Glad you had it done, Fisherman! I'm sure that you have been advised what activities to avoid. As a laborer, I had to wait some time to resume the heavy-duty stuff.
All right now in that department.
Best wishes.
CC
there are a couple of schools of thought on this.
some doctors recommend postponing surgery others recommend laparascopic surgery, etc.
how about local anesthesia, complications during and after surgery and other concerns.
Glad you had it done, Fisherman! I'm sure that you have been advised what activities to avoid. As a laborer, I had to wait some time to resume the heavy-duty stuff.
All right now in that department.
Best wishes.
CC
saw this while browsing through the good news brochure:.
is it any wonder people aren't listening to jws anymore?
what an absolutely delusional scene!
The newly risen man is loyally directing other resurrected ones to Jehovah's organization.
Somehow, I was never taught this heartwarming truth as a little boy when attending Methodist Sunday School in the 1950s. Back then, it was all about Jesus . . .
CoCo
i spent couple wonderful days in napa valley and sonoma with visits to san francisco.
what hits me was the number of apathy carts in the city.
they were at powell station, embarcadero, fisherman wharf, etc.
I recall, 5 cents each, 10 cents for the pair here in Canada.
Thanks, Incognito! I remember the event (placing my first pair) circa 1967, but obviously not the price. You're correct.
CoCo
i spent couple wonderful days in napa valley and sonoma with visits to san francisco.
what hits me was the number of apathy carts in the city.
they were at powell station, embarcadero, fisherman wharf, etc.
Correction: I think it was 20 cents (10 cents the copy in the '60s).
CC
i spent couple wonderful days in napa valley and sonoma with visits to san francisco.
what hits me was the number of apathy carts in the city.
they were at powell station, embarcadero, fisherman wharf, etc.
Thanks, kaik, for the memories.
I went to school there, came into the truth there, and placed my first Watchtower and AWAKE! in Twin Peaks. I "made" 50 cents. No carts -- we hadda climb hills, knock on doors, ring doorbells. You know, the old-fashioned way!
Far out experience, Twin Peaks . . . Tony 'hood.
CoCo
in my book, i wept by the rivers of babylon, i described the process of having a friend, johnny santa cruz, use our friendship as a platform for converting me to a jehovah's witness.. that friendship cost me decades of my life in bondage to a cult.. the friendship was real and johnny and i bonded for life.
but, the religion eventually turned him into a stone silence.
now he is dead and the imaginary reunion and meeting of the minds is no longer a possibility.. this makes his passing a double tragedy.. his memories were my memories.
Dear Terry:
Once again, I send you my heartfelt condolences as I remember a book that has given a sense of purpose to my life: Necessary Losses: The Loves, Illusions, Impossible Expectations That All of Us Have to Give Up in Order to Grow, by Judith Viorst.
My life has been one of impossible expectations, based on my former beliefs, my longing for true love, my illusory world of SF fantasy. It's all mixed up together in my heart and mind.
Ms. Viorst's soothing but reality-grounded words have helped me to see that I demanded -- albeit passively -- of others what they were incapable of giving. I, too, have had to admit to my own inability to be the all and everything I wished from others. We are friends only in spots, the author avers.
What you have written so resonates with me as I continue in my own life's journey, scarred but resolute.
Be well, mon ami.
CoCo
http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/topic/163499/necessary-losses
jd souther ... is most widely known for his part in writing somber, elegiac songs that the eagles and linda ronstadt made famous, such as "new kid in town," heartache tonight," and "faithless love.
" the new yorker, february 13 & 20, 2012, troubadour, page 36.. .
"i've never made a record in new york, start to finish," he went on.
Correction, from the thread, "Did You Participate in a Drama?":
I participated when a Bethelite, late-'60s, early-'70s.
Profuse apologies for having omitted hyphens in original. Sometimes I'm just not thinking.johnny santa cruz and i met around 1959 at a movie theater in fort worth, texas.. the purpose of that meeting was to create a fanclub for horror movie director william castle.
a week or so later, johnny stopped me as i was walking home from elementary school.. "hey--i think i know you.
weren't you at the william castle fanclub thing?".
I've "known" Johnny for years, Terry, through your bringing him to life for us.
I'm so very sorry; we were never supposed to grow old and die . . .
CoCo
jd souther ... is most widely known for his part in writing somber, elegiac songs that the eagles and linda ronstadt made famous, such as "new kid in town," heartache tonight," and "faithless love.
" the new yorker, february 13 & 20, 2012, troubadour, page 36.. .
"i've never made a record in new york, start to finish," he went on.
Hyphens and apostrophes:
"Mary is now in her mid-60s and fondly remembers her happy youth in the '50s."
"John is a well-known writer in his community."
However: "John is a writer and well known in his community."
"Greg was a high-risk high school student in the 1970s."
"The inspector made on-site visits to the new housing development."
"My three brothers-in-law's jointly owned house is spectacular."
The personal pronouns, yours, his, hers, ours, its, theirs, and whose, do not require an apostrophe; it's, a contraction, means "it is" and who's, likewise, a contraction, means "who is."
"The toys in the box belong to my brother's friend's cousin." [one brother, one friend]
"The toys in the box belong to my brothers' friends' cousin." [more than one brother, more than one friend; If there's some ambiguity as to who's who, I'll let you, the reader, sort that out! Oh, well, here I go: My brothers John and Fred have friends named Eric and Bob, whose cousin Gary owns the toys in the box.]
Enuf!
CoCo
i am bringing this up because even it was a lot of work, for the majority of the friends this was a rewarding experience.
camaraderie, joking, costumes, props and when the time came the celebrity status of being in the drama.. back in the 50s and 60s, conventions could be as long as 8 days and from about 1966 the dramas became an integral part of the program.
we had one per day and the brothers looked forward to their presentation.
I participated when a Bethelite, late '60s, early '70s.
I recall the sister, a table mate, who portrayed Ruth and all the in-house derision that followed upon the heels of the performance, particularly the howling and emoting during the scene where Naomi pleads with her daughters'-in-law to go their separate ways. Of course, it was canned dialogue. But the gesticulating and chewing of scenery was the actresses' own.
Friends and I had parts where we played teenage boys. I think we were horny, something to do locker room escapades and the removal of apparel. The only line I remember was one guy saying he didn't think he was a "monster for looks." This was after the major purge over sexually unacceptable behaviors.
Then there was the graphic presentation of Zimri and Cozbi getting run through by, oh, I forget who -- some righteous dude eaten up by zeal for Jah. The screaming of the victims was horrible, but it's in the Bible so it's acceptable.
I'm basically a prude, and it made me cringe, but Bethelites don't say "no" to privileges. Way, way too much fixation with sex . . .
CC