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Everything posted by Soxy
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I just got a Huffy for my birthday. I love it. But I would recommend spending the extra $20 to buy a better seat. Anyway, love the Huffy.
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QUOTE(southsider2k5 @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 10:46 AM) If its a boy, I guess that makes it Mother Nature's Son? :banghead :banghead I laughed...
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Things I never knew before... 9 months after storms . . . `There was no electricity, they were spending a lot of time at home, there were candles and -- I'll leave the rest up to you.' By Sandra Pedicini Sentinel Staff Writer Published June 7, 2005 Hurricanes Charley, Frances and Jeanne have given new meaning to the term "stormy romance." The power was out and there was nowhere to go. Central Florida couples did what many couples do when the lights go out. So, it's no coincidence there's a baby boom nine months after Hurricane Charley. Since May 20 -- 40 weeks after Charley hit -- the number of births is up 26 percent at just one hospital compared with this time last year. "The electricity being out, just like the blizzards up North, you have to play by Mother Nature's rules, I guess. Mother Nature's entertainment," said Mark Growe of Windermere. He became a first-time father last week when his wife, Amy, gave birth to 7-pound, 10-ounce Sarah Elizabeth. "I guess, from all that destruction," Growe said, "there's a little ray of sunshine that came out of it for some people." Hospitals throughout the region report a surge in the number of births, which they attribute to last year's triple hurricane whammy. Florida Hospital, one of the region's largest hospital groups, has seen double-digit gains since May 20 compared with the same period last year. That includes a 26 percent increase at Winter Park Memorial and an 18 percent spike at its downtown Orlando campus. Other hospitals report similar gains, including Central Florida Regional in Sanford and Health Central in Ocoee. Halifax Medical Center in Daytona Beach has posted 25 percent more deliveries than a year ago. Orlando Regional Healthcare, which operates Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children & Women, could not provide data. "We've got our catcher's mitts on," said Jan Wagner, a registered nurse in Halifax's labor and delivery department. Enrollment in childbirth classes at Halifax was up 18 percent in May. Pregnant women flocking to the classes all have the same story, Halifax spokeswoman Kate Holcomb said. "There was no electricity, they were spending a lot of time at home, there were candles and -- I'll leave the rest up to you." Some women said the storms and their aftermath also made it difficult for them to reach their pharmacies for birth-control pills. Hurricane Charley knocked down a big tree at the entrance to Sara Clarke's apartment, and debris covered the road leading to her drugstore, a CVS on Curry Ford Road in Orlando. So Clarke decided to stop taking the pill rather than brave nasty conditions outside to renew her prescription. Soon after, she and her husband, Gregory, conceived a baby boy, who is due June 14. "I think it was just all timing, and being home from work and," she giggled, "not having anywhere to go." Florida's Office of Vital Statistics hasn't tabulated birth data for May, so it can't yet officially confirm a baby boom. But to further illustrate one is occurring, the wives of five firefighters at a fire station in downtown DeLand got pregnant during the hurricane season. The post-hurricane surge in births doesn't surprise Melody Guy, maternal/child director at Health Central. She remembers similar results after snowstorms when she lived in suburban Chicago. "I know it's kind of an old wives' tale," she said. "But I truly do believe it." Some hospitals say they expect even bigger increases in the next couple weeks. People might have been caught up in the excitement of the first, quick storm, Guy said, while boredom set in during the last two hurricanes. Frances and Jeanne also might have ignited more passion than Charley, which hit during the heat of August. A week of no air conditioning during the sweltering summer might make conditions ripe -- but not necessarily for hanky-panky. Maria Mills-Benat conceived her son Jesse around Hurricane Frances, when "it was nice and windy," she said. "It wasn't so hot. . . . It was too hot during the other hurricanes to do anything." Like other couples, the Benats said they had a little unexpected time on their hands during the storms. The couple have two other children to keep them busy. But "after they go to bed, no entertainment," said Greg Benat of Daytona Beach. After one tryst, the couple joked about the possibility of having conceived during a storm. "My husband and I even said afterwards, 'Wouldn't that be funny if we got pregnant during the hurricane?'" Mills-Benat said. "It's probably going to turn out to be a wild child." A half-hour after giving birth Thursday, that didn't seem to be the case. "He's very calm," Mills-Benat said. Janel Coffing of Port Orange said she conceived soon after Hurricane Frances. It was her fourth child, a baby girl born last week. Hurricane Frances sent her and the kids packing for Virginia. "I took the kids and left for the second one," she said. Her husband had stayed behind. Was the birth the result of a happy reunion after the short separation? Possibly, Coffing said, "catching up for lost time." One statistic not showing up: kids named after last summer's storms. Wagner, the Halifax nurse, said she has yet to see a Charley, Frances or Jeanne. "That never even popped into our head," Mark Growe said.
