T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
15.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 25 1993 16:41 | 9 |
| A "guy thing" I do is to keep driving in the same direction, even if my wife
insists that we're lost, and furthermore I don't stop to ask directions. She
tells me that her ex used to explain the same behavior by saying that if he
kept driving for another 24K miles or so, he'd at least end up where he
started. But most of the time, I *DO* get where we want to go, even if it
takes a few minutes longer to get there. (She, on the other hand, is fond of
telling me to turn onto streets that go nowhere near where we want to go...)
Steve
|
15.2 | No way | MORO::BEELER_JE | America is being held hostage! | Mon Jan 25 1993 17:04 | 5 |
| No .. cycling through the channels is most assuredly not a "guy" thing.
My daughters do it to the extent that it drives me up the wall - and -
believe me - they ain't guys.
Bubba
|
15.3 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass, Music Aged To Perfekchun | Mon Jan 25 1993 17:13 | 8 |
| Yeah, my daughter clicks through channels too. Its dependent on who
has the remote control in their hand. The guy thing is that we usually
get to be the ones holding the controller most of the time, therefore
clicking through channels seems like a guy thing. The issue is one of
power I think. Why is it that the males get to control the T.V. in the
household, most of the time ?
Jim
|
15.4 | | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA, USPSA/IPSC, NROI-RO | Mon Jan 25 1993 18:05 | 13 |
| <<< Note 15.0 by JURAN::VALENZA "Preserving our noting heritage." >>>
> Okay, I admit it. I will often hold the remote control and cycle
> through the TV stations for long stretches of time. I keep hearing
Channel surfing is an equal opportunity sport, however ususally
guys are too polite to start ranting and raving when the women
wander through the TV offerings. Women, on the other hand, have
no problem pointing out that they do not appreciate the "men's
competition" portion of the sport.
Jim
|
15.5 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Mon Jan 25 1993 18:36 | 3 |
| re .4
yea verily!!!
|
15.6 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Mon Jan 25 1993 22:14 | 6 |
|
I concur:-)
David
|
15.7 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Preserving our noting heritage. | Mon Jan 25 1993 23:08 | 7 |
| Okay, then, what about this asking directions thing? It never even
occurs to me to ask directions; if I am lost, I just keep going, except
maybe I'll stop to open a map. Even I moved to New England, with
its incomprehensible and poorly marked road system, I *still* don't ask
for directions.
-- Mike
|
15.8 | Different perspective | MORO::BEELER_JE | America is being held hostage! | Tue Jan 26 1993 00:52 | 8 |
| I just saw something on TV about men being reluctant to ask directions.
Sorry, I've never understood that. I never hesitate to ask directions
if I'm lost. Maybe that comes from my military background - if you call
for artillery or an air strike you kin'a like to make damned sure you
know where you are and where you want the stuff dropped - otherwise it
could ruin your whole damned day.
Bubba
|
15.9 | there are gal things to of course | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Jan 26 1993 08:06 | 19 |
| Most men I know are hesitant to ask for directions. As I get older
and more mature (or perhaps just feel I have less time to waste :-))
I am getting more likely to ask when lost. I think part of it comes
from being raised to be self sufficient. Boys are, or were, taught
to make it on their own. Girls are taught that asking for help is
ok.
There are other guy things but I can't think of one at the moment. My
wife often comments about something my son and I do by saying "must be
a guy thing." I suspect that many women have a list of "guy things"
that they really don't understand and men can't explain.
Channel surfing, however, is definitely a universal thing. My wife is
as bad as I am. :-) Of course having 3 TVs and VCRs is helping keep
this little problem from getting out of hand. :-) Though I admit that
unless there is some thing I really want to watch I'd usually rather watch
what she's watching then watch alone. Yet an other guy thing? :-)
Alfred
|
15.10 | various things I've seen in my life... | ASDG::FOSTER | radical moderate | Tue Jan 26 1993 09:11 | 37 |
|
"Guy things I've noticed"...
Big expensive toys. Its partly a marketing thing, but in general, men
like larger, less frequent purchases. Audio equipment, cars, tools,
etc. Women do accessories, clothes, make-up, jewelry, "collectibles".
Men's "collecting" hobbies have resale value. Men's hobbies of stamp
collecting, coin collecting, comic collecting, model-railroading, card
collecting, have sufficient resale value so that you can actually look
at your "hobby" as an investment. Women's "collecting" hobbies -
Hummel, Goebel, miniatures, shadow boxes, curio's, animals, etc... tend
to collect dust more than money.
Most men steer clear of anything remotely "pretty" in the feminine
sense, unless they can't avoid it - i.e. a loved one gave it to them.
You'd rarely catch a man with a lace photo frame, or needlepoint
pillow. Men's clothing is tailored. No frills, no lace. Gone are the
days of laced shirt arm ends, previously a sign of gentry.
Many men take sports MUCH MORE seriously than women do. Men are more
likely to play an organized team sport well into their 30's and 40's.
Men tend to bet on games, and watching sports events is a way to
socialize. (How many women are organizing Super Bowl Parties?)
Many men hold fewer grudges, while getting anger out in the open
faster. Sometimes with a fist. (Its something I read somewhere...)
Hence two boys can fight in a school yard today and shoot marbles
together tomorrow. Two girls in a shouting match today will still be
enemies in their 80's. (I'm exaggerating for effect...)
Guys put each other down in jest. And women don't get it. I've heard
men play the dozens (leave mom out of it), and the object is to deliver
good lines. Insulting is part of it, but its an art form. A really good
insult is admirable. A weak one gets you boo'ed. A lot of women I know
can't stay sufficiently detatched to enter into this "sport". When
women exchange insults like this, hair pulling may be next.
|
15.11 | Directions and channel surfing | VMSMKT::KENAH | I think it's about -- forgiveness | Tue Jan 26 1993 09:19 | 16 |
| After I moved to New England, I realized that most of the time it was
an exercise in futility asking people for directions; the directions
they gave always seemed to assume that you know the area in question:
("Go down to the next-to-the-last traffic light and turn left" or "Go
two blocks past where the Necco factory used to be and turn right.")
Alternately, they use landmarks and street names that never occur on
any map: ("Take 93 to the lower deck, but don't get onto the expressway;
take the Longfellow Bridge exit off Storrow Drive.")
So, I read maps, and if that doesn't work, I look for a firehouse.
Firefighters can give clear, concise, understandable directions --
after all, they HAVE to know how to get somewhere.
And yes, of course, I do channel surf -- in my family, it's much more
a male thing...
|
15.12 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Tue Jan 26 1993 10:03 | 14 |
| Directions in New England are given, as Andrew says, in a way that is
incomprehensible to outsiders. For the record, you are an outsider if
you, both of your parents, and all four of your grandparents were not
born in New England.
I'm extremely reluctant to ask for directions. But I usually consult
maps before I go someplace new, and I always have good maps in my car.
If I become (apparently) hopelessly lost, I will break down and ask. I
view this behavior as a control thing. I don't want to admit that I'm
not in command. And I do believe it's a "guy" thing, instilled by our
societal style, which wrongly taught me as a child that "guys are
supposed to be in control" while "girls are supposed to be dependant."
-dick
|
15.13 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | pools of quiet fire... | Tue Jan 26 1993 10:25 | 7 |
|
I channel surf.
I will ask directions sooner than most men, but later than most women,
when I find myself lost or unsure of how to get where I'm going.
-Jody
|
15.14 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Preserving our noting heritage. | Tue Jan 26 1993 10:31 | 36 |
| A friend of mine from Colorado once gave me the ultimate insult when I
tried to give her directions to my place; she said that I had been
living in New England too long. After rereading my directions to her,
I had to agree--they were terrible.
I find it is helpful when the roads are long, straight, and clearly
marked. Last summer, I was staying with a friend in Lakewood, a suburb
of Denver, and went into Denver to see a movie at the Mayan theatre. I
swung onto 6th avenue going east, took it to Broadway, and turned right
and went south for a bit. A piece of cake. I have never lived in
Denver, but just from visiting it several times I can make my way
around with little fear of really getting lost. Such is not the case
with New England cities like Boston or Providence, with their spaghetti
street layouts, and even though I have driven in these cities several
times I still find them completely confusing. When you live in a place
that has at least a modicum of rationality to its roads, it is easy to
internalize a sense of direction and make your way around without
having to ask directions. But when I am driving on roads that wind
around every which way, I am hopelessly lost. But I rarely ask for
directions anyway. I am more likely to ask for directions when I am
walking than when I am driving, though, and in act I did that just
recently when I was walking on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, trying to
find the Nickelodeon Theatre. But that was the exception, not the
rule.
Colorado Springs doesn't have as desirable a street arrangement as some
cities do, but it helps when a mountain range is to your immediate
west. If the mountains are on your right, you know you are going
south; if they are on your left, you know you are going north; and so
forth. In Colorado Springs, people regularly use the mountains as a
landmark when giving directions ("you'll be going towards the
mountains, and then turn left at the light".) But I didn't ask for
directions much when I lived there, either. Maybe that's why I have
such a large map collection.
-- Mike
|
15.15 | How about farting? A guy thing to do!:) | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Jan 26 1993 12:27 | 1 |
|
|
15.16 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass, Music Aged To Perfekchun | Tue Jan 26 1993 12:30 | 2 |
| RE:15
Only when they're loud and smell badly.;)
|
15.17 | collision - but smelliness is not controllable | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Tue Jan 26 1993 12:33 | 10 |
| Re .15
Only if you deliberately let it rip is farting a guy thing to do.
There seems to be some "Gotta do the socially inappropriate thing to
prove we're not knuckling under to what our mothers told us" drive. I
think it's a cultural thing, not a generic one. As is the long
resonant burp thing - I used to work with a guy who prided himself on
being able to say a certain 8-syllable name in one continuous burp.
-dick
|
15.18 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Jan 26 1993 13:16 | 9 |
| How about stiring you coffee with a screw driver? Or how about having
your clothing orginized via the floor method. As in the dirtier the
article is the closer it comes to the laundry basket?
Or keeping your shop like you keep you desk at work?:) Wounder how many
of the guys do that? Wounder if their shops look like their cubes with
the tools traced out on the walls?:) And hangers to hang them? 8)
|
15.19 | I hate cities like Denver | CADSYS::BELANGER | | Tue Jan 26 1993 15:45 | 19 |
| re:15.14 (JURAN::VALENZA)
>New England cities like Boston or Providence, with their spaghetti
>street layouts,... When you live in a place that has at least a modicum
>of rationality to its roads,...Colorado Springs doesn't have as desirable a
>street arrangement as some cities do,
All of this assumes that straight streets laid out in a grid are desirable.
I disagree. The most interesting cities are cities that do not have this kind
of street pattern. Would you rather wander the streets of Denver or wander
the streets of a city like Boston, or most European cities, or cities like
Istanbul or Cairo?
Too much urban planning, where everything is straight and orderly, where
nothing catches your eye as you walk down the street, where people live in
one place and work in another and play in another and shop in another, has
been the death of American cities. And all of this to make driving easier.
Mike
|
15.20 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Preserving our noting heritage. | Tue Jan 26 1993 15:53 | 4 |
| I'll take the streets of Denver over the streets of Boston any day of
the week.
-- Mike
|
15.21 | how's the shopping in Denver? | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | do i care what your hobbies r? | Tue Jan 26 1993 16:00 | 6 |
| re .20, what streets I would take would depend on the *stores* that
were lining the streets. Maybe that's a "female thing"! Who cares
about the streets? It's the stores that matter!!!!
Lorna
|
15.22 | And I, I took the road less travelled by... | CALS::DESELMS | Opera rulz | Tue Jan 26 1993 16:38 | 14 |
| I try to "get lost" every once in a while. When I move, or I start a new
job, or I go to a new area for any reason, I'll try to take a random street
to see if it will get me to my destination. If it turns out to be a dead
end, so what, I turn around. If it takes me in the opposite direction, so
what, I'll eventually hit some road that I'm familiar with.
It helps me to learn my new surroundings, and it helps me figure out how
to get to various places like gas stations, convenience stores, restaurants,
etc.
Of course if I'm in a hurry or I'm really truly desperately lost, I'll
give in and ask for directions.
