The Junk Drawer

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
She, (nice eyebrows)

1655127994297.png

Envision this dude describing her

It's just like a real cor- uh, I mean, woman! Joking aside, this is a very good doll. Both vagina and anus holes are very nice, and easily deep enough for my longer-than-average size. Breasts, face, hands, and feet all feel real enough. (They of course don't feel like actual skin, but what do you expect? They're only rubber, after all.) Including an air pump (albeit quite a cheap one) is nice, because I don't have a better one and using an air pump prevents moisture from building up inside the doll. I did have some problems with the doll. First, the mouth being made of rubber, it's not very stretchy, so if your member is too large, it's too large. The size of the mouth is just big enough to fit two fingers, or about average penis girth. I'm substantially wider than average, so I can't use it that way. It's too bad, too, because feeling the inside with my fingers, it seems to have a really nice texture! Second, the breasts are quite difficult to inflate, because they just have a very large sealable hole rather than a proper valve (kind of like what you get on cheaper love dolls, but larger), unless I'm missing something. I found that it helps to inflate the breasts before inflating the body (the two air chambers press against each other and this causes the breasts to be firmer). Third, the places where the hair on the head sticks are sparse and dense, I suppose probably to cut down on costs. Unfortunately, this can cause the head to look really weird depending on how the hair is positioned, and this can easily happen just as a consequence of gravity unless you tie the hair up into a tight ponytail or something. Some of the scalp is painted black to hide this; I wish more of it was painted this way so that, for example, turning the doll a bit doesn't introduce you to a large, obvious bald patch. I should also note that the hair falls out really easily (I've already noticed a couple hairs falling out from only one use), so you should expect it to thin out over time. Of course, this applies to the pubic hairs as well. Not a big deal to me, but it may be something to keep in mind. Overall, it's about what I expected: not a perfect physical manifestation of a woman's body, but close enough, and more importantly, with very nice holes. I'd say it's worth the money. Just keep in mind that you won't be able to use the mouth unless you're about average girth (not too big and not too small), and don't be expecting something exactly like a real woman.

:)
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Anyone like horror/ghost stories?
I love them
Well, some I like but more often than not I find them a repetitive bore, like let's get a chainsaw & chop someone up, that kind of shit.
I like stories that don't entail another human killing another human (except the Shining)
I like ghosts :)
This film reminds me of 1402, with John Cusack & Samuel L Jackson because it's really, really good.
Excellent actually.
If you like demons & ghosts, definitely grab a bag of popcorn & a drink & watch it.
You'll be happy, if you like being scared.

Yeah I like 1402 you need a horror update dear Jim..there's shit way worse than those movies.
 

Ozumoz66

Well-Known Member
I'm curious as to why you haven't worked that much in the last 3 years.

I retired 4 years ago & just recently went back to work to earn some cash.
I used to sell herb to supplement my retirement fund, but I basically stopped last year due to the fact pot is legal in the state next to mine, Massachusetts, & I live around 50 miles from the state line (I live in Connecticut) so since that, combined with the covid virus & me getting it, I wasn't selling that much anymore & I was sick so I had to let my wife finish that crop & she fucked it up She didn't know what a hermie looked like & I had one in that grow & it pollinated my entire crop (did get a lot of seeds though & my wife has like 8 decent plants going in her garden at least (hope their female :) )

So, I said fuck it, I'm not growing anymore.

Just tired of all the effort it takes to grow a lot of plants (I ran 27 in a perpetual)

Nah, my growing days are over :(

Plus, I can get a gram of oil for $135 for the good shit in Mass & that will last me for 10 days or so.

So Oz (Too many letters to type so I'll simply call you Oz)

Why so few work days, if you don't mind me asking?
I suppose it's like that fortune cookie once said, "You've been lucky since the day you were born". I won't dispute it. But luck also favours the prepared and planning to retire early required discipline and effort. Contributing factors were: never buying a new vehicle, only one wife (34 years in August), no kid(s) - (stepson, daughter in-law (Italian), 2 grandkids), no church, settings aside savings greater than a teacher's pension contributions and being at the same employer for over 30 years. She also worked and we prioritized paying off the mortgage.

