Hope it's a good year for you Max! Wishing you best of luck in your studies and musical endeavors.

Hope it's a good year for you Max! Wishing you best of luck in your studies and musical endeavors.
Thanks Schulzy!
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
anguyen92 wrote:Oh well. Deal with it.
This made my day.
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
Happy 50th, my dear friend!! I hope you had a great celebration!!
Do you know who Manti Teo is?maximzub wrote: ↑Tue Sep 05, 2023 10:45 pmThis made my day.![]()
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But you know what just made my month?
So last week I looked for the Plush girls on Snapchat and added them, hoping it was really them and not other people with the same names. Ashley Suppa added me back the same day. Only then I started to have a bad feeling that it might have not been her.
I worked up the courage to ask her today if she's Ashley Suppa the Plush bassist or a different Ashley Suppa. And guess what? It's really her.
I now have the Snapchat of my third favorite female rockstar.![]()
I didn't when I saw this post, but I just looked him up and read about the catfishing incident. Okay, but I don't think a potential catfisher would have their Snap location on....
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
We found poison ivy growing in the backyard along a fence line at my parents’ place over the summer and my mom ended up breaking out on her arms. That stuff sucks because the oil it leaves behind is what will cause it. Actually not a terrible thing your bedroom got the biolab cleanse lol.gbruin wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 1:59 pm So a couple weeks ago, I came home after a long road bike ride with a few small itchy welts on my knee. I figured I hit a bush or a flying ant or some other bug and got some bites, no big deal. But these things got redder and itchier and started spreading elsewhere on my legs and then forearms over the next week. So since this wasn't going away, I started looking at my various references for skin rashes (not Dr Google) and at first it looked a little suspicious for bed bugs. Ugh.
I get exposed to all sorts of infestations at work in the ER, usually from homeless people who get brought in, but we are pretty careful to use PPE and I change into clean scrubs after every shift so I don't bring any hitchhikers home. But my wife who had recently travelled to and stayed at hotels in Vegas and LA the week before when she drove our daughter out to college, so I asked her if she had any signs of bug bites after her trip. And while she didn't have any bites herself, the mention of the words bed bugs sent her into a panic. Oops. She googled bed bugs and it was on. So we looked all around our room and in the bedding and corners and behind shelves, and every little speck of anything was immediately labelled by my wife of being a BEDBUG!!! - until I looked at the accused and reassured her it was really just a fleck of paint or a piece of a tortilla chip or some other non-bug item. She couldn't find any definitive signs of bed bugs until I was at work a couple days later when she texted me a photo from the drawer of my nightstand with what might have been some dead bugs in it and proclaimed we have a bed bug infestation and went into full scale ebola epidemic level crackdown, googled the most extreme measures one can take when clearly being overrun by bed bugs, then moved most of the stuff out of the bedroom into the garage, laundered every item of anything that would go in the washer over the next 2 days, sprayed pesticide directly on remaining items, and then bombed the room. Deconned...
Now, honestly, I can understand the approach, if not quite the execution, but when I got home and looked at the bugs she found, they really didn't look like bed bugs, Size, body shape, being dead...they didn't really fit for a bed bug infestation. They looked more like the dead carcasses of little flies that spiders leave in the corners. So I made the mistake of wondering out loud what else this could be and I mentioned scabies (same as mange in dogs). She immediately googled scabies and with her extensive medical background looked again at my rash and exclaimed I didn't have bed bugs but rather I had SCABIES!!! and that now she was at risk since they are highly contagious and I needed to do everything possible to ensure her safety. Now never mind that the rash didn't really look like scabies either - I see scabies at work all the time and mine were the wrong kinds of lesions, wrong locations, I'd never gotten it before, etc. But why listen to a doctor when you have google in your hand? So she demanded that we get treated, with the main options being permethrin cream (which is hard to find and you have to leave it on the skin for 8 hours then shower) or a one time oral dose of the excellent but now infamous antiparasitic medication, ivermectin. This cheap and easy and effective drug is used worldwide for things like roundworm and strongyloides and it's given monthly to prevent heart worm in our dogs (Heartgard), and it also somehow got proclaimed by certain weirdo cult members a couple years back as a hidden/withheld cure for covid that the government didn't want you to have. So, though I was pretty certain that I didn't really have scabies, I also considered the minimal downside of taking a one time dose compared to the much greater risk of dealing with a paranoid and furious wife with google, so I found a pharmacy that was open on Labor Day and got my buddy to call in a dose of Ivermectin for my wife and I and we took our doses that evening. Cured...
The next morning, I got up to watch the time trial at La Vuelta (go Sepp!!) and then went back to bed after the stage and was sleeping before work until my wife came in and woke me up and said we are idiots. Now, that last part was not a particularly unusual start to a day for me other than that she included herself this time, and she showed me a picture from our backyard of some vine looking plant with three leaves together coming out from under the AC compressor. She asked if I remembered a couple weeks back when she made me clear out a bunch of overgrowth from a nearby runaway lilac bush around that AC unit, which I did in shorts and short sleeves, and she explains that that actually probably wasn't lilac shoots after all, but it sure looked a lot like poison ivy...