- Jim
|
15.23 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Jan 26 1993 16:45 | 13 |
| Hmmm. I tend to prefer to blunder my way through, or puzzle it out
myself from maps (though I might have to stop somewhere and _buy_ a map
first - and yes, I have bought a map and gone back to the car and
figured out the way myself, rather than simply asking the clerk for
directions!).
[Note: "New England navigation," aka "keep turning in the direction of
your destination, and eventually you'll find a way through," works
rather well among the twisting and turning New England back roads, but
it fails horribly in the wide-open country out west. If you miss one
turn there, it may be _days_ before you get another chance... ;-)]
-b
|
15.24 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Greg - Hudson, MA | Tue Jan 26 1993 16:58 | 21 |
| A city like Boston is quite clearly superior to nearly any
sprawling mid-western metropolis when it comes to pedestrian
convenience. It's a matter of size. You really *can* walk
around Boston proper - without resorting to cabs or mass
transit (though both are available). Granted the layout is
confusing for a stranger and maps aren't always a lot of help...
Living there with a car, on the other hand, is much more difficult
(though I've done it, loved it, and will do it again). I can see
why people hate to drive in Boston, but I find it easy - Boston
was the first city I drove in, and I figured it was like that
everywhere :-)
As for asking for directions - I try to ask ahead of time if
going someplace confusing (like Somerville, Dorchester or JP) -
but in much of Boston itself (Downtown, North End, Beacon Hill,
Back Bay, South End) I just need an address. Once on the way, I
do the "guy thing" and drive around in circles before stopping
and asking a stranger for help :-)
/Greg
|
15.25 | This could be geographic rather just gender... | CCAD23::TAN | Life is a bed of neuroses | Tue Jan 26 1993 20:19 | 6 |
| Why is it that men on mediterranean beaches (or is it Mediterranean
men on beaches) seem to be forever adjusting themselves?
;^)
joyce
|
15.26 | dead reckoned | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Tue Jan 26 1993 21:58 | 1 |
| I never get lost!! (place "Home Improvement" growl here)
|
15.27 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | do i care what your hobbies r? | Wed Jan 27 1993 09:13 | 5 |
| re .25, maybe it's because so many of the women on Mediterranean
beaches are topless or naked? (from what I've heard)
Lorna
|
15.28 | Dave Barry quote that seems apropos | SWYP::SZKLARZ | Welcome to the inside of a roll top desk! | Wed Jan 27 1993 11:10 | 10 |
|
Most guys believe that they're supposed to know who to fix things. This
is a responsibility that guys have historically taken upon themselves to
compensate for the fact that they never clean the bathroom. A guy can
walk into a bathroom containing a colony of commode fungus so advanced
that it is registered to vote, but the guy would never dream of cleaning
it, because he has to keep himself rested in case a Mechanical Emergency
breaks out.
|
15.29 | | CCAD23::TAN | Life is a bed of neuroses | Wed Jan 27 1993 18:07 | 11 |
| re .27
Hi Lorna,
no, it doesn't appear to be restricted to, or more prevalent at the top-less
beaches. Just anywhere on the beach. I suspect it's also cultural as it's
something I've not noticed on New Zealand beaches. What about yours?
regards,
joyce
|
15.30 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Wed Jan 27 1993 19:38 | 6 |
| >> Why is it that men on mediterranean beaches (or is it Mediterranean
>> men on beaches) seem to be forever adjusting themselves?
Well, you really gotta be a guy to understand this one. It's the same
reason you see baseball players forever adjusting themselves. Once you've
slid headfirst into third, everything's out of place! ;)
|
15.31 | It's an offer. | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu Jan 28 1993 04:35 | 22 |
|
>> Why is it that men on mediterranean beaches (or is it Mediterranean
>> men on beaches) seem to be forever adjusting themselves?
It's because you're looking Joyce.
The Italians, as an example, use hand-signs as part of their language. They
can insult each other, tease each other, complement each other, all with out
saying a word.
An example. Extend your arm towards a man, left or right it doesn't matter.
Now tuck the two middle fingers into your palm and clamp them in place with
your thumb. The little and first fingers should be extended. That's called
'Cornuto'. Your insulting the man by telling him that he's the kind of guy
who let's his wife betray him.
Have you noticed how mediterranean men will play volleyball right in front
of an attractive lady/ies even when the beach is empty. They'll keep rubbing
their hands over their bodies - pretending to knock the sand off - and
adjust themselves all the time. They're displaying themselves. The effect is
heightened if the guy wears a G-string or scampy swim-wear to emphasise their
manhood.
|
15.32 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Jan 28 1993 04:55 | 7 |
| .31> 'Cornuto'. Your insulting the man by telling him that he's the kind of guy
.31> who let's his wife betray him.
Cornuto is the horn and it doesn't mean anything as specific as that.
It's a general curse. Giving the gesture a twist at the wrist, it
becomes malocchio, the evil eye, a worse curse.
|
15.33 | Cornuto | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu Jan 28 1993 05:01 | 7 |
|
I don't know what part of Italy you come from Michael - but that's what my
friends tell me 'Cornuto' means.
|
15.34 | As I understand it from my Sicialian Friend Signor Marinace | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Thu Jan 28 1993 09:39 | 7 |
| Gotta go with .33 - cornuto is the sign given to tell someone he's a
cuckold. But there are two ways of giving the sign described - with
the palm of your hand toward you or with it toward the object. Cornuto
is the first way. With your palm turned away from you, it's the evil
eye, a curse of banishment.
-dick
|
15.35 | which way to the.... | POWDML::ROSADO | | Thu Jan 28 1993 13:27 | 15 |
| HA! re .1.... men NEVER NEVER NEVER ask directions when they damn well
know they are lost. why do they do this? Why do they refuse to turn
into the nearest gas station and ask in order to avoid extra hours
of driving in circles? And why do they growl at there s.o. if they so
much as whisper...um..excuse me, but i think we're lost, you're going
the wrong way or whatever.
Would they not be considered "macho" if they did stop and ask?
I mean, really, who the hell cares if you ask directions or not?
It will get you to where you're going.
Ps: I did not read all replies so excuse me if this has been mentioned
already.
|
15.36 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Shame on me | Thu Jan 28 1993 14:11 | 6 |
| > HA! re .1.... men NEVER NEVER NEVER ask directions when they damn well
> know they are lost.
You apparently hang out with the wrong sort of men. I'm usually in too much
of a hurry to spend much time looking around. I'll stop and ask the first
reasonable looking person I see.
|
15.37 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Preserving our noting heritage. | Thu Jan 28 1993 14:53 | 7 |
| No wonder people never ask me directions; nobody thinks I am very
reasonable looking. :-)
-- Mike
(Actually, come to think of it, people do ask me directions, but only
when I am not from the area myself and cannot answer their question.)
|
15.38 | Body language | CCAD23::TAN | Life is a bed of neuroses | Thu Jan 28 1993 16:18 | 12 |
| re .31
so what/how do men feel when that sort of "guy" thing is totally ignored
by the female population because no one's bothered to explain that it's
macho body language? haha! Worse, how is one *supposed* to respond?!
'cornuto' - Well, I'll take your word for it. Not quite a gesture I'd like
to try out ;^)
regards,
joyce
|
15.39 | Armchair cartographer, too. | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Jan 28 1993 16:28 | 2 |
| If I get lost (which I never do), I'd stop at a pay-phone and look for
a map. Guys love maps.
|
15.40 | Maps | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Jan 29 1993 11:33 | 7 |
| When my wife and I get lost my wife would rather hunt around on our own
for hours rather than ask for directions or stop and get a map.
Someone else said that their husband would hunt around for hours, so
I don't see this as a guy gal thing... just individual.
Jeff
|
15.41 | brings back bad memories | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | least i'm enjoy'n the ride | Fri Jan 29 1993 11:39 | 9 |
| Whenever my ex-husband and I were driving together, and got lost, he
would start yelling at me, and telling me it was my fault, regardless
of the actual situation. It caused some miserable times for me. To
this day, if I'm riding in a car with a man, and we get lost, my
reaction is to cringe, because I'm afraid I'm about to be yelled at and
berated for my stupidity.
Lorna
|
15.42 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Jan 31 1993 09:56 | 5 |
| re:.34
No, no, no!
The evil eye is with a half twist of the wrist.
|
15.43 | Belching is absolutely out. | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Mon Feb 01 1993 03:08 | 8 |
|
The Economist reported this week that Paul Gasgoine, a British soccer player now
playing for an Italian team, was fined $13,000 for belching during a TV inteview.
The moral of the story "When in Rome, don't let rip."
|
15.44 | The "Awning" thing. | AKOCOA::HAMEL_WHITE | Got to Find My Corner of the Sky | Tue Feb 09 1993 10:37 | 8 |
| Here's a classic "guy" thing:
Did you ever see a guy walk down a street and bypass the opportunity to
leap up and touch-tag an awning?
:>)
C.
|
15.45 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Feb 09 1993 10:47 | 5 |
| Re: .44
Leap up? I usually have to duck to avoid whacking my head!
Steve
|
15.46 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged To Perfekchun | Tue Feb 09 1993 11:25 | 8 |
| How many men have a chair in their home which everyone in the family
knows it as being "Dad's Chair ?" You know, like Archie Bunker's chair.
Mine is the living room chair. The wife and kids know better than to
sit in it when I enter the room. My father and grandfathers all had
their chair, so maybe its an inherited thing ?
Jim
|
15.47 | Throwing | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Feb 09 1993 12:02 | 12 |
| I don't know if this has been mentioned earlier in this string.. I have
read through most but not all of it.
Boys usually throw rocks into the water when at beaches/ponds, girls
don't as often.
Also, I have noticed when a reatively light weight throwable object
needs to be moved a short distance, often guys will toss it to one
another. Women don't, (usually), they get up, walk over, and hand
the object to you.
Jeff
|
15.48 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Feb 09 1993 12:55 | 1 |
| How about flatching under your blanket at night and whiffing the aroma.
|
15.49 | | CARTUN::TREMELLING | Making tomorrow yesterday, today! | Tue Feb 09 1993 12:59 | 10 |
| re: <<< Note 15.48 by AIMHI::RAUH "I survived the Cruel Spa" >>>
> How about flatching under your blanket at night and whiffing the aroma.
I prefer 'flatching' in the bath tub, then biting the bubbles!
NOT.
(I think talking about such things is definitely a guy gene.)
|
15.50 | couldn't resist | ASABET::ESOMS | Crystal Packing Mama | Tue Feb 09 1993 19:41 | 11 |
| There's also the "Toilet Seat" in an up position?
Most of all, why do guys make those ungodly sounds at full
volume? No words, just bellows, grunts, hoots, barks,
strange sounds.
Another thing, if arranging something or designing something,
why is it that if it fits there it goes vs. the asthetic
value of placing it in the right place or making it functional?
Joanne
|
15.51 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Tue Feb 09 1993 20:02 | 12 |
|
> "Toilet seat" in the up position
I am one of nine children who lived in a one bathroom house. My
sisters and Mother broke me of that habit real quick :-)
> why do guys make those ungodly sounds at full volume
Pure unadulterated manhood :-)
David
|
15.52 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Feb 09 1993 20:50 | 5 |
| Toilet seats should be left in the position last used.
Any other algorithm wastes time and energy.
Why would anyone would sit down on a toilet without looking first?!
|
15.53 | | STAR::ABBASI | i think iam psychic | Tue Feb 09 1993 22:18 | 16 |
| >Toilet seats should be left in the position last used.
>
>Any other algorithm wastes time and energy.
humm.. rewinding the counter of this algo. back to zero, we see that
the seat must be down 'cause when we buy the seat it comes with
its cover down (not sure of this, others can confirm).
i think this question shows the deep difference between men and
women , this seat syndrome has been with us since the modern days
and has caused many a conflict in households between men and women.
hope this helps.
\bye
\nasser
|
15.56 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Feb 10 1993 07:04 | 6 |
| re:.53
No, no, no.
The algorithm is to leave the seat as is after use, not as found before
use.
|
15.57 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Wed Feb 10 1993 09:45 | 3 |
| Mike, that's the best defense I've ever heard. Bravo!
- Jim (A proud toilet-seat-leaver-upper)
|
15.58 | Guy things | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Feb 10 1993 11:40 | 14 |
| The seat 'should' be left down. Why? Because its the thoughtful thing
to do realizing that the next user might be a woman, or a man who needs
to use the facility for a BM.
UNLESS you have a five year old son who doesn't care which way the
seat is.... and.... is perfectly happy to pee on the seat for the
enjoyment of the next user.
I have been working on breaking him of that habit. Like having him
clean the toilet each time I find a wet seat.
A guy thing to do... sure is, but its gross in this case.
Jeff
|
15.59 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:26 | 9 |
| Gee. I always figured one was supposed to leave the seat (and the lid)
down to prevent the dog/cat/baby from drinking out of (or falling into)
the toilet.
Those who don't have a dog, cat, or baby, or don't care what they drink
from or fall into, could certainly make their own house rules about
this (apparently) major issue. ;-)
-b
|
15.60 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:35 | 5 |
| I was always taught that one leaves the seat and the lid down because a
toilet isn't the most enchanting pool to look into. To the contrary,
sometimes (as when the water isn't working) it is rather disenchanting.
-dick
|
15.61 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged To Perfekchun | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:58 | 4 |
| Yes leave it down. You could accidentally drop your tooth brush or comb
into an open commode.
Jim
|
15.63 | | STAR::ABBASI | i think iam psychic | Wed Feb 10 1993 13:51 | 11 |
|
lets talk about something say.. different !....why do you think more
men like chess and women dont? why are there so many more men chess players
and very few women? is chess a man game? it does not require force,
so what is the woman excuse?
hope this helps in changing the subject ^)
\bye
\nasser
who_is_looking_for_a_woman_chess_player_for_fun_and_games :)
|
15.64 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i would let it go | Wed Feb 10 1993 14:17 | 4 |
| re .63, maybe the woman thinks it's boring.
Lorna
|
15.65 | | COMET::COSTA | Getta Grip, dude. | Wed Feb 10 1993 21:28 | 15 |
|
How about when guys talk about things using numbers, contractions, and
acronyms. For example, a conversation that my girlfriend recently walked in
on, " Well, my three 0' five H.O. was only pushing two hundred at fifty
five hundred." translation - My 305 high output engine only produced
200 horsepower at 5500 rpm.
She just walked away kind of bewildered mumbling something about the
things guys talk about, and that was before we even got into the
conversation about the fine entertainment on the USA channels "Up All
Night."
Tony
|
15.66 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Wed Feb 10 1993 23:11 | 7 |
|
Tony,
:-)
David
|
15.67 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Feb 11 1993 00:08 | 6 |
| RE: .65
Ya know, Tony, the metric system is gonna just kill manly talk like
that!!
jt
|
15.68 | boyz-n-their-toyz | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Feb 11 1993 00:20 | 8 |
| Awhile back, I was talking with a salesman in a stereo store, and he
mentioned that, on average, women have more acute hearing than men, yet
men purchase something like 90% of all hi-fi equipment.
So how did stereo equipment become such a "guy thing?"
|
15.69 | no talk no sale | JGODCL::NOORDIJK | | Thu Feb 11 1993 02:58 | 15 |
|
Hi, let me know what you think of this:
Yesterday on the dutch news they mentioned that carsalesmen always
talk to the men even when the wife standing next to him. They were
bothered by this because women usually make the decision for the
looks, color and idealism of use. The males however usualy want to
know how much fuel it uses or engine capacity.
The salesmen were told this way that they discriminate women and
through that miss out on certain sales.
I believe that this is true! People just never realized it!
Mork from Ork
|
15.70 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 08:53 | 9 |
| Yes, numbers! Scores of pro ball games and stats on individual players,
teams, etc. Numbers of preformance of cars, computers, etc. Seldom
preformances of stocks. Funny people cannot understand that economics
and money are two words that go together well. But start talking
numbers and economics and you glaze the eyes and brains with slumber.:)
Mention numbers and money of pro-ball and you get them sitting on the
edge of their seats.:)
|
15.71 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:10 | 18 |
| Re: .68
The most recent issue of Stereophile had an article on exactly this. There
were two main theories proposed:
1. Most of the stereo equipment, especially the high-end stuff,
is considered ugly by women.
2. Because most men have hearing losses in the high frequencies,
manufacturers emphasize equipment which has a lot of "sizzle"
in the treble. Women, whose high-frequency hearing tends to
be better, often find it painful to listen to equipment that
men think sounds good.
I'd also add that men seem to enjoy spending lots of money on collecting
"toys" to show how superior they are, and women find this pursuit pointless.
Steve
|
15.72 | tweet? woof? | BLUMON::QUAYLE | | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:38 | 7 |
| In _The Drifters_, one of James Michener's characters speculates that men
who focus money, time, and attention on intricate and powerful stereo
equipment may do so to compensate for their lack of understanding of
and/or control over their relationships with women.
;)
aq
|
15.73 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:40 | 9 |
| RE: .71
I can't agree with either of those idea's. I think that the reason
just comes down to the fact that women seem to not be interested in
the "sonic" qualities of music. They are interested in the music,
but if the bass is alittle too boomy or the midrange weak, they
don't care. It bothers me if the sound of the song is wrong.
Marc H.
|
15.74 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | notes$surfer | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:43 | 21 |
| > 1. Most of the stereo equipment, especially the high-end stuff,
> is considered ugly by women.
Could be. My wife LOVES the look of bang and olufsen stereo equipment.
I think it's overpriced and I never have any idea how to work the stuff. :-)
> 2. Because most men have hearing losses in the high frequencies,
> manufacturers emphasize equipment which has a lot of "sizzle"
> in the treble. Women, whose high-frequency hearing tends to
> be better, often find it painful to listen to equipment that
> men think sounds good.
Seems like a poorly thought out theory, given the fact that most modern
hi fidelity stereo equipment is equipped with a treble control. Except
on a B&O unit, it may be difficult to find. :-)
>I'd also add that men seem to enjoy spending lots of money on collecting
>"toys" to show how superior they are, and women find this pursuit pointless.
Interesting concept. I buy things because I like them, not because I'm
in some sort of imagined competition.
|
15.75 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | notes$surfer | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:54 | 11 |
| > I can't agree with either of those idea's. I think that the reason
> just comes down to the fact that women seem to not be interested in
> the "sonic" qualities of music. They are interested in the music,
> but if the bass is alittle too boomy or the midrange weak, they
> don't care. It bothers me if the sound of the song is wrong.
I know my wife is not "all women," but she listens to songs whereas I listen
to music. I'm far more interested in the aural qualities than she is; she is
more interested in the lyrical content then I am (typically.) She doesn't
care for instrumentals, I do. Maybe it has to do with women's apparent
greater concern with language...
|
15.76 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | I *hate* not breathing! | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:01 | 6 |
| re .74
Mark, B&O *is* grossly overpriced if musical bang for your buck is at
stake. Their aesthetics are great but sonically they suck. When
talking about high end start with Krell or something and work up. A
lot of those boxes are really ugly.
|
15.77 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:08 | 5 |
| RE: .75
I agree....I think you are on to it.
Marc H.
|
15.78 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:10 | 13 |
| I dunno. I assembled my stereo based on specific criteria that I
myself established with intent that it would produce sound that I
would enjoy hearing without bankrupting me. I wouldn't have a B&O
system if you gave it to me - I'd sell it and by decent equipment.
My wife also doesn't think much of instrumental music. She thinks a
lot of lyrics are downright dumb, but she doesn't feel that wordless
music speaks to her. I can buy that. De gustibus non est disputandum.
She is also pained by listening to sopranos. Says it hurts physically.
Question: Is the wordless/with-lyrics thing sex-linked?
-dick
|
15.79 | Music?? | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox - More My Age | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:18 | 6 |
| Personally.......
I like talk radio....8^)
Ken
|
15.80 | priorities & money | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:20 | 16 |
| I think it's a matter of how much money a person has and how they
budget what the money they have. For one thing, men (on average) still
earn a lot more money than women, so that means they have more money to
spend on stereo equipment, and can, therefore, spend more on it. The
other thing is that most women may have something else that they would
rather spend their money on than stereo equipment, such as a nice piece
of jewelry, for example. Most times in the past when I might have
spent money on expensive stereo equipment, I've bought antique jewelry
instead. The way I see it, I can still listen to the music on cheap
equipment, and then have the jewelry, too. If I spent all my money on
expensive stereo equipment, I'd have no money left for jewelry or
clothes. Of course, if I could afford it all, I'd like to have it all,
but I can't.
Lorna
|
15.81 | funny | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 10:22 | 7 |
| re .72, it's funny, because the guy I dated who had the best stereo
system, was also the one who was most into control?
I don't miss him, but sometimes I miss the stereo. :-)
Lorna
|
15.82 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 11 1993 11:08 | 13 |
| My wife is very much into music, being an amateur musician herself. She
is very particular about how a stereo system reproduces sound and notices
things that I don't, such as the "blatt" of a trumpet. She is intrigued
by toys (indeed, she won't let me replace my laserdisc player unless I can
find another one with a display door that hides the disc tray, whcih she
thinks is neat), but doesn't see the point in spending $1000 on a set of
speaker wires, as some men seem to.
I don't agree with those who say women aren't interested in how things sound,
though I imagine that most don't get caught up in the "tweek" mentality some
men do.
Steve
|
15.83 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:00 | 7 |
| �For one thing, men (on average) still
�earn a lot more money than women, so that means they have more
�money to
Yha know, there is this ol song that seems to begin to wear on yha that
gets to the point that one wants to throw up. Please cut out the cliche
or I will do some Bible thing-ie on you about eating the apple.
|
15.84 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:02 | 3 |
| Re .83
Got a problem with facts, have we?
|
15.85 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:19 | 6 |
| RE: .84
What does the reply's logic, if any, have to do with explaining why
men seem to enjoy Hi-Fi?
Marc H.
|
15.86 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:23 | 6 |
| No problem. Just getting tired of it. As in many of us are reminded on
a hourly basis and its just an ol song. And If you look up the stats
you will find that women who entered the work force in the 80's have
equaled and/or surpassed their mail counter parts. And if someone wishs
to discuss things with people openly vs polorization you have to
lighten up Some. Or as the feminist would say, "you just dont get it"
|
15.87 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:24 | 11 |
| re .85, what it has to do with it, is that there are probably a lot of
women who would like to have expensive stereo equipment, but don't
because they can't afford it.
There are more men who make enough money to have expensive stereo
equipment, than there are women who do, and that might have something
to do with why more men seem to have expensive stereo equipment. Get
it?
Lorna
|
15.88 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:25 | 6 |
| >
> Got a problem with facts, have we?
What facts are those? And their sources? Sounds like somebody gave their
opinion about how they think people are paid. An opinion, though.
|
15.89 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:27 | 13 |
| RE .88
Statistics, such as those in the United States Census figures of 1990,
indicate that males average higher pay for a given job than females.
They also indicate that males hold a higher percentage of high-paying
jobs than do females. It's pretty clear, then, that women *on average*
have less discretionary income, given that it costs a woman just as
much as it costs a man to rent an apartment or buy a car or visit the
grocery.
Facts enough for you?
-dick
|
15.90 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:27 | 9 |
| re .86, well, I didn't enter the workforce in the '80's, I entered the
workforce in the '60's, and since I'm a secretary, I don't have very
many male (or mail) counterparts.
Take your own advice and lighten up, yourself! Gee, if it bores you
just ignore it.
Lorna
|
15.91 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:29 | 11 |
| > re .85, what it has to do with it, is that there are probably a lot of
> women who would like to have expensive stereo equipment, but don't
> because they can't afford it.
I have seen some women that do indeed want an expensive <something>. What
goes unsaid a lot of times is that they bought some other expensive
<something> instead. I know a woman that owns her own home but complains
about not having things like this (and the fact that some men have them>.
I think the reasons there is a discrepancy is much more involved in the
old 'men make much more money than women' "fact".
|
15.92 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:35 | 14 |
| > Facts enough for you?
Opinions, still (except the wage study pointer).
