Brief thoughts on my recent confinement
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It would have seemed as unlikely as winding up in a nursing home while still in my early 50s.
Yet both happened–simultaneously–earlier this year.
For reasons that will become obvious I developed what I ultimately called a “bottometer” to predict daily attitude (health, happiness, etc.) while confined in a skilled nursing facility. It was a negative scale. The more repulsed and aggravated and irritated I was by unwanted, yet unavoidable, closeup views of VPL’s and/or panties and/or their silhouettes, the better I actually felt overall.
The sight of a low-rise crimson tanga with a broad black lace trim screaming through stretched white poly-cotton pants could raise my ire (what could she possibly be thinking) enough to provide me with adrenaline sufficient to last a day or more.
But I’m getting ahead of the story.
My dining companions at the nursing facility were three older women with long experience with nursing homes–in general and with this one in particular. Two were in their late 70s and one was in her late 90s (she was the most independent, able to wheel herself around in a wheelchair). All of them loved to sing and I was always willing to join in with them. I surprised them by not only knowing favorites like “Bicycle Built for Two” and “Ivan Skavinsky Skavar” but also standards like “Twilight Time” by The Platters:
Heavenly shades of night are fallingIt’s twilight timeOut of the mist your voice is callingIt’s twilight timeWhen purple colored curtainsMark the end of the dayI hear you my dear at twilight time
We got along very well.
Their most consistent complaint (and it came up daily in one form or another) concerned aides who “dressed like sluts” and “always seem to be scratching”–even in church.
I hadn’t noticed the latter habit, but once pointed out to me I couldn’t seem to escape it. It was, after all, happening at eye level.
“Would you like dome more coffee?” an aide would ask–handing me a cup with one hand while scratching away with the other.
My companions’ theory was that if those aides cared so little about themselves you just knew where we ranked.
One day one of the younger women, who had been uncharacteristically morose during the meal, suddenly burst into tears.
We discovered, in bits and pieces over time, that earlier in the day an aide had wheeled her out into the hall in order to do something in the room. The aide then went around a corner and promptly forgot her.
“I could hear her every once in a while—she was complaining to another aide about how a resident had filed a complaint against her and how terribly unfair it was—but she just left me there. After a while—a half hour or more–I really needed to use the restroom. But I was stuck out there with no way to call anyone for help. I yelled a couple of times, but nothing.”
What happened next wasn’t the worst case scenario, of course—that would be death—but it was adequately humiliating. My companion was left feeling helpless.
“I’ve placed my life in the hands of someone so stupid she wears a bright red bra and panties under a white uniform. I guess I should be glad I only wet my pants.”
“Well,” another of the women said, “her chartreuse undergarments are even worse. I think they glow in the dark.”
We had to laugh—it hurt too much not to.
When I was in nursing school 30-plus years ago several of the older biddy nurses spent what seemed an inordinate time on appearance.
At that time female to male ratio in nursing was about 18-1 and we men were novelties.
The dress code called for a white skirt and “one or two slips as needed” along with a white blouse “made of material substantial enough to obscure undergarments” and a smock. Dresses were discouraged but, if worn, had to be cut in such a way the hemline didn’t rise when the woman reached straight overhead. Pants were banned outright.
The older biddy nurses had been known to stand a young nurse in front of a spotlight (legs apart, hands raised ala Di Vinci) to make sure her clothing was adequately opaque.
The concession–and single rule–added for men was white pants, white shirt and white smock “of material and design commensurate with the goals of the rules for women.”
Another strange obsession of the older biddy nurses was the relative position of the nurse and patient. There were right ways for entering and exiting rooms, taking vitals, etc. Some procedures (major dressing changes for example) were “blocked” as elaborately as a Broadway play.
The major rule–one that seemed silly to us–was never turn your back on the patient. Like a television evangelist, you were supposed to go about your task without ever completely breaking eye contact—even when it required contortions.
