Where R U, Dani...???



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "DanisLastChance4Sanity"
Date: 17 Aug 2007 07:54:51 AM
Object: Where R U, Dani...???
I've been waiting and waiting to see your words appear here again. We're a
team, you and I. Without you, I have nothing...no reason to post here.
It's a duet I must keep going....don't destroy US by not posting.
booooohoooooo.....
Doc :``(
.

User: "Dani"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 18 Aug 2007 03:00:27 PM
On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 05:54:51 -0700, "DanisLastChance4Sanity"
<rehabilitatethebitch@apntherapycenter.com> wrote:

I've been waiting and waiting to see your words appear here again. We're a
team, you and I. Without you, I have nothing...no reason to post here.
It's a duet I must keep going....don't destroy US by not posting.

booooohoooooo.....

Doc :``(

Doc,
You really and truly should get outta the house for a little bit. Take
a walk...enjoy some fresh air. Or better yet, go to the beach for a
bit - grab a towel or blanket and sit on the sand and watch the waves
crash. Or walk down to the sea-shore and let the waves crash on your
bare feet. Stay late and watch the sun set over the ocean. It will
do you a world of good.
Dani
.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 18 Aug 2007 10:39:32 PM
"Dani" <d.b737@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:bljec35lh5c6193imfoarbd4bhou0emuto@4ax.com...

On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 05:54:51 -0700, "DanisLastChance4Sanity"
<rehabilitatethebitch@apntherapycenter.com> wrote:

I've been waiting and waiting to see your words appear here again. We're
a
team, you and I. Without you, I have nothing...no reason to post here.
It's a duet I must keep going....don't destroy US by not posting.

booooohoooooo.....

Doc :``(


Doc,

You really and truly should get outta the house for a little bit. Take
a walk...enjoy some fresh air. Or better yet, go to the beach for a
bit - grab a towel or blanket and sit on the sand and watch the waves
crash. Or walk down to the sea-shore and let the waves crash on your
bare feet. Stay late and watch the sun set over the ocean. It will
do you a world of good.

Dani

I'd never take my laptop to the beach and jeopardize the damp air damaging
it, or otherwise harming it. So, if I can't take my laptop to the beach
safely, I'll just have to stay home and keep it safe.
Besides, my skin burns too easily and I've had keratosis patches removed.
The sun's no friend to me...and what about the crabs? One could bite me,
or a seagull might ***** on my laptop.
Doc
.
User: "mukyuk"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 19 Aug 2007 12:32:59 PM
"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:K--dndON5dnuJlrbnZ2dnUVZ_siknZ2d@comcast.com...


Dani


I'd never take my laptop to the beach and jeopardize the damp air damaging
it, or otherwise harming it. So, if I can't take my laptop to the beach
safely, I'll just have to stay home and keep it safe.

Besides, my skin burns too easily and I've had keratosis patches removed.
The sun's no friend to me...and what about the crabs? One could bite me,
or a seagull might ***** on my laptop.

I live right close several beaches only a couple blocks away. I don't go
either, but for different reasosns. Too many 'clowns' that just go only to
be 'seen'.


Doc

.
User: "Werewolfy"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 19 Aug 2007 02:30:04 PM
On Aug 19, 6:32?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I live right close several beaches only a couple blocks away. I don't go
either, but for different reasosns. Too many 'clowns' that just go only to
be 'seen'.

I know the feeling, Mondo. I live on the coast too. Miles and miles of
Somerset and Devon beaches, but I never go because of the people.
Nasty holiday-makers dragging their awful bratts around. Fat women in
bathing suits when they should really be wearing large sacks.
Overheard conversations of Baboon chatter are impossible to avoid.
No 'class' at all. It seems the sea fronts have been taken over by the
uneducated and the unimaginative millions that inhabit this Island.
I hate it more each day. Seems I hate people more each day too. I
can't find anyone with a 'Mondo-style' wit and way of thinking around
here. In fact, Armeggedon would be a relief..especially if it ignored
me and took all of the others!
That reminds me. Have you heard the shortest horror story ever
written? I'll re-produce it;
'The last man on Earth sat huddled in a corner of a hut. There was a
knock at the door.'
Werewolfy
.
User: "mukyuk"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 19 Aug 2007 03:31:57 PM
"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187551804.056009.23400@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 6:32?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I live right close several beaches only a couple blocks away. I don't go
either, but for different reasosns. Too many 'clowns' that just go only
to
be 'seen'.


I know the feeling, Mondo. I live on the coast too. Miles and miles of
Somerset and Devon beaches, but I never go because of the people.
Nasty holiday-makers dragging their awful bratts around. Fat women in
bathing suits when they should really be wearing large sacks.
Overheard conversations of Baboon chatter are impossible to avoid.

No 'class' at all. It seems the sea fronts have been taken over by the
uneducated and the unimaginative millions that inhabit this Island.

I hate it more each day. Seems I hate people more each day too. I
can't find anyone with a 'Mondo-style' wit and way of thinking around
here. In fact, Armeggedon would be a relief..especially if it ignored
me and took all of the others!

That reminds me. Have you heard the shortest horror story ever
written? I'll re-produce it;

'The last man on Earth sat huddled in a corner of a hut. There was a
knock at the door.'

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.
In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books. There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it now.


Werewolfy



.
User: "Werewolfy"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 19 Aug 2007 05:03:18 PM
On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books. There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it now.

It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.
One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.
One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.
Thanks.
Ricky
.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? 20 Aug 2007 03:17:55 PM
"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky

Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting on a
rock with my bare feet splashing the cold saltwater will, in any real
sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the time.
I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and 'outsiders'
as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by her words here,
one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural setting has
helped with her mental illness.
Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience as aging progresses, and many
varied kinds of human interaction, would give oneself.
I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels cmfortable in such settings, nor
should they made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy, for
being interested in such an enviroment.
Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.
Doc :))~




.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 20 Aug 2007 03:27:39 PM
"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings, nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.

For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating, then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.
Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.

Doc :))~





.
User: "WH"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 04:27:23 AM
On 20 Aug, 22:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message

news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...







"Werewolfy" <Werewol...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:


I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.


In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.


One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.


One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.


Thanks.


Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the
time.


I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.


Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.


I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings, nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.


Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating, then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.

Fuckin' idiot. Grow up, get the ***** over it. You're fishing for
sympathy again. An old ***** of your age should be able to
understand that your parents can't take care of you forever...you have
got take care of yourself at some stage. At 65, which is your age if I
remember correctly, one wudda thunk that you'de learned that by now.
Tosser!
WH
.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 05:27:46 AM
"WH" <bollogs@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187688443.975699.100030@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On 20 Aug, 22:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message

news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...







"Werewolfy" <Werewol...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:


I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience
for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I
lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.


In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't
feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy,
I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not
a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.


One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.


One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.


Thanks.


Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.


I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.


Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others'
behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would
give
oneself.


I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly
healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.


Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn
yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


Fuckin' idiot. Grow up, get the ***** over it. You're fishing for
sympathy again. An old ***** of your age should be able to
understand that your parents can't take care of you forever...you have
got take care of yourself at some stage. At 65, which is your age if I
remember correctly, one wudda thunk that you'de learned that by now.

Tosser!

WH

Let me try and put this succinctly to you: it is not that I can't cope
with my parents being gone, it's my contempt for arseholes who can't
respect someone expressing their pain of loss on an anniversary of my
mother's death.
That is why you are an arsehole. If I have done something fucking wrong by
posting a brief memoriam to my mother, then you spell it out as to what is
wrong with it. You tell me what terrible thing I did, you fucking
arsehole.
No, buster, you stop with your disrespect toward others' remembrances of
their lost loved ones, and you fucking grow up!!
If you feel *uncomfortable* seeing someone's memoriam posted, then maybe
you should examine why you feel it's vital to you to take a ***** on it.
Maybe you should take a good, hard, painful look inside yourself and
wonder why you can't just LET IT GO...eh, arsehole?
Why can't you just leave it alone? What? Was your relationship with your
parents a fucking lousy one, or you feel guilty how you treated them, or
pissed about how they treated you? Or are you such a cold-hearted bugger
that you think public expressions of the pain of lost loved ones ares
nothing more than a contemptible show of weakness?
Listen up, arsehole, you're the one who has the serious fucking problem in
his head with this issue, which you started when you dissed my memoriam to
my mom back in May. NO ONE forgets people who do ***** like that! NO ONE !!
Do you think you can just walk away from that smarty-***** crap and I, or
anyone, am going to just let you off the hook for your assinine, hurtful
behaviour, you ***** beer-pissin' hillbilly of a jackass fucker?
So, you crawl back into your goddamned emotional hellhole and be all upset
I'm bringing it up again, you slimy ***** of a man. You drink
yourself into oblivion...and when you die, I doubt anyone would care
enough to remember you publicly or otherwise. Yeah, maybe that's what's
botherin' you -- no one would give a damn about you croaking.
No matter what age a person is, they find it hurtful when others do what
you did. And, advanced age brings on a recognition of buttholes like you
and how they exist only to hurt others for no goddamned fucking
retribution for anything...no, just that you can't take the expression of
emotion and just leave it the hell alone. You found it so goddamned
necessary that day to let me know that you thought I should just shut up
and 'get over it.' YOU FUCKING GET OVER IT, YOU FUCKING IRISH TURDFUCKER
!!!!! YOU GET THE HELL OVER IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You let me know where your burial place is. I want to make sure I dance
and ***** on it, and take a long crap on your tombstone, too.
Doc :))~~~
.
User: "WH"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 07:11:23 AM
On 21 Aug, 12:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"WH" <boll...@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:1187688443.975699.100030@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...