I had been a supervisor here at DEC with both men and women reporting to me.
I got to see the salaries of those people; I also got to hear the women
complain about men getting paid more than women. I asked if they themselves
felt they were 'underpaid' and some said yes, they were. The funny part is
that those 'underpaid' women were actually getting paid MORE than the men.
I beleive this is another one of those "if you tell someone something long
enough, it becomes a fact".
-Joe
|
15.93 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:35 | 5 |
| re .91, as I had said in my first reply, I think it's a combination of
the two.
Lorna
|
15.94 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:36 | 8 |
| �I entered the workforce in the '60's, and since I'm a secretary,
�I don't have very
I could have flipped burgers, pumped gas, stocked shelves. I went back
to night school. I am sure you have the time as many good people do to
make a better life for themselves.:)
Peace, Love, and Handguns
|
15.95 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:37 | 7 |
| RE: .87
No...I don't "get it" because it isn't true. My Hi-Fi system was built
from homemade and second hand parts, because it was the only way I
could afford good sound on my budget. Your argument is wrong.
Marc H.
|
15.96 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:39 | 10 |
| re .92, it's not just a case of women in equal jobs getting paid less than
men. The fact is that women, on average, make less money than men.
It's usually because women - for whatever reason (that's not the point
here) - tend to hold lower paying jobs than men do. Secretaries,
receptionist, waitresses, childcare workers, etc., all make less money
than truck drivers, or most maintenance workers or garbage men, for
example.
Lorna
|
15.97 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:47 | 6 |
| .96 If you wish to pre destine yourself to comeriserate(sp) with others.
Then fine, the world is a bad-bad place and you have your cross to bare
with the rest of us. If you wish to do something about it, then get off your
pity pot and do it.
|
15.98 | i don't know what I'm going to do with you... | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:47 | 15 |
| re .94, you know, George, I am not complaining about anything here in
this note, so I don't know what your problem is. For the most part, I
have and have had a very good life, and I am certainly not complaining
about it here. All I was doing was giving my opinion as to why more
men seem to have expensive stereos, than women. I can't understand why
you seem to feel such animosity towards me, but can only imagine that
it's a combination of your having no interest in, or understanding of
feminism, and your having been hurt in the past by women. I'm sorry
that your negative experiences have closed you off to learning a better
understanding of the world and people around you.
Peace, Love and may you someday actually learn to spell,
Lorna
|
15.99 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i'm the bad guy? | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:50 | 6 |
| re .95, well, just because you built your own hi-fi system doesn't mean
all the men in the world have. But, you certainly must be resourceful
and clever at electronics. Good for you.
Lorna
|
15.100 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:53 | 12 |
| > here) - tend to hold lower paying jobs than men do. Secretaries,
> receptionist, waitresses, childcare workers, etc., all make less money
> than truck drivers, or most maintenance workers or garbage men, for
> example.
This implies that there are no male (receptionists, waitrons, childcare
workers); it also implies there are no female truck drivers, garbage 'men',
maintenance workers, etc. How do THEIR salaries compare within those
groups? Does a male secretary make more than a female secretary (etc)?
-Joe
|
15.101 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:53 | 12 |
| Lorna,
No problems. Just getting tired of this old song. Like someone saying
that womens place is home in the kitchen. And that is wrong idea. And
your constant slamming of this pity pot seems a real issue that you
wish nothing to do about execpt complain about. Nothing personal at
all. More facts? How about that in 1969 three times the amount of money
to put the man on the moon was spent on cosmetics alone.
Geo
ps I always have room to improve inspelling
|
15.102 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 13:59 | 17 |
| > Statistics, such as those in the United States Census figures of 1990,
> indicate that males average higher pay for a given job than females.
I'd prefer getting data from a financial area (IRS) than the census
(considering some of the stories told about people's love of filling
them out). Also, were very specific salaries listed (as off a W-2 form)
for very specific jobs? How broad were the categories given? I would
not consider comparing a consulting engineer's pay with a software
engineer II's pay if they were both pigeonholed under 'software engineer'
or 'computer programmer'.
> have less discretionary income, given that it costs a woman just as
> much as it costs a man to rent an apartment or buy a car or visit the
> grocery.
Depending on their individual tastes, of course :-)
|
15.103 | Loved them as a kid, but it tastes gross now! | JURAN::SILVA | Memories..... | Thu Feb 11 1993 14:08 | 7 |
|
Depending on their individual tastes, of course :-)
I guess then spaggetti o's are out, huh? ;-)
Glen
|
15.104 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 11 1993 14:13 | 11 |
| > I'd prefer getting data from a financial area (IRS) than the census
> (considering some of the stories told about people's love of filling
> them out).
People have more reason to lie about their income on tax forms than
on census forms.
Getting back to the question of stereo equipment, perhaps the question
should be "why do men spend a greater percentage of their disposable
income on stereo equipment than do women?" Assuming, of course, that
they do.
|
15.105 | anecdotal evidence alert | BLUMON::QUAYLE | | Thu Feb 11 1993 14:16 | 13 |
| In another company, when the female Finance/Payroll person left, a male
(younger and with less experience) was hired at a little more than 1 1/2
times her salary. When he left, a female of roughly comparable age/
experience was hired at a little more than 1/2 what he had been paid.
Here at Digital, I've only known of a few male secretaries. I've often
wished I could see their salaries, reviews, years experience, edu,
proficiency, etc.
aq
|
15.106 | different spending priorities | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | notes$surfer | Thu Feb 11 1993 15:05 | 5 |
| I think Lorna hit the nail on the head tens of notes ago. Many women prefer
clothes and jewelry and such to stereos. end of story.
There are men who make X and spend Y on stereo equipment, and women who
make 2X and spend Y/4 on stereo equipment. It's a simple matter of priorities.
|
15.107 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Feb 11 1993 15:42 | 12 |
| >
> I think Lorna hit the nail on the head tens of notes ago. Many women prefer
>clothes and jewelry and such to stereos. end of story.
And the wiser of two things to buy. Those items are portable and can be
enjoyed/used much more :-).
> There are men who make X and spend Y on stereo equipment, and women who
>make 2X and spend Y/4 on stereo equipment. It's a simple matter of priorities.
Of course, there are some people that make X$ and spend 2X$ on steroes :-)
|
15.108 | on men and women behavior when going shopping | STAR::ABBASI | i think iam psychic | Thu Feb 11 1993 15:52 | 16 |
| and women have big stamina to shop, men get tired quickly shopping.
when i was a little kid i used to have to go to the mall with my mother
and sisters to buy me a trouser, they spend the whole day in the mall !
they never get tired ! i collapse on the floor after one hour in
exhaustion , but they just keep going , i find this is an amazing thing,
i get bored from the mall after like 5 minutes from being in it, yet
many women seem to shop there all day from one shop to the other
with no problems !!
i think this is another one of the deep difference between men and
women. make sure you make a note of it.
\bye
\nasser
|
15.109 | | NOVA::FISHER | DEC Rdb/Dinosaur | Fri Feb 12 1993 06:31 | 5 |
| Mark, I can rationalize the X & Y and the 2X on the
basis of chormosome, the Y/4 must be the result of
stray hormones.
ed
|
15.110 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 01 1993 12:59 | 10 |
| How about this one.... The guys with the sneakers that stink sooooooo
badly! WoW! Talk about guy things to do. I re-read some yuck yucks that
were written in another file. And remember this guy who showed up to
workout with me, and had the worse case of rotten foot known to the
human nose! It was soooo bad, you could melt a driveway in the middle
of a raging Nor-eastern snow storm!:)
Lord only knows how he made it thru gym class in high school. But, I am
certain that there were many folks checking around to see if some small
animal didn't curl up and die someplace close of the sneakers.:)
|
15.111 | Dr. Shoals is investigating | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Mar 01 1993 13:06 | 4 |
|
I knew a guy who bought some heavy-duty odor-eaters for his sneakers
once. He disappeared without a trace. ;^).
fred();
|
15.112 | REAL Guy Things | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Sat Mar 20 1993 04:26 | 28 |
| 1. Browse through tool departments. I always do this after my wife has
dragged me through a fabric store going "Oh, feel THIS material!"
In turn, I take her to the tools and go, "Wow, heft this 10 pound
sledgehammer".
2. On Father's Day: The sales all center on either clothes (mainly
shirts and ties) or stepladders and buckets of paint. (Keep the man
working around the house).
3. Buying lots of tools we will probably never use.
4. Letting the wife mail out anniversary and birthday cards to the
relatives.
5. Setting off fireworks. Especially cherry bombs. Ever use a 1/4"
firecracker on a frog? A real guy thing there. Also plinking frogs with
BB guns. My sister never could get into the enjoyment of frog plinking.
6. Writing your name in the snow while taking a whizz. It would be very
interesting to see the ladies try this one.
7. Buying good hunting hounds.
8. Buying various kinds of rifles. "Let's see, I'll NEED a .243 for
woodchucks (so what if you live in downtown Boston), a .270 for deer,
a .30-06 for black bear and a .375 H&H magnum for grizzlies". "Oh,
yeah, better throw in a .44 magnum revolver in case I can't stop a
grizzly bear attack with my .375 H&H magnum".
|
15.113 | | TENAYA::RAH | Robert Holt @PAG | Sun Mar 21 1993 00:18 | 6 |
|
hefting biggish rock cod from the hold of a leaky tub
is a guy thing, even if they're being caught by the fishmyn's
mother.z
|
15.114 | | COMET::DYBEN | Grey area is found by not looking | Sun Mar 21 1993 13:29 | 18 |
|
1.) Teaching my son how to play baseball.
2.) Waking up to a panicked SO saying " I heard something go check it
out please" then you walk down to the fridge grab a beer and tour the
house looking for the pseudo prowler.
3.)Being the official taster tester for the SO's new and improved
recipe( smiling even if you don't like zuccini spaghetti):-)
4.) Always wash your hands in the litchen sink and use the best dish
towel possible to clean with..
Short list,
David
|
15.115 | Eeeeeeewwwwwww! | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Mon Mar 22 1993 09:06 | 13 |
| Re .112
> 5. Setting off fireworks. Especially cherry bombs. Ever use a 1/4"
> firecracker on a frog? A real guy thing there. Also plinking frogs with
> BB guns. My sister never could get into the enjoyment of frog plinking.
I never could get into blowing up frogs or plinking at them, either. I
don't think it's a real "guy" thing, I think it's a real "cruel" thing.
"Though the boys throw stones at frogs in sport, yet the frogs do
not die in sport but in earnest."
- Plutarch
|
15.116 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 22 1993 09:17 | 11 |
| I sigh over the Sears tool catalog with the best of them, but this past weekend
I saw something which was even a bit "too much" for me. It was in a catalog
called Griot's, which sells expensive tools for fixing expensive cars (at least
the copy writer seems to keep referring to how this and that is useful for
Porches; not sure how they'd work on my car. Anyway, the header on one of the
pages said "Own the largest automotive hammer collection on your block!" Is
this supposed to make me rush to the phone and buy the dozen or so different
specialty hammers they offer? Are there men who would get excited at this
prospect?
Steve
|
15.117 | Ba-Ha! | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 22 1993 09:34 | 3 |
| From "Steel Magnolia":
Pee in the sink. Hopefully take the dishes out first.:)
|
15.118 | i always hated the boys who were...and still do | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Mon Mar 22 1993 10:51 | 5 |
| re .115, I agree with you about a real "cruel" thing. Fortunately,
there are some guys who aren't into real cruel things.
Lorna
|
15.119 | Plink, plink! | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Tue Mar 23 1993 03:23 | 8 |
| >.115 and .118
The note is for guy things, remember? You want cruel, take a zoology
lab and pith your little froggy. This is where you stick a needle under
the base of the skull and wiggle it back and forth to break the cord to
the brain. Bet there's a lot more froggies dying in those labs than
being plinked by BB guns. Maybe you two should get together and try to
stop these frog murders in the labs.
|
15.120 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Mar 23 1993 08:44 | 3 |
| Or frogs that get squashed under the wheels of your car on a warm
rainy night when the hop out onto the pavement to get warm and flatten.