What the older biddy nurses didn’t tell us (or at least the men) but almost certainly knew was a person stuck in a bed or wheelchair or even chair has a butt-high line-of-sight. Add that to the unavoidable close proximity involved in nursing care and the consequences start at unpleasant and move downward. I never really understood this until I changed roles.
Make no mistake: I was in a first class skilled nursing facility and received first class care. Any complaints I make–stated or inferred–are broader than a single facility and tend to be universal.
Staff-wise at my skilled nursing facility the overall female to male ratio was about the same 18-1 as when I was in nursing school. The nurse to aide (including tech) ratio was about 1-12 and and the therapist (physical and occupational) to aide ratio about 1-6.
Everyone, but nurses and techs in particular, worked a lot of double shifts (16 or 20 hours) or quick returns (back after only 8-12 hours off). At least once I noticed none of the nurses on my floor left at shift change–although a couple changed work assignments.
The food service workers were polite and, for the most part, efficient. The cooks I met were very good and willing to make special dishes when asked in advance.
The food was better than most institutional food and at time it bordered on being very good. Soups were especially good and desserts were particularly decadent. Maintaining an appetite was not a chore.
My dealings with the administration were limited, but typical—some anonymous bureaucrat or another would get excited because this or that form was incomplete and the nurse or aide would calmly help the patient take care of it in order to “keep them off your back.”
All the horror stories about untrained and unqualified nursing home workers who are misused and exploited by their employers had me prepared for the worst, but they proved untrue. Yes, some were better than others and yes, some complained about their working conditions, but as a whole the employees were capable of doing their job and seemed to be glad to be doing it.
An unusually large percentage of the workers were also attending school in order to move up the pecking order in the nursing home.
Almost all of the aides were already certified, but several housekeeping and food service workers were working toward aide certification. Aides were working toward certification as med techs or lab techs or licensed practical nurses. LPNs were working to become registered nurses and two-year RN’s were working toward bachelor’s degrees.
But almost none of them said they were working on advancement as a way to get out of nursing homes. While the rest of the medical world may look down on nursing home workers, many of the workers at this nursing facility said it is closer to the old-fashioned ideals of nursing that made them get into the field in the first place.
I was checked and settled in by a nurse who had no visible panty lines–something I didn’t appreciate at the time, but soon came to realize had been very special. Of my generation–she may have been a little younger–her attire included a blouse buttoned to the neck and a covering smock. Even though she was wearing pants, I have to believe the old biddy nurses would have approved.
What put me in a nursing home was a staph infection that required intravenous antibiotic treatment every four hours. I had just spent about three weeks in the hospital with septic arthritis in my right knee complicated by pneumonia and, of course, the infection. The physical therapy department had taught me to get around with a walker, but I was not yet allowed to do so on my own.
I had come from the hospital with a Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter, or PICC, hooked to a vein in my right arm. Six times a day a nurse came in and hooked me up to the antibiotics. Each treatment, in theory, took about half an hour. The vagaries if the IV pump and viscosity of the antibiotic IV fluid meant I was pretty much tied me to the bed for the duration of the treatment.
Additionally, four times a day—every six hours—a tech would give me a breathing treatment for asthma and the lingering effect of the pneumonia. This also took about half an hour.
Five days a week I also had physical therapy and occupational therapy–each an hour more or less. Add three meals a day in a dining facility and it’s obvious I had no long stretches of free time.
The drastic difference between the attire of my initial nurse and her subsequently introduced aide not only set off my bottometer—which I didn’t know I had until then—it may have also calibrated it.
Just after I finished a late supper in my room (I’d missed meal time) the aide came in, announced it was my bath night, and said, “But I guess you don’t want a bath or shower yet.”
I disappointed her I could tell, but during those three weeks in the hospital I had only been allowed an occasional “whore’s bath” and was ready to pay any price for hot water, soap and shampoo.
As I said earlier, I was technically still wheelchair bound, so the trip to, and preparation for, the shower was somewhat complicated. Also, the PICC in my right arm had to be covered and waterproofed.
