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Post by mikklynn on Jun 17, 2024 21:10:54 GMT
This is for you, artbabe ! I'm keeping the board moving, LOL. Tell us something about yourself that most people don't know. It can be anything - interesting, embarrassing, or confessional I'll start: Most people don't know that I was on a shooting team in college. There was a gun range in the sub-basement of my college. It was a great way to meet guys! Also, I don't tell most people, but I really do not like my dad a lot of the time. It makes it tough to be a caregiver. He's not cooperative, self centered, and was extremely controlling during my childhood. That last part made me a better parent. I let my kids and now my grandson make their own decisions as much as I could.
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scrappert
Prolific Pea
RefuPea #2956
Posts: 7,960
Location: Milwaukee, WI area
Jul 11, 2014 21:20:09 GMT
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Post by scrappert on Jun 17, 2024 21:25:02 GMT
Geesh, I don't really know. I guess I will start off with living in Iceland for 2 years with XH when he was in the Air Force. Right now we are in the process of remodeling our bathroom, the only bathroom with a shower, so we have to go to SO's mom's to shower. That's been fun...it has been a month now. Ask me in December where we are with this... Maybe I will think of something else as I read other people's posts.
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kitbop
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,623
Jun 28, 2014 21:14:36 GMT
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Post by kitbop on Jun 17, 2024 22:02:50 GMT
Hmmm, an interesting "factoid" about ourselves? I think of myself as pretty blandly 50ish now. I remember when the show "thirtysomething" was on TV, and I was too YOUNG for it to apply. Wish I could go back I'm an only kid and I hated it. It's worse now - it's lonely. There's no one with shared memories. Like you mikklynn, I had scant love for my Dad because he treated me and my Mom so badly as a kid/adult, but then decided that I should be his caregiver when he needed help and had no one left to help him when he was old. I did help him, because I couldn't live with myself otherwise, but when he passed I barely shed a tear. I wish I had a sibling to share those emotions with!
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artbabe
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,406
Jun 26, 2014 1:59:10 GMT
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Post by artbabe on Jun 18, 2024 0:03:13 GMT
I used to work in the art department for low budget horror films, film shorts, and commercials in Ohio. If I could do my life over again I'd go to California and try to make a living being a set decorator, art director, prop master, or anything arty like that. I love movie/tv art design. So interesting how they do that stuff.
But I do have a page on IMDB. So that is cool. I always use that as my fun fact.
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Post by karinec on Jun 18, 2024 0:58:34 GMT
Like artbabe, I worked in the movie business, except here in L.A. I just kind of fell into it and started out as a secretary. After 13 years I had made it up to production supervisor, which isn't exactly meteoric, but I'm still pretty proud of myself. I left the business to become a full time mom. Oh, and I can wiggle my ears and belch on command
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paget
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,117
Jun 25, 2014 21:16:39 GMT
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Post by paget on Jun 18, 2024 1:43:18 GMT
I’m left handed and it is weird answering questions about it a lot - let’s say someone is showing you something sports related or assumes your handedness correlates to you dominate hand/side… they will say are you left or right handed and I will say left but then whatever it is I almost always would use my right hand. I basically write with my left but everything else with right (use scissors, can opener, other tools, play sports, etc).
I’ll also add that I am related to Laura Ingalls Wilder on my Grandma’s side (last name Ingalls) and I did NOT like the TV show. lol I didn’t even read the books until I was an adult and knew we were related. I remember meeting my great uncle who was 102 and he had played with Mary and Laura as a child.
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Post by workingclassdog on Jun 18, 2024 2:31:34 GMT
I have said this before a long time ago, I'm sure people don't remember.. I flew on a 747 with just one other person. I have moved around 30 times in my life. I went to Europe for a weekend with a friend with no plans. Almost got killed in Tijuana, Mexico. Just random stuff.. haha
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Post by Linda on Jun 18, 2024 13:02:28 GMT
Like kitbop - I think of myself as blandly 50s-ish (I'm 53) I'm not sure what would be interesting that people wouldn't know... maybe that despite all my kids having the same father, I was a single mum for nearly 7 years...dh and I broke up when I was pregnant with my oldest and didn't reconcile until he was almost 7 - we married a year a year later.