Road froggie pizza.:)
|
15.121 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:11 | 4 |
|
>> Road froggie pizza.:)
Road toad ala mode.
|
15.122 | cruelty is a guy thing | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:29 | 19 |
| Well, I refused to touch the frog in biology class and I brake for them
when they're in the road, and don't recall ever running over any.
And, besides, I think there's a difference between hurting something
for an important reason (such as teaching students anatomy), and hurting
something just for the hell of it.
Gee, when someone referred to killing frogs, for the hell of it, as
cruelty, someone else responded by saying that, well, afterall, this
*is* a topic for guy things. Does that mean *cruelty* is a guy thing?
(Something tells me that if I or some other woman had said that cruelty
is a guy thing, the men in here would have been up in arms.)
Of course, not that I disagree. From what I've seen of the world
cruelty does seem to be a guy thing. (Not all guys, but always guys!)
Lorna
|
15.123 | | CALS::DESELMS | | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:41 | 16 |
| RE: 15.112 by MYOSPY::CLARK
> 6. Writing your name in the snow while taking a whizz. It would be
> very interesting to see the ladies try this one.
Actually, any woman can do this... if her name is Dot...
RE: blowing up frogs.
I never got into frog murder, but gypsy moths were a differet story...
we used to fry them with magnifying glasses and squish 'em with our
bike tires and stuff.
And I'd do it again if I had the chance.
- Jim
|
15.124 | Not by nature. | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:12 | 22 |
| Lorna, I'm real happy about your note - at least I can relate to somebody out
there.
"Does that mean *cruelty* is a guy thing?"
In general I don't believe it is. What I find disturbing about the last few
replies is the notion of killing something - animal, insect or whatever - for
the fun of it. Granted, some of the replies might have been in jest but that's
some sense of humour.
"From what I've seen of the world cruelty does seem to be a guy thing"
Men do perpetrate acts of cruelty - unfortuneately - and Men are capable of
doing things to others of horrific proportions in the name of the cause or
flavour of the month but don't exclude women. There's been some major bitches
around in the past 80 years or so without going back through the History books.
I do believe however that Men in general aren't cruel by nature. So it's not
a "guy thing".
- Paul.
|
15.125 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:18 | 7 |
|
>> Of course, not that I disagree. From what I've seen of the world
>> cruelty does seem to be a guy thing. (Not all guys, but always guys!)
Laughable. Women have their own methods of being cruel.
It's usually not quite so overt, but it's there.
|
15.126 | sticks & stones may break my bones, etc... | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Tue Mar 23 1993 11:08 | 5 |
| re .125, well, personally, I'd rather have somebody gossip about me
than beat the crap out of me, but each to his/her own!
Lorna
|
15.127 | human nature | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 23 1993 11:41 | 8 |
|
>> re .125, well, personally, I'd rather have somebody gossip about me
>> than beat the crap out of me, but each to his/her own!
True, but the way the cruelty manifests itself is a separate issue.
Cruelty is not a "guy thing" - was my point.
|
15.128 | Kindness can kill yha. | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Mar 23 1993 12:51 | 5 |
| Lorna,
Do you dodge flocks of misquotes too?:) What about those butterflies
that you smack in the grill of your car? Do you stop for them too? Have
many rear end accidents?:)
|
15.129 | | BUSY::DKATZ | Elvis Has Left The Building | Tue Mar 23 1993 12:53 | 8 |
|
> Do you dodge flocks of misquotes too?:)
Well, I can't speak for Lorna, but I know that I personally try to
dodge as many misQUOTES as possible!
Daniel
|
15.130 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Tue Mar 23 1993 16:40 | 24 |
|
Cruelty comes in many forms. And yes, women can dish it out real well.
Recently, a woman got mad at me for something I wrote in email. So mad, in fact,
that she didn't answer my messages for 3 whole days. Didn't answer email, didn't
answer work phone, didn't answer home phone.
I had no idea she was even mad at me. I thought maybe she had literally died,
or was in the hospital. When I finally got a message three days later, she
told me I hadn't heard from her because she was so upset by what I had written,
and to please back off.
I was really mad ! First of all, I didn't really know why she was so mad.
Secondly, I had gotten so worried about her well being.
To me, it's *cruel* to wait 3 days before telling me you're mad. The uncruel
thing is to tell me right away. Give me a chance to apologize or to explain
myself. It's cruel to cut me off completely like that without giving me a chance.
(sure, if someone is being persistant or abusive, then sometimes cutting
someone off is a good move, but in this case her *first* reaction to anger was
the cut off. I'm pissed!)
/Eric
|
15.131 | look on the bright side | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | you've been a great audience | Tue Mar 23 1993 17:08 | 6 |
| re .130, well, at least she didn't go over to your house and shoot you,
which men seem to be doing more and more often, when upset, to the women
in their lives.
Lorna
|
15.132 | Hopefully, he was somewhat unique in this behavior, tho. | CSC32::CONLON | | Tue Mar 23 1993 17:24 | 14 |
| RE: blowing up frogs w/cherry bombs
My ex-husband once came close to blowing up our beloved cat with a
cherry bomb. He put the cherry bomb in an empty bedroom (in an
ashtray) then lit it and encouraged our cat to sniff the smoke from
the lit fuse (which he did.)
I walked into the room and saw what was happening and yelled and
stomped (sending the cat scurrying out of the room) just in time.
The bomb went off and hurt my ears, but at least the cat was safe.
By the time we split up, both our cats would hiss when my ex would
simply walk into a room. They were great judges of character (or
the lack thereof.)
|
15.133 | | BSS::L_BRADFORD | | Tue Mar 23 1993 17:37 | 5 |
| Getting away from 'cruel' things and into annoying yet endearing things
that 'my guy' does...like taking off underwear, spandex, shorts and
sweatpants all at one time and leaving the unique looking pile inside
out on the floor, or balling a pair of socks up and then putting it in
the laundry...
|
15.134 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Wed Mar 24 1993 06:40 | 4 |
|
your guy wears underwear? that's been a novel concept for some guys
I've met.
|
15.135 | Why those dirty, slimy, abusive.... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:39 | 5 |
| re last few
Ah yes, let't turn this into (yet another) male bashing exercise.
fred();
|
15.136 | huh !!!!!! | RTOVC0::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:50 | 4 |
|
fred();, what 'last few' are you referring to ?
- Paul
|
15.137 | last few == | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Mar 24 1993 11:57 | 4 |
|
.134, .133, .132, and .131
fred();
|
15.138 | They have a point. | RTOVC0::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 12:54 | 21 |
| I don't consider that male bashing fred.
Blowing up cats isn't a 'guy thing' - that's cruel - she's just bitching about
her ex-hubby and in that context too right.
Shooting women isn't a 'guy thing' - what do expect if guns are available to
everybody and anybody. Expect pathological nuts to get hold of them and blow
people away that's what.
Dropping clothes where you take them off isn't a 'guy thing' - that's a slob
thing.
Wearing no undies (I only wear boxers - sexy huh ?) isn't a 'guy thing' - that's
dumb. The danger of catching JT in the zip is too painful to imagine. Brings
tears to my eyes just thinking about it.
So why's that male bashing fred ? Has nothing to do with men.
- Paul.
|
15.139 | All you're doing is proving my point | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:26 | 9 |
|
>Blowing up cats isn't a 'guy thing' - that's cruel
>Shooting women isn't a 'guy thing'
>Dropping clothes where you take them off isn't a 'guy thing'
>Wearing no undies (I only wear boxers - sexy huh ?) isn't a 'guy thing'
Q.E.D.
fred();
|
15.140 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:34 | 4 |
| Blowing up frogs isn't a 'guy thing,' either (I hope!)
It did come up in the conversation, though.
|
15.141 | | RTOVC0::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:48 | 28 |
| "All you're doing is proving my point"
Sure, but my point is that they're bitching about non "guy things" which you
can't consider male bashing. It's just bitching - which women are very good at.
Now that's a typical 'guy thing'. Have you noticed that when women start bitching
men turn a deaf ear.
Procrastination is another good example of a 'guy thing'
The wife: "Have you taken the trash out yet darling"
Hubby: "Sure have honey"
thinks 'I wonder what's on TV'
5 minutes later
The wife: "When did you take the trash out darling ?"
Hubby: "Oh, just a little while ago light of my life"
thinks 'this is a great game'
5 minutes later
The wife: "Darling you HAVEN'T taken the trash out - I thought .."
explosion + ensuing chaos as the wife attacks hubby with a kitchen knife.
Hubby: thinks - 'oh shit I guess I'd better take the trash out now'
Well maybe that's not a 'guy thing' - more a me thing.
|
15.142 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:50 | 20 |
|
> re last few
>
> Ah yes, let't turn this into (yet another) male bashing exercise.
>
> fred();
A guy admitting he feels annoyed or insulted ? Now *that*'s not a guy
thing at all.
/Eric
|
15.144 | | RTOVC0::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 15:10 | 4 |
| Who wants easy access ? It's a lot more fun when the woman pulls your boxers down
....with her teeth !!!!
- Paul.
|
15.145 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Wed Mar 24 1993 20:36 | 10 |
| RE: .138
>> The danger of catching JT in the zip is too painful to imagine. Brings
>> tears to my eyes just thinking about it.
Repeat after me: "Button-fly, Button-fly, Button-fly!!!"
;-)
- "jt"
|
15.146 | I Brake for Frogs? | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Thu Mar 25 1993 02:28 | 17 |
| >.123. Thanks for the reply.
>.122
Braking for frogs? Are you kidding? This is a good way to get rear
ended. This reminds me of a ride I had last fall. The driver swereved
every which way to keep from running over a chipmunk. Almost put us
in the trees doing it. I was so mad I wanted to belt him. Idiot will
probably kill himself trying to avoid running over a chipmunk some day.
As to frog plinking being cruel: Not if you get them with a good head
shot which isn't easy with a BB gun. We used BB guns because our
fathers wouldn't let us use 12 gauge shotguns with number 6's. Those
are reserved for rabbits.
Take a trip to a slaughter house and see where your Big Macs and
Chicken McNuggets come from. (HINT: They aren't from animals that die
natural deaths).
|
15.147 | Oh boy !!!! | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu Mar 25 1993 05:30 | 18 |
| Little boys with guns in their hands and nothing between their ears except
air plink frogs - not men.
Personally I make a distinction between killing to serve a need and killing
for sport or enjoyment. I'm a lactose vegetarian by choice because I don't
want an animal to be destroyed to satisfy my needs. There are enough ways to
sustain oneself without having to eat meat. However, I accept that other
people choose to eat meat and that as a consequence animals will be destroyed.
Plinking frogs doesn't serve any basic need - it's a senseless act of
destruction.
- Paul
P.S. ::Clark - If I did eat meat I wouldn't eat a Big Mac - that's s..t food.
Thickens your arteries, puts layers of fat around your heart and liver and
makes your breath smell. No thank you. You should take more care of your body -
it's the only one you've got and the road is long and hard.
|
15.148 | can you say "quality of life" | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Mar 25 1993 09:15 | 17 |
| re .147
>I'm a lactose vegetarian by choice because I don't
>want an animal to be destroyed to satisfy my needs.
Good. That means more for the rest of us.
>P.S. ::Clark - If I did eat meat I wouldn't eat a Big Mac - that's s..t food.
>Thickens your arteries, puts layers of fat around your heart and liver and
>makes your breath smell. No thank you. You should take more care of your body -
>it's the only one you've got and the road is long and hard.
Funny how the life expectancy has skyrocketed now that we have all
this "unhealthy" stuff around.
fred();
|
15.149 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Mar 25 1993 09:36 | 5 |
| re .147, I agree with you (although I'm not a vegetarian). Thanks for
your refreshing reply, proving that cruelty is not always a guy thing.
Lorna
|
15.150 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Thu Mar 25 1993 10:02 | 3 |
| Wow- .147 pegged my piety meter.
Maybe I should say "little boys are self righteous- not men." :-)
|
15.151 | a life that requires running or giving up meat or women is not worth living :-) | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Mar 25 1993 10:12 | 8 |
| Even if I can live longer by not eating meat I'm not sure it's
worth it. I like meat. :-)
I think it may be a guy thing to do things that we know (or at least
suspect) may be bad for us because "it's fun." As the saying goes,
"you only live once - but if you do it right once is enough."