The the rising and falling and pulling of her uniform (raising her arm bared her midriff, for example) during the pre and post shower procedures revealed—to my amazement and slight disgust—a taste for daringly low rise panties of hot pink lace. Continuing the theme of too much information, I also learned her left breast (ala Janis Joplin) had a tattoo of a heart; the right side of her chest was tattooed with a vine that spiraled around the breast several times before ending in a blossom on the aureole; a stylized floral motif of some kind was tattooed on the area above her pubic mound; and her right hip cheek had a tattoo of a cartoon character.
Despite a haze made of fatigue, medication and hot steam my bottometer screamed. This is not the stuff on which dreams are made.
Before breakfast the next morning a physical therapy tech came to evaluate me. I told her I could get around fine using the walker and then set about killing myself to prove it.
It worked. She put me in a category that said I could go (using the walker) without an escort to meals, activities, etc. I still had to have an escort to and from the shower, but not in it. It’s hard to describe how good this makes one feel.
Past bad experiences taught me how easy it is to loose range of motion, so I tend to attack physical therapy full force and them push my limits. If pain allowed (and I was more than adequately doped up) I’d add 10 repetitions to whatever the tech asked and always try to walk twice as far as expected.
Many of the routines involved counter pressure provided by the therapist or tech and the resulting twisting and turning for position meant there were times it felt like we were playing “Twister” or wrestling in slow motion.
During one of these awkward positions I realized the therapist was dripping sweat on me. Worse, I realized this meant I had undoubtedly been dripping sweat on her for quite some time. But we both politely ignored it and went on with the exercise.
After several weeks I progressed to using a cane—a degree of freedom that seemed unbelievable after being dependent on a walker for so long. I was even, very slowly, beginning to handle stairs. I began to believe the light a the end of the tunnel was not a train approaching a a high rate of speed.
I’m not sure when my brain death began. It’s just something residents of nursing homes slip into. We did a lot of strength and rage-of-motion exercises for our upper and lower body, but no one was really looking out for our minds.
Sure, the aides dragged everyone they could to various activities. Get them out of their room and etc. But activities often meant little more than mindlessly staring at different walls.
My roommate watched television every waking hour he wasn’t eating or going through physical therapy. Fortunately for me he was deaf and watched it with the captions ion but the sound muted.
I read. As often the case when faced with short snatches of time to fill I read passages from “Desert Solitaire” by Edward Abbey. I read it for comfort and inspiration. Abbey’s book is my “New Testament” I suppose—I carry it around as a companion. Through the years I have read it while hiking, camping, traveling, waiting. I keep copies of it in almost everywhere and have been know to force copies on friends and strangers.
“Has joy any survival value in the operations of evolution?” I read after randomly opening the book. “I suspect that it does; I suspect that the morose and fearful are doomed to quick extinction. Where there is no joy there can be no courage; and without courage all other virtues are useless. Therefore the frogs, the toads, keep on singing even though we know, if they don’t, that the sound of their uproar must surely be luring all the snakes and ringtail cats and kit foxes and coyotes and great horned owls toward the scene of their happiness.”
But Abbey began losing against the institutional soporific impress of the nursing home and I was approaching desperation when I pleaded with my son to dig out a copy of another nearly constant companion: “The Character of Physical Law” by Richard Feynman. Sure enough, he found a copy under the driver’s seat of my car (taking advantage of my confinement he was borrowing it—the car that is).
“The age in which we live is the age in which we are discovering the fundamental laws of nature, and that day will never come again,” Feynman wrote. “It is very exciting, it is marvelous, but this excitement will have to go. . .
“There will be a degeneration of ideas, just like the degeneration that great explorers feel is occurring when tourists begin moving in on a territory.”
Yes, but there will always be something new under the sun. Every answer launches a new line of questions.
“The world is so full of a number of things, I’m sure we should all be as happy as kings.” So goes Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Happy Thought.” Of course Stevenson also said, “To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive.”
