Two days in a row - giant fat ass.
Yesterday started out ok, but then after dinner we went back to a friend's house and I stuffed my face with junk food. The only consolation was the 700-cal workout I did in the morning, followed by a 90 minute hike up a mountain. But I still feel like I swallowed a hand grenade. My tumtum hurts. :*(
Back to the on/off switch - it is located in your lateral hypothalamus. It's a bit of a problematic spot as far as correctly destroying the right area. Do it wrong, and it could have the opposite effect: you may eat yourself to death. God speed, ladies!
Anyone have any ideas on how I might conceal a really adorable, cuddly pet snake? I love snakes, but Mum--for reasons I cannot fathom--will not allow me to bring one into the house. I know keeping a timber rattlesnake or a northern copperhead (my fav) might not be practical, but there are other options. Like the python I got attached to in the pet shop. It was red, and super adorable, and I carried it around for like half an hour while my friends looked at in-bred puppy-mill puppies. And yes, I know pythons get kind of big, but look at that face!

What a muffin! How could you resist?
o yeah i dont like snakes they freak me out so much ugh but hmm im sure u can find a way to hide it from ur mom if ur really determined too
ReplyDeleteim sorry that ur tummy hurts i hope that it feels better soon
and iknow tomm u will do amazing well adn these last 2 days will b forgotten
Haha I think snakes are the shit... they smell though, so hiding it may not be possibly haha Good luck though!!
ReplyDeleteI had a turtle once... all it did was lay eggs and hide in it's shell... So i'm thinkin a snake may be a little more interesting.
Have an awesome day.
Lilah
Snakes?
ReplyDelete-shudder-
You must be so brave!
Hahaha...the fear of snakes is like a primordial thing. You can't rationally discourage it, it has to be overcome through exposure or desire.
ReplyDeleteBesides, pythons and boa constrictors often strangle their owners, sometimes to death.
While certain reptiles, amphibians and other non-mammalian animals become attached to their hosts, snakes seem (and I say "seem" because I have cared for more than one constrictor and have never witnessed something resembling fondness, but that is personal experience without a shred of science behind it) only to tolerate humans until they grow large enough to eradicate them.
I guess if you wanted one small enough to hide, I'd go for a garter snake. I caught and released a couple of them this summer. They're fairly easy to maintain, and don't have tooooooo strong of a smell.
Yes, I have heard that the big ones can turn on their owners. Not surprising, consider they're locked up in cages. That's the other big problem with me having a snake - I don't really believe in caging animals, so Mum might notice it slithering 'round the house.
ReplyDeleteGreat idea, Kazehana, about the garter snakes. I play with them outside all the time, and these other ones we get in the yard a lot. They're kind of big and all black, but they're quite friendly. I suppose I could just be happy with the ones that I make friends with out in the yard!
Ooooh, I love snakes! They're adorable :D My mom won't let me have one though :( sucks!
ReplyDeleteGood luck on convince/hiding it from your mom xD