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Writing my way through...
Member Since Feb 2020
Location: In the desert
Posts: 7,281
(SuperPoster!)
4 5,786 hugs
given |
#601
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SlumberKitty
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LonesomeTonight
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Writing my way through...
Member Since Feb 2020
Location: In the desert
Posts: 7,281
(SuperPoster!)
4 5,786 hugs
given |
#602
Our friend's son (who is about the same age as our son and they've been friends since they were little, consider themselves cousins actually) is a great cook. He's "deboning a turkey" tonight to cook for our dinner tomorrow. I didn't even know that was a thing... deboning the turkey before cooking. Should be interesting!
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SlumberKitty
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LonesomeTonight, Quietmind 2
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Writing my way through...
Member Since Feb 2020
Location: In the desert
Posts: 7,281
(SuperPoster!)
4 5,786 hugs
given |
#603
Hugs all around to those who want/need.
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LonesomeTonight, SlumberKitty
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Quietmind 2
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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
Posts: 39,964
(SuperPoster!)
12 66.6k hugs
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#604
Quote:
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SlumberKitty
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LonesomeTonight, Quietmind 2
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Wise Elder
Member Since Nov 2013
Location: US
Posts: 8,419
(SuperPoster!)
10 6,446 hugs
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#605
My sister sent me a recording of my nieces when they picked them up from their paternal aunt's who is supervising visits. Just so sad. My heart breaks for them.
__________________ "Odium became your opium..." ~Epica |
ArtieTheSequal, Daffydungle, LonesomeTonight, Polibeth, SlumberKitty, unaluna
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Feb 2017
Location: the upside down
Posts: 3,815
7 6,362 hugs
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#606
Honestly, the history of Thanksgiving is a little troubling to me. I'm no history expert, but the original colonists from England were ill-equipped to handle North America and a Native American tribe helped them survive their first years here. To celebrate the colonists held a feast to celebrate their survival that eventually became Thanksgiving. Of course, as time went on, we decimated the Native American population, treated them horribly, called them savages, stole the land they had been living on for many years, forced them onto reservations, etc. (For now, I'm going to ignore the French colonists that nearly trapped some species into extinction in Canada and what's now the northern US.)
On one hand, I can appreciate the opportunity to gather with family and friends for a celebration. It's something we were brought up with and didn't understand the historical implications of as children. But at the same time it kind of feels like we're celebrating a bunch of ill-prepared, super-religious English people coming to a new-to-them continent and serving as a plague upon the current residents. That being said, my lonely-*** self is going to make some air fryer tempeh and instant mashed potatoes and try not to feel sorry for myself that I have no family or friends to get together with. |
ArtieTheSequal, Daffydungle, LonesomeTonight, Polibeth, SlumberKitty, unaluna, WarmFuzzySocks
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comrademoomoo, LonesomeTonight, Oliviab, unaluna, WarmFuzzySocks
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Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2020
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 1,257
4 451 hugs
given |
#607
I very very occasionally eat fast food and i confused the girl at Hungry Jacks, i think its Burger King in the US by saying i wanted a medium onions rings and a small drink, i think i broke her because she just couldnt get her head around it i had to say it several times.
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ArtieTheSequal, SlumberKitty, unaluna
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Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2020
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 1,257
4 451 hugs
given |
#608
Quote:
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SlumberKitty
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ArtieTheSequal, LonesomeTonight, unaluna
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Poohbah
Member Since Jan 2020
Location: Somewhere I'm working to leave
Posts: 1,243
4 8 hugs
given |
#609
Edit because I feel ashamed and embarrassed
Last edited by Quietmind 2; Nov 25, 2021 at 03:51 AM.. |
ArtieTheSequal, Daffydungle, daisydid, LonesomeTonight, Oliviab, ScarletPimpernel, SlumberKitty, unaluna, WarmFuzzySocks
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Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2020
Location: Nowhere
Posts: 1,257
4 451 hugs
given |
#610
Today i learned that my next door neighbours, who adore my dogs and feed them treats through the fence, cook a special batch of spaghetti bolognaise without onions just for the dogs, when they cook it for themselves. Thats so sweet.
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SlumberKitty, unaluna
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ArtieTheSequal, LonesomeTonight, Quietmind 2, StressedMess
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Tweaky Dog
Member Since Aug 2011
Location: England
Posts: 4,813
12 3,148 hugs
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#611
That's wonderful, BCM!
__________________ 'Somewhere up above the great divide Where the sky is wide, and the clouds are few A man can see his way clear to the light 'You have all the grace you need for today, and today is all that matters.' - Steve Austin |
SlumberKitty
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Poohbah
Member Since Jan 2020
Location: Somewhere I'm working to leave
Posts: 1,243
4 8 hugs
given |
#612
Endocrinology lab results appeared. Appointment is mid December.
Everything that is borderline or too low or too high - quite a number of results? So far ALL of them have fatigue as a result. |
ArtieTheSequal, LonesomeTonight, Polibeth, SlumberKitty, unaluna
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Always in This Twilight
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 20,823
(SuperPoster!)