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Post by workingclassdog on Jun 18, 2024 13:40:08 GMT
I’ll also add that I am related to Laura Ingalls Wilder on my Grandma’s side (last name Ingalls) and I did NOT like the TV show. lol I didn’t even read the books until I was an adult and knew we were related. I remember meeting my great uncle who was 102 and he had played with Mary and Laura as a child. Okay now Little House is my jam.. that is SO cool. I read and reread her books so many times. Also watched the show (and smart enough to know the difference between the books and show..lol). And your great uncle PLAYED with them??? That's so cool. Was he ever depicted in the books? I can kinda remember her talking about playing with cousins... My girlfriends got me a Little House original lunchbox for my birthday this year. I will be buried with it one day! lol
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Post by kmage on Jun 18, 2024 13:54:24 GMT
Lately I have taken to calling myself "a woman of a certain age" because I think it sounds funny, but like others have mentioned...the 50's are here lol. I read very fast. I have lied to others, telling them I was only on page 100 or whatever because I was already done with the book and I could tell they would not believe me. In school, when we were assigned a book to read for class I generally would have it done that night. (if I had not read it already) When I was in 4th/5th/6th grade, I was sent to the high school and sat in on the 9th grade English classes. For whatever reason, I don't read word for word, or sentences, I read a chunk of text. I've been accused of skimming, (by a mean teacher) but that isn't the case. I very much retain what I read and read all the words. I don't join book clubs because I cannot stand the pace lol. My mom let me read whatever I wanted because she really didn't understand what was happening lol and I read "Are you there God it's me Margaret" in first grade because my friend's older sister had it. I could read it fine, but I did not understand it at all and was very confused hahahha. So sometime there was discrepancy between the ability to read well and actually understanding the material. I was reading bodice ripper romances that my aunt had at the age of 8 and remember being like, "Ewwwwww....why would she let him do THAT?" However-I am horrible in Math and essentially have a 10th grade math ability despite having a Master's degree.
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breetheflea
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,588
Location: PNW
Jul 20, 2014 21:57:23 GMT
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Post by breetheflea on Jun 18, 2024 13:56:37 GMT
I'm a pretty boring 46 year old...
I didn't get my driver's license until I was 23?
I had my permit at 15, took driver's ed my senior year of high school (17), went to college far away from home (no car). DH dad and DH taught me to drive after we got married and we bought a car that was not a stick shift. DH still can't stop telling me what to do when I'm driving, so most of the time when we're in the car together he drives.
Now we are trying to teach the 17 and 19 year old to drive (and the 15 year old could technically get his permit) and I HATE it. I think I'd rather change diapers for all eternity.
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Post by joblackford on Jun 18, 2024 14:00:19 GMT
I’m left handed and it is weird answering questions about it a lot - let’s say someone is showing you something sports related or assumes your handedness correlates to you dominate hand/side… they will say are you left or right handed and I will say left but then whatever it is I almost always would use my right hand. I basically write with my left but everything else with right (use scissors, can opener, other tools, play sports, etc). I’ll also add that I am related to Laura Ingalls Wilder on my Grandma’s side (last name Ingalls) and I did NOT like the TV show. lol I didn’t even read the books until I was an adult and knew we were related. I remember meeting my great uncle who was 102 and he had played with Mary and Laura as a child. That’s cool! Have you read Pioneer Girl, the autobiography that was drawn from to create the Little House books? I enjoyed it a lot. It’s got details that were simplified or omitted from the kids books. www.goodreads.com/book/show/22212838-pioneer-girl
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hutchfan
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,599
Jul 6, 2016 16:42:12 GMT
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Post by hutchfan on Jun 18, 2024 14:19:53 GMT
I am completely deaf in my right ear it wasn't discovered until I was 5 and they don't know if I was born that way or just went deaf. I also didn't get my driver's license until a couple of days before I turned 23. I hate driving and never do it until I absolutely have to.
