What did you accomplish today?

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
And absolutely heavenly, like most Belgian beer. Better than that German stuff.

Something to sip and savour like a good wine, scotch or cognac, especially when you're hitting the %ABV we're used to here.

Want some REALLY good stuff? See if you can find Straffe Hendrik Quadrupel. 11% ABV, goes down like water, takes your legs clean off.
I like Abbey Quads. I’m also a fan of Hefeweizens, and anything from Stone Brewing Company and Lancaster Brewing Company.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
Why are you avoiding contacting your lawyer?
Don't worry, I don't have one. I just need to find one to answer some procedural questions and I don't wanna do it. I'm reading the CA procedure codes to motivate me. It's almost working.

I have "experimented" before, and know I can drink 3 litres of beer without it affecting my blood sugar so I very much doubt there will be any difference with my Houblon tonight.

As I say, 8 months ago I wasn't "pre", I had gone over that limit into "full". Beer is more of an occasional thing now, and as I've watched the A1C drop I've been able to relax the strictness of my diet and I know that two or three beers tonight will make no difference whatsoever. Doing that, or more, every day, otoh...


PS. Google "Delirium", for that is the beer with the pink elephants here. As far as I have been told, you can buy the Nocturnus or Tremens in stores across the US and I wholeheartedly recommend it for something to savour and enjoy on any day of the year.
Nice they have 10 of the Nocturnum at my local Bevmo. I'll have to try it and congrats on dropping your A1C and stay away from those poisonous carbs :)
Thank you, I shed a tear, that is precisely the car I deserve LOL
 

Tangerine_

Well-Known Member
I do not. It completely wipes all my short term, which is why I enjoy it. So I was in a class that required State Boards to get the license (doesn't matter I don't carry that license anymore). After the program ended I stopped smoking, upped my exercise and cleaned up my diet and since I tend to test extremely well I did not bother to study.

Come the morning of Boards we all carpooled. They were going over possible questions and solutions. It was at that point I realized I don't remember diddly squat of any of this shit and I freak! They handed me a joint and I rejected it (freaked I tell ya). Being true stoner friends they simply rolled up the windows (it was a nice summer day in LA), and hot boxed my ass.

We rolled in looking like this:


I passed and I stopped pot (for several reasons), but memory was a biggie.
LOL, I can remember rolling into the parking lot for class, furiously misting myself with orange oil in hopes of disguising the fumes.

I stopped due to memory loss as well. After my first yr working med-surg, I transferred to the ED. Far too fast paced for me to be burnt.
You went on much farther than I could've ever imagined. I stopped with just a BSN.

And I miss it but I've forgotten sooo much and I couldn't imagine going back now...even if my body allowed it my mind would not.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
LOL, I can remember rolling into the parking lot for class, furiously misting myself with orange oil in hopes of disguising the fumes.

I stopped due to memory loss as well. After my first yr working med-surg, I transferred to the ED. Far too fast paced for me to be burnt.
You went on much farther than I could've ever imagined. I stopped with just a BSN.

And I miss it but I've forgotten sooo much and I couldn't imagine going back now...even if my body allowed it my mind would not.
You worked med-surg! OMG I bow, that was brutal. I kept going because the work it was brutal, school was easier.
 

Tangerine_

Well-Known Member
You worked med-surg! OMG I bow, that was brutal. I kept going because the work it was brutal, school was easier.
It was many yrs ago but I do remember having this intense feeling when I finished. Suddenly my confidence was nonexistent and I had nothing "due". No 10 page term papers. No deadlines. No rotations where I could depend on other peoples abilities while remaining "a student". Just me and an expensive piece of paper. I was scared out of my wits.

And telemetry was very intimidating. I didn't feel as though I had the skills for the position in med-surg as a brand new nurse. I was fortunate to work with (mostly) great people who were very understanding and some "old hands" who took me under their wing and helped me along.

My memory really is shot but I can vividly remember pushing my very first cardiac meds. I was on cloud nine that day, though it took at least a yr for me to feel clinically confident.
 
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Fubard

Well-Known Member
Nice they have 10 of the Nocturnum at my local Bevmo. I'll have to try it and congrats on dropping your A1C and stay away from those poisonous carbs
I don't avoid carbs, I still eat everything as long as one thing is missing called refined sugar aka glucose

Pasta, rice, bread, potatoes, fruit, all carbs but the pasta is spelt or wholegrain, rice is whole, I can make a list but the bottom line is REFINED sugar, aka glucose, and anything with sugar added, is out unless it's alcohol related and then quantities are limited. No white wheat flour, no shite processed food, just decent home cooking using proper food that isn't filled with chemicals.

The other thing is the quantity on the plate in front of you, I got the warning and heeded it. Stop shovelling so much down the throat, lose excess blubber, everything comes in order.

Type 2 is mainly a lifestyle disease, although there's also a genetic factor with me, but the bottom line is I dropped 17kg since my stay in hospital in August, 23kg lost in around 10 months, the dietitian told me to lose 5kg in a year and I told her she would get at least 10 because anyone can lose 5 without trying, and I made some pretty minor changes to my diet but, mainly, the biggest change was how much was on the plate.

That's all it needed, eat less, lose blubber and be more aware of WHAT is being eaten. Simple as that.

