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I'm curious what you guys think about this. I posted this in the other group,
but would appreciate your feedback. Tell me if I'm missing the boat, or correct me if am wrong... Bill wrote: Quote:
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and see the reality of it. How can I change my world view with stuff like this going on today? The only way would be to just look the other way..... /rant |
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#2
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Bill wrote:
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an increasingly hard-to-find service station (someone manning the pumps rather than me having to get out of the car to do it myself) they'll do even it for me. Mind you, our cars don't usually need to have their radiators topped up between oil-change services anyway, even though one of them is 12 years old. So I can't help you with this, Bill. lol Tai |
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#3
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What a load of crap. Pretty much every gas station I go to has air
and water, fre for customers, or 50 cents for non customers (even though if you go in and ask for a token, tehy always give you one. Someone has been blowing smoke up Bill's gullible *** again. On Sun, 03 Aug 2003 22:32:05 GMT, "Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> wrote: Quote:
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#4
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"Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> wrote in message news:F3gXa.130821$Io.11138779@newsread2.prod.itd.e arthlink.net... Quote:
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I disagree with that last sentence. Looking the other way won't do it - but paying more attention the GOOD changes would make a difference. Your problem seems to be that you only focus on the negative, and don't even see the positives - which, as people keep pointing out, do exist. You seem to feel that the negatives in the world outweigh all the positives - but that could be because that is where your attention lies. Others seem to feel that the positives outweigh the negatives... |
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#5
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fairly_happy wrote:
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*societal* changes, most for the worse - well, ok, with two notable exceptions: there is much more awareness of, and lack of tolerance for, discrimination and abuse, nowadays. And THAT part is great. As for the two parent family structure, well, we've already been down that path... And suing, instead of working things out... And slipping in education... A HS diploma doesn't mean what it used to, in many, many cases that I have seen and read about. Of course, I've spent a fair chunk of my time in some heavily Hispanic communities, where education still is such a tough sell. (If you've "been there", you know what I am talking about). If THAT isn't fundamentally important, in fact, the most important stuff, I don't know what is. And in those areas, we are slipping badly. |
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#6
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"Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> wrote in message news:i7jXa.131036$Io.11153955@newsread2.prod.itd.e arthlink.net... Quote:
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I'm talking about Quote:
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shouldn't have been two parent families. All those families where abuse was hushed up? They really should have divorced. For a lot of families, staying together was bad. I believe Inky explained that one to you. Well, if you consider that some of those families back then really should have broken up, then the increase in divorce rates doesn't seem quite as bad. Maybe the divorce rate should have been higher all along....certainly abused spouses and children should have been able to get out. Quote:
are frivolous lawsuits. On the other hand, folks have more opportunity for legal redress when mistreated or cheated nowadays. I'd call it about a wash. And slipping in Quote:
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communities? Quote:
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YMMV |
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#7
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fairly_happy wrote:
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of this, as viewed in a more balanced perspective. (Just kick me once in awhile, when I miss some of this, cause I often seem to). So - thanks for pointing it all out again, SB. I really think I need this sometimes. Actually, I know I need it, lest I go off the deep end... Hmmm. Maybe I already have, to some extent... |
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#8
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"Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> writes:
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find one (and I think there are, what with kids of my own at that age now), then I expect the ones that folded did so for basic economic reasons like supply and demand. I said what I meant by "thick with them." If there were more, some would have to close, since there wouldn't be enough campers to make them all profitable. Doug |
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#9
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Herr Taurus wrote:
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get it when you got home, if you did. LOL! |
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#10
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>and drive 50 miles with my buddies on a weekend
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Tracey |
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#11
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"Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> writes:
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getting sued if someone gets lost (no, no, it has nothing to do with the fact that cars are more reliable and hence selling gas has become a business which competes on price instead of service) I know this because someone I know who's father's cousin worked in a service station told me so. Quote:
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#12
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Doug Anderson wrote:
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decades ago? Just look at your yellow pages in your phone book. For a city, the Attorney section is NOW about an inch thick - THESE DAYS. Gee, I wonder what that indicates? Could it be that our current "advanced" society just "sues it out, rather than works it out"? Nah, can't be. Must be the drugs I'm on.....It sure as hell can't be associated with a decline in personal responsibility, now can it? |
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#13
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You had White Castles all the way north to MN???