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craftymom101
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,798
Jul 31, 2014 5:23:25 GMT
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Post by craftymom101 on Jun 18, 2024 14:20:35 GMT
My ex-dh and I divorced when I was 30 years old, and I spent five years dating. It was a miserable five years... online dating is awful, and I had so many bad first dates or short-term relationships with men who had huge red flags. I stopped online dating (or dating in general) for a while until one of the teachers I was working with mentioned that he met his wife on eHarmony. I was extremely apprehensive about trying to date online but signed up for a free trial and within a few days, my now DH messaged me. We met a week after we started texting, and we've been together since. We were married in December 2023, and he is my best friend.
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Post by justjac on Jun 18, 2024 14:58:36 GMT
My three friends and I worked at a college and had the summer off so we took the bus from western Canada to Prince Edward Island to stay in a cabin we rented for two weeks (we'd found it in the back of the PEI tourist information booklet.) This was before AirBnB and only one of us had a cell phone (that she forgot when we switched buses in Winnipeg.) The bus ride (including so many stops and a 12 hour layover in Montreal) took 74 hours, but it was so worth it. It was the kind of adventure that belongs on a bucket list (but I was only 26 at the time.)
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Post by jenr on Jun 18, 2024 15:16:07 GMT
My dad and mother-in-law worked together in the early 70s. He died when I was four, and at his funeral my MIL met my mom for the first time. They became very good friends, but for whatever reason never got their kids together to play or anything, although I did meet her two kids once. 25 years later, I was single, and my MIL's son was single, and now we've been married 25 years. I like to say that my dad is the reason we're together.
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Post by joblackford on Jun 18, 2024 23:58:40 GMT
Interesting that a couple of you started driving at 23... I never learned. I had 2 or 3 terrifying driving lessons that involved driving a few feet in a parking lot in my teens and that was it, I couldn't do it. I've never had another lesson, have never driven, even on a back road. Probably not even a bumper car. I can ride a bike (just) but not on a road near traffic. I loved living in Japan because the trains were amazing, none of the expats I knew had a car, and we all got around just fine. It didn't even occur to me that every single one of them drove in their home countries. And no, I didn't grow up in a place with great public transit. People here said I would learn after I had kids (which is when my mum learned, I remember my dad teaching her to drive a manual transmission). I had already told them I wasn't having kids but they didn't believe me about that either. I know a few other non-drivers now, funnily enough, and we all agree the roads are terrifying, but safer without us learning to drive on them!
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Post by marg on Jun 19, 2024 1:09:55 GMT
I’ll also add that I am related to Laura Ingalls Wilder on my Grandma’s side (last name Ingalls) and I did NOT like the TV show. lol I didn’t even read the books until I was an adult and knew we were related. I remember meeting my great uncle who was 102 and he had played with Mary and Laura as a child. Okay now Little House is my jam.. that is SO cool. I read and reread her books so many times. Also watched the show (and smart enough to know the difference between the books and show..lol). And your great uncle PLAYED with them??? That's so cool. Was he ever depicted in the books? I can kinda remember her talking about playing with cousins... My girlfriends got me a Little House original lunchbox for my birthday this year. I will be buried with it one day! lol I was obsessed with Little House when I was a kid. I read the books over and over, loved the TV show, found a biography of Laura Ingalls Wilder and devoured that, sewed myself a sunbonnet when I was only 10 or 11, and even wrote letters to the Laura Ingalls Wilder museum with questions (they didn't reply). My son had struggles in school (and just in life in general), and was diagnosed with ADHD when he was 7 and then again when he was 12 (I wanted further paperwork for high school because fighting the school to get him accommodations was a nightmare). Throughout the diagnosis process, especially the latter one, I realized that I have ADHD, too (it's hereditary, and I'm positive my father has it, as well). Suddenly my entire life made sense. So much of my childhood that confused me - why I felt different, had trouble fitting in, my obsessions (hyper focus) with things like Laura Ingalls Wilder, my jumping from hobby to hobby, my acting out scenarios through my barbie dolls and playing with them until I was way too old to play with them - it all made sense. I felt so relieved, but also so sad for that little kid and teenager me who struggled, and for how things could have turned out differently in a lot of ways (except for my husband and son who I am grateful for every day). Watching my son struggle with ADHD has not been easy, though. It seems like every day is hard for him, even at 24 years old, and I wish I could fix it but he has to learn on his own. He learns everything the hard way, unfortunately.