And the secret weapon? Buckwheat. We don't have regular flour any more, that stuff is used to make pizza bases, sauces, whatever. If you can make it using wheat flour, then you can with buckwheat and it's much better for you and you get a lovely flavour added to whatever thanks to the buckwheat. And, iirc, if you have problems with gluten then buckwheat is a good solution as I think it's low/zero gluten so your penis won't take off like an ICBM (Yes, I saw that documentary called South Park).

As I say, I got the warning and heeded it. Countless others don't. I know I'll outlive them but that's their problem.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
It was many yrs ago but I do remember having this intense feeling when I finished. Suddenly my confidence was nonexistent and I had nothing "due". No 10 page term papers. No deadlines. No rotations where I could depend on other peoples abilities while remaining "a student". Just me and an expensive piece of paper. I was scared out of my wits.

And telemetry was very intimidating. I didn't feel as though I had the skills for the position in med-surg as a brand new nurse. I was fortunate to work with (mostly) great people who were very understanding and some "old hands" who took me under their wing and helped me along.

My memory really is shot but I can vividly remember pushing my very first cardiac meds. I was on cloud nine that day, though it took at least a yr for me to feel clinically confident.
Oh my! I did a turn as an MICN for about a minute, then I realized the only place you could save lives was the OR. I loved the adrenaline and always worked the highest acuity I could. Boredom and having to talk to patients was pure hell. I wasn't very concerned about their uneducated opinions on what they needed. Trauma, neuro and vascular were my loves. I once transferred some guy out of the ICU because after I extubated him and kindly gave him some coffee he complained about the coffee! So I unilaterally stepped his ass down all the way to med-surg (it was County). As you can see I was a high order jerk, nursing was glad to see me go.
 

Tangerine_

Well-Known Member
Oh my! I did a turn as an MICN for about a minute, then I realized the only place you could save lives was the OR. I loved the adrenaline and always worked the highest acuity I could. Boredom and having to talk to patients was pure hell. I wasn't very concerned about their uneducated opinions on what they needed. Trauma, neuro and vascular were my loves. I once transferred some guy out of the ICU because after I extubated him and kindly gave him some coffee he complained about the coffee! So I unilaterally stepped his ass down all the way to med-surg (it was County). As you can see I was a high order jerk, nursing was glad to see me go.
LOL, well for the record, I would've loved to work along side you.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
It should be noted that the CEO and co-founder of 23 is married to one of the Google hotshots, hence my distrust. Not of the findings but how it's used,
uh-oh

"The suspect, Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, was arrested by the police on Tuesday. Investigators accuse him of committing more than 50 rapes and 12 murders. Investigators used DNA from crime scenes and plugged that genetic profile into a private online genealogy database. They found distant relatives of Mr. DeAngelo’s and traced their DNA to him."

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/us/golden-state-killer.html?nl=top-stories&nlid=54558419ries&ref=cta

 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
uh-oh

"The suspect, Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, was arrested by the police on Tuesday. Investigators accuse him of committing more than 50 rapes and 12 murders. Investigators used DNA from crime scenes and plugged that genetic profile into a private online genealogy database. They found distant relatives of Mr. DeAngelo’s and traced their DNA to him."

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/26/us/golden-state-killer.html?nl=top-stories&nlid=54558419ries&ref=cta
That is my biggest fear as well & I knew it was just a matter of time.

Thanks George Orwell for giving us the heads up we didn't heed.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
That is my biggest fear as well & I knew it was just a matter of time. Thanks George Orwell for giving us the heads up we didn't heed.
I don't have a problem with police finding rapist with places like 23.
yeah, but...shit happens

DNA test jailed innocent man for murder
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-19412819


Forensics gone wrong: When DNA snares the innocent

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/03/forensics-gone-wrong-when-dna-snares-innocent

 

whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
yeah, but...shit happens

DNA test jailed innocent man for murder
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-19412819


Forensics gone wrong: When DNA snares the innocent

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/03/forensics-gone-wrong-when-dna-snares-innocent
Yea but it said that the sample wasn't good quality and the test could neither rule him out nor say for sure. The DNA sample was freely given for a previous robbery case.

In that case several mistakes led to it happening.

I have my concerns about it. I have even changed my stance in the death penalty because of the amount of mistakes made.

I still have no problem with police catching a rapist or killer using it. As long as a second and maybe third DNA test done and the results conclusive.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
Yea but it said that the sample wasn't good quality and the test could neither rule him out nor say for sure. The DNA sample was freely given for a previous robbery case.

In that case several mistakes led to it happening.

I have my concerns about it. I have even changed my stance in the death penalty because of the amount of mistakes made.

I still have no problem with police catching a rapist or killer using it. As long as a second and maybe third DNA test done and the results conclusive.
I agree whole heartedly - that bastard should fry if it was him - my question is where does this stop?

Though I would bet heavily that the govt already has my dna so it's moot when it comes to me.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
there are flags not to wave, but i got curious. the high estimates are 50,000 nsa agents. there are 325 million Americans. that's 6,500 people per agent. if they sat, unblinking, in front of a monitor for 8 hours, that would be 4.4 seconds per person. i'll gamble that i'm just taking a shit or picking my nose during my 4.4 seconds
 
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