You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   200-224 
 225-249   250-274   275-299   300-324   325-349   350-374   375-399   400-424   425-449 
 450-474   475-499   500-524   525-549   550-574   575-599   600-624   625-649   650-674 
 675-691          
 
Author Message
25 new of 691 responses total.
hematite
response 625 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 01:22 UTC 2000

Okay Sarah, you can come unbury my f*ing car out of bufo. After I 
unburied my roommates car with her friends help. And I get to shovel 
mine out alone.
I hate the snow. I hate doctors. I hate school. I hate accounting. All 
I want to do is curl up and die. Permanently. (And yes, I know that is 
the point of dieing. And no, I don't care about my spelling)
ashke
response 626 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 02:08 UTC 2000

<comforts Wendy and helps unbury her car>

Just a little blue tonite.  Might put up my christmas tree.  Feeling kinda
lonely.  Thank god for grex, eh?
jiffer
response 627 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 02:58 UTC 2000

*hugs wendy*

Wanna move to Georgia with me?  Augusta only gets an inch every three years
or so...
hematite
response 628 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 03:23 UTC 2000

Thanks guys..

And so..I got my econ final test grade back, near failed it. found out 
we're not getting the house we applied for, so i have no where to live 
next year yet. and everyone's pissed at me because it's all my fault it 
took us so long to turn in our applications. 
carson
response 629 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 03:34 UTC 2000

(you could always transfer to NMU.  plus, we have real hockey.)  :^)
beeswing
response 630 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 04:25 UTC 2000

my paper sucks. I don't wanna turn it in tommorrow
birdy
response 631 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 05:18 UTC 2000

Wendy - I would be glad to help you with your car if you lived here.  ;-) 
I have fun rocking people out of snowy patches - good exercise.
senna
response 632 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 07:11 UTC 2000

Damn.  rough night everywhere.  I need more than just Toronto.
scg
response 633 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 07:16 UTC 2000

Thinking back on living in Michigan, I'm struck by how car dependant people
there are.  I realize that if I did any amount of socializing with somebody,
one of the first things I would know was what sort of car they had, as it
would go everywhere with them.  It was possible to see if somebody was at work
by whether their car was in the parking lot.  A broken down car meant its
owner was stranded unless they rented a car.  Not owning a car of some sort
was just about unthinkable, and a sign of great poverty, at least for people
who didn't live their lives almost entirely within central Ann Arbor.  Living
in an area where I drive my car maybe once a week, and where a large number
of my friends don't own cars because they don't want to deal with finding
somehwere to park them, really puts a different perspective on a lot of
aspects of life.
birdy
response 634 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 07:49 UTC 2000

<nods>  If I move to Chicago for grad school, I'll probably only drive my car
once a week or so to visit friends back home in Michigan.  Every time I go
to Chicago, we take the subway *everywhere*.  It's very rare to hop into
someone's car.  A friend of mine just moved to Manhattan and sold his car
since it wasn't worth it to keep it.  He takes the subway and bus and flies
home to Michigan.

Having a car feels like a necessity to me since my busy schedule makes taking
the bus a Royal Pain.

But this is the bummed item.  =)

<set drift = off>
bru
response 635 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 12:46 UTC 2000

Snow made me late to work because the landlord had not plowed the lot intil
8:00, got to work at 8:30  (1.5 hrs. late)  I came home at three and yelled
at the landlord, very politely because they still had not plowed out my lot.
seems like the thing to do is to plow it while people are at work, not after
the sun goes down.
ashke
response 636 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 15:08 UTC 2000

I got stuck because they decided not to plow behind my building where the cars
are, other than one little patch.  I got my car out with little trouble
yesterday, and ended up not paying attention and finding a huge pile of snow.
Then I couldn't get out, someone offered to help, but I had to help him
because his battery was dead and he didn't have jumper cables.  1.5 or so late
to work and my toes are frozen.  <wiggles her finger in the air> woo hoo.
gelinas
response 637 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 17:57 UTC 2000

<DRIFT>
The Ann Arbor area is not as car-dependent as SoCal.  When I was a student
here, living in Northwood V, I either took the UM bus or walked to Central
Campus.  The Kroger at Plymouth and Green (now a Busch's) was close enough
that I could walk for groceries, if the car was . . . unresponsive. 
Similarly, when we lived on Yost, I could either take the bus or walk to
work (sometimes, walking was as fast as waiting for the bus).  Even now,
living just east of Zeeb, I can walk downtown.

In SoCal (Orange County, specifically), the busses shut down at or about 
8:00pm, and there was nothing almost nothing within walking distance (comes
of living in the middle of a bean field, I guess).

The Bay area is atypical of California, in my experience.  I enjoyed my
visits to northern California far more than I did living in southern
California.
</DRIFT>
hematite
response 638 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 22:20 UTC 2000

Today did not go well. <curls up in bed and cries herself to sleep>
mooncat
response 639 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 13 22:24 UTC 2000

<huggles Wendy>
ashke
response 640 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 00:25 UTC 2000

<huggles wendy>

Snow is good, and pretty.  However, it taking an hour for me to get home
because of people drives me NUTS.  So I'm going to put up my tree and be
happy.  Or pretend.
birdy
response 641 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 05:40 UTC 2000

I would like to inform the Ann Arbor road crews that there are LOTS OF PEOPLE
WHO GET OUT OF WORK AFTER SIX.

Thank you.
gelinas
response 642 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 05:58 UTC 2000

What makes you think they were clearing the roads before that, Sarah?
I was on the streets from about 14:45 until 17:15.  The only thing I saw
pushing snow around was other cars.  (Of course, it didn't really start until
15:00 or so.)
birdy
response 643 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 06:17 UTC 2000

I agree with that too.  =)  I can't believe that I've seen four road plows
since Monday morning...are they short-staffed or underbudgeted?
senna
response 644 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 06:53 UTC 2000

Well, just when my weekend is ready to start, it stops.  The CV joint in my
car is malfunctioning, or so I presume from the fairly heavy vibrations I'm
getting at speed.  Same thing happened to the Camry I drove.  I might not make
Toronto at all.  What a waste.  
beeswing
response 645 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 07:17 UTC 2000

Paper almost done. Now I have to grade papers, exams, and compile final 
grades until my eyeballs melt. I am so tired of this...
birdy
response 646 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 07:31 UTC 2000

Steve - this happens to my car every winter.  During heavy snow, the ice and
snow get caught up in the springs and cause them to act funky.  The result
is a horrible, scary vibration/shimmy in the front end that gets really bad
at 50-55 mph then kinda evens out around 65-70.  If I turn the wheel one way
or another, the shimmy gets weirder.  Sound familiar?  If not, then I'm sorry
about your CV joint.
carson
response 647 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 13:29 UTC 2000

(methinks birdy's used to large road crews ready to clear snow at almost a
moment's notice, a la Marquette & Gaylord.  even K-Zoo has a large road
crew [the largest MDOT-controlled force in the state, FWIW].  not A2,
though...)

(IBB Marquette's practically deserted.)

scott
response 648 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 13:32 UTC 2000

The A2 road crews were probably getting some much-needed sleep after dealing
with the first big snowfall.
mooncat
response 649 of 691: Mark Unseen   Dec 14 14:45 UTC 2000

I hate this weather....
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   125-149   150-174   175-199   200-224 
 225-249   250-274   275-299   300-324   325-349   350-374   375-399   400-424   425-449 
 450-474   475-499   500-524   525-549   550-574   575-599   600-624   625-649   650-674 
 675-691          
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss