I must've gotten food poisoning or something because I woke up at 6 this morning and my stomach felt like it was on fire. Actually, it felt more like a little leprechaun was dancing his way through my digestive system with pointy shoes, digging his feet into everything along the way. Sounds cute, but in reality, far from it. I'm still in pain.bob_newman
:lol:
Believe it or not, I know exactly what you're talking about. My stomach has issues sometimes, so I've felt all kinds of pain in there. The Dancing Leprechaun is pretty bad. Lately, I've been waking up in the early morning with my stomach feeling like it's just about to growl, but it never does. You wouldn't think that'd hurt, but it does. Next time you're hungry, notice how your stomach feels right before it growls. Then imagine that feeling for hours.
I have one rule when it comes to snow.
Only women and children like it because they don't have to work in it nor are the expected to work in it.
Men on the other hand have to shovel every single inch of the stuff so others can get around.
Jaysonguy
I submitted an Everybody Votes question a few weeks ago about snow: "What do you think of snow? Beautiful or inconvenient?" I admit that that's one of those questions that would piss me off.... "It can be both!" But usually people either hate snow or love it, so I think it's a fair question.
I love snow. It makes the deadness of winter a little more aesthetically bearable.
I love driving in snow. Power slides feel so much cooler when you're in the car than when you're controlling it with a joystick.
I love shoveling snow; it's good exercise. It's hard to exercise in the winter if you don't like going to a gym and doing boring repetitive stuff. Yeah, yeah... "Shoveling snow is boring and repetitive!" Not to me. I like being able to immediately see what I've accomplished. Running on a treadmill or lifting weights just doesn't provide that. And doing those things only benefits yourself.
And I love sledding. And snowboarding. And snowball fights. And falling down without getting hurt. You can't do these things without snow. Which we measure in feet in America.
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