good additions to meat dishes
for those who partake (as any good medievalist can tell you).

Beauty.

Celeste

unread,
Jan 9, 2004, 9:18:42 AM1/9/04
to
a brit thing maybe, we have one to, beatr*x pott*r with peter rabbit on.
find it amazin we still have it lol. not sure at wot point we extractid it
from
m*th*rs cuboard.
C.

"Beauty" <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message

news:hgpLb.35670$p04....@news01.roc.ny...

Kristi

unread,
Jan 9, 2004, 10:45:41 PM1/9/04
to
My mother had lots of "precious artifacts" like that - never could
understand their importance. Prolly just being stoggy! :o)))
Kristi

sascha

unread,
Jan 10, 2004, 6:56:34 PM1/10/04
to
What's stoggy? Having a brit heritage, and living here in the colony,
we all had bunnyk8ns mugs and bowls. I put away my boys' sets for when
they had kids. Bit tradition! I have my mother's baby set and my own,
and they will have theirs. the SO has his baby set, a set from
irel*nd. we are all a bit sentimental about such things here. :o) jane

Kristi <a...@b.net> wrote in message news:<c7vl6ji0tww2$.lp1uvyn0...@40tude.net>...

Beauty

unread,
Jan 10, 2004, 9:46:56 PM1/10/04
to
Stoggy ol' Kristi. Heh. We gots lots of precious artifacts - but - we
learned, by self-will, to create them for ourselves as "just things"
because we don't want to be too dominated by the material. So, we have
both: we treasure things so greatly, and we also make ourselves let go
if say they get lost or broken - yes, we get sad, but we don't go crazy.
And we were also taught by a group of women students of the husb. how to
give precious things away. They taught us that sometimes it is the right
gesture to pass things along - and that has been an important lesson. It
helps us value lve over things - or to embue things w/lve that can be
handled. That is why we have created the aphorism, which might not at
all be an original thought, but anyway, we say that for us, beauty is
the material manifestation of lve in the world.

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 10, 2004, 9:48:11 PM1/10/04
to
Smiling. We does these things. Have certain special things made for son
when he was a baby - and certain special toys - and most all his stuffed
toys and books - because, one day . . .

Beauty.

sascha

unread,
Jan 11, 2004, 3:50:33 PM1/11/04
to
We are the same here about our beautiful things. If they are broken,
it is okay, a little sad, but not wackybobo over them. I learned a
lovely lesson from my grandm*ther, the one who loved me truly, and the
one I am most like, which makes me glad. When she was getting older,
and we were young kidlets, she often gave us her treasures as we
admired them. Not maybe right away, to make it look like 'if you like
it then you can have it' and devaluing her special things, but at some
point the item would be given either to us directly or to our parents
for when we were older. There was a blue bowl, a quite old bowl with
flo blue glaze, that dark kind of runny blue on a white background. I
loved it and used to sit in the kitchen while she worked there,
tracing the design with my fingers. When I was about twelve, she gave
it to me. I was startled! And didn't know what I would ever do with a
bowl. But my m*ther put it away until I was getting married, and made
sure it came to live with me. I have it still, a beautiful thing, and
something from this grandmother I loved so dearly. I might be upset a
lot if it was broken, but I would still have the special memories,
right? And they are more precious even than the bowl itself. love to
all, jane


Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<AO2Mb.49121$kL1....@news02.roc.ny>...

Kristi

unread,
Jan 11, 2004, 9:20:28 PM1/11/04
to
hi janesis - I just looked it up and I spelled it wrong - stodgy -
tending toward drab when it's up to me to produce or originate non
drabness, but this just comes from "it hurts too much to do
anything so I do nothing" eventually!!!!! :o)))
I remember being once given my silver baby cup. It got tossed
into the trash some time later. I just rebel against keeping such
stuff - something internal...... (very probably because my
mother treasured these items, but not me) So you can giggle at me!
:o)))
Kristi

all...@canada.com (sascha) wrote...

>> >>>>>>>>>>>news:d952bcb8277fc89.279ade653769a10999@asarian-hos
>> >>>>>>>>>>>t.net...

Beauty

unread,
Jan 13, 2004, 12:01:15 AM1/13/04
to
You have said it all, sstr dear, and I am moved to remark upon how it
was a ceramic bowl that moved you so . . . and eventually you came to
make pots of your very own.

Yesterday when we were shopping for some things the husb. needed for his
project w/the son, we saw some teeeeeeeeeny little woven baskets
(thimble sized, w/handles), and also some teeny shells, teeny stones,
and teeny little birdies and teeny eggs - so we got some of each, and we
want to make little basket thingies for necklaces, that could be
"tacky," we suppose, but we hope not, and maybe someone will just think
they are sweet and fun and maybe someday we will find a way for someone
to buy them.

