My first thought, but then thought perhaps there was more to it...Oh, I know... :) I just try to not assume, at least as much as
Unlike what some people like to think, I do not always
have ulterior motives (sometimes, maybe, but not then).
possible... :)
Pretty nice.... :)The first dates are Saturday and Sunday of theGotta keep your priorities straight, after all... You can join them for the second part.... :) Sounds like a nice gig... :)
echo picnic. The working conditions are okay
and the money is more than okay, but she'll have
to do without me for at least the first weekend.
We shall see. Four digits for her.
Even a 1% chance is pretty high... ;) And can kill you just as dead...patient, well, there's a 80% chance it'll help youIsn't that pretty much all or most of medicine, even if one isn't specifically told so...? I remember signing a consent form for removing
but a 10% chance it'll kill you.
a skin tag, that also mentioned that chance of death....and that's a
minor minor surgery...
Usually the formulations and dosages have been refined
to the degree that they can claim a substantially better
percentage than that.
And then, one can just look at the much better odds that it would help,
and not worry about the risk factor... ;0
It's monkfish liver - the Japanese poach it (inI'll mostly just have to remember to mention them when we're at Fu's...
sake sometimes) and press it and chill it, and it
becomes an expensive delicacy. Americans used to
throw it overboard, but now they know that the
Japanese will pay for it. And the Japanese have
discovered that American epicures will pay for it,
which creates a bi-linear 360 degree trade.
not always an opportunity, especially when things are busy....
... "Sometimes the only answer to death is lunch." -- Jim HarrisonI thought so.... especially having recently (before snagging it) had the occasion to be at a funeral, which had been followed by the usual food-back-at-the-church (or community room, as the case might be)... :)
Okay, that's an interesting take.
... Traditions are group efforts to keep the unexpected from happening.
She doesn't think she's deaf, and when I compensate bySpeak a little less slowly, speak distinctly but not exaggeratedly so,
speaking slowly and distinctly (though not loudly), that's
considered condescending. I'm not sure how to cope with this.
and tell her that you are merely trying to compensate for her being hard
of hearing... ;) And that you understand that yelling only makes it
harder, not easier, to be understood.... ;)
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