The tongue bone's connected to the headbone
Today's score: one slice of banana bread with chocolate chips; four or five chocolate-covered raisins. And I finished the Ritter bar.
I'm deeply puzzled by this little "project" -- could there be a more useless (less useful) form of denial? I've not given up chocolate. I've just given up buying chocolate. A response to tiresome abundance; a resistance to being at the beck and call of every pastry shop in my hometown; a continuation of the last year's efforts to clean my home of anything not useful (e.g., frozen Thin Mints and chocolate bars more than a year old). It's hard to make a good story out of it, though things may get more exciting as supplies run low.
The subject line refers to the woodpecker's situation: tongue bone loops around to the top of the scalp, so if you pull their tongues (once dead) (them, not you), a little mohawk of feathers rises up to salute you. If you pull their tongues while alive (both of you, presumably), there's a risk of detachment. So don't.
I'm deeply puzzled by this little "project" -- could there be a more useless (less useful) form of denial? I've not given up chocolate. I've just given up buying chocolate. A response to tiresome abundance; a resistance to being at the beck and call of every pastry shop in my hometown; a continuation of the last year's efforts to clean my home of anything not useful (e.g., frozen Thin Mints and chocolate bars more than a year old). It's hard to make a good story out of it, though things may get more exciting as supplies run low.
The subject line refers to the woodpecker's situation: tongue bone loops around to the top of the scalp, so if you pull their tongues (once dead) (them, not you), a little mohawk of feathers rises up to salute you. If you pull their tongues while alive (both of you, presumably), there's a risk of detachment. So don't.
