Page 4 of 5
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 9:00 am
by nael
back in middle school, i didn't do the whole bar snapping thing, i did however becoem quite skilled at unhookign them very quickly with one quick one handed motion. i thought it was funny then, little did i know it would come in handy later in life.
and as far not knowing what you do when you are drunk, ever since i had a little bout of alcohol poisoning during undergrad, i regularly have sections of time that i don't remember. not even always just when i am drinking, but doubly so when i do drink. it's not as if i do anything mean, but i just don't remember conversations and such.
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 9:22 am
by rapier
Originally posted by Vinin:
<STRONG>three- [...] drugs</STRONG>
:: arches eyebrow :: Okay, okay...must hold back...Mhmm, m-must hold back...Okay, I'm calm, no problem here, I'm not saying anything...
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 9:24 am
by rapier
Oh yeah..."Bra-snapping"...Americans are strange...
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 9:27 am
by rapier
Originally posted by Bloodstalker:
<STRONG>Drinking doesn't make that big a difference. I have been about as drunk as a man can get, and still always knew what I was doing at the time. I vividly recall every moment of being on my knees in front of the toilet.</STRONG>
Low alcohol-tolerance, eh?
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 9:30 am
by Bloodstalker
@Rapier
Interesting point, I must start research on my tolerence level immediatly.
*Heads to liquer store*
Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 12:13 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by nael:
<STRONG>back in middle school, i didn't do the whole bar snapping thing, i did however becoem quite skilled at unhookign them very quickly with one quick one handed motion. i thought it was funny then, little did i know it would come in handy later in life.

</STRONG>
There was a boy in my 6th grade class who could do that. One of my friends "challenged"(not what she meant to do) him by informing him that the bra she was wearing had its clasp in the front instead of in the back. He had no trouble undoing the clasp, but he did get slapped so hard he started crying.

He got into a lot of trouble with us girls, all of it having to do with our bras. He stole at least one bra from almost every 6th grade girl at that school.

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2001 12:53 pm
by Gibsonajt
serve him right, though there was a girl at my school that used lash out with boots at bits that hurt the most
i think some guys are not going to be able to have children
Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2001 3:50 am
by Georgi
Originally posted by Bloodstalker:
<STRONG>Drinking doesn't make that big a difference. I have been about as drunk as a man can get, and still always knew what I was doing at the time. I vividly recall every moment of being on my knees in front of the toilet.</STRONG>
Oh, I don't mean that they didn't know what they were doing... just that bra-snapping is apparently more amusing when you're drunk.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2001 7:48 am
by Tom
The greatest sin is also the most commen...
the sin of Omission.

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2001 9:46 am
by Bloodstalker
yeah, but everything is more amusing when you are drunk.
Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2001 2:52 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by Bloodstalker:
<STRONG>yeah, but everything is more amusing when you are drunk.</STRONG>
I don't think I would enjoy bra-snapping more while drunk. Bra removing, sure; but not bra-snapping.

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 4:00 pm
by jennabard
if i am GOD the greatest sin would be
APATHY
i believe that it is better to feel something, whether it is love or hate, than to feel nothing at all.
Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 7:06 pm
by Bloodstalker
Sure Sailor, but how many drunks can actually remove a bra without it snapping a couple times?
damn clumsy fingers.....

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:31 pm
by nael
if you're that drunk...that's when you either just leave it on, tear it off, or chew yoru way through the straps.

Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:36 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:41 pm
by Bloodstalker
Well if I WAS that drunk, it probably wouldn't do me any good to try it anyway.
And on that note I bid you all goodnight.
Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:44 pm
by nael
Posted: Sat Sep 08, 2001 8:45 pm
by nael
@bloodstalker - OMG, that is just too funny.
you have no idea how hard i laughed out loud when i read that
Posted: Sun Sep 09, 2001 1:33 pm
by Yshania
Posted by SS -
When I hear a man abusing a woman, it angers me far more than any other wrong deed. It's something that has always angered me in such a way. Sure, I get mad when I hear about those other things happening, but not near as mad as when I hear about a man abusing a woman. And I don't just mean physical abuse, either. All kinds of abuse are included in that.
IMO ANYONE who abuses ANYONE/THING weaker than themselves commits the biggest sin.
Posted by SS -
Yes, but he also abused my mum(when she was a kid) and grandma. In his case, it wasn't exactly his fault.
I am sorry to bring this back up - but who's fault is it then? How many times will a battered wife hear 'sorry' and go back to her abuser, how many battered/sexually abused kids are not given the choice? It is not the fault of the abused ....
Posted by Happy Evil -
You don't
Unfortunately some do. Hence my above observation than the abused inevitably return to the abuser...it is not always fear of the abuser that causes the return, it is often the promises that 'it was a mistake - it will not happen again'...or in the case of a child - protecting the carer...
Sad subject, better to steer clear...

Posted: Sun Sep 09, 2001 1:59 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by Yshania:
<STRONG>I am sorry to bring this back up - but who's fault is it then? How many times will a battered wife hear 'sorry' and go back to her abuser, how many battered/sexually abused kids are not given the choice? It is not the fault of the abused ....</STRONG>
*grr*

You took that out of context!! I explained why it wasn't his fault! READ EVERYTHING I SAID!!!!!!
Originally posted by Sailor Saturn:
Yes, but he also abused my mum(when she was a kid) and grandma. In his case, it wasn't exactly his fault. He had diabetes for almost his entire life, but didn't know it until sometime last decade. This caused him to be somewhat emotionally unstable, which resulted in losing his temper and such.

Don't take what I say out of context like that again! I loved my grandpa dearly. He tought me a lot of things and he wasn't at all abusive
after he found out he had diabetes and started taking medicine for it. He wasn't
extremely abusive before he found out he had diabetes, either. It wasn't his fault. He had no way of knowing he had diabetes. And he
immediately did something about it when he found out he had diabetes. You have no right to blame him. Yeah, he did some stupid things in his life; but he was a good man, especially in the last 5-6 years of his life.