Tracey wrote: Quote:
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#14
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Doug Anderson wrote:
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#15
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"Bill" <nowhere@earthlink.net> writes:
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most of the US) self-service stations because they are cheaper and because moden cars _need_ less service. You get what you pay for. It's got nothing to do with litigation costs. |
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#16
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>You had White Castles all the way north to MN???
Actually, yes. But, even if they *didn't* have White Castles in MN, I've lived in 7 different states, 2 other countries, and spent significant amounts of time in probably 20 other states so I can relate to a lot of different 'local' delicacies. Tracey |
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#17
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Doug Anderson wrote:
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#18
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Bill <nowhere@earthlink.net> wrote:
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lawyers and responsibility and so on, it's not a good sign for your emotional health. |
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#19
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>Plus I playing around with the meds.....self titrating,
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Tracey |
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#20
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Tracey wrote:
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me? Not often enough, I guess. But I'll reconsider... (This is an ongoing war between me and this in-the-head meds crap). I really want to be off of it.... |
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#21
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>I really want to be off of it....
I understand that, but, Bill, you're still right in the middle of the stuff that led to you needing them. That's NOT the time to wean yourself off of it (and definitely not without your doctor's and/or counselor's approval/ input.) And there's been a recent study that says the recurrence of depressive episodes are much greater when the ADs are only taken for short periods of time (6 months or shorter). Tracey |
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#22
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Tai wrote:
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so much more mellow lately, then that's good, and I can stay on this lower dose. I thought Emma was implying that the last few days here were bad. Now I'm really confused. If there hasn't been a noticeable change over the few days, then I'm ok. BTW - I discuss this fully with the doc when I see her. |
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#23
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Tai wrote:
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matter" conquers all? Or should - at least for this stuff. But obviously not for the real, physical, bonafide, *diseases*. I swear I'm my own worst enemy sometimes.... |
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#24
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>I'm trying to see who's stronger - me or the meds. You know, the "mind over
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Sheila |
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#25
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Tai wrote:
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out. Let's just see how it goes now.. |
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#26
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WhansaMi wrote:
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#27
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>> Yes, you are. :-) How about you give yourself a break?
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Really? Sheila |
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#28
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WhansaMi wrote:
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again.. |
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#29
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>I don't know. It's probably that residual ACOA guilt bull**** sneaking out
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the environmental/psychological/biological components of these problems, isn't it? Bill, one of the things that happened with my dad after his staph infection was that he became addicted to opiates. He was given morphine, in the doses that they usually give terminally ill cancer patients, because the nerve pain was so bad. He continued getting it in rehab, and, since his wife was a nurse, she managed to work it so that there were ALWAYS plenty of opiates in the house. This went on for two years after he came out of orthopedic rehab, until his wife died, and we discovered what he was taking, and in what dosages. We sent him to the hospital for a detox (his health precluded any non-hospitalized detox). OTOH, I've taken anti-depressants. At one point, they probably saved my life. I was stubborn (like you!) and insisted that, doggonit, I was going to work through this the old-fashioned way.... and after nearly three years in therapy, I was coping exceptionally well with my depression, but I was still depressed. I finally agreed to take the medication my therapist had been recommending for over two years. Since that time, I've gone back on the anti-depressants periodically. At times I have been able to identify the trigger of the depression (hormonal therapy to treat some gynecological problems), and other times I just found myself sinking into the black hole without understanding why. So, you see.... I've seen prescription drug abuse up close and personal (my dad) and I've seen the therapeutic benefit of psychotropics (my depression). So, let me ask you some questions: Do you "crave" your medication? Do you obsess that you *won't* be able to have access to your medication? Are you willing to forego time with your family, money, or recreational activities to get to the medication? If your answer to these questions is "no" (and I suspect it is ;-)) you aren't misusing drugs, or becoming drug dependent. What is your fear, exactly? What makes the taking of the meds so onerous for you? Can you specifically pinpoint the concern? Sheila |
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#30
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Back to the title of this thread.
Yes. |
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