Being number three of six, with a sister being the youngest, we all contributed to the family income through efforts in agriculture in the summertime. A summer vacation (2 months off) was a foreign concept, as it simply didn't exist after the age of 7 - strawberries are ready to be picked by mid June and various other crops reaching maturation required manual labour to bring the bounty to market. Cherries, peaches, plums, tomatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins, gourds, apples, raspberries, apples, pears, blueberries, etc, we picked them. Caught chickens at night, shovelled shit, delivered newspapers, dug out gladiola bulbs in the fall, worked in tobacco for 5 years, etc.

I look back with gratitude, as blessings abound I struggle to comprehend how these opportunities weren't seen by others. I'd prefer to see everyone do well. I'm also intrigued how others have taken different paths in their life's journey, without judgement or jealousy. I feel we did miss out on sports, music, and theater though. Fortunate to not be addicted to video games - chasing colours for dopamine hits is a real time burglar.

I left my employer fours years ago, just before my 52nd birthday. I'd booked 4 consecutive weeks vacation (out of 5) and with 2 weeks remaining, notice was given that I wouldn't be returning. :finger: My reaction to some of their new policies triggered unfamiliar/negative emotions and I sought answers/treatment from a psychotherapist - only one session required! She was a petite redhead (probably Irish), beautiful green eyes, and soft voice. Her asking me whether I'd ever considered leaving my employer prompted me to book the vacation time the following week. She assured me that I deserved differently and had earned/prepared for the next chapter. A profound impact she had, in a short time.

A much shorter answer could have been that there's no need for me to be employed. Or I don't have time to go to work, I'm busy. :D


These days Mom gets my attention along with time in the garden. While attending a doctor's visit a few weeks ago with Mom, I learned about pessary devices/incontinence/UTIs, pads, etc. It is fascinating and simultaneously frustrating dealing with some things she comes up with - she lies a lot. It is also emotionally taxing to watch the struggles some endure later in life - you know bud, you looked after your Da. You're a good man James.

On the grow side, I've got 46 babies that I'll cull the males and plant the best of the rest today. All AK47 and Chem91 crossed with a dozen or so varieties. Downsized considerably this year with only 19 spots for plants in clover covered compound with 12 foot walls. Another 20 clones (Tangie, purple haze, pineapple express) will go into surrounding corn fields. Tumble for kief/hash mainly as trimming sucks.

Growing lots of food too - the usual veggies plus giant sunflowers, kale, watermelon, butternut squash and peanuts. The garden is the only place I've ever seen miracles happen - it a magical tranquil place for me, where I can focus my attention and tune out most uninvited noise.

l walk/hike a fair bit and recently got an ebike to go further with less effort - checking out various stages of crops along the way.

I'm blessed. Life is good. Enjoy the ride.
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
She, (nice eyebrows)

View attachment 5148688

Envision this dude describing her

It's just like a real cor- uh, I mean, woman! Joking aside, this is a very good doll. Both vagina and anus holes are very nice, and easily deep enough for my longer-than-average size. Breasts, face, hands, and feet all feel real enough. (They of course don't feel like actual skin, but what do you expect? They're only rubber, after all.) Including an air pump (albeit quite a cheap one) is nice, because I don't have a better one and using an air pump prevents moisture from building up inside the doll. I did have some problems with the doll. First, the mouth being made of rubber, it's not very stretchy, so if your member is too large, it's too large. The size of the mouth is just big enough to fit two fingers, or about average penis girth. I'm substantially wider than average, so I can't use it that way. It's too bad, too, because feeling the inside with my fingers, it seems to have a really nice texture! Second, the breasts are quite difficult to inflate, because they just have a very large sealable hole rather than a proper valve (kind of like what you get on cheaper love dolls, but larger), unless I'm missing something. I found that it helps to inflate the breasts before inflating the body (the two air chambers press against each other and this causes the breasts to be firmer). Third, the places where the hair on the head sticks are sparse and dense, I suppose probably to cut down on costs. Unfortunately, this can cause the head to look really weird depending on how the hair is positioned, and this can easily happen just as a consequence of gravity unless you tie the hair up into a tight ponytail or something. Some of the scalp is painted black to hide this; I wish more of it was painted this way so that, for example, turning the doll a bit doesn't introduce you to a large, obvious bald patch. I should also note that the hair falls out really easily (I've already noticed a couple hairs falling out from only one use), so you should expect it to thin out over time. Of course, this applies to the pubic hairs as well. Not a big deal to me, but it may be something to keep in mind. Overall, it's about what I expected: not a perfect physical manifestation of a woman's body, but close enough, and more importantly, with very nice holes. I'd say it's worth the money. Just keep in mind that you won't be able to use the mouth unless you're about average girth (not too big and not too small), and don't be expecting something exactly like a real woman.

