I'm reading The Librarian Spy, but I decided to skip chapters in the point-of-view of a character that hasn't hooked me. We'll see if that works - so far, they're two different plots and little overlap, so I might not miss much of the story!
I also started The Lost Years, a Trek novel I read years ago and now own.
I wasn't feeling like a Trek book before bed last night (and nothing from my bookshelves either), so I started an ebook from the Cavanaugh Cowboys series.
This is how I end up with multiple books going at the same time. "What do I feel like reading?" Tsk tsk!
I have started Peter James "Dead Man's Grip". Another Inspector Grace book. Having read half way through I can say it is a good read, if a little iffy on life / procedure at times.
I have now finished this book and found it a really good read.
My daughter loaned me this "You will like it coz it deals with the elderly."
It seemed a bit dull, but half way through, I found I had to read the next chapter, though I had planned to put it down.
So, I do seem to be enjoying it. When I get to the end I will know better. I rarely give up on a book once I start it. I just tend to slow down as I go if I am not too fussy.
Post by Popcorn&Candy on Jan 11, 2023 5:29:21 GMT -5
I finished reading my library book yesterday evening: and an enjoyable novel it was too. It took a good few hours to read, but was worth every minute.
I shall now be reading my two magazines: "Good Housekeeping" and "Woman & Home". Don't be fooled by the titles: they are modern and aren't fuddy-duddy.
Being old fashioned and right now I am reading the back of my cereal box. lol...
I used to use food packaging to get more exposure to French, before it was time to teach me at school. (Grade 4 was the typical starting grade for a second language back then.) My mum concluded that I could use the challenge of French immersion when there was talk of starting it up in my city. I agreed, so that began in grade 7. And I'm still fascinated by languages! 😁
I have a couple graphic novels from the library (The Giver by Lois Lowry, plus Little Women Part 1). Keep forgetting to go back to The Librarian Spy, a novel my younger sister also has from her library. And in the evenings, I've finally gotten to a Louie Giglio book I've had on my shelf for a bit, about a healthy outlook on life and relationships.
And in the evenings, I've finally gotten to a Louie Giglio book I've had on my shelf for a bit, about a healthy outlook on life and relationships.
I don't read self help books very often. Actually, I HAVE read:
+"Say What You Mean And Get What You Want" by Tricia Kreitman +"Real Gorgeous" by Kaz Cooke +"Babe Bible" by Anita Naik +"Naughty But Nice" Anita Naik +"Cupcakes and Cashmere" by Emily Schuman +"Cupcakes and Cashmere: At Home" by Emily Schuman +"Feel The Fear And Do It Anyway" a book dear to my heart
These are GREAT self help and inspiring books to add to your bookshelf.
It was a good read: again, it isn't a fuddy-duddy magazine. I am too old for Cosmopolitan magazine: being 42 years old, I don't fit the reader category. Anyhow, I now have the new issue of "Woman & Home" magazine to read. This'll be from cover-to-cover. In fact, years ago I read a load of Cosmo magazine back issues. My sister had bought them, so I read through them all. There was quite a pile of them actually, so it took a long time. But read them I did. I later read "Glamour" and "Marie Claire". I read "Sugar", "Just 17" and "Cosmo Girl". "Company" magazine was good, too.
Post by Rebecca Jo on Jan 15, 2023 21:21:08 GMT -5
I don't think we can be too old for really good kids books, so I grab them at the library sometimes for me as well as the boys. I just finished a manga Little Women specifically made for kids.
I don't think we can be too old for really good kids books, so I grab them at the library sometimes for me as well as the boys. I just finished a manga Little Women specifically made for kids.
I often read Jaqueline Wilson books when I can get them from the book exchange. Jaqueline Wilson
Ive started a novel called behind closed doors... Starting off about a supposedly runaway Girl and then it seems that everyone in the community has something to hide , I don't know brain bleach really..
To be honest I've decided I've been getting a bit lazy I'm only reading English novels that I pick up at the second-hand store and that's very bad my next batch will be Dutch. I have no excuse to play the expat and insist on English books it's silly.
Ive started a novel called behind closed doors... Starting off about a supposedly runaway Girl and then it seems that everyone in the community has something to hide , I don't know brain bleach really..
To be honest I've decided I've been getting a bit lazy I'm only reading English novels that I pick up at the second-hand store and that's very bad my next batch will be Dutch. I have no excuse to play the expat and insist on English books it's silly.