Beauty.

sascha

unread,
Jan 13, 2004, 2:11:29 PM1/13/04
to
The necklaces sound amazing!!! I love little things. Teeny littlest
things are my favorites. :o) jane

Beauty <beauty@***po.hm.uc.edu> wrote in message news:<vYKMb.65$du3...@news02.roc.ny>...

Kristi

unread,
Jan 14, 2004, 9:15:38 PM1/14/04
to
Yeah - stodgy of Kristi - must be a new alter! LOL goes around saying
"bah humbug!" :o) Yep, you definitely have a different take on objects
than I do, though, after saying that, I bet I could find lots of
similarities - that is as to attachments - like I like my computer and my
hifi, but I could walk away from them, as I have before. And besides, all
my stuffes mooses *are* objects of beauty! :o))))) MOOSE
Hugs if k
Kristi (definitely in less pain at the moment) Hey, I'm 60 years
old!!!!!!! the big six oh!!!! Neat!!!!! :o)

sascha

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 11:00:32 AM1/15/04
to
So I'm not the oldest one here anymore? LOL. I rather like mooses too.
Though don't have any stuffed ones. jane who is younger than you...

Kristi <a...@babel.net> wrote in message news:<1ohajcfe...@mymoose.net>...

Jill

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 11:48:41 AM1/15/04
to
In article <1ohajcfe...@mymoose.net>, Kristi <a...@babel.net> wrote:
>Yeah - stodgy of Kristi - must be a new alter! LOL goes around saying
>"bah humbug!" :o) Yep, you definitely have a different take on objects
>than I do, though, after saying that, I bet I could find lots of
>similarities - that is as to attachments - like I like my computer and my
>hifi, but I could walk away from them, as I have before. And besides, all
>my stuffes mooses *are* objects of beauty! :o))))) MOOSE
>Hugs if k
>Kristi (definitely in less pain at the moment) Hey, I'm 60 years
>old!!!!!!! the big six oh!!!! Neat!!!!! :o)

Break out the purple! I am _so_ planning for being 60 cause then
I'm going to do some stuff I've always wanted to do but haven't for
various reasons. First on my list is cutting my hair (maybe dying it
purple to, or green:) I figure until then I can't get away with it
cause people will say I'm being 'odd' and trying to look younger
than I am and all that but by the time I'm 60 I can act like a
crumudgeon if they say that *huge grin*

Rainbow Colors (Jill, only 41 but almost 42!)


--
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The colors blend, the edges soften. Swirling and mixing
we are becoming white light.
ji...@tuells.org

astri

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 12:28:46 PM1/15/04
to
and by then you won't have teenaged children to embarrass any more...

-- astri

Kristi

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 1:54:04 PM1/15/04
to
LOL
YAYYYYYYYYYYYYYyy curmudgeon!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Kristi

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 1:54:17 PM1/15/04
to
MOOSE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:o)))
Kristi

rainstar

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 2:39:35 PM1/15/04
to
LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLAMA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :)

*BOFGOL* *giggles*

lilval

sascha

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 6:45:26 PM1/15/04
to
Carrrrribooooooooooou!!!!! :0) jane

Kristi <nos...@babel.net> wrote in message news:<1myd3zm6evuj8$.d...@mymoose.net>...

Jill

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 7:48:20 PM1/15/04
to
In article <Pine.BSI.4.58.04...@malasada.lava.net>,

astri <as...@lava.net> wrote:
>and by then you won't have teenaged children to embarrass any more...
>
>-- astri

Ooh! Maybe I'll do it when I'm 55 then :) That might actually work.
I'll just tell them 'whatever you do I'll do it too' (like pi*rcings
or tatoos or whatever). Although I have already gotten them to roll
their eyes at me at times. I think I am abit much for even a 2 year
old some days *grin*

Rainbow Colors (Jill)

Kitten

unread,
Jan 15, 2004, 9:28:09 PM1/15/04
to
all...@canada.com (sascha) writes:

> Carrrrribooooooooooou!!!!! :0) jane

listening to that song right now!

> Kristi <nos...@babel.net> wrote in message news:<1myd3zm6evuj8$.d...@mymoose.net>...
>> MOOSE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
>> :o)))
>> Kristi

--W

Beauty

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 2:11:20 AM1/16/04
to
Me writed diss about miniatures - beauty who is not teeny little in the
leastest.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 2:12:18 AM1/16/04
to
Congratulations for the 60ness of yous.

Beautys.