Alfred
|
15.152 | Give up women - you must be kidding | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu Mar 25 1993 10:27 | 2 |
|
Hang on Alfred, I never said anything about giving up women...
|
15.153 | Guy Stuff | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:20 | 30 |
| There is a BIG difference between killing animals as sources of food
(big Macs'/Chicken McNuggets) and killing animals for the hell of it.
I wonder that some have trouble seeing the distinction.
Last Fall I was operating a log splitter in my back yard. A couple
of 12 year old neighborhood boys were watching. A fat toad jumped
out from under the wood pile. The next thing I knew one of the boys
was in the process of fying the toat alive on the muffler of the log
splitter.
Yup a GUY thing to do all right... sure wasn't a little girl doing it.
The toad. I saved it before it got too fried... it happily hopped away
in the woods after I chewed the boys out throughtly. "Didn't they
REALIZE about the ecosystem and the strain earth is under etc etc.?"
Its funny THEY should have been teaching ME about stuff like that. I
am 50 won't be around as long to see the ruins.
Yup, guy stuff all right.
Jeff
|
15.154 | Frogs | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:26 | 6 |
| Oh yeah. When I was a kid I DID shoot frogs too. More out a sense
of hunting than because I wanted to watch the frogs suffer. But I
was WRONG to do it, and I know it now. So, I do understand the
hunting urge all right, but not the frying urge.
Jeff
|
15.155 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 25 1993 12:30 | 7 |
| .147
Paul,
What about all those goood chemicals they put on the foods you eat. And
if you say you grow your own. Good, remember that the soil that you
grow them in might have some good nuke waist in it.
|
15.156 | not necessarily a "guy thing" | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:20 | 9 |
| re .153
> Yup a GUY thing to do all right... sure wasn't a little girl doing it.
Even though it was a boy doing this in this particular thing, I don't
think "guys" have a corner on this type of behavior. I've seen little
girl do things just as cruel.
fred();
|
15.157 | Frogging | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Mar 25 1993 14:38 | 4 |
| Actually the last time I went 'frogging' was with my future WIFE, she
didn't seem to mind shooting them at the time either.
Jeff
|
15.158 | Reply to Replies | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Fri Mar 26 1993 03:52 | 19 |
| Jeez, glad I didn't mention frog baseball. Now, I will NOT kill a snake
for "fun" or target practice. Anything that eats rats, mice is A-OK
with me. Is it still okay to shoot rats and mice? How about rabid
raccoons?
ALL food is chemicals and those particular organizations of
hydro-carbon chains is what your body uses. If it isn't usable
chemicals upon digestion it isn't going to be detected as nutrition
by your body.
I have friends who are vegetarians and will not eat anything that has
eggs in it. They are both just as sick just as often as anyone else so
I don't buy it that it is necessarily healthier. Give up cheeseburgers
and pepperoni pizza? HA! Figure the odds. I do think there is a chance
they might be healthier looking corpses someday due to all those
vitamins being so good for your skin. This is a constant debate even
among nutritionists, medical researchers, etc. I am just biding my time
until someone "discovers" that salads are bad for you and we should all
eat more chocolate and pizza.
|
15.159 | Sex, Drugs and Rock n' Roll - Keep on Rockin' | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Fri Mar 26 1993 04:33 | 15 |
| Being a vegie doesn't equate with being a health freak, a nut, a desire
to live longer or a way of living which restricts the enjoyment of life -
for me anyway. Could it be that in America vegetarianism has negative
associations ?
Sure there are chemicals in the food I eat (hopefully not any nuclear waste)
and the alcohol I drink doesn't do my liver any good - I know. What I try to
practice however is damage control and preventative maintenance. I try not
to get drunk too often, I watch my food consumption and I exercise regularly.
I'm really a hedonist at heart - I just don't believe in killing or torturing
animals for fun, sport or senseless destruction.
- Paul.
|
15.160 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 08:39 | 6 |
| .159
Did you know that the FDA has an allowance of so many part of rat per
ton of grain that goes into the booze you drink? :) Never mind the
parts per million of rat that goes into those veggies that you eat
too.:) Parfa rat anyone?:-)
|
15.161 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 08:43 | 6 |
| .159
Guess that all goes to show you that you cannot go around expecting not
to eat some little animal someplace. And that all things that apear to
be, are not always what we are told they are.:)
|
15.162 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Fri Mar 26 1993 08:53 | 6 |
| Re .160
No, it's not so many parts of rat per ton of grain. It's so many parts
of rat excrement, so many parts of insect corpses, so many parts of...
It all comes out in the end, anyway.
|
15.163 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Fri Mar 26 1993 09:38 | 9 |
| re .159, I can totally identify with your last paragraph.
Regarding vegetarianism, I think it does have some negative
connotations for many people in the US. Most people in the US tend to
eat a lot of meat, so anyone who doesn't might be considered sort of a
new age health freak, or a nut, or something, by many people.
Lorna
|
15.164 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:22 | 11 |
| Lorna,
Hey! I can relate to that. Being green with a lizards tail, from doing
too much Joe Wieder magic potions has its draw back. Esp when you
cancle the subscription to the mags. You get the operator on the other
side to wave her magic wand and.... >POOOF!< your a toad. Or a wart.:)
I use to be married to a vetarian. Execpt she wasn't in it for the
cause of stopping the killing of little animals.
Welp.... Back to doing my single tail dumbel press's.
|
15.165 | <--- they went thata' way | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:22 | 5 |
|
Maybe we need a constitutional amendment forbidding the discrimination
against vegetarians?
fred()
|
15.166 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:26 | 5 |
|
George, Aw, geeze, right in the middle of trying to eat a bagel.
Don't you have _any_ decency 8^}.
fred();
|
15.167 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:38 | 4 |
| re .164, George, you confuse me! Did you say that you're a lizard?
Lorna
|
15.168 | Time to go home .. - another day another dollar | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:49 | 3 |
| George, it's not a cause just an act of conscientiousness - on my part.
- Paul
|
15.169 | rats! | 11SRUS::BROWN | On time or else... | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:52 | 14 |
|
I was reading recently about restaurants in China that specialize
in rat cuisine. All sorts of stir-fried rodent goodies are on the
menu, with the critters in question being considered a delicacy.
Rat is a "hot" food in the Chinese gustatory lexicon (crab, for
example, is a cold food and must be tempered with lots of ginger
and garlic to prevent chilling the diner). Apparently rat makes
the diners sweat profusely, so the restaurants are filled with
people stripped to the waist.
Oh, the relevance to this topic? Rat restaurants cater to a
predominantly male clientele. Apparently rat is a "manly meal."
Ron
|
15.170 | Sounds like John Cleese & co. .....;^) | STRATA::PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:07 | 10 |
| Re. last few entries....
SET MODE = MONTY/PYTHON
"One strawberry tart without so much rat in it....."
;^) ;^) ;^) ;^)
--Eric--
P.S. We now return you to the rathole in progress. ;)
|
15.171 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:08 | 5 |
| re .169, maybe the women just don't feel comfortable with being
"stripped to the waist" while they eat. :-)
Lorna
|
15.172 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:27 | 8 |
| Lorna,
What if it was a large 6 foot rat stripped to the waist? Would you be
upset?:)
Pass the spam and parfa rat please.:)
|
15.173 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:44 | 8 |
|
A man winked at me this morning, and it occurred to me that this
is primarily a "guy thing" to do. One that I find devastatingly
charming, too. This, of course, will put me in even better stead
with the radical feminist contigent. 8^)
Diane
|
15.174 | Rats | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:59 | 13 |
| Rat? Its all in your mind. Properly prepared I suppose its as healthy
a meal for you as most other meats. Don't eat it raw... could get
tapeworms... my cat does from eating them. You would think I didn't
feed him, but obviously he thinks rat is an appropriate suppliment to
his meals... to each their own.
Rabin coons ok to shoot? Give me a break. How does shooting a
dangerous sick animal equate to killing frogs for fun?
Hey, you want to shoot frogs go to it...its not against the law, yet,
anyway. For me... I think its wrong.
Jeff
|
15.175 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:21 | 17 |
| RE: .173 Diane
> A man winked at me this morning, and it occurred to me that this
> is primarily a "guy thing" to do. One that I find devastatingly
> charming, too.
Well, I've seen lots of women wink (perhaps they meant something
different by it, though. Who knows.)
> This, of course, will put me in even better stead with the radical
> feminist contigent. 8^)
I don't know any radical feminists, but I can't even begin to imagine
why it would bother anyone for you to find winks charming. They really
are charming (IMO) - most of the time, anyway.
Best luck in this endeavor, though.
|
15.176 | everyone winks | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:30 | 9 |
| > A man winked at me this morning, and it occurred to me that this
> is primarily a "guy thing" to do. One that I find devastatingly
> charming, too.
I too have seen women wink at men. In fact I was attending a wedding
and the bride winked at me as she walked down the aisle. I was not
an expected guest and she wanted to let me know she saw me.
Alfred
|
15.177 | federal case number 17000 | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:45 | 22 |
|
>> Well, I've seen lots of women wink (perhaps they meant something
>> different by it, though. Who knows.)
Yeah, that's why I used the word "primarily". I've seen
women wink, too, but many more men than women.
>>I don't know any radical feminists, but I can't even begin to imagine
>> why it would bother anyone for you to find winks charming. They really
>> are charming (IMO) - most of the time, anyway.
Well, I can't help if it your imagination is lacking. 8^)
>> Best luck in this endeavor, though.
What endeavor is that, pray tell? Geez, just when I think I
know about all of my endeavors, I suddenly have a new one. No
rest for the weary.
Di
|
15.178 | .175 | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:48 | 2 |
| A wink is the same as a nod to a blind horse.:) Sounds like a title to
a Rod Stewart album....:)
|
15.179 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:55 | 23 |
| RE: .177 Diane
> Yeah, that's why I used the word "primarily". I've seen
> women wink, too, but many more men than women.
I've seen about the same number of winks from men and women, so
I guess our experiences differ. (Big surprise, eh?) :>
>> I don't know any radical feminists, but I can't even begin to imagine
>> why it would bother anyone for you to find winks charming. They really
>> are charming (IMO) - most of the time, anyway.
> Well, I can't help if it your imagination is lacking. 8^)
Your projections and wishful thinking aren't, though. :>
>> Best luck in this endeavor, though.
> What endeavor is that, pray tell? Geez, just when I think I
> know about all of my endeavors, I suddenly have a new one. No
> rest for the weary.
Who said it was a new one? :>
|
15.180 | twisted sister | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Mar 26 1993 13:06 | 15 |
|
>> I've seen about the same number of winks from men and women, so
>> I guess our experiences differ. (Big surprise, eh?) :>
Yeah, maybe you're a lot cuter.
>> Your projections and wishful thinking aren't, though. :>
Wishful thinking? Hmmm, how _do_ you come up with this stuff? It's
a truly amazing thing to watch.
>> Who said it was a new one? :>
Let's see - I think that was me.
|
15.181 | Relax. | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 13:23 | 11 |
| RE: .180 Diane
People (men and women) wink for a lot of different reasons, as
Alfred's note suggested. Another example is to wink at people
standing nearby after making a humorous comment to someone.
Folks in my group (men and women) do this very frequently.
> Wishful thinking? Hmmm, how _do_ you come up with this stuff? It's
> a truly amazing thing to watch.
Just funnin' with ya, Diane. :> Couldn't resist.
|
15.182 | my mentor | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Mar 26 1993 13:52 | 5 |
|
>> People (men and women) wink for a lot of different reasons, as
Gosh, I learn so much from you, Suzanne. I'm forever grateful. 8^)
|
15.183 | Wrapping up this rathole... | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:02 | 7 |
|
So glad I could be of help to you, Diane. :>
(Funny you should use the term 'mentor' since I do actually work as
a mentor to several engineers at Digital as part of my job.)
See ya...
|
15.184 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:07 | 5 |
|
>> (Funny you should use the term 'mentor' since I do actually work as
>> a mentor to several engineers at Digital as part of my job.)