On 20 Aug, 22:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message


news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewol...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:


I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience
for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I
lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.


In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't
feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy,
I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not
a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.


One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.


One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.


Thanks.


Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.


I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.


Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others'
behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would
give
oneself.


I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly
healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.


Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn
yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.


Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


Fuckin' idiot. Grow up, get the ***** over it. You're fishing for
sympathy again. An old ***** of your age should be able to
understand that your parents can't take care of you forever...you have
got take care of yourself at some stage. At 65, which is your age if I
remember correctly, one wudda thunk that you'de learned that by now.


Tosser!


WH


Let me try and put this succinctly to you: it is not that I can't cope
with my parents being gone, it's my contempt for arseholes who can't
respect someone expressing their pain of loss on an anniversary of my
mother's death.

That is why you are an arsehole. If I have done something fucking wrong by
posting a brief memoriam to my mother, then you spell it out as to what is
wrong with it. You tell me what terrible thing I did, you fucking
arsehole.

No, buster, you stop with your disrespect toward others' remembrances of
their lost loved ones, and you fucking grow up!!

If you feel *uncomfortable* seeing someone's memoriam posted, then maybe
you should examine why you feel it's vital to you to take a ***** on it.
Maybe you should take a good, hard, painful look inside yourself and
wonder why you can't just LET IT GO...eh, arsehole?

Why can't you just leave it alone? What? Was your relationship with your
parents a fucking lousy one, or you feel guilty how you treated them, or
pissed about how they treated you? Or are you such a cold-hearted bugger
that you think public expressions of the pain of lost loved ones ares
nothing more than a contemptible show of weakness?

Listen up, arsehole, you're the one who has the serious fucking problem in
his head with this issue, which you started when you dissed my memoriam to
my mom back in May. NO ONE forgets people who do ***** like that! NO ONE !!
Do you think you can just walk away from that smarty-***** crap and I, or
anyone, am going to just let you off the hook for your assinine, hurtful
behaviour, you ***** beer-pissin' hillbilly of a jackass fucker?

So, you crawl back into your goddamned emotional hellhole and be all upset
I'm bringing it up again, you slimy ***** of a man. You drink
yourself into oblivion...and when you die, I doubt anyone would care
enough to remember you publicly or otherwise. Yeah, maybe that's what's
botherin' you -- no one would give a damn about you croaking.

No matter what age a person is, they find it hurtful when others do what
you did. And, advanced age brings on a recognition of buttholes like you
and how they exist only to hurt others for no goddamned fucking
retribution for anything...no, just that you can't take the expression of
emotion and just leave it the hell alone. You found it so goddamned
necessary that day to let me know that you thought I should just shut up
and 'get over it.' YOU FUCKING GET OVER IT, YOU FUCKING IRISH TURDFUCKER
!!!!! YOU GET THE HELL OVER IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

You let me know where your burial place is. I want to make sure I dance
and ***** on it, and take a long crap on your tombstone, too.

