RE: [ET2] Tee Hee Hee - best tonic

From: StarFields <starfields_at_nZSrworidLYi3w9P_MUnlRjLdV6RYP67txP6V8sKVC8a5CdlacKm9oBL0mIHA99FvD6T>
Date: Sun, 20 Apr 2003 17:10:38 +0100

> Tee hee hee (and huge inner smile). Every cell in my
> body is being fixed right now by your cynical humour
> (or my reception of it). I need to trance it through or
> it might get stuck and I won't be able to take in the
> next lot. Please keep it coming - I'll make space for
> it. I'm on the floor, rolled up and I love it there.
> I'm just wondering where I can put my small mirror
> tiles when I get something I could stick them on.

Well humour - in all its varieties - has been a tool of the fool
for many a good age to dig away at the oh so serious foolishness
of those fools who think they know it all.

Great believer in it, myself.

Bandler said once, "What you can't joke about, you have an issue
with."

You could replace the word issue with injury but the gist would be
the same.

So, by all means, keep on giggling to yourself. As I now do every
time I'm in a bank.

<anecdote warning on>

One time, I get this phonecall from a friend.

"I'm in HSBC (bank) and I'm having a panic attack! All of a
sudden, everything feels so totally wrong! I'm scared!!!"

I responded quite automatically with, "But HSBC *is* all wrong!
You're just seeing it *exactly* it is!"

Friend stops, then starts to laugh. "Oh, yeah, that's it!"

... and we spend about ten minutes just being unable to do
anything other but laugh.

Which has had the result that trips to the bank are rather
enjoyable for both of us these days, and it's starting to rub off
on supermarket visits and hospitals now (although, in truth, I'm
still having a bit of a struggle in seeing the funny side of the
huge madness that are 21st century 1st world hospitals - work to
be done still ...)

>
> LOL (Does that mean lots of love or something else? I
> haven't yet learned all this e-speak)
>
> Angela xxx LOL (in my speak).

LOL! No it means laughs out loud. rofl is the next one up, rolls
on floor, laughing. <g> is grin or giggle, depending.

There's lots more - a guide can be found on

http://www.pcworld.com/howto/article/0,aid,88686,pg,3,00.asp

<waves to Angela and winks>

SF

           
Received on Sun Apr 20 2003 - 09:14:24 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Fri Dec 04 2009 - 11:02:32 GMT