This was Taz He was the best dog ever. A real people pleaser.
This was Taz He was the best dog ever. A real people pleaser.
Good idea. Marcos pizza and Greek salad hit the spot. I think I’ll join you now and maybe fall asleep.I'm bored, gonna clean out the bong and do a few hits before bedtime...I have a U shaped office module and Dutch is under one side, Ivan the others...spent the entire day chilling and letting my bones hate me...
Front quarter or hind quarter?re reply lol
I do have a goal to eat an entire cow over the next year though
I am shopping local regenerative farms currently and saving up
for my first 1/4 cow.
I put a stand up freezer on layaway. Yes, layaway!
We have a locally owned appliance store that sells
new/ used and do repairs, who still do lay away.
Fantastic customer service and I keep my $$ local.
It is SaturdayI'm so confused, I honestly thought today was Saturday...
I tell people I have Hershey's Chocolate in my blood. My Grandmother, who was born on 4/20/1899, wrapped Hershey Kisses by hand, in 1917, in the Hershey Chocolate Factory. She said she would wrap a bunch, then eat one. She said she probably ate a pound a day. She met my grandfather there. He would come take the wrapped kisses away, and would never look at her. So one day, she tripped him. That is how they met, and they always said, That is the day he fell for her...If I stocked up on Hershey bars, they wouldn’t last a week in my house
Sweet storyI tell people I have Hershey's Chocolate in my blood. My Grandmother, who was born on 4/20/1899, wrapped Hershey Kisses by hand, in 1917, in the Hershey Chocolate Factory. She said she would wrap a bunch, then eat one. She said she probably ate a pound a day. She met my grandfather there. He would come take the wrapped kisses away, and would never look at her. So one day, she tripped him. That is how they met, and they always said, That is the day he fell for her...
See ya have funUntil tomorrow
I want whatever it is you’re about to be smoking or have been smokingI meant Sunday...see how whacked out I am and haven't hit the bong yet...
Hit the bong, it will take you back a day…I meant Sunday...see how whacked out I am and haven't hit the bong yet...
Well - I made it till 2.19am - without pain meds - but woke up in such a kerfuffle of pain in my chest at this hospital - just now - that I had to wimp out and accepted the 5mg dose the nurse was almost insisting that I take orally - and so will probably be constipated again - but pain free - after major heart surgery last Monday night -
That’s heavy man 🥹hang in there Amigo , this will soon be a memory faster than you can say prestidigitations!…
here is something to ponder anytime of the day or night
The Sumerians looked to the sky when they invented the time system we still use today.
We may find it funny that we divide hours into 60 minutes and days into 24 hours; why not a multiple of 10 or 12?.
In short, the answer is that the inventors of time did not operate with a decimal (base 10) or duodecimal (base 12), but with a sexagesimal system (base 60).
For ancient Sumerian innovators who first divided the motions of the skies into countable intervals, 60 was the perfect number.
The number 60 can be divided into 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20 and 30 equal parts.
In addition, ancient astronomers believed that a year had 360 days, a number that 60 fits perfectly into six times.
The Sumerian Empire didn't last. Yet for over 5,000 years the world keeps measuring time as they dictated.
And if time is an illusion in the spiritual sense is this invention a good or a bad thing?
View attachment 18990690
I wonder if the Sumarians noticed that time would slow down when you were not enjoying your life - and it would speed up when you did? - Hmmmm -hang in there Amigo , this will soon be a memory faster than you can say prestidigitations!…
here is something to ponder anytime of the day or night
The Sumerians looked to the sky when they invented the time system we still use today.
We may find it funny that we divide hours into 60 minutes and days into 24 hours; why not a multiple of 10 or 12?.
In short, the answer is that the inventors of time did not operate with a decimal (base 10) or duodecimal (base 12), but with a sexagesimal system (base 60).
For ancient Sumerian innovators who first divided the motions of the skies into countable intervals, 60 was the perfect number.
The number 60 can be divided into 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20 and 30 equal parts.
In addition, ancient astronomers believed that a year had 360 days, a number that 60 fits perfectly into six times.
The Sumerian Empire didn't last. Yet for over 5,000 years the world keeps measuring time as they dictated.
And if time is an illusion in the spiritual sense is this invention a good or a bad thing?
View attachment 18990690