Doc :))~~~- D=F6lj citerad text -

- Visa citerad text -

Much ado about *****-all!
Told you before you twat...*****-off and get a life. I'm not getting
into a debate with a bitter old tosser who is of the opinion that he
knows all there is to know about everyone. So go on...continue you're
'very mature' slagging of Dani, which even if it started as a wind-up
has become an obsession. Learn when to stop...a joke's not a joke
after the fifth or sixth time one has heard it. You old tosser should
have learned that by now.
WH
.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 01:22:30 PM
"WH" <bollogs@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1187698283.061956.157130@57g2000hsv.googlegroups.com...
On 21 Aug, 12:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"WH" <boll...@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:1187688443.975699.100030@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...





On 20 Aug, 22:27, "Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampth...@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message


news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewol...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:


I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience
for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I
lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.


In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't
feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like
it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best
policy,
I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's
not
a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a
matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.


One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.


One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.


Thanks.


Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and
sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in
any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.


I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani
by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a
natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.


Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others'
behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging
progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would
give
oneself.


I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly
healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.


Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn
yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these
traumas
and emotional imprisonments.


Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


Fuckin' idiot. Grow up, get the ***** over it. You're fishing for
sympathy again. An old ***** of your age should be able to
understand that your parents can't take care of you forever...you have
got take care of yourself at some stage. At 65, which is your age if I
remember correctly, one wudda thunk that you'de learned that by now.


Tosser!


WH


Let me try and put this succinctly to you: it is not that I can't cope
with my parents being gone, it's my contempt for arseholes who can't
respect someone expressing their pain of loss on an anniversary of my
mother's death.

That is why you are an arsehole. If I have done something fucking wrong
by
posting a brief memoriam to my mother, then you spell it out as to what
is
wrong with it. You tell me what terrible thing I did, you fucking
arsehole.

No, buster, you stop with your disrespect toward others' remembrances of
their lost loved ones, and you fucking grow up!!

If you feel *uncomfortable* seeing someone's memoriam posted, then maybe
you should examine why you feel it's vital to you to take a ***** on it.
Maybe you should take a good, hard, painful look inside yourself and
wonder why you can't just LET IT GO...eh, arsehole?

Why can't you just leave it alone? What? Was your relationship with your
parents a fucking lousy one, or you feel guilty how you treated them, or
pissed about how they treated you? Or are you such a cold-hearted bugger
that you think public expressions of the pain of lost loved ones ares
nothing more than a contemptible show of weakness?

Listen up, arsehole, you're the one who has the serious fucking problem
in
his head with this issue, which you started when you dissed my memoriam
to
my mom back in May. NO ONE forgets people who do ***** like that! NO ONE
!!
Do you think you can just walk away from that smarty-***** crap and I, or
anyone, am going to just let you off the hook for your assinine, hurtful
behaviour, you ***** beer-pissin' hillbilly of a jackass fucker?

So, you crawl back into your goddamned emotional hellhole and be all
upset
I'm bringing it up again, you slimy ***** of a man. You drink
yourself into oblivion...and when you die, I doubt anyone would care
enough to remember you publicly or otherwise. Yeah, maybe that's what's
botherin' you -- no one would give a damn about you croaking.

No matter what age a person is, they find it hurtful when others do what
you did. And, advanced age brings on a recognition of buttholes like you
and how they exist only to hurt others for no goddamned fucking
retribution for anything...no, just that you can't take the expression
of
emotion and just leave it the hell alone. You found it so goddamned
necessary that day to let me know that you thought I should just shut up
and 'get over it.' YOU FUCKING GET OVER IT, YOU FUCKING IRISH TURDFUCKER
!!!!! YOU GET THE HELL OVER IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

You let me know where your burial place is. I want to make sure I dance
and ***** on it, and take a long crap on your tombstone, too.