I had a scottish book, and I got tired of it after only one chapter.
I can read scottish, it's just tiring lol. I suppose if I persevered it would soon become natural.
I found an excerpt from the book if you all want to try.
Ah despised masel and the world because ah failed tae face up tae ma ain, and life’s, limitations. The acceptance ay self-defeating limitations seemed then tae constitute mental health, or non-deviant behaviour.
Success and failure simply mean the satisfaction and frustration ay desire. Desire can either be predominantly intrinsic, based oan oor individual drives, or extrinsic, primarily stimulated by advertising, or societal role models as presented through the media and popular culture. Tom feels that ma concept ay success and failure only operates on an individual rather than an individual and societal level. Due tae this failure tae recognize societal reward, success (and failure) can only ever be fleeting experiences for me, as that experience cannae be sustained by the socially-supported condoning of wealth, power, status, etc., nor, in the case ay failure, by stigma or reproach. So, according tae Tom, it’s nae good telling us that ah’ve done well in ma exams, or got a good job, or got off wi a nice burd; that kind ay acclaim means nowt tae us. Of course, ah enjoy these things at the time, or for themselves, but their value cannae be sustained because there’s nae recognition ay the society which values them. What Tom’s trying tae say, ah suppose, is that ah dinnae gie a f**k. Why? So it goes back tae ma alienation from society. The problem is that Tom refuses tae accept ma view that society cannae be changed tae make it significantly better, or that ah cannae change tae accommodate it. Such a state ay affairs induces depression on ma part, aw the anger gets turned in. That’s what depression is, they say. However, depression also results in demotivation. A void grows within ye. Junk fills the void, and also helps us tae satisfy ma need tae destroy masel, the anger turned in bit again.
So basically ah agree wi Tom here. Whair we depart is that he refuses tae see this picture in its total bleakness. He believes that ah’m suffering fae low self-esteem, and that ah’m refusing tae acknowledge that by projecting the blame oantae society. He feels that ma means ay emasculating the rewards and praise (and conversely condemnation) available tae me by society is not a rejection ay these values per se, but an indication that ah dinnae feel good enough (or bad enough) aboot masel tae accept them. Rather than come oot and say: Ah don’t think ah have these qualities (or ah think ah’m better than that), Ah say: It’s a loaday f**king shite anywey. Hazel said tae us, jist before she telt us that she didnae wantae see us again, whin ah started using for the umpteenth time: – You just want tae f**k up on drugs so that everyone’ll think how deep and f**king complex you are. It’s pathetic, and f**king boring. In a sense ah prefer Hazel’s view. Thir is an element ay ego in it. Why should ah reject the world, see masel as better than it? Because ah do, that’s why. Because ah f**king am, and that’s that.
The upshot ay this attitude is that ah was sent tae this therapy/counselling shite. Ah didnae want aw this. This shite muddies the waters for us; confuses rather than clarifies issues. Basically, aw ah ask is that cooters mind their ain business and ah’ll dae the same. Why is that because ye use hard drugs every cooter feels that they have a right tae dissect and analyse ye?
Once ye accept that they huv that right, ye’ll join them in the search fir this holy grail, this thing that makes ye tick. Ye’ll then defer tae them, allowin yersel tae be conned intae believin any biscuit-ersed theory ay behaviour they choose tae attach tae ye. Then yir theirs, no yir ain; the dependency shifts from the drug to them.
Society invents a spurious convoluted logic tae absorb and change people whae’s behaviour is outside its mainstream. Suppose that ah ken aw the pros and cons, know that ah’m gaunnae huv a short life, am ay sound mind etcetera, etcetera, but still want tae use smack? They won’t let ye dae it. They won’t let ye dae it, because it’s seen as a failure ay thir am failure. The fact that ye jist simply choose tae reject whit they huv tae offer. Choose us. Choose life. Choose mortgage payments; choose washing machines; choose cars; choose sitting oan a couch watching mind-numbing and spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing f**kin junk food intae yir mooth. Choose rotting away, pishing and shiteing yersel in a home, a total f**kin embarassment tae the selfish, f**ked-up brats ye’ve produced. Choose life.
I can read scottish, it's just tiring lol. I suppose if I persevered it would soon become natural.