:)
#showboebertyourdick
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
I suppose it's like that fortune cookie once said, "You've been lucky since the day you were born". I won't dispute it. But luck also favours the prepared and planning to retire early required discipline and effort. Contributing factors were: never buying a new vehicle, only one wife (34 years in August), no kid(s) - (stepson, daughter in-law (Italian), 2 grandkids), no church, settings aside savings greater than a teacher's pension contributions and being at the same employer for over 30 years. She also worked and we prioritized paying off the mortgage.

Being number three of six, with a sister being the youngest, we all contributed to the family income through efforts in agriculture in the summertime. A summer vacation (2 months off) was a foreign concept, as it simply didn't exist after the age of 7 - strawberries are ready to be picked by mid June and various other crops reaching maturation required manual labour to bring the bounty to market. Cherries, peaches, plums, tomatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins, gourds, apples, raspberries, apples, pears, blueberries, etc, we picked them. Caught chickens at night, shovelled shit, delivered newspapers, dug out gladiola bulbs in the fall, worked in tobacco for 5 years, etc.

I look back with gratitude, as blessings abound I struggle to comprehend how these opportunities weren't seen by others. I'd prefer to see everyone do well. I'm also intrigued how others have taken different paths in their life's journey, without judgement or jealousy. I feel we did miss out on sports, music, and theater though. Fortunate to not be addicted to video games - chasing colours for dopamine hits is a real time burglar.

I left my employer fours years ago, just before my 52nd birthday. I'd booked 4 consecutive weeks vacation (out of 5) and with 2 weeks remaining, notice was given that I wouldn't be returning. :finger: My reaction to some of their new policies triggered unfamiliar/negative emotions and I sought answers/treatment from a psychotherapist - only one session required! She was a petite redhead (probably Irish), beautiful green eyes, and soft voice. Her asking me whether I'd ever considered leaving my employer prompted me to book the vacation time the following week. She assured me that I deserved differently and had earned/prepared for the next chapter. A profound impact she had, in a short time.

A much shorter answer could have been that there's no need for me to be employed. Or I don't have time to go to work, I'm busy. :D


These days Mom gets my attention along with time in the garden. While attending a doctor's visit a few weeks ago with Mom, I learned about pessary devices/incontinence/UTIs, pads, etc. It is fascinating and simultaneously frustrating dealing with some things she comes up with - she lies a lot. It is also emotionally taxing to watch the struggles some endure later in life - you know bud, you looked after your Da. You're a good man James.

On the grow side, I've got 46 babies that I'll cull the males and plant the best of the rest today. All AK47 and Chem91 crossed with a dozen or so varieties. Downsized considerably this year with only 19 spots for plants in clover covered compound with 12 foot walls. Another 20 clones (Tangie, purple haze, pineapple express) will go into surrounding corn fields. Tumble for kief/hash mainly as trimming sucks.

Growing lots of food too - the usual veggies plus giant sunflowers, kale, watermelon, butternut squash and peanuts. The garden is the only place I've ever seen miracles happen - it a magical tranquil place for me, where I can focus my attention and tune out most uninvited noise.

l walk/hike a fair bit and recently got an ebike to go further with less effort - checking out various stages of crops along the way.

I'm blessed. Life is good. Enjoy the ride.
You are blessed & I envy you.

Basically, my childhood sucked, except for the time I spent in Ireland to work on family farms.
That was wonderful & thank fucking God I had that in my life.

This man makes a lot of sense to me & I can understand & relate to his viewpoint.


From a very early age I wanted to get the fuck out of my existence & the only path that seemed to work where I could get the fuck out of my head was to shut it down by using drugs & alcohol.
I entered high school in 1970 at 16 & my only experience with drugs was smoking pot when I could find it.
By the time I entered sophomore year I had ingested every known drug available to mankind at that time .
Heroin/LSD/opium/both coke & crank/uppers & downers/PCP & anything else to escape.
But of course none of those worked very long, only a few hours.
I went to my !st shrink at 16 and have been seeing them ever since.
I was 28 before I was diagnosed Bipolar/Manic Depressive & finally was prescribed meds to treat me.