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Post by hoopsfn on Jun 19, 2024 13:53:24 GMT
It's nice of you all to share your stories here. I guess I'm the most boring person in America. I grew up in the country and went to a small country school - 8 kids in my graduating 8th grade class. I love to watch basketball and Chicago PD and wish Taylor Swift would retire. Sorry Swifties.
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breetheflea
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,588
Location: PNW
Jul 20, 2014 21:57:23 GMT
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Post by breetheflea on Jun 19, 2024 14:01:59 GMT
Okay now Little House is my jam.. that is SO cool. I read and reread her books so many times. Also watched the show (and smart enough to know the difference between the books and show..lol). And your great uncle PLAYED with them??? That's so cool. Was he ever depicted in the books? I can kinda remember her talking about playing with cousins... My girlfriends got me a Little House original lunchbox for my birthday this year. I will be buried with it one day! lol I was obsessed with Little House when I was a kid. I read the books over and over, loved the TV show, found a biography of Laura Ingalls Wilder and devoured that, sewed myself a sunbonnet when I was only 10 or 11, and even wrote letters to the Laura Ingalls Wilder museum with questions (they didn't reply). My son had struggles in school (and just in life in general), and was diagnosed with ADHD when he was 7 and then again when he was 12 (I wanted further paperwork for high school because fighting the school to get him accommodations was a nightmare). Throughout the diagnosis process, especially the latter one, I realized that I have ADHD, too (it's hereditary, and I'm positive my father has it, as well). Suddenly my entire life made sense. So much of my childhood that confused me - why I felt different, had trouble fitting in, my obsessions (hyper focus) with things like Laura Ingalls Wilder, my jumping from hobby to hobby, my acting out scenarios through my barbie dolls and playing with them until I was way too old to play with them - it all made sense. I felt so relieved, but also so sad for that little kid and teenager me who struggled, and for how things could have turned out differently in a lot of ways (except for my husband and son who I am grateful for every day). Watching my son struggle with ADHD has not been easy, though. It seems like every day is hard for him, even at 24 years old, and I wish I could fix it but he has to learn on his own. He learns everything the hard way, unfortunately. My 15-year-old DS has ADHD (formerly just ADD), and getting accommodations, trying to get his teachers at his IEP meetings, the communications with his teachers (or lack of) Ugh. How did you find out you had it? I'm 99% my dad has it. One of my sisters has it. My other sister claims to have it... I wonder if I have it sometimes but don't check off enough boxes. I LOVE Little House on the Prairie, and used to watch the show on TV and get ticked off at my mom when we'd miss it... Now I prefer the books and find the analysis about what was actually true fascinating.