Damn...
It's pretty rare here in Colorado so it never occurred to me at the time. But yeah, that's it
The rash is starting to get better. And my bedroom is now as clean as a CDC Level A biolab. So I got that going for me. Which is nice.
anguyen92 wrote:Oh well. Deal with it.
gbruin wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 1:59 pm So a couple weeks ago, I came home after a long road bike ride with a few small itchy welts on my knee. I figured I hit a bush or a flying ant or some other bug and got some bites, no big deal. But these things got redder and itchier and started spreading elsewhere on my legs and then forearms over the next week. So since this wasn't going away, I started looking at my various references for skin rashes (not Dr Google) and at first it looked a little suspicious for bed bugs. Ugh.
I get exposed to all sorts of infestations at work in the ER, usually from homeless people who get brought in, but we are pretty careful to use PPE and I change into clean scrubs after every shift so I don't bring any hitchhikers home. But my wife who had recently travelled to and stayed at hotels in Vegas and LA the week before when she drove our daughter out to college, so I asked her if she had any signs of bug bites after her trip. And while she didn't have any bites herself, the mention of the words bed bugs sent her into a panic. Oops. She googled bed bugs and it was on. So we looked all around our room and in the bedding and corners and behind shelves, and every little speck of anything was immediately labelled by my wife of being a BEDBUG!!! - until I looked at the accused and reassured her it was really just a fleck of paint or a piece of a tortilla chip or some other non-bug item. She couldn't find any definitive signs of bed bugs until I was at work a couple days later when she texted me a photo from the drawer of my nightstand with what might have been some dead bugs in it and proclaimed we have a bed bug infestation and went into full scale ebola epidemic level crackdown, googled the most extreme measures one can take when clearly being overrun by bed bugs, then moved most of the stuff out of the bedroom into the garage, laundered every item of anything that would go in the washer over the next 2 days, sprayed pesticide directly on remaining items, and then bombed the room. Deconned...
Now, honestly, I can understand the approach, if not quite the execution, but when I got home and looked at the bugs she found, they really didn't look like bed bugs, Size, body shape, being dead...they didn't really fit for a bed bug infestation. They looked more like the dead carcasses of little flies that spiders leave in the corners. So I made the mistake of wondering out loud what else this could be and I mentioned scabies (same as mange in dogs). She immediately googled scabies and with her extensive medical background looked again at my rash and exclaimed I didn't have bed bugs but rather I had SCABIES!!! and that now she was at risk since they are highly contagious and I needed to do everything possible to ensure her safety. Now never mind that the rash didn't really look like scabies either - I see scabies at work all the time and mine were the wrong kinds of lesions, wrong locations, I'd never gotten it before, etc. But why listen to a doctor when you have google in your hand? So she demanded that we get treated, with the main options being permethrin cream (which is hard to find and you have to leave it on the skin for 8 hours then shower) or a one time oral dose of the excellent but now infamous antiparasitic medication, ivermectin. This cheap and easy and effective drug is used worldwide for things like roundworm and strongyloides and it's given monthly to prevent heart worm in our dogs (Heartgard), and it also somehow got proclaimed by certain weirdo cult members a couple years back as a hidden/withheld cure for covid that the government didn't want you to have. So, though I was pretty certain that I didn't really have scabies, I also considered the minimal downside of taking a one time dose compared to the much greater risk of dealing with a paranoid and furious wife with google, so I found a pharmacy that was open on Labor Day and got my buddy to call in a dose of Ivermectin for my wife and I and we took our doses that evening. Cured...
The next morning, I got up to watch the time trial at La Vuelta (go Sepp!!) and then went back to bed after the stage and was sleeping before work until my wife came in and woke me up and said we are idiots. Now, that last part was not a particularly unusual start to a day for me other than that she included herself this time, and she showed me a picture from our backyard of some vine looking plant with three leaves together coming out from under the AC compressor. She asked if I remembered a couple weeks back when she made me clear out a bunch of overgrowth from a nearby runaway lilac bush around that AC unit, which I did in shorts and short sleeves, and she explains that that actually probably wasn't lilac shoots after all, but it sure looked a lot like poison ivy...
Damn...
It's pretty rare here in Colorado so it never occurred to me at the time. But yeah, that's it
The rash is starting to get better. And my bedroom is now as clean as a CDC Level A biolab. So I got that going for me. Which is nice.
MaraCarr wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 9:46 pmgbruin wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 1:59 pm So a couple weeks ago, I came home after a long road bike ride with a few small itchy welts on my knee. I figured I hit a bush or a flying ant or some other bug and got some bites, no big deal. But these things got redder and itchier and started spreading elsewhere on my legs and then forearms over the next week. So since this wasn't going away, I started looking at my various references for skin rashes (not Dr Google) and at first it looked a little suspicious for bed bugs. Ugh.