Concerning quantum mechanics Feynman said: “I am going to tell you what nature behaves like. If you will simply admit that maybe she does behave like this, you will find her a delightful, entrancing thing. Do not keep saying to yourself, if you can possibly avoid it, ‘But how can it be like that?’ because you will get ‘down the drain’, into a blind alley from which nobody has yet escaped. Nobody knows how it can be like that.”
Paul Dirac said, “A physical theory must possess mathematical beauty.” One problem with Feynman is his beauty sometimes obscures his mathematics. Feynman makes things seem so logical we forget the underlying complexity—we think we understand more than we actually do because Feynman has made it seem so obvious.
Brain fuel for surviving IV therapy. For blacking out the fact the nurse’s underwear is so tight it has divided her bottom into what appear to be several balloons on the verge of explosion. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Entropy must increase. But please, not yet.
Back to Abbey:
“Civilization is Jesus turning water into wine; culture is Christ walking on the waves;
“Civilization is a youth with a Molotov cocktail in his hand; culture is the Soviet tank ort the L.A. Cop that guns him down;
“Civilization is the wild river; culture 592,000 tons of cement;
“Civilization flows; culture thickens and coagulates, like tire, sick, stifled blood.”
When I was finally given my walking papers from the skilled nursing facility I faced one final hitch. The nursing facility rules said the PICC in my right arm could only be removed by a registered nurse. Unfortunately my wing didn’t have an RN on duty at the time. One would have to be brought in from another wing.
She was, of course, busy with patients on her own wing and then busy with patients on other wings who, for one reason or another, required the services of an RN. I ended up waiting—futilely—for several hours.
Then—at shift change—my LPN grabbed an incoming RN in the parking lot and convinced her to take care of me before she reported to her own wing.
The RN was very nice and seemed very professional, but when she bent over to remove the PICC the waist of her pants—inches from my nose—pulled down just enough to reveal a tattoo of a butterfly. Framed by the straps of her thong.
My bottometer told me I wasn’t leaving a moment too soon.
White ladies pantsUpon the old clothesline;Polka-dotted bloomersOh my gosh they’re mine!Oh don’t you wishThat you could wear them too?That will only happenWhen the seat wears through.
Tags: Brief, confinement, recent, Thoughts
July 26th, 2010 at 2:20 pm
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July 29th, 2010 at 6:54 am
I saw on TV a guy who had been in solitary for 10 years but because if they let him into general population they feared someone would kill him. He was a child molester and murderer. But I don't know if there is a limit.
August 6th, 2010 at 8:52 pm
It’s one of the most barebones filings we’ve seen in recent memory, but there’s no mistaking that at least one Windows Phone 7 device from HTC is going to make a stateside debut. If we had to guess, we’d say that this is the first official look at whatever phone we spotted late last month, but the only identifying mark anywhere is a PD26100 model number. Based on the test reports, we know for sure that it’ll boast Bluetooth, 802.11n WiFi and support for GSM 850 / UMTS I and II, but it’s obviously still up in the air as to what carrier this will be headed for. Given AT&T’s own proclamation that it’s aiming to be the “premiere carrier” for WP7 in the States, we’d reckon that this bugger has a better-than-average chance at sitting quietly beside Apple’s iPhone 4 and Samsung’s Cetus in due time. Those “holidays” are drawing ever closer, you know? Mysterious HTC Windows Phone 7 device breaks cover at FCC, swears it was invited originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Aug 2010 15:54:00…
August 17th, 2010 at 1:03 am
talk to myself. make a Cast Away Wilson
August 20th, 2010 at 1:49 am
Does it have electricity? Where does it get power from? Battery? Solar that charges a battery?
September 13th, 2010 at 3:45 pm
One-time Edmonton Oilers captain Jason Smith faces charges of domestic assault and confinement after an incident in Calgary earlier this summer.
September 14th, 2010 at 12:56 am
Saying many prayers for him and for you all.