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Post by Linda on Jun 19, 2024 14:10:08 GMT
Interesting that a couple of you started driving at 23... I never learned. I had 2 or 3 terrifying driving lessons that involved driving a few feet in a parking lot in my teens and that was it, I couldn't do it. I've never had another lesson, have never driven, even on a back road. Probably not even a bumper car. I can ride a bike (just) but not on a road near traffic. I loved living in Japan because the trains were amazing, none of the expats I knew had a car, and we all got around just fine. It didn't even occur to me that every single one of them drove in their home countries. And no, I didn't grow up in a place with great public transit. People here said I would learn after I had kids (which is when my mum learned, I remember my dad teaching her to drive a manual transmission). I had already told them I wasn't having kids but they didn't believe me about that either. I know a few other non-drivers now, funnily enough, and we all agree the roads are terrifying, but safer without us learning to drive on them! also a non-driver and I suspect that DD24 will never get her license either
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Post by marg on Jun 19, 2024 16:44:12 GMT
I was obsessed with Little House when I was a kid. I read the books over and over, loved the TV show, found a biography of Laura Ingalls Wilder and devoured that, sewed myself a sunbonnet when I was only 10 or 11, and even wrote letters to the Laura Ingalls Wilder museum with questions (they didn't reply). My son had struggles in school (and just in life in general), and was diagnosed with ADHD when he was 7 and then again when he was 12 (I wanted further paperwork for high school because fighting the school to get him accommodations was a nightmare). Throughout the diagnosis process, especially the latter one, I realized that I have ADHD, too (it's hereditary, and I'm positive my father has it, as well). Suddenly my entire life made sense. So much of my childhood that confused me - why I felt different, had trouble fitting in, my obsessions (hyper focus) with things like Laura Ingalls Wilder, my jumping from hobby to hobby, my acting out scenarios through my barbie dolls and playing with them until I was way too old to play with them - it all made sense. I felt so relieved, but also so sad for that little kid and teenager me who struggled, and for how things could have turned out differently in a lot of ways (except for my husband and son who I am grateful for every day). Watching my son struggle with ADHD has not been easy, though. It seems like every day is hard for him, even at 24 years old, and I wish I could fix it but he has to learn on his own. He learns everything the hard way, unfortunately. My 15-year-old DS has ADHD (formerly just ADD), and getting accommodations, trying to get his teachers at his IEP meetings, the communications with his teachers (or lack of) Ugh. How did you find out you had it? I'm 99% my dad has it. One of my sisters has it. My other sister claims to have it... I wonder if I have it sometimes but don't check off enough boxes. I LOVE Little House on the Prairie, and used to watch the show on TV and get ticked off at my mom when we'd miss it... Now I prefer the books and find the analysis about what was actually true fascinating. My Sister-in-law is a Psychologist and the head of one of the Psychological organizations in Canada, so after my son was diagnosed i discussed it with her, and brought up my Dad (she agreed he had signs of it), and myself. She sent me a bunch of tests to fill out, the same ones my son had to do, and the ones we as parents had to do for him - so I had lots of discussions with my parents, as well. She didn't write up the formal report like my son has (since it was free/she was just being helpful, and I don't need it for work or anything), but it was definitive. If I wanted medication she'd write something up for me, but I don't. She did say it's possible to have ADHD tendencies/traits but it not quite reach the level for a diagnosis - so it's possible you have that. There is a 50/50 chance of having it if one of your parents has it. I tried to rewatch Little House a few years ago and only got halfway through the first season. I much prefer the books and analysis, too. I got obsessed a year or two ago, again, and reread all the books, biographies, watched a bunch of videos about their true life, etc. I'm onto my next obsession now, though, lol.
