#14 Sweet tea I don't know this happened. As a kid growing up in South Texas ice tea was served straight tea and if you needed it sweet you added real sugar from a quart sized sugar dispenser that was every table. But that was before all the toxic "sweetener" That big chem foods make and sell by the boat loads. Today, "IF" I feel compelled to spend almost $2 for a glass of tea, I order unsweet and usually get looks from the server. I never add any sweetener. Tea is fine all by itself. and to give ya'll a nostalgic moment...In my early teen years I would help my Dad work on his oil wells during the summer months. This was in the late 1950's. My pay for the day was a lunch in one of the thousands of lunch rooms all over South Texas. A Blue Plate Special cost under $2 and the gallon pitcher of tea was 25 cents. Tea was refillable and seconds through the buffet was free. For a growing kid with hollow legs it was Paradise
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I do not get #6... hint?
ReplyDeleteSome of us don't like people and would rather spend time with the dog if we're forced to go to a party.
DeleteThis guy is me. As my bride points out, I like animals more than people.
DeleteIt's true.
#20 Soundtrack, The End by the Doors with the voice over: "Saigon. Shit. I'm still only in Saigon".
ReplyDelete#12 - FTW. Didn't see that coming.
ReplyDelete#20 - A close second.
#15 - This is the one I'm going to recycle.
#15, ab-so-damn-lute-lee.
Delete#20 OMG, I wish we had thought of that when my son was a little boy.
ReplyDeleteFreaking awesome
ReplyDelete#14 Sweet tea I don't know this happened. As a kid growing up in South Texas ice tea was served straight tea and if you needed it sweet you added real sugar from a quart sized sugar dispenser that was every table. But that was before all the toxic "sweetener" That big chem foods make and sell by the boat loads. Today, "IF" I feel compelled to spend almost $2 for a glass of tea, I order unsweet and usually get looks from the server. I never add any sweetener. Tea is fine all by itself.
ReplyDeleteand to give ya'll a nostalgic moment...In my early teen years I would help my Dad work on his oil wells during the summer months. This was in the late 1950's. My pay for the day was a lunch in one of the thousands of lunch rooms all over South Texas. A Blue Plate Special cost under $2 and the gallon pitcher of tea was 25 cents. Tea was refillable and seconds through the buffet was free. For a growing kid with hollow legs it was Paradise
Number 6...."Reservoir Dogs"
ReplyDelete20 good laughs. # 20 took me back to my social work days. Everyone of those days made the staunch Conservative I am today.
ReplyDeleteWhy is #16 complaining? Everyone knows her Momma raising her kids.
ReplyDelete