September 16th, 2010 at 9:01 am
Man that sucks she sounds like a bitch. Did you get to meet Darby?
September 24th, 2010 at 7:06 am
I'm no expert, but I think prisoners are placed in administrative segregation for all kinds of reasons, including their own protection. You might want to go to Prison Talk Online for a more authoritative response, at http://www.prisontalk.com.
September 27th, 2010 at 2:55 am
Outstanding work! I love how your video is so short, sweet, simple, straight-forward, well researched, and yet so educational. This is an issue that is critical for so many to understand. Well done my friend! I’m usually into documentaries and educational videos that have a higher end production, however this is one of the best homemade videos I’ve ever seen! Good work and information, keep it up my fellow American Patriot!
October 6th, 2010 at 5:06 pm
To get directly to my bottom line on this: I’ve been impressed by all those cable TV science documentaries vividly illustrating the extreme chaotic violence which seems to pervade the universe. This state of affairs is frightening, terrifying, for any rational mind — for any living creature of any species — but there it is. So: we are a violent species living in a violent universe among many other violent species. But everything we can do to ease the horror of this situation I applaud. By the way, what kind of creature, if there is a God, would dream up such a nightmare?
October 7th, 2010 at 10:12 am
A very long day for the team. Only just finished the run!!! Quick brief & bed me thinks…
October 7th, 2010 at 10:07 pm
I do agree with most of what you say except the death penalty, how can any one who has any compassion or sense of fairness ever think of the death penalty being good or useful , first it has no deterrent on crime or murder, and statistics have proven this out many times, but, in view of what happened in Illinois and LosAngles the Rampart deal .where thousands of cases have got to be retried because of false evidence etc, where are your peoples common sense , also , consider if some one is accused of any thing especially a Major crime , unless you have deep pockets as O,J, did at least $100,000 in your pocket you can not buy justice, and you will be appointed a public defender ( better known as public pretenders )who will do as their employer "the state " tells them to, and that is to get you
convicted, don't forget this contry has a 98.8 %conviction ratio.
sohow in hell could any one get a fair trial, when it is proven so many times that the cops and the prosecutors lie like a rug,
October 30th, 2010 at 3:44 pm
Those are 2 totally unrelated things: the most recent video
which you see at the top of your channel is your "featured
video"; and there's no "automatic" way to "always" embed
updated videos because the embed code for each of those
vids is completely different from the other.
November 20th, 2010 at 2:51 am
NEWS: Wayne Pacelle: Country's Clucking About Cruelty of Cage Confinement, Food Safety Risks
November 29th, 2010 at 3:11 am
Free market deregulation in this industrial society will result in a competitive labour market leading to lowered salaries and lowered spending, i.e. a downward spiral of earning less, spending less and producing less, it also favors criminal countries who exploit labour. Free market in practise does not offer job opportunity, it leads to soaring competition, credit crisis and job loss.
November 29th, 2010 at 10:15 am
All of your recent faves have been chekked & clikked. Have a nice day @tara840406 @vetta10
December 1st, 2010 at 5:36 pm
As some one who develops new technology for the military unless the material is declassified by the department of defense for public knowledge. Anyone that post an answer to this question could be looking for some real legal trouble. The problem with your question is if you look at the NSA's website they brag how they design technology, the U.S. government would never allow you to buy anywhere. The reason why it's spy equipment is because you don't know it exist.
I'll throw you a bone you can make a listening device from hooking two cellphones together and it's possible to connect a cell or beeper to the grounding wire of a car and putting the vehicle out of use by just making a call.
December 5th, 2010 at 3:46 pm
Hair stylist told me she had a customer who didn't wash hair for the entire confinement. She almost fainted.