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Post by joblackford on Jun 19, 2024 17:34:52 GMT
My 15-year-old DS has ADHD (formerly just ADD), and getting accommodations, trying to get his teachers at his IEP meetings, the communications with his teachers (or lack of) Ugh. How did you find out you had it? I'm 99% my dad has it. One of my sisters has it. My other sister claims to have it... I wonder if I have it sometimes but don't check off enough boxes. I LOVE Little House on the Prairie, and used to watch the show on TV and get ticked off at my mom when we'd miss it... Now I prefer the books and find the analysis about what was actually true fascinating. My Sister-in-law is a Psychologist and the head of one of the Psychological organizations in Canada, so after my son was diagnosed i discussed it with her, and brought up my Dad (she agreed he had signs of it), and myself. She sent me a bunch of tests to fill out, the same ones my son had to do, and the ones we as parents had to do for him - so I had lots of discussions with my parents, as well. She didn't write up the formal report like my son has (since it was free/she was just being helpful, and I don't need it for work or anything), but it was definitive. If I wanted medication she'd write something up for me, but I don't. She did say it's possible to have ADHD tendencies/traits but it not quite reach the level for a diagnosis - so it's possible you have that. There is a 50/50 chance of having it if one of your parents has it. I tried to rewatch Little House a few years ago and only got halfway through the first season. I much prefer the books and analysis, too. I got obsessed a year or two ago, again, and reread all the books, biographies, watched a bunch of videos about their true life, etc. I'm onto my next obsession now, though, lol. It's amazing how many people, especially adult women, are now realizing they may be neurodivergent in some way (incl. me) and I've been seeing signs in other family members too. None of us has a diagnosis, nor particularly need one I suspect, but it explains a lot of things. I appreciate being able to see that some of my "failings" are just adhd brain. It helps me learn to forgive myself (and others). I also see where some of us have some tendencies and traits but because we just thought we were just wrong or bad at certain things we figured out how to mask the problem and/or cope with it.
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artbabe
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,406
Jun 26, 2014 1:59:10 GMT
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Post by artbabe on Jun 19, 2024 17:37:12 GMT
Suddenly my entire life made sense. So much of my childhood that confused me - why I felt different, had trouble fitting in, my obsessions (hyper focus) with things like Laura Ingalls Wilder, my jumping from hobby to hobby, my acting out scenarios through my barbie dolls and playing with them until I was way too old to play with them - it all made sense. I have ADHD (and bipolar and anxiety) and I have all of those traits. I was definitely an outsider, I definitely hyper focus, I jump from one thing to another, and I am incredibly messy because I never finish one thing before going to another. I didn't know acting out scenarios was part of it- I definitely did that- not with Barbies but with Lego, and on paper. I found a boyfriend that liked to do it too and we had really complex worlds we were building. My 15-year-old DS has ADHD (formerly just ADD), and getting accommodations, trying to get his teachers at his IEP meetings, the communications with his teachers (or lack of) Ugh. How did you find out you had it? I'm 99% my dad has it. One of my sisters has it. My other sister claims to have it... I wonder if I have it sometimes but don't check off enough boxes. When I was going to a psychiatrist they decided to test me. I think it took 2 hours? It was a long time. There were all kinds of intellectual tests and all kinds of different kinds of tests and it turned out I did have it, like I thought. There were all kinds of puzzles and activities, not just paper and pencil stuff. It was really fun. I really enjoyed it. I found out I have a high IQ, my left hand/side is really useless, and I'm pretty face blind. And I'm ADHD. The face blindness was pretty interesting. They would show you photos of people. And then 10 minutes later they would flip through a bunch of photos of people and I had to say if they were in the first batch. I was terrible at it- everyone looked familiar. I think part of that is from being a teacher, though. I have taught literally thousands of kids and they all kind of blend together after awhile.
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Post by joblackford on Jun 19, 2024 17:53:34 GMT
It's nice of you all to share your stories here. I guess I'm the most boring person in America. I grew up in the country and went to a small country school - 8 kids in my graduating 8th grade class. I love to watch basketball and Chicago PD and wish Taylor Swift would retire. Sorry Swifties. I'm sure you're not boring at all. That tiny school sounds intriguing! Wow. Did you have to go to a bigger high school? My friend taught at a middle school in Japan that was so small that instead of each class eating lunch together in their classroom the whole school sat in a circle. I couldn't get my head around that (especially in crowded Japan!) but I guess it was in the boonies near the end of the train line, but they were committed to having a local school. But they could've gotten on the train and gone to the next school that was a little bigger. I'm guessing your next school over was a long way away. Funny that you love Chicago PD specifically. Every Wednesday we watch Med (which I call Gore) and Fire and then turn off before PD starts!