I found an excerpt from the book if you all want to try.
Ah despised masel and the world because ah failed tae face up tae ma ain, and life’s, limitations. The acceptance ay self-defeating limitations seemed then tae constitute mental health, or non-deviant behaviour.
Success and failure simply mean the satisfaction and frustration ay desire. Desire can either be predominantly intrinsic, based oan oor individual drives, or extrinsic, primarily stimulated by advertising, or societal role models as presented through the media and popular culture. Tom feels that ma concept ay success and failure only operates on an individual rather than an individual and societal level. Due tae this failure tae recognize societal reward, success (and failure) can only ever be fleeting experiences for me, as that experience cannae be sustained by the socially-supported condoning of wealth, power, status, etc., nor, in the case ay failure, by stigma or reproach. So, according tae Tom, it’s nae good telling us that ah’ve done well in ma exams, or got a good job, or got off wi a nice burd; that kind ay acclaim means nowt tae us. Of course, ah enjoy these things at the time, or for themselves, but their value cannae be sustained because there’s nae recognition ay the society which values them. What Tom’s trying tae say, ah suppose, is that ah dinnae gie a f**k. Why? So it goes back tae ma alienation from society. The problem is that Tom refuses tae accept ma view that society cannae be changed tae make it significantly better, or that ah cannae change tae accommodate it. Such a state ay affairs induces depression on ma part, aw the anger gets turned in. That’s what depression is, they say. However, depression also results in demotivation. A void grows within ye. Junk fills the void, and also helps us tae satisfy ma need tae destroy masel, the anger turned in bit again.
So basically ah agree wi Tom here. Whair we depart is that he refuses tae see this picture in its total bleakness. He believes that ah’m suffering fae low self-esteem, and that ah’m refusing tae acknowledge that by projecting the blame oantae society. He feels that ma means ay emasculating the rewards and praise (and conversely condemnation) available tae me by society is not a rejection ay these values per se, but an indication that ah dinnae feel good enough (or bad enough) aboot masel tae accept them. Rather than come oot and say: Ah don’t think ah have these qualities (or ah think ah’m better than that), Ah say: It’s a loaday f**king shite anywey. Hazel said tae us, jist before she telt us that she didnae wantae see us again, whin ah started using for the umpteenth time: – You just want tae f**k up on drugs so that everyone’ll think how deep and f**king complex you are. It’s pathetic, and f**king boring. In a sense ah prefer Hazel’s view. Thir is an element ay ego in it. Why should ah reject the world, see masel as better than it? Because ah do, that’s why. Because ah f**king am, and that’s that.
The upshot ay this attitude is that ah was sent tae this therapy/counselling shite. Ah didnae want aw this. This shite muddies the waters for us; confuses rather than clarifies issues. Basically, aw ah ask is that cooters mind their ain business and ah’ll dae the same. Why is that because ye use hard drugs every cooter feels that they have a right tae dissect and analyse ye?
Once ye accept that they huv that right, ye’ll join them in the search fir this holy grail, this thing that makes ye tick. Ye’ll then defer tae them, allowin yersel tae be conned intae believin any biscuit-ersed theory ay behaviour they choose tae attach tae ye. Then yir theirs, no yir ain; the dependency shifts from the drug to them.
Society invents a spurious convoluted logic tae absorb and change people whae’s behaviour is outside its mainstream. Suppose that ah ken aw the pros and cons, know that ah’m gaunnae huv a short life, am ay sound mind etcetera, etcetera, but still want tae use smack? They won’t let ye dae it. They won’t let ye dae it, because it’s seen as a failure ay thir am failure. The fact that ye jist simply choose tae reject whit they huv tae offer. Choose us. Choose life. Choose mortgage payments; choose washing machines; choose cars; choose sitting oan a couch watching mind-numbing and spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing f**kin junk food intae yir mooth. Choose rotting away, pishing and shiteing yersel in a home, a total f**kin embarassment tae the selfish, f**ked-up brats ye’ve produced. Choose life.
Well, ah choose no tae choose life.
I can understand some of that! Woo hoo! Maybe it's partly because of dialect in books when I was younger, like George MacDonald's novels (though edited by Michael Phillips in the 90's).
Post by Rebecca Jo on Jan 16, 2023 16:55:42 GMT -5
I'm reading too many books at once, but that's typical of me.