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QUOTE(southsider2k5 @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 09:23 AM) With both of them, it just goes to show you that its not what you know... It's who you're married to/related to? Man, with my college gpa I guess I'm over qualified for the presidency.
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QUOTE(kapkomet @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 09:17 AM) UH OH! :uhoh ChiSoxy'll be drooling all over her screen when she finds this thread. Keyboard, drooling all over her keyboard.
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Happy Happy! You've turned the luckiest age of them all!!!! Enjoy!
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QUOTE(EvilJester99 @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 08:48 AM) Isn't that what Jacko likes?? Dirty, dirty, dirty! That didn't even occur to me.
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I'd like to be under the sea In an octopus' garden in the shade He'd let us in, knows where we've been In his octopus' garden in the shade I'd ask my friends to come and see An octopus' garden with me I'd like to be under the sea In an octopus' garden in the shade.
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QUOTE(LosMediasBlancas @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 08:27 AM) I remember the 'E' channel did this whole thing where they showed photos of her like 2 weeks apart. In one she was flat, in the next photo WHAMMO. She must've realized she was gonna be like 80lbs. with D cups and had them taken out. Really? Huh, I always thought they were more natural looking. Oh well, I am no expert on her boobs. But if she would have kept the implants they she probably would have been 85 lbs with D cups.
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QUOTE(LosMediasBlancas @ Jun 7, 2005 -> 07:48 AM) I'm confused. They were fake boobs, right? So, her sudden, major weight loss wouldn't reduce their size, right? That would only happen if they were real. So did she have them removed? See, I think they might have been real. They were proportionate to her body (I thought), and you all are Chicagoans, you should know Irish girls just have more, uh, in their luggage racks....
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London's public transport blog-ish thing.
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HELL YEAH! I love this team. So much.
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Well, I've changed my mind...
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What kind of food are you currently addicted to?
Soxy replied to Wise Master Buehrle's topic in SLaM
QUOTE(Soxnbears01 @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 08:53 PM) weird thread to bring up, but oh well. and yes, those are incredibly good. I wanted to share my joy. -
What kind of food are you currently addicted to?
Soxy replied to Wise Master Buehrle's topic in SLaM
Edy's whole fruit Fruit Bars, coconut flavors. They're like crack to me. -
they're gonna be mad at us they're gonna be mad at me and you they're gonna be mad at us and all the thinks we wanna do just please don't name this please don't explain this just blame it all on me say i was shameless say i couldn't slow it down let alone stop it and say you just hung around 'cuz you couldn't top it
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QUOTE(FlaSoxxJim @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 08:06 PM) I saw this, and it's incredibly cool. Animals that use tools kick ass. Of course, sometimes things can go too far... "I believe I speak for the entire human race when I say, 'Holy s***,'" said Oceanographic Institute director Dr. James Aoki, noting that the dolphin has a cranial capacity 40 percent greater than that of humans. "That's it for us monkeys." That's just awesomely funny!
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 08:05 PM) Out of habit, I always try and get my hand drunk first . . . roflmao
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 08:01 PM) tell me A guy will sit on his hand until it falls asleep then "shake hands with mr. winkie" and because he can't feel his own hand, it's called the stranger.....
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 07:58 PM) what does Billy Joel have to do with this? That's worse than Ross Gload You don't know "the stranger"?!
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 07:55 PM) let me try that putting down Soxy photo thinking of Gload stuck at first base, my hand fell asleep Well, then you're in a perfect position to do "the stranger."
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 07:51 PM) and my new favorite after swapping an email with a lady friend . . . thinking of you Or.... Thinking of Ross Gload.
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QUOTE(Texsox @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 07:40 PM) Oh great, it is now known as "Tex's List" My mom would be sooooo proud. Now I'm going back to holding Soxy's picture with one hand.
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QUOTE(Cerbaho-WG @ Jun 6, 2005 -> 07:02 PM) Then wouldn't ID fall outside the realm of science, as science is mainly geared to a posteriori, or empirical, evidence supporting hypotheses instead of a priori? Just curious to understand ID a little better without turning this thread into an episode of Numb3rs. ^^^^^^^^^^ That was beautiful. Really. And I've heard some ID speakers (went to a Christian college...). And let me tell you, it makes a lot of sense, if you're a religion, humanities, english, fine arts major. To those of us in the hard sciences it comes off less as science and more as philosophy.