Lucky them. (wink, wink)
|
15.185 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:38 | 4 |
| Well, they did each *ask* for me (individually and quite specifically)
as a mentor. (It's part of our business here.)
I liked your winks, though. They were charming. :>
|
15.186 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Fri Mar 26 1993 15:06 | 7 |
| Well, for some reason, I find winks annoying, whether it's a man or a
woman. I think it looks stupid. (This has nothing to do with being a
radical feminist, since I'm not as proven by the fact that I like to
have doors held for me, and have let men buy me things.) :-)
Lorna
|
15.187 | Back to our regularly scheduled cruelty | MSBNET::KELTZ | Let those who Ride Decide! | Fri Mar 26 1993 15:20 | 12 |
| Well, getting back to the original topic, one of the guy things we use to do
when I was in the Navy was to sit on the fantail (back for you land lubbers)
of the ship and throw AlkaSelzer tablet up in the air. The Sea Gulls would
grab and eat them.
I'll leave it to your imagination what happened about 3 minuits after the gull
ate the tablet. Yech! I still don't beleave we used to do that, but the
military does strange things to the mind.
Just my passing perversion,, :-)
GONZO
|
15.188 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 26 1993 16:00 | 2 |
| .187
Hope the guls didn't have to go to captins mast.:)
|
15.189 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Mon Mar 29 1993 08:36 | 4 |
| >Could it be that in America vegetarianism has negative associations ?
Definitely, largely due to the almost religious fervor associated
with the practice.
|
15.190 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Mar 29 1993 08:49 | 11 |
| >>Could it be that in America vegetarianism has negative associations ?
>
> Definitely, largely due to the almost religious fervor associated
>with the practice.
Not only that but it's associated with not eating meat. :-) But the
common (apparent) attitude among many American vegetarians that those
who eat meat are "bad people" is probably the source of a lot of
antagonism.
Alfred
|
15.191 | spit first | NHASAD::GARABEDIAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 09:45 | 6 |
|
Guy thing to do :
Spit into the urinal before peeing.
|
15.192 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Mon Mar 29 1993 09:51 | 2 |
| Guy thing? Flush the urinal before/while peeing so your tinkle will be
inauduble.
|
15.193 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 29 1993 10:01 | 7 |
| How about tinkling in well lit alleys drunk out of your skull?
Or chalange limo drives for a free ride when there is a car load of
people?
I have had toooo many close calls with this! :)
How about just spitting chewing tobacco in public!
|
15.194 | | BUSY::DKATZ | White Men Can't Grump | Mon Mar 29 1993 10:21 | 4 |
| Actually, I've always wondered why so many guys seem to have difficulty
*flushing* a urinal...yech...
Daniel
|
15.195 | CRUEL | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 12:37 | 20 |
| Re: seagulls
I too was in the Navy (4 years as an enlisted man on a carrier). Some
of the laundry guys got hold of a cat and spun it 'dry' in an
industrial spin dryer on the ship.
I bring this up as a further illustration of mans' un 'kind' ness
to other creaters. It STILL enrages me to think of what those guys
did to that cat (and this is 25 YEARS later). If I had caught them
in the act I would have gotten beaten to a pulp by them but I would
given it my best shot to beat the sxxx out of them.
I don't don't consider spin drying cats or throwing Alka Seltzer
Tablets to seagulls (to watch them blow up their stomachs) guy things
to do. I consider those things just plain cruel and a further
illustration of mankinds ability to pick on creatures weaker than
themselves.
Jeff
|
15.196 | Flushing | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 12:41 | 5 |
| Difficulty flushing: There are only two hands. One to hold the
cigarette, the other for........ none left to flush with.
|
15.197 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Mon Mar 29 1993 12:44 | 10 |
| re .195, I agree with you. Cruelty of the type you describe is
horrible, and I would appreciate if people could refrain from giving
any more explicit examples. It's really sickening to read.
I know this is Mennotes, and I'm a woman, but this Notesfile is open to
all DEC employees, and I would prefer not having to read about such
disgusting examples of man's cruelty to other living creatures.
Lorna
|
15.198 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:15 | 2 |
| Next unseen is an option available to those who are not comfortable
with any given passage.
|
15.199 | Lighten up, will'ya | MSBNET::KELTZ | Let those who Ride Decide! | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:19 | 13 |
| WRT Cruelty:
I do not dispute that these things are cruel, just citing an example. I another
noter said, Next Unseen is the best option.
Also, I do not do things like this any more.
I think that the "Guy" things we do change with who we are and where we are in
pur lives.
Anyway, just rambling, sorry if I offended anyone's delicate constitutions.
GONZO
|
15.200 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:22 | 3 |
|
Is it a 'guy thing' to seek snarfs? :>
|
15.201 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Simply Resistible | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:42 | 1 |
| Not at all.
|
15.202 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:54 | 2 |
| If vegetarians have a hard time in America, I wonder how they fare in a place
where people *really* eat a lot of meat -- like Argentina.
|
15.203 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:58 | 15 |
| re .198, well, since I'm not omniscient, I sometimes don't realize that
a particular reply is going to offend me until I've already read it,
and by then it's too late. It's possible to next unseen past replies
by particular noters I might not like, but I can't always predict what
reply by a noter, I don't usually try to avoid, might be especially
offensive.
One thing this topic has done is remind me why I never wanted to have a
son. Thank god my only child is a girl. If I had had a boy I probably
would have dropped him off by the side of the road somewhere to fend
for himself. (Hope that admission doesn't offend anyone's delicate
sensibilities!)
Lorna
|
15.204 | Gulls etc. | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 15:33 | 32 |
| Sorry Lorna, didn't mean to upset you, really. And I agree you can't
know it offended you until it offended you. Next unseen is too late.
Now, talking about cruelty to children, (smile). I assure you Lorna
not all boys do those sorts of things (beat on animals) and its not
the wimps and sissies who don't. Don't give up on MANkind yet Lorna.
For every case of cruelty there are hundreds of acts of kindness you
don't hear about.
The the noter who talked about the gulls. I know what you mean. We
do grow out of certain behaviors. (I admitted that I have shot frogs)
so am hardly a complete saint myself.
When in a setting like that.... a bunch of guys sitting around on the
fantail chewing the breeze and some joker pulls out an Alka Seltzer
Tablet and tosses it in the air for a gull to eat. That DOES pose an
interesting social problem if you object to that behavior. Do you
do the 'guy thing' and go along with it and maybe toss a few tablets
yourself, or do you walk away, or do you actively object, thus risking
your social standing with the group? On a closed society like a ship
that is no small risk.....getting the stigma of being a softie or wimp
etc.
As I said, I think that in my case my anger would overcome any social
common sense. I can't stand seeing weaker, or innocent creatures being
taken advantage of like that.
I think that most guys would recognize that guy thing or not, it is a
wrong thing to do whether they admitted it to the group or not.
Jeff
|
15.205 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 29 1993 16:39 | 7 |
| Regarding seagulls and Alka-Seltzer tablets - has anyone actually SEEN this,
or are you just retelling a story someone else told you? I've read a number
of times that this doesn't really happen any more than "fill in your favorite
child actor or singer" died after swallowing a bunch of Pop Rocks, that the
worst that can happen is that the seagull belches.
Steve
|
15.206 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 29 1993 16:54 | 5 |
| �worst that can happen is that the seagull belches.
or pass over captins mast!:) Bombs Away!! AAAH! Got one of them
suckers!:) Direct hit! Wait till I get back to land and tell the other
gulls of how I hit that bald guy.;)
|
15.207 | It's not my fault I'm not American | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue Mar 30 1993 04:11 | 2 |
|
Ok, ok, ok, ok, ok - what's a snarf ?
|
15.208 | explaining snarf notes to new DECeee | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Tue Mar 30 1993 05:13 | 24 |
| >Ok, ok, ok, ok, ok - what's a snarf ?
i cant believe you dont know what a snarf is? you must be a new
DECeeee?
ok, i explain a snarf, a snarf is used mostly by experienced noters
who have been around more and they use it on notes with significance
numbers, usually numbers like 100, 500, 1000, or even ones with x69x
and x66x and may be x50x in them. (although the most popular snarfs
are used with x000x and x69x ones).
very experienced noters might have collaborators to them who make a notes
just to get close to the snarf number, then the lead noter quickly
comes in and write the note and get the snarf note for themselves.
there are many combinations to the above, but with time you'll get
the hang of it.
hope this help.
\nasser
|
15.209 | | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue Mar 30 1993 06:14 | 13 |
|
Hey, Nasser - where've you been man ?
Thanks for the explanation - sure helped. No I'm not a new hand. I've been
around DEC since 1981 - August 3rd 9:30am to be exact. I just never had the
time to note before. My last job was done away with in a re-shuffle so since
then I keep my frustrations at bay (= checked) through noting.
- Paul
|
15.210 | Bad Comment | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 30 1993 09:39 | 6 |
| RE: .203
Well, actually, I find a comment like yours more offensive than a story
about shooting toads.
Marc H.
|
15.211 | those are the breaks | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:15 | 4 |
| re .210, yeah, so?
Lorna
|
15.212 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:55 | 7 |
| RE: .211
Just putting things in perspective for you. Feeling bad about hurting
animals is certainly O.K., but to not want a human life that is a gift
because of its sex surely is far more of a deep hurt.
Marc H.
|
15.213 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Tue Mar 30 1993 11:11 | 18 |
| re .212, well, fortunately, my only child, is a beautiful female, and
we're thrilled with each other, so don't shed any tears about the
situation.
Personally, I don't see anything wrong with someone saying they would
prefer to have children of one sex over the other. I just don't happen
to like little boys (in general), while I love little girls (in
general). As my mother used to say, most boys don't really turn human until
they get to be around 18 or 20.
Also, just to clue you in, Marc, I really don't need you to put
anything in perspective for me. How presumptuous of you. (Do you
think that just because you are a man that you should be able to put
things in perspective for women? I've noticed men often seem to feel
that way.)
Lorna
|
15.214 | Deep hurt? You ain't seen nothin' yet! | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Tue Mar 30 1993 11:11 | 6 |
| Your mileage may vary, Marc. That's okay. In China, parents are still
reportedly exposing girl babies because they are worthless. In India,
parents have set their own homes on fire to kill daughters asleep
inside because they were a liability - dowry, you know...
-dick
|
15.215 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 30 1993 11:28 | 9 |
| RE: .213
Lorna...you have *NO* clue as to what type of person I am. You
have *NO* clue as to what type of family I have, or, what type
of relationship I have with my wife. I see now that anymore
comments with you would just be a waste of time.
Good Bye.
Marc H.
|
15.216 | goodbye is too good a word | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | I want Spring *now*! | Tue Mar 30 1993 11:33 | 9 |
| re .215, what are you talking about? I didn't say anything about your
family or your wife!
Also, let me remind you, that while I don't know you, you don't know me
either, but I agree that exchanging any further comments would be a
waste of time.
Lorna
|
15.217 | | JURAN::VALENZA | I'm notes about you. | Tue Mar 30 1993 11:35 | 6 |
| >As my mother used to say, most boys don't really turn human until they
>get to be around 18 or 20.
And sometimes not even then.
-- Mike
|
15.218 | Being a Son, I think they are great! | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Wed Mar 31 1993 07:07 | 5 |
| >.203. You stated if you had had a son you probably would have dropped
him off beside the road. From your comments I bet if you had a son he
would probably leave on his own will without any urging from you. Do
you hate all men or just a select few? Such a cruel statement. Sure
feel sorry for any boys that try to date your daughter in high school.
|
15.219 | i needed a good laugh | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter and Diamonds | Wed Mar 31 1993 10:09 | 10 |
| re .218, your reply makes me laugh. You're replying to the woman whose
husband once said, "You could find something appealing about a wino
passed out in the gutter!" To which one of my girlfriends, who was
with us, burst out laughing, and said, "I know! Lorna *loves* men!"
I like men. I'd just rather have somebody raise'm til they get old
enough to be interesting.
Lorna
|
15.220 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the other white meat | Wed Mar 31 1993 10:36 | 5 |
| >.203. You stated if you had had a son you probably would have dropped
>him off beside the road.