I finished skimming The Librarian Spy. I like Madeleine Martin's descriptions and overall her style of writing, but something in this book didn't grip me. Oh well, it was worth a try.
I picked up the graphic novel of Dune (Book 1) from the library, and it's cool getting a visual with more depth than the movies. I should get back to the actual novel, which I set aside after 1/3 of it. Possibly about the same amount as is covered in this first graphic novel. (And I have the next on hold, since you can place a hold on books that are ordered if they've got an entry in the library's catalogue. I'll be the first to get it when it's ready for the shelves!)
For a lighter read than Dune, I've also read some of the graphic novel for A Wrinkle in Time, and so far I like the art from Hope Larson. Might buy this one for myself sometime!
With the older boys, I'm reading Dragon Rider (Cornelia Funke) in the evenings. The youngest has been wanting to read silently or draw without any reading aloud, so I will want to finish off The Hobbit on my own to count that read once again...
Doing pretty good for my GoodReads goal of 125 books this year!
I'm reading too many books at once, but that's typical of me.
I finished skimming The Librarian Spy. I like Madeleine Martin's descriptions and overall her style of writing, but something in this book didn't grip me. Oh well, it was worth a try.
I picked up the graphic novel of Dune (Book 1) from the library, and it's cool getting a visual with more depth than the movies. I should get back to the actual novel, which I set aside after 1/3 of it. Possibly about the same amount as is covered in this first graphic novel. (And I have the next on hold, since you can place a hold on books that are ordered if they've got an entry in the library's catalogue. I'll be the first to get it when it's ready for the shelves!)
For a lighter read than Dune, I've also read some of the graphic novel for A Wrinkle in Time, and so far I like the art from Hope Larson. Might buy this one for myself sometime!
With the older boys, I'm reading Dragon Rider (Cornelia Funke) in the evenings. The youngest has been wanting to read silently or draw without any reading aloud, so I will want to finish off The Hobbit on my own to count that read once again...
Doing pretty good for my GoodReads goal of 125 books this year!
If you have read a third, then you are over the hump of Dune, and should start really enjoying it.
I can read scottish, it's just tiring lol. I suppose if I persevered it would soon become natural.
I found an excerpt from the book if you all want to try.
Ah despised masel and the world because ah failed tae face up tae ma ain, and life’s, limitations. The acceptance ay self-defeating limitations seemed then tae constitute mental health, or non-deviant behaviour.
Success and failure simply mean the satisfaction and frustration ay desire. Desire can either be predominantly intrinsic, based oan oor individual drives, or extrinsic, primarily stimulated by advertising, or societal role models as presented through the media and popular culture. Tom feels that ma concept ay success and failure only operates on an individual rather than an individual and societal level. Due tae this failure tae recognize societal reward, success (and failure) can only ever be fleeting experiences for me, as that experience cannae be sustained by the socially-supported condoning of wealth, power, status, etc., nor, in the case ay failure, by stigma or reproach. So, according tae Tom, it’s nae good telling us that ah’ve done well in ma exams, or got a good job, or got off wi a nice burd; that kind ay acclaim means nowt tae us. Of course, ah enjoy these things at the time, or for themselves, but their value cannae be sustained because there’s nae recognition ay the society which values them. What Tom’s trying tae say, ah suppose, is that ah dinnae gie a f**k. Why? So it goes back tae ma alienation from society. The problem is that Tom refuses tae accept ma view that society cannae be changed tae make it significantly better, or that ah cannae change tae accommodate it. Such a state ay affairs induces depression on ma part, aw the anger gets turned in. That’s what depression is, they say. However, depression also results in demotivation. A void grows within ye. Junk fills the void, and also helps us tae satisfy ma need tae destroy masel, the anger turned in bit again.
So basically ah agree wi Tom here. Whair we depart is that he refuses tae see this picture in its total bleakness. He believes that ah’m suffering fae low self-esteem, and that ah’m refusing tae acknowledge that by projecting the blame oantae society. He feels that ma means ay emasculating the rewards and praise (and conversely condemnation) available tae me by society is not a rejection ay these values per se, but an indication that ah dinnae feel good enough (or bad enough) aboot masel tae accept them. Rather than come oot and say: Ah don’t think ah have these qualities (or ah think ah’m better than that), Ah say: It’s a loaday f**king shite anywey. Hazel said tae us, jist before she telt us that she didnae wantae see us again, whin ah started using for the umpteenth time: – You just want tae f**k up on drugs so that everyone’ll think how deep and f**king complex you are. It’s pathetic, and f**king boring. In a sense ah prefer Hazel’s view. Thir is an element ay ego in it. Why should ah reject the world, see masel as better than it? Because ah do, that’s why. Because ah f**king am, and that’s that.
