[lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-07 Thread Tamara P Duvall
On Aug 7, 2005, at 3:20, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jacquie) wrote: Suzy, most people will not have anything more than a temporarily painful sting from bees and wasps - an icepack will very quickly remove most of the pain. Yes, that's what I've always known to be true (and enjoyed the jokes about ki

[lace-chat] Re: ......And flying things

2005-08-09 Thread Tamara P Duvall
On Aug 9, 2005, at 12:49, Weronika Patena wrote: I don't think you necessarily need to worry about self-inflicted pain... I used to do that a lot as a kid, and still don't think there was anything unhealthy about it. I just wanted to be tough and to develop my pain resistance - I wasn't bein

[lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-09 Thread Tamara P Duvall
On Aug 9, 2005, at 22:40, susan wrote: you must have been a hell-raiser as a kid. I was :) My mother was appalled, my father was delighed (he'd hoped for a boy, and a hell-brat of a girl was better than nothing), I was confused :) i would surely never induce pain on myself not in any wa

Re: [lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-08 Thread susan
that is scary. just a little sting could end your life like that. you are more corageous then i would ever be to leave the house, but then again the medicine your friend had did help and probably saved your life. i guess it is something very simple to counteract the poison from the bee. also

Re: [lace-chat] Re: ......And flying things

2005-08-09 Thread RicTorr8
In a message dated 8/9/2005 8:18:44 PM Mountain Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > And we all caught hell that evening, coming in with torn clothes and > all bloody; we were supervised *most strictly* the next day, not > permitted to keep building our nascent Indian Tribe society... But

Re: [lace-chat] Re: ......And flying things

2005-08-09 Thread Weronika Patena
On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 10:17:16PM -0400, Tamara P. Duvall wrote: > No wonder the two of us hit it off like a house on fire, despite a 34 > years difference in our ages :) And I don't think it's something > specifically Polish (as in "dumb Polack"), either... > > I remember being at camp (aged m

Re: [lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-10 Thread RicTorr8
In a message dated 8/9/2005 11:50:54 PM Mountain Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: it's *women* who are supposed to be the nitwits who spend the money without thinking (and do everything else without thinking). Something I read recently dispelled this rumor - if I can find it agaion, I'

Re: [lace-chat] Re: ......And flying things

2005-08-10 Thread Carol Adkinson
Suffolk UK. - Original Message - From: "Tamara P Duvall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "chat Arachne" Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2005 3:17 AM Subject: [lace-chat] Re: ..And flying things > >> > There was a most fascinating article in yesterday'

Re: [lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-13 Thread Weronika Patena
On Wed, Aug 10, 2005 at 01:46:31AM -0400, Tamara P. Duvall wrote: > I was uncertain about my "orientation" at 20:) And, even at 55 (almost > 56), I still think a female form is easier on the eyes than a male one; > it just doesn't give me as much satisfaction beyond the visual aspect > I'm p

Re: [lace-chat] Re: .......And flying things

2005-08-14 Thread susan
> > > As were the - I don't even know the > > English for it... Those things where one person sat at a board of > many > > holes, plugging in many telephone sticks into the holes?. > > I don't know what that is. > i think that is a switchboard. the operators use it to connect the lines.