Cranberry wrote:I want to follow the URL, but I'm not sure if I should. If I do, what will I see?
It's just a banner ad with a googly-eyed guy on it, repeating the message the poster left. It doesn't actually link to anything and, because he didn't have the actual image location, but a webpage on which it's hosted, it didn't post here.
Redwolf
...agus déanfaidh mé do mholadh ar an gcruit a Dhia, a Dhia liom!
I edited the original post to add OT to the subject line and, in so doing, I may have sheared off the end of the img tag. I blame myself. If it's any consolation, in the process of editing the post, I got a really nasty paper cut.
DaleWisely wrote:I edited the original post to add OT to the subject line and, in so doing, I may have sheared off the end of the img tag. I blame myself. If it's any consolation, in the process of editing the post, I got a really nasty paper cut.
It's definitely no great loss (the image, I mean. A paper cut on one of your playing fingers is another story!).
Redwolf
...agus déanfaidh mé do mholadh ar an gcruit a Dhia, a Dhia liom!
DaleWisely wrote:I edited the original post to add OT to the subject line and, in so doing, I may have sheared off the end of the img tag. I blame myself. If it's any consolation, in the process of editing the post, I got a really nasty paper cut.
It's definitely no great loss (the image, I mean. A paper cut on one of your playing fingers is another story!).
Redwolf
Exactly! And this will be my reason for why I'm a mediocre whistle player for the next 6 months. People don't understand that the clinical aftermath of a paper cut is a REAL MEDICAL CONDITION affecting the finger, at least. Sometimes you get infections in these cuts that can spread to the other whistle playing fingers, making them slow and unresponsive and unable to execute certain rolls. Sometimes the infection will spread to the coordination centers of the brain, which further impedes whistle playing abilities. Not to mention the psychological trauma. And for those of you know-it-alls who might be tempted to point out that I'm TYPING with my newly traumatized and diseased fingers and brain, I'll just point out to you that I'm dictating this to a transcription intern. (Hi, everbody!--XOXOXOX--Trisha).
Oh--and by the way, I think I might be getting a cold.
Tell us something.: I used to be a regular then I took up the bassoon. Bassoons don't have a lot of chiff. Not really, I have always been a drummer, and my C&F years were when I was a little tired of the drums. Now I'm back playing drums. I mist the C&F years, though.
DaleWisely wrote:Exactly! And this will be my reason for why I'm a mediocre whistle player for the next 6 months. People don't understand that the clinical aftermath of a paper cut is a REAL MEDICAL CONDITION affecting the finger, at least. Sometimes you get infections in these cuts that can spread to the other whistle playing fingers, making them slow and unresponsive and unable to execute certain rolls. Sometimes the infection will spread to the coordination centers of the brain, which further impedes whistle playing abilities. Not to mention the psychological trauma. And for those of you know-it-alls who might be tempted to point out that I'm TYPING with my newly traumatized and diseased fingers and brain, I'll just point out to you that I'm dictating this to a transcription intern. (Hi, everbody!--XOXOXOX--Trisha).
Oh--and by the way, I think I might be getting a cold.
Dale
Now I know what has been troubling my playing. I cut my finger at work a few years ago. Not just a paper cut, but a REAL wiz banger of one. Must be what is holding me back still. That also explains why I have been trying to cover up this handicap by wheeling and dealing in whistles and flutes!
I will sleep much better now, thanks.
Steven - IDAwHOa - Wood Rocks
"If you keep asking questions.... You keep getting answers." - Miss Frizzle - The Magic School Bus