The upshot ay this attitude is that ah was sent tae this therapy/counselling shite. Ah didnae want aw this. This shite muddies the waters for us; confuses rather than clarifies issues. Basically, aw ah ask is that cooters mind their ain business and ah’ll dae the same. Why is that because ye use hard drugs every cooter feels that they have a right tae dissect and analyse ye?
Once ye accept that they huv that right, ye’ll join them in the search fir this holy grail, this thing that makes ye tick. Ye’ll then defer tae them, allowin yersel tae be conned intae believin any biscuit-ersed theory ay behaviour they choose tae attach tae ye. Then yir theirs, no yir ain; the dependency shifts from the drug to them.
Society invents a spurious convoluted logic tae absorb and change people whae’s behaviour is outside its mainstream. Suppose that ah ken aw the pros and cons, know that ah’m gaunnae huv a short life, am ay sound mind etcetera, etcetera, but still want tae use smack? They won’t let ye dae it. They won’t let ye dae it, because it’s seen as a failure ay thir am failure. The fact that ye jist simply choose tae reject whit they huv tae offer. Choose us. Choose life. Choose mortgage payments; choose washing machines; choose cars; choose sitting oan a couch watching mind-numbing and spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing f**kin junk food intae yir mooth. Choose rotting away, pishing and shiteing yersel in a home, a total f**kin embarassment tae the selfish, f**ked-up brats ye’ve produced. Choose life.
Well, ah choose no tae choose life.
I tend to read as if I'm looking at a film so I hear the accent of the person in the book. With that in mind reading the above text wasn't so difficult.. it's a bit like reading Frisian at first it looks like gobbledygook but read phonetically it makes perfect sense, it's like reading something written by a 6-year old.
The fact is I read good Dutch I'd say to native standard but I don't like some translations and that's why I tend to stick to the English versions. But I really should make an effort to find good books that are translated well I know that John Grisham, Nicki French, RD Wingfield their books are translated beautifully the Agatha Christie's and Dick Francis are appalling..
I can read scottish, it's just tiring lol. I suppose if I persevered it would soon become natural.
I found an excerpt from the book if you all want to try.
Ah despised masel and the world because ah failed tae face up tae ma ain, and life’s, limitations. The acceptance ay self-defeating limitations seemed then tae constitute mental health, or non-deviant behaviour.
Success and failure simply mean the satisfaction and frustration ay desire. Desire can either be predominantly intrinsic, based oan oor individual drives, or extrinsic, primarily stimulated by advertising, or societal role models as presented through the media and popular culture. Tom feels that ma concept ay success and failure only operates on an individual rather than an individual and societal level. Due tae this failure tae recognize societal reward, success (and failure) can only ever be fleeting experiences for me, as that experience cannae be sustained by the socially-supported condoning of wealth, power, status, etc., nor, in the case ay failure, by stigma or reproach. So, according tae Tom, it’s nae good telling us that ah’ve done well in ma exams, or got a good job, or got off wi a nice burd; that kind ay acclaim means nowt tae us. Of course, ah enjoy these things at the time, or for themselves, but their value cannae be sustained because there’s nae recognition ay the society which values them. What Tom’s trying tae say, ah suppose, is that ah dinnae gie a f**k. Why? So it goes back tae ma alienation from society. The problem is that Tom refuses tae accept ma view that society cannae be changed tae make it significantly better, or that ah cannae change tae accommodate it. Such a state ay affairs induces depression on ma part, aw the anger gets turned in. That’s what depression is, they say. However, depression also results in demotivation. A void grows within ye. Junk fills the void, and also helps us tae satisfy ma need tae destroy masel, the anger turned in bit again.