9 75k hugs
given |
#613
Quote:
Hugs, QM. Hopefully they're relatively easily treated. Is thyroid one, I'm guessing? |
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SlumberKitty
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Quietmind 2
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Always in This Twilight
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 20,823
(SuperPoster!)
9 75k hugs
given |
#614
Quote:
Hugs, NP. I know it's not the same, but you an hang out here with us. I've never really gotten into tempeh--is it good fried like that? |
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SlumberKitty
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Always in This Twilight
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 20,823
(SuperPoster!)
9 75k hugs
given |
#615
NP, your post made me think of elementary school--maybe kindergarten? When for Thanksgiving, some of us would dress up as Pilgrims and some as, well "Indians," but Native Americans (I believe American Indians or Indigenous Americans is preferred now?) I'm cringing in particular thinking of the sort of paper headbands with feathers the kids playing the latter would wear. And of course we were taught that they all came together as friends and enjoyed dinner together. This was in the 1980s.
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SlumberKitty
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Poohbah
Member Since Jan 2020
Location: Somewhere I'm working to leave
Posts: 1,243
4 8 hugs
given |
#616
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LonesomeTonight, SlumberKitty, WarmFuzzySocks
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Child of a lesser god
Member Since Jun 2015
Location: Tartarus
Posts: 19,164
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8 12.4k hugs
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#617
Quote:
In the case of the original Thanksgiving, the tribe is the Wampanoag tribe. And, actually, the story of the first Thanksgiving goes even deeper (I teach it in a survey class of world folklore I sometimes do). “Thanksgiving” actually refers not to a harvest festival, but a war victory, and the name comes from an 1863 proclamation celebrating Civil War Union victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg. It wasn’t the first harvest festival celebrated in the New World, and the Wampanoag were actually trying to make an alliance with Plymouth (some sources suggest they actually gate-crashed the Plymouth harvest festival, they weren’t invited). And there was no turkey, no pie, and no potatoes. Most of what we celebrate as Thanksgiving is late-19th century tradition. __________________ The secret to eternal youth is arrested development.—Alice Roosevelt Longworth |
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SlumberKitty
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LonesomeTonight, NP_Complete, ScarletPimpernel, WarmFuzzySocks
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Always in This Twilight
Member Since Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 20,823
(SuperPoster!)
9 75k hugs
given |
#618
Quote:
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I'm curious as to what they're teaching in public elementary schools about it now (I don't trust my D to really be able to tell us, though I suppose I could ask a few teacher friends). And I kind of assumed they weren't eating pumpkin pie or potatoes--figured wild turkeys might have been a possibility. |
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SlumberKitty
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2017
Location: In a land far far away
Posts: 1,581
7 1,306 hugs
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#619
Thanksgiving has always been a weird one coming from Switzerland... we do not have a single holiday that's celebrated that intensely, centered about being together, eating together, and so on and it not being a religious holiday (with the religion often being a very minor part in the actual celebration, if it's mentioned at all).
I'll say that as far as I know, the people originally coming to the US were not just choosing to go on vacation or spread their religion, most of them were kicked out by their own country for having a belief not aligned with their country. I can't blame them for being ill-prepared and probably not the best group for leading the initial efforts. That combined with a general unawareness of medicine will quickly go down a bad path... Also, regarding the debate of dressing up as a certain group/race you're not part of: as a child, I don't think this is actually a bad thing, but maybe that's an uncommon opinion. It's a fantasy world where you get to role play something, most times something that you could never experience, children are not aware of all the implications and that's fine. You're a person living in the per-colonized North America, got a bow and arrow and run around in your garden searching for plants to make into some kind of food. Of course this isn't fully accurate but as a kid that lets you experience sides of life that you'll never see again and lets you empathize with that kind of lifestyle idea. I see it similarly to playing theater, you're trying to empathize with the character. If paired properly with education about the bad parts of society, whether it'd be something like slaves or genocide, illnesses, corruption, will help the kid more than restricting their fantasy world. You have to live with out the fantasy for long enough... It's weird to do for older people though just to dress up, that doesn't make sense to me. |
SlumberKitty
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atisketatasket, LonesomeTonight, unaluna
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Writing my way through...
Member Since Feb 2020
Location: In the desert
Posts: 7,281
(SuperPoster!)
4 5,786 hugs
given |
#620
I'm toying with the idea of opening my Etsy store again. I did sell like 7 pieces when I had it open before, but they were small things, and now I want to do afghans. I already have a couple baby afghans that have been in a closet waiting for when I open it again or for a friend or family to have a baby. I'm just not quite yet convinced that my afghans won't fall apart when washed. I really should know better because the ones I've made for myself and for family members like 30 years ago are still in one piece, but my mind doesn't work like that - it tells me that because those were for me or were gifts, they are safe. But if someone pays me for it, that will somehow make it fall apart. Silly brain. Here's one I recently finished for my sister for christmas. eta i don't know why it's sideways
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LonesomeTonight, SlumberKitty
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LonesomeTonight, NP_Complete, ScarletPimpernel, unaluna, WarmFuzzySocks
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