Doc :))~~~- Dölj citerad text -

- Visa citerad text -

Much ado about *****-all!
Told you before you twat...*****-off and get a life. I'm not getting
into a debate with a bitter old tosser who is of the opinion that he
knows all there is to know about everyone. So go on...continue you're
'very mature' slagging of Dani, which even if it started as a wind-up
has become an obsession. Learn when to stop...a joke's not a joke
after the fifth or sixth time one has heard it. You old tosser should
have learned that by now.
WH
Zitty bollocks to you, you boozin' brainless *****. All you need to know
is how to act when someone's dead loved one is being remembered and that
it is a not just another ppportunistic moment of entertainment for you, or
an opportunity for you to vent your pent-up seething anger over your own
fucked up life...and, hey, sober up sometime online. It'd be a revelatory
moment for ya. What Dani and I do, trading insults, is obviously what
we're both enjoying, even if she denies it. She's a mud slinger, but
doesn't seem to understand herself well.
The pile of mud I have ready for you would suffocate you quickly, you
pisshead.
Keep dissin' my memories of my mom and you'll get the full fuckin'
trainload of it. And for weeks to come.
Learn when to stop, you say? You should take your own assinine advice on
dissing memoriams. When will you stop taking a smelly whiz on folks'
remembrances, and learn that a few subjects in life are better left alone?
And, BTW, arsehole, I've never asked for any retributive ***** from you by
any behaviour I directed at you. If you think posters are like crows on a
shittin' fence for you to plink away at when your brain is awash in booze,
then you get the ***** back you deserve. No, you don't want to spend your
time trading words with me. You just wanna plink away and then scamper off
to the next momentary piece of fuckin' entertainment -- namely, your
bloated opinions on everything, and cheap potshots.
If you ever make it to my age, brain reasonably still intact, maybe you
can reflect back on a lifetime of stupid, coarse behaviour that made you a
fuckin' hypocrite as you arrogantly called others, like me, a hypocrite,
you fuckin' arsehole big hypocrite!!!
When you finish with that beer bottle you got in your hand, stuff the
damned thing up your arsehole, bottom end first. Then put your
*****-stained pants on and stagger around on the streets and hear gals
remark, "Ooooh...jeez...that bum's got a chubbie comin' outta' his *****!?
hahahhaaahaaa...how could that be??"
Doc :))~
.




User: "Woodswun"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 04:11:17 PM
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings, nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet. I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating, then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.

I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)
Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!
I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is there
are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.
Woods
.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 07:16:56 PM
"Woodswun" <woodswun@tepidmail.com> wrote in message
news:46cb54f4$0$23520$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet.
I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.

LOL!! ;))~ No, I was referring to WoodHOUSE, the *louse*. See elsewhere
where we're locking horns over his dissing of my memoriam to my mom
earlier this year. Jeez...did you think I was sharpening my knife, after
turning on Dani, and gettin' ready to start carving into you? No, so far,
you and I have gotten along reasonably well with each other.
heeheehee...I've never been comfortable in a natural setting except when I
was very young, and played on logging roads in the woods nearby, up to my
late teen years when my stepdad and I went fishing. Then, after that, I
spent more and more time inside, cutting lurid crime scene pics outta'
sleazy detective magazine pages, pinning them to the walls, and babbling
to myself for hours alone in my bedroom. (Dani thinkin': "Man, I KNEW it!
The perverted sicko!") LOL!
All my parents were farmers and ranchers, and most of my uncles and aunts,
too...I respect and admire anyone who lives in rural settings of any kind.
I wish I had my lil' house again. It wasn't really in a rural area, but I
had two full lots of land to roam on a dead end street, and had peace of
mind, plenty of privacy. Apartment living sux~!
Doc


I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)

Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and
they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is
there
are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is
significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods

.
User: "mukyuk"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 08:32:31 PM
"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:Xcudnfwg4p_rHVbbnZ2dnUVZ_v6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Woodswun" <woodswun@tepidmail.com> wrote in message
news:46cb54f4$0$23520$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings, nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet.
I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating, then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


LOL!! ;))~ No, I was referring to WoodHOUSE, the *louse*. See elsewhere
where we're locking horns over his dissing of my memoriam to my mom
earlier this year. Jeez...did you think I was sharpening my knife, after
turning on Dani, and gettin' ready to start carving into you? No, so far,
you and I have gotten along reasonably well with each other.
heeheehee...I've never been comfortable in a natural setting except when I
was very young, and played on logging roads in the woods nearby, up to my
late teen years when my stepdad and I went fishing. Then, after that, I
spent more and more time inside, cutting lurid crime scene pics outta'
sleazy detective magazine pages, pinning them to the walls, and babbling
to myself for hours alone in my bedroom. (Dani thinkin': "Man, I KNEW it!
The perverted sicko!") LOL!
All my parents were farmers and ranchers, and most of my uncles and aunts,
too...I respect and admire anyone who lives in rural settings of any kind.
I wish I had my lil' house again. It wasn't really in a rural area, but I
had two full lots of land to roam on a dead end street, and had peace of
mind, plenty of privacy. Apartment living sux~!