If a man said such a thing about daughters in =wn=, who wants to take bets
on how long before the lynch mob arrived?
|
15.221 | Snarf, Snarf, Snarf !!!!! | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 31 1993 10:40 | 16 |
|
My wife doesn't want to have boys and neither did her mother.
My grandmother didn't like girls - she thought they squeeled and giggled too
much.
I don't care what the sex of my child is as long as it's healthy.
Lorna is entitled to her opinion - and she's entitled to express it - so can
we cut the hate mail and get back to some good discourse - please.
You pay your dues you take your choice. Each to their own - let's respect that.
- Paul.
P.S. Do I get points for snarfing 220 ?
|
15.222 | DAMN - WHO BEAT ME. | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Wed Mar 31 1993 10:42 | 5 |
|
Sxxx somebody beat me to it - can you believe that. Just when you see the winning
post...
Damn.
|
15.223 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 31 1993 10:57 | 4 |
| There's a big difference between expressing a preference for children of
a particular sex and saying you'd abandon your child if it was of the
wrong sex. Besides being reprehensible, child abandonment is illegal
is the civilized world.
|
15.224 | Lorna, you need help.:) | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 31 1993 11:07 | 1 |
|
|
15.225 | besides my son would have been *nice* | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter and Diamonds | Wed Mar 31 1993 11:08 | 6 |
| Well, I doubt I would have really abandoned my child if it had been a
boy.......unless I had caught him being mean to animals, and then I
might've considered it!
Lorna
|
15.226 | Lorna, you still need help.:) | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 31 1993 11:14 | 1 |
|
|
15.227 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter and Diamonds | Wed Mar 31 1993 11:20 | 2 |
| help with what?
|
15.228 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Wed Mar 31 1993 12:14 | 11 |
| Lorna, if you'd had a son, he *would* be nice!!
As for me, I didn't know what it would be like to raise a son until
I had one. I figured that little boys don't like to hug or be touched
at all, so I got in all the hugging possible in the first few years.
My son is still an excellent hugger to this day (and I still get one
from him almost daily.)
I would love to have had both (a boy and a girl,) but I'm happy to
have had a child like my son.
|
15.229 | | SMURF::BINDER | Vox turbae uox Dei | Wed Mar 31 1993 13:01 | 4 |
| If I may suggest... it appears that Lorna subscribes to a slight
variation of the bunghole theory of child-rearing: Put the kid in a
barrel, feed it through the bunghole until its 18th birthday, and then
drive in the bung.
|
15.230 | If they could only miss those teen years | STUDIO::AMADO | Renee' | Wed Mar 31 1993 13:39 | 12 |
| Hey sometimes I wish that I could have payed someone to take my son. But
they say that's against the law. ;.)... I tried when they were little,
but those rug rats kept finding home......
Anyways, I think boys are harder to raise, I always wanted boys until I
had one of each...Don't get me wrong I wouldn't trade him for anything
in the world except he could be little again and not hit those teenage
years, or hurry past these teenage years. It's those alien years....
TEENS.
A MILLION DOLLARS WOULD DO.... ;.)
|
15.231 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 31 1993 13:49 | 15 |
| I have a friend who has/had a little girl. She went thru those teen
years.:) And she use to slam, kick, STAB with her finger nail file,
the hollow core bedroom door. He (dad) replace this lovely door at
least three times. Then he bought a solid core fire door. Wood of
course. Welp..... The door lasted sometime. But what abuse it took!
Anyhow, when he gave his daughter away in marraiage... He gave her that
last door that took the abuse. Better to take out your hostility on the
inamate door than something else. :)
I have seen my dad bend a quarter inch roll poker in half! And then
when my sister was still standing mouthing off, streighten it out! I
don't know how easy it is to raise a teen. I know I have something too
look forward too. I hope that I have the paitents that my dad
had/has.:)
|
15.232 | | COMET::COSTA | This year we get serious. | Wed Mar 31 1993 19:07 | 5 |
|
Hmmmm, so much for guy things.
|
15.233 | Here's a "guy" thing .. | MORO::BEELER_JE | We'll always have Paris | Wed Mar 31 1993 21:14 | 9 |
| .232> ...so much for guy things.
Nope. I did one two nights ago. Went out, got drunk out my skull.
Woke up the next morning in someone else's bed .. I think I had
fun .. don't really remember.
Ladies don't do that kind of stuff ...
Bubba
|
15.234 | oooh my! | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Apr 01 1993 00:53 | 11 |
| I had a buddy in school who got drunk out of his skull, and late, late
that night crashed on the floor of my dorm room, fully clothed. Woke
up the next morning (or perhaps afternoon), and went to the men's room,
only to find that he'd lost his skivvies.
He was a dorm hero for weeks!
Ladies don't do that kind of stuff ...
Jon
|
15.235 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | I *hate* not breathing! | Thu Apr 01 1993 04:54 | 1 |
| Cultural differences problem: skivvies?
|
15.236 | To an English man .... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu Apr 01 1993 05:33 | 3 |
|
skivvies are underpants or undies (male variation) or panties (female variation).
|
15.237 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Apr 01 1993 08:21 | 9 |
| RE: .233
> Ladies don't do that kind of stuff ...
Ladies don't but some women do. :-) The guy thing is to talk about it.
A woman wouldn't admit to it while guys brag about it.
Alfred
|
15.238 | Bondage thing I guess | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox - More My Age | Thu Apr 01 1993 13:13 | 20 |
| Took a groom out for his last night as a bachlor. Did all the strip
joints in the North End (San Franciso). He got to touch Carol Doda's
cement chest (she of the famous first implants). We were all smashed
and I came up with a wonderful guy idea..........since the best man was
a SF cop....we'd handcuff the groom to second base at Candlestick Park.
Problem was...we forgot what we did when we all woke up at 10:30 AM the
next morning.....All of us got showered and cleaned up, donned the
light orange tuxes with black slacks.....lookin' spiffy. Wedding was
due to start at 1:00 PM sharp. At 11:45 I got to the church and made
sure everything was fine........then I called the best man and asked
him if he'd seen the groom? Then it hit me! I got to Candlestick around
12:20 and he was still sleeping!!!!!Just a coat for a blankie...The cop
showed up around 12:35.....groundskeeper let us get him into the
showers, Best man showed up at 12:45......SFPD showed up at 12:55 and
took us at supersonic speed to the church.....we got there 8 minutes
late.......Of course I got blamed for everything............
Women would never do that........
Ken
|
15.239 | | ASDG::FOSTER | radical moderate | Fri Apr 02 1993 09:36 | 4 |
| re .238
I think your bottom line is fairly accurate. No, most of us wouldn't do
that.
|
15.240 | yeah, it must be a guy thing | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | they say compassion is a virtue | Fri Apr 02 1993 14:42 | 5 |
| re .238, nope, never done that to one of my girlfriends. Never even
thought of it. We usually go shopping or out to lunch.
Lorna
|
15.241 | it was a _mostly_-guy thing ... | SOLVIT::JOHNSTON | the White Raven ...raving? | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:11 | 9 |
| my friends had the good taste not to leave me in that mattress cover
hanging from a mesquite tree the night before my wedding
the did it a month earlier
Texas Aggies ... gotta love 'em!
Annie
|
15.242 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:14 | 13 |
|
> Nope. I did one two nights ago. Went out, got drunk out my skull.
> Woke up the next morning in someone else's bed .. I think I had
> fun .. don't really remember.
>
> Ladies don't do that kind of stuff ...
If ladies don't do that kind of stuff, then you were in bed wi
|
15.243 | Moi? | MORO::BEELER_JE | We'll always have Paris | Fri Apr 02 1993 22:14 | 9 |
| .242> If ladies don't do that kind of stuff, then you were in bed with
Damned if I know. If you find out let me know. I want to know how I
did.
Bubba
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15.244 | | DOCTP::BINNS | | Wed Sep 15 1993 13:44 | 36 |
| >> <<< Note 15.19 by CADSYS::BELANGER >>>
>> -< I hate cities like Denver >-
>>
>> re:15.14 (JURAN::VALENZA)
>>
>> >New England cities like Boston or Providence, with their spaghetti
>> >street layouts,.
>>
>> All of this assumes that straight streets laid out in a grid are desirable.
>>I disagree
A *very* belated comment:
All this assumes that streets of cities like Boston were *not* laid out as
grids. That is an incorrect assumption. In almost all instances they *were*
laid out in a grid, at least in as much a grid as the confines of geography
would ensure -- it's the simplest way to divide up and sell land.
The old streets of (downtown) Boston follow a grid within the old Shawmut
peninsula. As land was filled, parallel streets grew up on the new land. As
*big* chunks of land were filled (like Back Bay or the South End) whole new
grids of streets were created. As the "streetcar suburbs" grew in areas
that were annexed later, grids again appear everywhere. And forget the old
cowpath myth. Boston was always a business and government center, not a
farm town, and people decided where to put the streets, not cows. (That's
really just as true in farm towns, too)
It's not the grid-like pattern that is the problem (there is a current
theory that even suburban housing should be done grid-like and that
meandering suburban streets are anti-social). It's the scale of buildings,
the mix of uses, the scale of the streets themselves (hopeless multi-lane
barriers or something that people have a fighting chance to get across)
that are the keys.
Check out Jane Jacobs' classic "The Life and Death of American Cities" for
a description of all this.
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15.245 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, MRO AXP BPDA | Wed Sep 15 1993 22:26 | 22 |
| re: streets
I grew up in Providence, so did my parents. One fine day, we went
looking for a store on Westminster St. We were looking for school
supplies.
No sweat, we all knew where Westminster St was. We get there, and
find out that the addresses only go up to something like 500, and this
store is supposed to be 800-something.
Well, to make a long story short, after more than an hour of checking
and double checking, we finally stopped by the police station. They
informed us that Westminster Street is actually two pieces, one down-
town, and one up towards Federal Hill. Viewed from above, you can see
that it was one street at one time, but got broken up by 95 and related
construction.
How nice.
And Boston is even worse. Half the time you'll run into a one-way
street that wasn't one-way last time you were there or was one-way in
your direction. A street map is a necessity in Boston.
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15.246 | Why do you need more than one street? ;-) | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Sep 16 1993 03:10 | 5 |
| You'd love the villages in this area. Typically they are built on
hills, and *the* street goes in a spiral to the church at the top.
Short passageways with steps connect different parts of the spiral, but
with a car, you can drive up to the church and then reverse back down
and you have seen the whole village.
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15.247 | | DOCTP::BINNS | | Thu Sep 16 1993 09:42 | 19 |
| re: 245, streets in two pieces.
That, too, is not uncommon in Boston. Then there's the phenomenum of
completely unrelated streets with the same name! Biggest example:
Washington Street 1)The main one that stretches from downtown allthe
way down through Roslindale and Hyde Park 2)the one in Dorchester 3)the
one in Brighton. Reason being, of course, that Dorchester and Brighton
were once independent towns.
Brighton has another weird street naming problem. Starting at the
Brookline town line (where the street is Winchester Street), within the
space of 4 blocks the same street has 4 different names -- it's been 20
years since I was a cab driver and knew all this, so I'm a bit foggy on
the names, but I think it went Kelton, Warren, Arlington, and Sparhawk.
(Warren and Arlington are also examples of completely different streets
in different sections of the city with the same name, and that's
without even differentiating between Warren Ave and Warren Street!)
Kit
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15.248 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Thu Sep 16 1993 17:48 | 11 |
|
> space of 4 blocks the same street has 4 different names -- it's been 20
> years since I was a cab driver and knew all this, so I'm a bit foggy on
> the names, but I think it went Kelton, Warren, Arlington, and Sparhawk.
I live 50 yards off Kelton ... and have to try to describe this in
directions ... "yes, it really is the same street ... yes, I know I
told you 4 different names ...etc". One of the joys of living in town.
Greg
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15.249 | | OKFINE::KENAH | I���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\ | Fri Sep 17 1993 11:16 | 6 |
| I once got directions that went: "Take I93 south to the lower deck;
take the lower deck to the central artery; take the central artery
to the Southeast Expressway..."
These "three" routes are different names for stretches of the
*same road*!
|