December 22nd, 2010 at 7:33 am
Your safest bet is not to take any liquids. Only keep things you need i.e Passport, ID, etc…
December 24th, 2010 at 7:15 pm
Drunk thoughts don't lie…
January 5th, 2011 at 6:51 pm
Setting up a meeting with Mr. Mayor to talk about relationship between Victoria and Japan(Morioka). Any thoughts/ideas? #yyj
January 25th, 2011 at 11:26 pm
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January 29th, 2011 at 12:16 am
A man accused in the deadly Tucson shooting rampage reportedly researched lethal injections, solitary confinement and political assassinations in the days before the attack.
February 3rd, 2011 at 9:24 pm
Ideas don't stay in some minds very long because they don't like solitary confinement. #teamfollowback
February 13th, 2011 at 12:56 pm
I have a salary calculator on my site that you can use.
Hope this helps.
March 21st, 2011 at 2:44 am
Confinement in one dimension is how we live most of our lives, neglecting stairs or airplanes. We are free to run around in any horizontal direction but we cant get very far from the ground. In quantum confinement in one dimension the particle can move in the x and y directions but is confined to a plane. In more quantum mechanical terms, the particle behaves like a wave in two directions, but has quantized states in the third. So its momentum has two continuous components and one discrete component.
Confinement in two dimensions is like a hallway, or like a ladder. The particle can go back and forth at any speed it pleases, but it must stay on a line. The particle has two discrete quantum numbers for its momentum and one continuous.
Confinement in three dimensions is like being stuck in a box or a closed room. The particle has all three of its momentum coordinates as discrete values. This means that it is truly in a single quantum state and not spread out in any direction.
April 1st, 2011 at 1:50 pm
Any sort of sex can give STDs. It depends on a lot of factors like how long ago you ate, etc. I don't think the duration affects it that much. The odds dont get that much worse as the duration goes on, and ergo they do not get much smaller as the duration decreases.
My advice: get tested for STDs as soon as possible. It is the only way to be sure.
April 9th, 2011 at 7:44 pm
There was an article about a guy who killed 30 cats and was recently caught.
The link to the story is at the bottom of my post.
Below are a few posts on the blog about the story.
Notice how vicious these nazilibs are and hiow ready to attack and kill or at least hope he is killed for animal abuse.
Notice how they love to judge without a trial.
Now compare that to the story about the abortionist who in partial birth abortions was at least as cruel as this guy was with the cats.
If killing him is so wonderful then those who support that are justifying the killing of the abortionists as well, but THERY would call you all kinds of vicious names for saying that.
Then look at all the gang members caught committing crimes and how these nazilib hypocrites keep screaming about "innocent till proven guilty" no matter how red handed they are when caught.
I think the hypocrisy and vicious nazilike anti freedom attitudes of liberalism is an excellent thing to study and write about.
As a world issue the same idea applies to the liberal excuses for Arab terrorism and blaming Israel for defending themselves.
on another blog about this animal abuse story the nazilibs were saying things blaming Jews not only for this but blame them for ALL the worlds problems, because this guy's last name SOUNDS Jewish.
This proves that liberalism=nazism and these same bloodthirsty libs who want this guy to be tortured and killed are the same ones on a blog about Iraq screaming about how "innocent" a terroist is just because he was caught with fellow terrorists and how "evil" it is to torture.
cheneywatch wrote:
You hypocritical vultures. You hawk over this kids life screaming "Guilty!" "Guilty!"
I'm outraged at what happened to these cats and certainly support stiff penalties to the GUILTY party, but you jerks hear of a suspect and all go screaming for blood.
You look at a photo and start your pseudopsychiatry:
"narcissistic, pyschopathic, serial killer"
"This little monster"
If he is indeed guilty of these attacks, then let a jury find out.
But you are a throwback to the Salem loons who heard accusations and ran out with your pitchforks. Get a grip on your souls and get right with the Lord.
In the United States of America you are innocent until proven guilty.
The unamerican Guilt First garbage can take a hike. Shame on yourselves.