I get exposed to all sorts of infestations at work in the ER, usually from homeless people who get brought in, but we are pretty careful to use PPE and I change into clean scrubs after every shift so I don't bring any hitchhikers home. But my wife who had recently travelled to and stayed at hotels in Vegas and LA the week before when she drove our daughter out to college, so I asked her if she had any signs of bug bites after her trip. And while she didn't have any bites herself, the mention of the words bed bugs sent her into a panic. Oops. She googled bed bugs and it was on. So we looked all around our room and in the bedding and corners and behind shelves, and every little speck of anything was immediately labelled by my wife of being a BEDBUG!!! - until I looked at the accused and reassured her it was really just a fleck of paint or a piece of a tortilla chip or some other non-bug item. She couldn't find any definitive signs of bed bugs until I was at work a couple days later when she texted me a photo from the drawer of my nightstand with what might have been some dead bugs in it and proclaimed we have a bed bug infestation and went into full scale ebola epidemic level crackdown, googled the most extreme measures one can take when clearly being overrun by bed bugs, then moved most of the stuff out of the bedroom into the garage, laundered every item of anything that would go in the washer over the next 2 days, sprayed pesticide directly on remaining items, and then bombed the room. Deconned...
Now, honestly, I can understand the approach, if not quite the execution, but when I got home and looked at the bugs she found, they really didn't look like bed bugs, Size, body shape, being dead...they didn't really fit for a bed bug infestation. They looked more like the dead carcasses of little flies that spiders leave in the corners. So I made the mistake of wondering out loud what else this could be and I mentioned scabies (same as mange in dogs). She immediately googled scabies and with her extensive medical background looked again at my rash and exclaimed I didn't have bed bugs but rather I had SCABIES!!! and that now she was at risk since they are highly contagious and I needed to do everything possible to ensure her safety. Now never mind that the rash didn't really look like scabies either - I see scabies at work all the time and mine were the wrong kinds of lesions, wrong locations, I'd never gotten it before, etc. But why listen to a doctor when you have google in your hand? So she demanded that we get treated, with the main options being permethrin cream (which is hard to find and you have to leave it on the skin for 8 hours then shower) or a one time oral dose of the excellent but now infamous antiparasitic medication, ivermectin. This cheap and easy and effective drug is used worldwide for things like roundworm and strongyloides and it's given monthly to prevent heart worm in our dogs (Heartgard), and it also somehow got proclaimed by certain weirdo cult members a couple years back as a hidden/withheld cure for covid that the government didn't want you to have. So, though I was pretty certain that I didn't really have scabies, I also considered the minimal downside of taking a one time dose compared to the much greater risk of dealing with a paranoid and furious wife with google, so I found a pharmacy that was open on Labor Day and got my buddy to call in a dose of Ivermectin for my wife and I and we took our doses that evening. Cured...
The next morning, I got up to watch the time trial at La Vuelta (go Sepp!!) and then went back to bed after the stage and was sleeping before work until my wife came in and woke me up and said we are idiots. Now, that last part was not a particularly unusual start to a day for me other than that she included herself this time, and she showed me a picture from our backyard of some vine looking plant with three leaves together coming out from under the AC compressor. She asked if I remembered a couple weeks back when she made me clear out a bunch of overgrowth from a nearby runaway lilac bush around that AC unit, which I did in shorts and short sleeves, and she explains that that actually probably wasn't lilac shoots after all, but it sure looked a lot like poison ivy...
Damn...
It's pretty rare here in Colorado so it never occurred to me at the time. But yeah, that's it
The rash is starting to get better. And my bedroom is now as clean as a CDC Level A biolab. So I got that going for me. Which is nice.
If you travel you certainly are at risk for the dreaded bedbug. I always check mattresses in all hotels and behind the headboards.
This is gross but will share. It’s educational. Bedbugs are Medium to Dark Red. I know because I have worked clinics where I would be putting a patient on a dialysis machine and see a bug crawl on their body. I have actually grabbed a bug with my gloved hand and squashed it right in front of my patient.
I said…” I Got it!” The patient just looked so numb like you know… “just let it live” …vibes![]()
Anyway when there is an infestation you have to get rid of everything. Burn it! They get in everything and reproduce… like cockroaches.
I am so glad yours was just poison ivy. I Hope you are on the mend!
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
...unless they're dumb. I'm sorry, guys.
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
8)
anguyen92 wrote:Oh well. Deal with it.
gbruin wrote:Go reread what zaz says
Well, I'm in a much better mood than I was in a week ago, certainly.maximzub wrote: ↑Thu Sep 07, 2023 11:47 pm I feel like I'm setting myself up for failure. In fact, I feel so bad that I think I might just quit music after my show with Six Speed tomorrow. Six Speed anyway is going to be stopping playing live after that show and one show on Thanksgiving because we're sick of playing the same songs in the same arrangement to the same crowds. We will instead move to doing stuff for YouTube...if I even keep doing music.
Why did this have to happen? I created the new band because I wanted to have something new and refreshing to do with music. Instead, I'm running into even more problems than before. And we've already scheduled a practice for Thursday. If that doesn't go well, I'm out. It's seeming to be impossible to find people I enjoy playing with that are close to my age, so I might as well not even try.
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.
anguyen92 wrote:Oh well. Deal with it.
Is this a reference to the Josiah that once was a user on this board?
Check out my coolest TABN posts!MaraCarr wrote: It is not like a crush or a lust thing.