oortcloud
OortCloud
oortcloud

"While working at Jim's Krispy Fried Chicken in Mexia, Anna Nicole met Billy Wayne Smith, who was a cook at the restaurant; the couple married April 4, 1985[6] when she was 17 and he was 16. Anna Nicole gave birth to their son, Daniel Wayne Smith, on January 22, 1986. She and Billy separated in 1987, and she moved to

If the screenshot of his supposed tweet a couple of days ago was really him, yes. Can't find it again...supposedly it's been scrubbed.

Well, I'll bite. I think Adnan did it, based on my personal experience with a jealous man. Here are the three main reasons: 1) Why isn't Adnan more outraged at Jay, if Jay put him behind bars wrongly? He seems so equanimous. So was my abuser. Soft-spoken, mild-mannered, liberal—but try to leave him and he went

Happened in KC

I remember her from the 70's. And though this doesn't matter as far as her allegations, she's as beautiful today as she was then. Every bit.

That's impressively reasoned and mature. What are you doing on Gawker?

I'm a woman. I guess I thought you were saying that if a person eats too much may they are susceptible to certain conditions, like others have been saying that eating sugar causes yeast infections. I guess it was a stupid question.

My mother has that. What causes it? thanks

Why is this?

That's a good point—I've never had someone "normal" come up to me out of the blue and attempt to pick me up. I'm really old and back in my day we said "I ain't no pickup." Sometimes I got "I know you ain't no pickup" and the guy would still try to chat with us and ask us out, but "I ain't no pickup" meant he had to

What on earth did these whiners do back in the days when a gentleman had to be "properly introduced" even to talk to a lady? It's not like for most of history a guy could just go up and talk to a woman he didn't know. Guys should be glad they can get to know us at, say, meetup and stuff, rather than have to be

Like I said in another part of this thread...I grew up in a strict fundie sect where the men rule the roost, but in many cases they resent the hell out of being brought up that strict. I can't count the number of wives who've told me the first time their husbands hauled off and punched them was on the honeymoon.

I've been the single friend of many divorcing women. I've had time for them and also haven't been judgmental. I KNOW marriage is hard—maybe that's one reason I remained single for so long. More married people should keep up friendships with their single friends, because in my experience single friends sometimes

Me again—another thing I've seen three or four times...a brain injury changes one spouse's entire personality. I knew a couple where the husband had a brain injury and forgot who his wife even was. It was like he didn't know her. She tried to stay and take care of him but he became increasingly mean to her. I've

"Or one person being freaked out by the construct of marriage and acting out and the other person resenting it." — I have totally seen this. I grew up in a strict fundie sect where there was huge emphasis on getting married in college. Having been brought up with such strict rules, most of the people had had no

You can send all your bank info and PINS to me, I'll look after it

I knew someone who died and wasn't found for a week. In 2002 or so I was online dating and this guy responded who had what looked like a pretty impressive background. Harvard, political activism, philosophy circle with some illustrious people in it. But I googled him and found out he had shaved more years off his

I knew someone who didn't have a single soul in the entire world. Or so he said. From 2012 to part of 2013 I let a down-on-his-luck former programmer (or so he said) guy who was looking for work live on my top floor in exchange for "8 hours a week handyman work." He didn't do any work and it turned into a squatter

Awww if it's any consolation, I spent my 40th birthday COMPLETELY alone. No one in my life at all. Seventeen years later I can't get a minute to myself. I'm drowning in social obligations. Life can turn a corner just like that.