So basically ah agree wi Tom here. Whair we depart is that he refuses tae see this picture in its total bleakness. He believes that ah’m suffering fae low self-esteem, and that ah’m refusing tae acknowledge that by projecting the blame oantae society. He feels that ma means ay emasculating the rewards and praise (and conversely condemnation) available tae me by society is not a rejection ay these values per se, but an indication that ah dinnae feel good enough (or bad enough) aboot masel tae accept them. Rather than come oot and say: Ah don’t think ah have these qualities (or ah think ah’m better than that), Ah say: It’s a loaday f**king shite anywey. Hazel said tae us, jist before she telt us that she didnae wantae see us again, whin ah started using for the umpteenth time: – You just want tae f**k up on drugs so that everyone’ll think how deep and f**king complex you are. It’s pathetic, and f**king boring. In a sense ah prefer Hazel’s view. Thir is an element ay ego in it. Why should ah reject the world, see masel as better than it? Because ah do, that’s why. Because ah f**king am, and that’s that.
The upshot ay this attitude is that ah was sent tae this therapy/counselling shite. Ah didnae want aw this. This shite muddies the waters for us; confuses rather than clarifies issues. Basically, aw ah ask is that cooters mind their ain business and ah’ll dae the same. Why is that because ye use hard drugs every cooter feels that they have a right tae dissect and analyse ye?
Once ye accept that they huv that right, ye’ll join them in the search fir this holy grail, this thing that makes ye tick. Ye’ll then defer tae them, allowin yersel tae be conned intae believin any biscuit-ersed theory ay behaviour they choose tae attach tae ye. Then yir theirs, no yir ain; the dependency shifts from the drug to them.
Society invents a spurious convoluted logic tae absorb and change people whae’s behaviour is outside its mainstream. Suppose that ah ken aw the pros and cons, know that ah’m gaunnae huv a short life, am ay sound mind etcetera, etcetera, but still want tae use smack? They won’t let ye dae it. They won’t let ye dae it, because it’s seen as a failure ay thir am failure. The fact that ye jist simply choose tae reject whit they huv tae offer. Choose us. Choose life. Choose mortgage payments; choose washing machines; choose cars; choose sitting oan a couch watching mind-numbing and spirit-crushing game shows, stuffing f**kin junk food intae yir mooth. Choose rotting away, pishing and shiteing yersel in a home, a total f**kin embarassment tae the selfish, f**ked-up brats ye’ve produced. Choose life.
Well, ah choose no tae choose life.
It's interesting to see this. I agree with you that it is rather tiring to follow, but it is understandable. Possibly more so than accents of some Scottish people if they read it aloud. Some of it actually bears some relation to Lincolnshire dielect but here few people use more than a smattering these days whereas I imagine the Scottish is more of a language. For interest, here is a site which shows some Lincolnshire. It is similar to Yorkshire but, like any of these, it varied quite a bit around the county. As I grew up in the countryside where it was more prevalent I understand more than townies would: Lincolnshire Dialect (There are some audio clips on this site too. Very understandable. The accent did get far broader in some places).
I had a patient with a very, very, very broad lincoln accent. He was also very deaf. I honestly could hardly make out a word he said, and there was no chance of his sentences. That he was deaf, and I was scottish, made it impossible for him to follow me too. He would gibber on, I would look after him, nod and smile, and 30 minutes later, I would move along 5 little cottages, and look after his sister. She, I could converse with, so I would ask her to tell him when I was calling back.
They were both really nice people, who died fairly close to one another.
a_muppet: Ha, I just spotted you, Noeleena - sneaking in. ::Sgc7Hl4::
Nov 13, 2024 3:58:37 GMT -5
*
TestDummyCO: WOF has creaky floors. ::mCOIty6::
Nov 13, 2024 21:01:47 GMT -5
heatherly: ::Sgc7Hl4::
Nov 13, 2024 21:06:02 GMT -5
jen: It's good to know you are still here Noeleena ::Sgc7Hl4::
Nov 14, 2024 3:39:22 GMT -5
Ɖσмιиιc ♰: creaking floors, you make me laugh, Cherry has good eyes huh?
Nov 14, 2024 21:25:03 GMT -5
noeleena: Thank you i do come in allmost every night ,just dont allways have some thing to say ,of cause you know i,m a spy....lol,s.
Nov 19, 2024 2:06:33 GMT -5
MaryContrary: lol hi noeleena!
Nov 19, 2024 5:58:54 GMT -5
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MaryContrary: she's like the wof elf on a shelf *giggles*
Nov 19, 2024 5:59:54 GMT -5