shewantsmore
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2006
- Posts
- 12,480
Looks like a lovely warm weekend, im glad its not so hot now,it was too much
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How do you live with that sort of heat? Is it high humidity as well? Our 40.3 = 104 was just bonkers. The overnight temperature wasn’t much better.have things cooled down a bit there yet?
currently, my outdoor thermo reads 100.. should be 96 with a 'feels like' of 103. i'd say it feels closer to 110. tooooooo hot out there. if i move away from the fan i'm a mess.
with difficulty. seriously.How do you live with that sort of heat? Is it high humidity as well? Our 40.3 = 104 was just bonkers. The overnight temperature wasn’t much better.
Rain tomorrow and then rising to 30C by Sunday for the south east.
It's pretty here...loads of trees and rolling hills, ponds and a stream.


Tha UK thread just got amazing, thank you for sharing. What a wonderful place to live. Even if it’s for about two weeks of the year when it’s neither too hot or too cold.here are 3, gotta go through my files. the back of our property is a tree-covered hill (we're on a hill but the back rises even more steeply past the pastures), and when it's rained the whole hillside can be covered in thick mist from the breathing trees. One day last winter, we had some rain then a really cold snap overnight that froze the raindrops. In the morning, when the sun hit the trees there, it was blindingly beautiful, afire with light and all colours as the light refracted. Amazing stuff.
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Oh, that sounds like fun.That does look amazing. I like the Facebook group “view from my window” where people post their picture. Makes the world a smaller place.
How many times should France have scored??Triffic Netherlands v France game so far. May the worst team win!
The Dutch goalkeeper saved ten French attempts. But they lost to a French penalty.How many times should France have scored??
I'm sure France hit the woodwork a half dozen times too.The Dutch goalkeeper saved ten French attempts. But they lost to a French penalty.
oh, no, lol... it's wonderful a lot longer than that. i don't mind the cold, either!Tha UK thread just got amazing, thank you for sharing. What a wonderful place to live. Even if it’s for about two weeks of the year when it’s neither too hot or too cold.
the footie?Triffic Netherlands v France game so far. May the worst team win!




God bless the NHS it's just a shame it's so under funded and under so much straina few more...
a view of the hill out back beyond the gardens and pastures
looking downhill from the front porch
the little garden pond
the entire footprint of the house and front/back garden i lived in UKside fits a few times over just into the fenced veggie garden here. I know i'm really lucky; the chiggers, fire ants and even small black ants that bite all come with it free, tooView attachment 2163343View attachment 2163346View attachment 2163347
i enjoy taking snaps with my phone and my tiny brit garden was pretty nice, too.
anyway, there are benefits and drawbacks wherever one lives, i guess. Remain everlastingly thankful the UK still has a National Health Service, seriously. It's insanely expensive over here. Make sure brits never lose it, despite various governments trying to ruin it!
i know, it's been undergoing a stripping of its assets, including staff, due to pay, hours and more, especially since thatcher sought to largely dismantle it in favour of people going private. The pay and hours saw so many good doctors and nurses leave the UK for America, for instance, in a brain drain. Combine that with the cost of housing and the sold off council houses not replaced at the promised rates, and now covid? I'd not want to be a nurse OR a doctorGod bless the NHS it's just a shame it's so under funded and under so much strain
i know, it's been undergoing a stripping of its assets, including staff, due to pay, hours and more, especially since thatcher sought to largely dismantle it in favour of people going private. The pay and hours saw so many good doctors and nurses leave the UK for America, for instance, in a brain drain. Combine that with the cost of housing and the sold off council houses not replaced at the promised rates, and now covid? I'd not want to be a nurse OR a doctor![]()
18 months... damn, that's even worse than my own son's wait (autism, too) but that was GP, phone, in the flesh meetings after referral. Probably 6-8 months altogether. Pretty sure it was less than a year. I hope you're getting all the support, and taking avail of it, that you need.Neither would I, an ex partner worked for the NHS, she was a cleaner and you can genuinely make more than she did by delivering takeaways.
At the beginning of covid I had an assessment over the phone with a psychiatrist to start my autism diagnosis, it was an 18 month wait then, they can't even give a time frame in YEARS at the moment.
The gp side was done in under an hour, 6 months or more for the referral to go through and get a telephone appointment, they sent me a leaflet of phone numbers but that's it.18 months... damn, that's even worse than my own son's wait (autism, too) but that was GP, phone, in the flesh meetings after referral. Probably 6-8 months altogether. Pretty sure it was less than a year. I hope you're getting all the support, and taking avail of it, that you need.
I hope you have some family member you can discuss things with if you need to.The gp side was done in under an hour, 6 months or more for the referral to go through and get a telephone appointment, they sent me a leaflet of phone numbers but that's it.
I can relate to that, I'm 31 and I want to understand why I react like I do, my reactions can get pretty extreme, when my car broke down a few months ago I broke my hand punching a bus stop, not my greatest move.I hope you have some family member you can discuss things with if you need to.
My son, 30 this year, had problems... still has, but he found the more he learned about his condition the better he understood why he felt or reacted the way he did and the more i learned from and with him helped us understand eachother better, too.
Talking, even if it's electronically (my son's favourite means as he's uncomfortable around most people, too much input/stimuli) is really helpful as becoming even more isolated can be harmful to your overall appreciation of life.I can relate to that, I'm 31 and I want to understand why I react like I do, my reactions can get pretty extreme, when my car broke down a few months ago I broke my hand punching a bus stop, not my greatest move.
Unfortunately my family are super toxic but I've got people I can talk to if I need to, I probably should talk more to be honest.