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2003-05-07, 11:51 PM | [Ignore Me] #19 | |||
Major General
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GAH! Its like this month is full of dieing.... mean so far i have 3 friends that just lost there grandma or grandpa, now it seems like soon my grandpa is going....(he's roughly got a big temp. of 101-104, and refuses to stay in a hospital) All i say, hope for the best. i'll stick your grandma into me prayer tonight. Peace.
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PS Storys: The Eraser The New World (5Chap.) http://mrchevys3.blogspot.com/ Living is easy with eyes closed. |
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2003-05-08, 08:27 AM | [Ignore Me] #20 | ||
Sergeant Major
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Pater aeterne! rogo te per vitam et mortem acerbissimam dilectissimi Filii tui, per infinitam bonitatem tuam: concede mihi propitius, ut gratia tua semper vivam et moriar.
Benignissime Iesu! rogo te per amorem Patris tui, quo te semper amplexus est, per ultima verba, quibus in cruce pendens Patri spiritum tuum commendasti, suscipe spiritum meum in vitae meae fine. Sancte Spiritus! perfectam caritatem in me accende et in illa spiritum meum conforta, dum ex hac vita emigrem. Sanctissima Trinitas, unus Deus, miserere mei nunc et in hora mortis meae. Amen. Aztec: I hope your grandmother finds peace. God bless you and your family. -Confectrix
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Confectrix "Speech is the mirror of the soul; as a man speaks, so he is." -- Publilius Syrus |
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2003-05-08, 10:28 PM | [Ignore Me] #21 | ||
Lightbulb Collector
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I just learned that her kidneys have failed. Not sure if it's just one or both, but now things are getting really bad.
I'm signing off for the night. I have to talk with my dad. She's in God's hands now.
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The gun katas. Through analysis of thousands of recorded gunfights, the Cleric has determined that the geometric distribution of antagonists in any gun battle is a statistically predictable element. The gun kata treats the gun as a total weapon, each fluid position representing a maximum kill zone, inflicting maximum damage on the maximum number of opponents while keeping the defender clear of the statistically traditional trajectories of return fire. By the rote mastery of this art, your firing efficiency will rise by no less than 120%. The difference of a 63% increase to lethal proficiency makes the master of the gun katas an adversary not to be taken lightly. |
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2003-05-08, 11:03 PM | [Ignore Me] #22 | ||
Major General
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Flying blind and with little fuel....not a good sight...
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PS Storys: The Eraser The New World (5Chap.) http://mrchevys3.blogspot.com/ Living is easy with eyes closed. |
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2003-05-09, 02:56 AM | [Ignore Me] #23 | ||
Aztech, being from a family that has had their own hearts broken in the past 2 years, I can honestly say that you'll be able to come out of this. It may not seem like it right now, but "this too shall pass". This is the better way for her to go.
A little backround here. My grandmother passed away in 1995. She had been in a hospital for 17 years due to a stroke. She knew where she was and what she was doing, but the stroke basically paralized her. She had no control over her vocal cords either. It was with a very sad heart that I went to visit her in the nursing home every two weeks. The home was located about a half an hour away from where we lived, but my father religiously kept his appointments with her. To this day I will not go into a nursing home. I have too many bad memories of those places and had wished to god that there had been laws in place to be rid of her suffering. When I left to join the Navy, I saw her. When I came back from Boot Camp, I saw her. I even got dressed up in my dress blues for the occasion. When she saw me standing in front of her bed in my uniform, she let out a wail I can only believe was one of joy, but I couldn't tell. When she finally passed away in 1995, it was almost like it was a blessing. But that blessing should have been done a long time before she actually died. Two years ago my father went in for a routine surgery to his knee. He had the same proceedure done to himself two years prior on his other knee and things turned out good. This time it didn't. He got a massive blood clot in his lung and had to be rushed to a hospital that could take care of him, 2 1/2 hours away. The winds were extreme that night so no helicopter could take him. They had to go down via ambulance. My brother was serving over seas and I was living in NY. I got the call shortly after they put my father into the ambulance. I receved a call from my mother the next morning saying that my father had passed. It was more than I could stand. I left work and hurried to where my wife worked, ran into the office crying my eyes out screaming that dad had died. The next couple of months I wasn't a really nice person. I blamed my wife for my fathers death. Why? Because she assured me as I lay crying in my bed that Tuesday night that he would pull out of this ok. How irrational is that? Like my wife is a goddess who can magically turn things around! I treated her like crap. I did everything I could to push her away from me, except physical abuse (never EVER hit a woman). I finally saught counceling and now I can say that I am OK with dads passing. It took me two years, but it could have been worse. He could have been like his mother. In a hospital surrounded by machines sustaining his life.
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Commanding Officer To the next idiot who says the PS2 Devs do not listen: See this Thread |
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2003-05-09, 07:20 AM | [Ignore Me] #24 | ||
Private
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It can be real tuff... My great grandma went through almost the exact same thing...
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www.antimatrix.net "Put as much power as you can into a single shot. Cause most of the time, thats all you get." -Me |
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2003-05-09, 01:57 PM | [Ignore Me] #26 | ||
/salute
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Happy lil' Elf, now Santa approved. -Immortalis Vita Its eating it's food. (Incorrect use of apostrophes specifically for UV) "Oni wont get banned, unless you get banned. Its a 2 man ticket."-Hamma to TekDragon re: his request to ban Oni. Life is good. |
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2003-05-09, 02:09 PM | [Ignore Me] #27 | ||
Major
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The same thing happened to my grandmother not a scant half a year ago.
It was dually depressing. We got the call that she was desperately ill while we were still in England on a vacation. We cut our vacation short by about a week to travel back. Luckily, thanks to the nicest people who have ever been at an airport ever, we got back in time to say goodbye to her. The day after, my dad broke the news. The pain had been too severe, so they had to give her several shots of morphine. There wasn't a good chance she would survive. And she didn't, unfortunately. But I felt good knowing that she was able to finally rest in peace. The most emotional moment at the funeral was when my father went up to the podium and spoke about her life. He described the last minutes before the injection. My grandmother slowly leaned over to the nurse and asked, solemnly, "Can I go home now?" She was a devout Christian all her life. My mother, who was the daughter of my grandmother, had actually never reached for the box of tissues throughout the entire service but was clutching it tightly by the time my father had finished. I can still remember the fond memories of my grandmother. I used to go over to her house and watch TV, or bake cookies or cupcakes. She would read me stories when I stayed over and was always a smart-aleck, saying jokes like, "Where have I seen you before? Wherever it was, you shouldn't have been there!" She eventually had to move to a new house with my aunt when she couldn't climb stairs anymore. Eventually, she was put on dialisis machine and formed a tight bond with those who helped her with the activity every week. I only have one grandparent left, now. My grandmother who lives in a remote town a drive away. She's getting old, now, and is losing some of her hearing. I'm afraid of what will happen when she goes. Will we ever go and visit her old town again every thanksgiving or Christmas? We might, but it will never be the same. Sir, I salute your brazen will and iron attitude. I know that I could barely stand to sit in my grandmother's room as she was having her last sleep. I can only pray that your grandmother will have the same peaceful end that mine did. |
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