BORING

Sep 14, 2009 00:34

I understand why no one posts on LJ anymore.  I have been fighting the urge to update all freaking day, mostly because I only want to post the following ( Read more... )

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Comments 4

neuraltrash September 14 2009, 20:37:37 UTC
Hey, I still post on here from time to time! But I would add "tedious updates about my jogging schedule that not even I care about" to that list!

I like reading your updates, you should post more. By the way, Nacire was asking how you were the other day. Remember, Nacire, with his beret (maybe) and walking cane? Poor Nacire, that's the image everyone has of him forever more.

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crocodilecheese September 15 2009, 03:43:35 UTC
i care. you need to drunk dial me after work happy hours. also, you should have called the guy that yelled at you a lesbo. that just leaves them stunned and they can't figure out what to say. oh, and i have an awesome story about tums- i had to eat 4 a day for like a month after my surgery, because they nicked my parathyroid glands which control your calcium, and tums are calcium apparently. but what was really gross was on the low iodine diet, i couldn't have red dye, so i could only eat the peppermint tums. GROSS x 10000. as if tums aren't bad enough, the peppermint kind are super duper gross. also, i love my package. i forgot to text you to tell you how awesome it is, but bj loves wearing the giant glasses around. i swear. also, i'm scared of the bath caviar. what is urea, and why is it the first ingredient???

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batboybites September 15 2009, 22:34:28 UTC
EWWWWWWWWWW - I'm pretty sure urea is the main ingredient in urine too. I'm almost positive. It's like the one thing I remember from Mrs. Hughes' class.

I was just scared that it was called "bath caviar". Why would you want caviar in your bath tub anyway?

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crocodilecheese September 16 2009, 03:31:30 UTC
ewwww, i just got this from wikipedia:

"Urea plays an important role in the metabolism of nitrogen-containing compounds by animals, and is the main nitrogen-containing substance in the urine of mammals. Being solid, colourless, odorless, neither acidic nor basic, highly soluble in water, and relatively non-toxic, urea is widely used in fertilizers as a convenient source of nitrogen. Urea is also an important feedstock for the chemical industry. The synthesis of this organic compound by Friedrich Wöhler 1828 from an inorganic precursor was an important milestone in the development of chemistry."

i am definitely never using the bath caviar. gross. also, i just realized that when i commented on your post i was drunk and spelled "nicked." that looks horribly wrong. oh well.

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