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Post by melanell on Jun 19, 2024 23:08:31 GMT
I have a scar from where I attempted to have a belly button ring not once, but twice, because I'm stubborn or stupid, take your pick. I wanted a hoop earring instead of a barbell and the piercing guy told me it wouldn't work well. But I wanted to try anyway, and it took forever to heal properly, and eventually pulled through. So in my brilliance, I went to another place, told them my story, and they backed up the first person, saying it wouldn't work, especially not the 2nd time, but I pleaded and they shook their head and did it again, and the same exact thing happened. The sad/funny thing is, that despite the complete failure the entire thing was, I really did love it for the short amount of time that I had it both times, LOL! I imagine now, some 30+ years later, less places would have been willing to do something they knew darn well would fail, because gosh knows they'd probably expect me to trash them on every form of social media even thought it was entirely my fault. Only the guys at the piercing places and DH knew about the belly button ring---until now!
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Post by kkrenn on Jun 20, 2024 0:10:25 GMT
This is fun!
My left arm is approx 2" shorter than my right due to a botched surgery that left me with an incurable nerve disorder.
I can speed read and retain it. My school friends used to challenge me and they'd always lose. I was on the front page of my towns newspaper for winning a reading comp at my elementary school.
When I was 19 I boarded a Greyhound bus in GA around 5am and 3 days later arrived in CA where I now live. Only 1 other person knew what I was doing. I had 3 bags and $300, no job or housing lined up. I was escaping an abusive relationship.
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Post by Margie on Jun 20, 2024 0:18:36 GMT
I had cancer and went through chemo 13 years ago. Before that, I never forgot a face. Post-chemo, is a different story. I transferred to a different department at work 6 months after my recovery, and every morning I had to have an 8 am meeting with the department director and all the managers (all men in suits) to provide updates on my project. It was a nightmare, because I couldn't place a face to the names for about a month. It even took a few weeks to realize which of them was the big boss. Fast forward to the present, and the problem continues to persist. It can be very embarrassing when someone comes up to my husband and I and calls me by name (so I know I must know them), but I have no idea who they are. Sometimes I feel they think I'm super stuck up. Of course, once I've seen or met someone several times, I remember them. artbabe , is there a name for this condition? Edit: Ugh, somehow when I quoted artbabe's last sentence, I lost it in this post. Tried to edit and add it back in, but no dice.
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Post by mom on Jun 20, 2024 1:14:15 GMT
Here's some little known factoids about me: my parents did not know they were having twins until my twin brother and I were born. He was one ounce heavier and I was one inch longer. My mom gained less than 20 lbs total so no one was suspicious - though my mom did tell people she thought she had an octopus in her belly because all she could feel was hands and feet, lol. My twin is 4 min older.
Another random fact is I hate wearing shoes that require me to wear socks or shoes that are closed toed. HATE THEM. Iff I could wear flip-flops all the time, I would. And for the most part, I do wear them year around unless we have snow.
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craftymom101
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 3,798
Jul 31, 2014 5:23:25 GMT
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Post by craftymom101 on Jun 20, 2024 3:56:24 GMT
Here's some little known factoids about me: my parents did not know they were having twins until my twin brother and I were born. He was one ounce heavier and I was one inch longer. My mom gained less than 20 lbs total so no one was suspicious - though my mom did tell people she thought she had an octopus in her belly because all she could feel was hands and feet, lol. My twin is 4 min older. Another random fact is I hate wearing shoes that require me to wear socks or shoes that are closed toed. HATE THEM. Iff I could wear flip-flops all the time, I would. And for the most part, I do wear them year around unless we have snow. I call close-toed shoes “toe jail” much to the annoyance of my husband! I HATE wearing close-toed shoes and avoid it at all costs. I live in Florida so I can get away with open-toed shoes 99% of the time. Say no to toe-jail! 😆
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