Kristi wrote:
> Yeah - stodgy of Kristi - must be a new alter! LOL goes around saying
> "bah humbug!" :o) Yep, you definitely have a different take on objects
> than I do, though, after saying that, I bet I could find lots of
> similarities - that is as to attachments - like I like my computer and my
> hifi, but I could walk away from them, as I have before. And besides, all
> my stuffes mooses *are* objects of beauty! :o))))) MOOSE
> Hugs if k
> Kristi (definitely in less pain at the moment) Hey, I'm 60 years
> old!!!!!!! the big six oh!!!! Neat!!!!! :o)
>
> On Sun, 11 Jan 2004 02:46:56 GMT, Beauty wrote:
>
>
>>Stoggy ol' Kristi. Heh. We gots lots of precious artifacts - but - we
>>learned, by self-will, to create them for ourselves as "just things"

>>becones we don't want to be too dominated by the material. So, we have

Beauty

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 2:14:12 AM1/16/04
to
Well, and they can't lay it off as being part of "mid-life crisis"
unless they are planning a 120 yr. life span for you - which maybe you
think of as being okay, and maybe if I should get further along the
track wouldn't look so bad for me, either, but as it is, well, even 48
as mid-life is kind of intense.

Beauty.

Beauty

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 2:16:03 AM1/16/04
to
And then what's the fun in that???

Beauty (who walks the tightrope betw. having her son think she's pretty
okay to having him think she's abhorrently aberrant - like when she
prances around w/reindeer horns and a flashing nose in front of a whole
roomful of people when he's present . . . I am *not* allowed to dance at
him . . .)

Kristi

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 1:01:24 PM1/16/04
to
:o) Thanks! I think we still feel more like 3!!!
:o))))))
Kristi

Kristi

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 1:05:34 PM1/16/04
to
I figure I'll be around here till i'm 140+ or something. bad/changing
times for folks are usually Saturn returns (27y, 54y, etc) Don't know
about the 40's... But no perfectly good excuse should ever be discarded!!!
:o)))))))))))
Kristi

Jill

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 4:39:51 PM1/16/04
to
In article <6ETNb.22343$VS4.6...@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>,
Melissa <donno...@dontspamme.com.invalid> wrote:
>In article <bu7cck$gld$1...@fullstop.tuells.org>, ji...@tuells.org (Jill)
>wrote:

>
>> I'll just tell them 'whatever you do I'll do it too' (like pi*rcings
>> or tatoos or whatever). Although I have already gotten them to roll
>> their eyes at me at times. I think I am abit much for even a 2 year
>> old some days *grin*
>>
>> Rainbow Colors (Jill)
>
>That'd be fun! :) Can you imagine if a whole block or neighborhood of
>parents did this? <g>
>
>Melissa

Actually, I'm not all that unique. For the most part the other
parents at the school my kids go to/will go to are like me in so
many ways it's scary :) Today I talked to a guy who's 4 year old was
wearing makeup and a dress (he's a boy:), his one year old (girl)
was relatively normal for once *grin* and his 8 year old (boy)
was wearing dress clothes, dreadlocks and old gym shoes to school.
The guy himself (who looks like luca from E*R :) was wearing bright
red combat boots, a long trench coat and sweats. This guy is on the
governing body at the school!

Rainbow Colors (Jill)

sascha

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 7:37:19 PM1/16/04
to
then what would be the point???? actually mine are in their 30s and i
could likely still embarrass them... jane

astri <as...@lava.net> wrote in message news:<Pine.BSI.4.58.04...@malasada.lava.net>...

sascha

unread,
Jan 16, 2004, 7:40:29 PM1/16/04
to
Obviously you are doing a great job if they are rolling their eyes. we
mums have to stick together. I love to be silly, and now can do that
with the grandkidlets!!! Last week we visited them and the 3 year old,
the outside one, and I were running in the circle from the lvrm,
hallway, through the kitchen, into the dining room and around and
around, both of us giggling like cr*zy. it was great!!! And the SO and
dil got lunch ready while we were having fun. Then after lunch I
danced with the seven month old sweetie, even if she is a girl, and
she laughed and kicked her feet in joy. Give me a chance to be who I
really am. Proud of you Jill that you can make them roll their eyes!!!
jane

ji...@tuells.org (Jill) wrote in message news:<bu7cck$gld$1...@fullstop.tuells.org>...

Beauty

unread,
Jan 18, 2004, 8:15:19 PM1/18/04
to
Me 18
always was will be
beauty.

Kristi

unread,
Jan 18, 2004, 9:57:26 PM1/18/04
to
:o)

Beauty

unread,
Jan 23, 2004, 1:20:15 AM1/23/04
to
Oh yeah! I remember about Saturn returns. Gahh. Well, I've got a few
years yet before mine, but yeeeegs, the husb.'s is coming up in a couple
of years - can his mid-life crisis stuff get worse??????? He's really
having it rough. Please, any who give thoughts to those in need, his
needs are for some strong thoughts . . .

Beauty.

0 new messages