I wish I could move far away from the city too, but everywhere else is too
cold.

Doc


I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)

Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is
there
are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods


.

User: "Woodswun"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 08:03:32 PM
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 17:16:56 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Woodswun" <woodswun@tepidmail.com> wrote in message
news:46cb54f4$0$23520$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet.
I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


LOL!! ;))~ No, I was referring to WoodHOUSE, the *louse*. See elsewhere
where we're locking horns over his dissing of my memoriam to my mom
earlier this year.

Oh, okay. I don't recall anything along those lines, and couldn't figure
out where the Wood-anything came in.

Jeez...did you think I was sharpening my knife, after
turning on Dani, and gettin' ready to start carving into you?

Nah, I didn't take it as you getting ready to start carving into me. I
just took it as being horrified at the thought of being stuck in "nature"
with no escape. (I know some people who would have that exact same
reaction ;-)

No, so
far, you and I have gotten along reasonably well with each other.
heeheehee...I've never been comfortable in a natural setting except when
I was very young, and played on logging roads in the woods nearby, up to
my late teen years when my stepdad and I went fishing. Then, after that,
I spent more and more time inside, cutting lurid crime scene pics outta'
sleazy detective magazine pages, pinning them to the walls, and babbling
to myself for hours alone in my bedroom. (Dani thinkin': "Man, I KNEW
it! The perverted sicko!") LOL!

My sister works with someone who's really, really into crime stuff. It's
not for me, though.

All my parents were farmers and ranchers, and most of my uncles and
aunts, too...I respect and admire anyone who lives in rural settings of
any kind. I wish I had my lil' house again. It wasn't really in a rural
area, but I had two full lots of land to roam on a dead end street, and
had peace of mind, plenty of privacy. Apartment living sux~! Doc

Yeah, I've lived in apartments in college and when we were newly married.
It is definitely not great, but home ownership has its own pitfalls -
lots of maintenance. I've told Mr. Woods that I think we should buy some
disposable housing (double wide & let it rot & then buy another one),
but he was absolutely horrified at the thought. (Good thing, too,
because I don't like trailers, either (not good in severe weather and too
much manufactured materials for good health) - but we can just keep that
between us ;-)
Woods



I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)

Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and
they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is
there
are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is
significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods

.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 08:27:39 PM
"Woodswun" <woodswun@tepidmail.com> wrote in message
news:46cb8b43$0$16460$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 17:16:56 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Woodswun" <woodswun@tepidmail.com> wrote in message
news:46cb54f4$0$23520$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience
for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I
lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't
feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in
books.
There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like
it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy,
I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not
a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a
matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and
sitting
on
a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in
any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by
her
words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others'
behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging
progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would
give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly
healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn
yet.
I
can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems
combine
with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these
traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


LOL!! ;))~ No, I was referring to WoodHOUSE, the *louse*. See elsewhere
where we're locking horns over his dissing of my memoriam to my mom
earlier this year.


Oh, okay. I don't recall anything along those lines, and couldn't
figure
out where the Wood-anything came in.

Jeez...did you think I was sharpening my knife, after
turning on Dani, and gettin' ready to start carving into you?


Nah, I didn't take it as you getting ready to start carving into me. I
just took it as being horrified at the thought of being stuck in
"nature"
with no escape. (I know some people who would have that exact same
reaction ;-)

No, so
far, you and I have gotten along reasonably well with each other.
heeheehee...I've never been comfortable in a natural setting except
when
I was very young, and played on logging roads in the woods nearby, up
to
my late teen years when my stepdad and I went fishing. Then, after
that,
I spent more and more time inside, cutting lurid crime scene pics
outta'
sleazy detective magazine pages, pinning them to the walls, and
babbling
to myself for hours alone in my bedroom. (Dani thinkin': "Man, I KNEW
it! The perverted sicko!") LOL!


My sister works with someone who's really, really into crime stuff.
It's
not for me, though.