PoolsClosed wrote:
cheneywatch – Innocence until proven guilty may be the law, but the reality is he is as guilty as sin and the police have him by the short curlies. Join this psycho in a firing squad.
momof3 wrote:
You know what he needs?? A rabid, feral kitty to scratch that smug, serial killing smirk off his smart ass face!
Mindbender wrote:
I've got a 9mm bullet with his name on it.
lucky1606 wrote:
Someone needs to wipe that smirk of this cat killer's face.
May 1st, 2011 at 3:10 pm
I just got an email from Albert Renshaw in which he asked me to look at a new video by him on the birth certificate:
“Obama Birth Certificate Faked In Adobe Illustrator – Official Proof 2″
Andrew: care to comment? The first thing I notice is that he fails to address the points about the optimize scan feature raised by nyatnagarl.
May 2nd, 2011 at 9:32 am
1:02 there’s a word for that. It happens during the first st–
May 8th, 2011 at 2:42 am
Essentially, that Russia is trying to mirror the successes of the American Economy by adopting a market system more closely oriented to America's. The most successful (non-oil) economies in the world are market economies rather than economies focused on centralized decision making. Russia realizes this, and is trying to play catchup.
July 23rd, 2011 at 1:30 am
oh you and your crazy thoughts! we did talk about the amazing JBAS captains!
July 24th, 2011 at 6:15 am
Our daydreams are 100% responsible for reality. Dejavu is the memory of when you imagined the reality you’re experiencing. Our imaginations create reality. Observation is manifestation. Our reality sucks, because we don’t edit our negative daydreams. Circle, X and toss upwards, out of your mind, negative images to prevent their recurrence or influence over your (or Our) reality. Then, imagineer our world into a paradise. Send your email address for free “Understanding Your Power.”
August 15th, 2011 at 8:04 pm
so true only ppl with ugly thoughts r ugly
September 4th, 2011 at 12:06 pm
#solution 2 1 intermediate accounting kiesco #pdf #search on http://www.findpdf.us at #2011 #September: Solution 2 1 In…
September 8th, 2011 at 3:32 pm
Bengaluru, Sept 8 (IBNS) State Bank of Hyderabad (SBH) on Thursday beat Air India by one wicket in the final of the third edition of the Airtel Raj Singh Dungarpur Trophy in Bengaluru.
Put in to bat, Air India scored 282-9 in the allotted overs. SBH overhauled the target in a thrilling chase, with four balls to spare.
Brief scores: Air India 282-9 (50) lost to SBH 283-9 (49.2)
The cash prizes announced by the BCCI are as follows:
read more
September 24th, 2011 at 5:17 am
This all day house confinement is killing me.. I feel like like a virgin on the other side of a private dance booth glass
October 17th, 2011 at 5:49 am
NEW HAVEN, CT.- The Yale University Art Gallery exhibits side by side two of Vincent van Gogh’s most renowned paintings, Cypresses (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) and The Starry Night (Museum of Modern Art, New York). Completed in June 1889, during his yearlong confinement at the asylum in Saint-Rémy, in southern France, these two paintings exemplify the work of this modern master at the height of his creativity.
October 21st, 2011 at 3:33 pm
This video is awesome!!!
November 3rd, 2011 at 11:48 pm
با این حماقت هایی که این چند روزه از خودت نشان دادی نشان درجه یک بلاهت خوراک دوست را از آن خودت کردی
January 7th, 2012 at 5:48 pm
i’m tellin you man…they probably got a solitary confinement cell in the stock room! Lol
February 3rd, 2012 at 11:11 am
#Ideas dont stay in some minds very long because they dont like solitary confinement. #teamfollowback #相互フォロー #fact
February 11th, 2012 at 11:37 am
recent article: Rio De Janeiro Is Abundant In Apartment Rentals For Many Budgets
February 20th, 2012 at 8:51 pm
In brief video clip, hunger striker #KhaderAdnan speaks out from hospital bed via
March 9th, 2012 at 8:57 pm
Tooth Decay In Children On The Rise: Dentists Regularly See Kids With Cavities: A recent New York Times article …