All my parents were farmers and ranchers, and most of my uncles and
aunts, too...I respect and admire anyone who lives in rural settings of
any kind. I wish I had my lil' house again. It wasn't really in a rural
area, but I had two full lots of land to roam on a dead end street, and
had peace of mind, plenty of privacy. Apartment living sux~! Doc


Yeah, I've lived in apartments in college and when we were newly
married.
It is definitely not great, but home ownership has its own pitfalls -
lots of maintenance. I've told Mr. Woods that I think we should buy
some
disposable housing (double wide & let it rot & then buy another one),
but he was absolutely horrified at the thought. (Good thing, too,
because I don't like trailers, either (not good in severe weather and
too
much manufactured materials for good health) - but we can just keep that
between us ;-)

Woods



I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting?
;-)

Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone
liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and
they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is
there
are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is
significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods

I remember going up into a remote area along the Green River, near the
foothills of the Cascades, back when I was about 18. I hiked down an old
logging road into a canyon. All that was nearby was a two-lane, very high
span over the river. I became nervous and upset after awhile as I fished
the river alone. And began to imagine someone was watching me. Frightened,
I went back to the car and hurried out of there. The same thing's happened
when I've been in park settings, with people around. Open spaces bother
me, but they look nice in films. As I said to Dani, nature isn't for
everyone. My idea of nature was my small house I lived in for many years,
next to a forest back strip, and large trees on the property, but sitting
close to others' homes. I feel most comfortable with that type of setting.
There were racoons, rabbits, and skunks running around. I even had a
raccoon go after me, but the screen door stopped his attack. He didn't see
the glass apparently and smashed into it, dazed himself, and ran off. They
make a crying human baby sound that's spooky. I lived in a double-wide
mobile home for one year, and they are cheaply built things. Stuff kept
coming apart, like drawer guides, hinges, etc. The heat pump vibrated the
entire trailer. LOL! Yet, they are low-cost to live in. Just hope a high
wind storm or large quake doesn't happen. Even a moderate quake requires
that they be leveled again. Rainstorms are noisier than hell, hitting the
metal siding.
Doc
.



User: "Perseid"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 08:20:16 PM
After Much Chewing of Cud and Cogitation, Woodswun <woodswun@tepidmail.com>
Spat the Words

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in

books.

There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy, I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting

on

a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by

her

words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others' behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings, nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn yet.

I

can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating, then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems

combine

with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)

It's some reference to WH's nick. Doc and WH are in a spat right
now.. seems like doc is in a spat with the handful of few people who
liked him, dani, wh.. he periodically gets in fights with wolfy, though
he hasn't picked a fight with me yet. I suppose I should get ready for
it, although with no real reason to fight I may become an absentee
protagonist.


Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is

there

are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods

.
User: "Docrodile"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 09:50:51 PM
"Perseid" <eidpers@anti-spam.comcast.net> wrote in message
news:Xns9993C4B727D78rrfkwrantispamattbic@216.196.97.136...

After Much Chewing of Cud and Cogitation, Woodswun
<woodswun@tepidmail.com>
Spat the Words

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy" <Werewolfy1@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1187560998.500646.278220@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

On Aug 19, 9:31?pm, "mukyuk" <a...@b.com> wrote:

I wouldn't mind an entire planet to myself either! I couldn't be
bothered
sifting through the common 'riff raff" to find decent people. I
have
my own
shortcomings too. The biggest being that I have little patience
for
others
shortcomings. I don't like to expose others to my wrath when I
lose
patience. So I like to keep to myself.

In the past year or so, it doesn't bother me as before. I don't
feel
like an
outcast anymore. I realize now it's a choice I'm making. Most
people
are
'aliens' to me. There are smart people, but I only find them in

books.

There's
so much peace in solitude. I've always been that way, but I like it
now.


It's quite extraordinary. We really are so much alike in thinking,
Mondo. Books are my saviour too. That's where to find original and
interesting ideas.
There are times when I suspect the world has been over-run with
'aliens'. They seem to be everywhere. Avoidance is the best policy,
I
do that to.
I feel 'different' though, different to the throngs, and that's not
a
bad feeling. I've always had it, but although it used to be a matter
for concern, it became less so as the years passed.

One bad trait of mine is confrontation. I'm too quick to
react...wildly...when some minor issue touches a nerve; so I keep
myself to myself and avoid that as much as possible.

One thing though....It's good to know I'm 'not alone'.

Thanks.

Ricky


Well, I fail to understand how going down to the seashore and sitting

on

a rock with my bare feet splashing in the cold saltwater will, in any
real sense, change decades of living alone and being inside most of
the
time.

I guess Dani thinks of 'insiders' as mentally ill people, and
'outsiders' as being more mentally healthy. Yet, if we judge Dani by

her

words here, one cannot clearly ascertain how frolicking in a natural
setting has helped with her mental illness.

Or how it could possibly give one any insight into others'
behavioural
states over what sheer life experience gives one as aging progresses,
and many varied kinds of human interaction and situations, would
give
oneself.

I think Dani overvalues the experience of being in the natural
outdoors
and, realistially, not everyone feels comfortable in such settings,
nor
should theybe made to feel they are incomplete, or not wholly
healthy,
for being interested in such an enviroment.

Dani's a young woman, at 27, and has much to experience and learn
yet.

I

can understand how at a youthful age that stereotypical images of
human
happiness can override reality. Most, if not all, of us had them at
one
time.


For example, let Dani go through years of her parents deteiorating,
then
lose her parents to death, and then have serious physical problems

combine

with serious mental problems, coupled with aging, and let's see how
trotting down the sea shore barefooted liberates her from these
traumas
and emotional imprisonments.

Of course, I guess if I were Woodlouse, I'd just drink myself into
forgetfulness.


I'm taking a guess that you're referring to me & my rural setting? ;-)


It's some reference to WH's nick. Doc and WH are in a spat right
now.. seems like doc is in a spat with the handful of few people who
liked him, dani, wh.. he periodically gets in fights with wolfy, though
he hasn't picked a fight with me yet. I suppose I should get ready for
it, although with no real reason to fight I may become an absentee
protagonist.

It's an old term, 'louse', used many years ago but barely used today. A
louse is a contemptible *****, basically. It spins off the word,
"lousy". No, WH asked for it when he slammed me for a memoriam to my
mother. You don't fool around with things like that without incurring
wrath. Why he thought it was so necessary to tell me 'to get over it' and
'grow up' is something his shrink would have to analyze. It sounds partly
like some kind of misplaced machismo, which doesn't apply to remembrances
of loved ones gone. Even the biggest most macho, like John Wayne, wouldn't
tolerate such a slap in their face over a remembrance of their loved ones.
Some guys just over-play the macho stereotype, while others are mentally
disturbed in some manner. No, as I remember, you and I have already
tangled earlier, and mondo and I have sniped at each other occasionally. I
don't think friends are expected to agree all the time, and stresses
affect the stability of relationships. Dani got her share for analyzing
too many posters too often and that pissed me off. I don't like shrinks,
social workers, et al, much these days. I've had a shitload of 'em for
decades. Well, Dani's obviously sticking and twisting thick pins in my
voodoo doll these days, but maybe she'll settle down over time. I"ve also
had brief spats with Woodswun, long battles with Krib, raging infernos
with Jean, etc. Wolfy and I scare each other, so it's unlikely we'll go
tooth and nail anymore...we're too much alike, and we've both acknowledged
the mutual heavy damage it does. I felt I needed an EMT after he we got
through that big spat early this year...both of us were left bloodied and
worn out. LOL!!!
Doc




Takes all kinds, Doc. Like I keep telling Mr. Woods, if everyone liked
the same thing, lobster would be 50 bazillion dollars a pound, and
they'd
pay you a million dollars to eat a single bite of liver. LOL!

I like living in a rural area, close to nature. An added benefit is

there

are fewer "neighbors", so the moron-to-square-mile ratio is
significantly
reduced in comparison to, say, suburbia.

Woods


.
User: "mukyuk"

Title: Re: Where R U, Dani...??? REVISED!! ;) 21 Aug 2007 10:03:49 PM
"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:eM2dnSXz1pMUOVbbnZ2dnUVZ_tSknZ2d@comcast.com...


"Perseid" <eidpers@anti-spam.comcast.net> wrote in message
news:Xns9993C4B727D78rrfkwrantispamattbic@216.196.97.136...

After Much Chewing of Cud and Cogitation, Woodswun
<woodswun@tepidmail.com>
Spat the Words

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 13:27:39 -0700, Docrodile wrote:

"Docrodile" <swampthing@hellsbayou.net> wrote in message
news:dLWdnReun5tva1TbnZ2dnUVZ_r6rnZ2d@comcast.com...


"Werewolfy&quo