I was a perfect storm of shit, being mentally ill & growing up in a unloving household ,except for my mother who died from meningitis when I was 16.
On Monday she was alive/normal & on Tuesday the following week, we buried her & it was all downhill from then on

Yup, my life has been a pain in the ass, but unlike a lot of people I knew, I'm still breathing.

I'm still alive, but actually I not sure if that is a good thing or bad

Sad way to exist, isn't it?
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The Hubble Space Telescope May Have Spotted a Free-Floating Black Hole
There are an estimated 100 million black holes strewn throughout the Milky Way galaxy. Each one that astronomers have identified are part of a larger neighborhood of stars and other objects that share in some kind of gravitational tug-and-pull. But scientists believe that, just by sheer odds, there must be some black holes that are rogue wanderers, floating aimlessly through interstellar space without any companions around.

It seems astronomers might have finally found one. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has detected evidence of a lone black hole drifting around space, 5,000 light-years away. And furthermore, its discovery suggests that the nearest rogue black hole to Earth might be as close as 80 light-years away.

The researchers behind the new discovery, which was announced in two papers that have been accepted for publication by The Astrophysical Journal, caution the new object isn’t a verified black hole yet; it may simply be another kind of massive object like a neutron star. Should the findings stand up to muster, though, this phantom black hole would be unlike anything astronomers have ever seen before.

The two papers are notable for using the same stack of data collected by Hubble, as well as ground-based instruments located in Chile and New Zealand. Both found the new object through a technique called microlensing, which observes how the movement, brightness, and curvature of light traveling through space changes due to the gravitational force of other objects.

The papers differ slightly in their estimations of how far away the new object is. They also have different conclusions on how fast the object is traveling—one estimation is 30 kilometers per second, while the other is 45 km/s.

A little more analysis is needed to confirm the new object is a black hole, but regardless, the findings point the way to finding other rogue black holes and mysterious objects drifting around quietly through the vast emptiness of space.




 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
The Hubble Space Telescope May Have Spotted a Free-Floating Black Hole
There are an estimated 100 million black holes strewn throughout the Milky Way galaxy. Each one that astronomers have identified are part of a larger neighborhood of stars and other objects that share in some kind of gravitational tug-and-pull. But scientists believe that, just by sheer odds, there must be some black holes that are rogue wanderers, floating aimlessly through interstellar space without any companions around.

It seems astronomers might have finally found one. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has detected evidence of a lone black hole drifting around space, 5,000 light-years away. And furthermore, its discovery suggests that the nearest rogue black hole to Earth might be as close as 80 light-years away.

The researchers behind the new discovery, which was announced in two papers that have been accepted for publication by The Astrophysical Journal, caution the new object isn’t a verified black hole yet; it may simply be another kind of massive object like a neutron star. Should the findings stand up to muster, though, this phantom black hole would be unlike anything astronomers have ever seen before.

The two papers are notable for using the same stack of data collected by Hubble, as well as ground-based instruments located in Chile and New Zealand. Both found the new object through a technique called microlensing, which observes how the movement, brightness, and curvature of light traveling through space changes due to the gravitational force of other objects.

The papers differ slightly in their estimations of how far away the new object is. They also have different conclusions on how fast the object is traveling—one estimation is 30 kilometers per second, while the other is 45 km/s.

A little more analysis is needed to confirm the new object is a black hole, but regardless, the findings point the way to finding other rogue black holes and mysterious objects drifting around quietly through the vast emptiness of space.




It's moving huh?

The way things have been going lately around this Planet, I think I have a pretty good idea of where it's headed.

Right here

:)
 

Sir Napsalot

Well-Known Member
Was a parent involved in the purchase or did you, on your own purchase these weapons without some form of supervision?
That really is the point.
One of the shotguns was a 20ga. Winchester single shot youth model that my parents bought for me as a Christmas gift when I was 14- I have a picture of me holding it under the Christmas tree
I traded a much more valuable octagon-barrelled Winchester pump .22 rifle that my father gave me to my stepfather for the Colt when I was 15 because I wanted a pistol
One of the .30cal. rifles was a sporterized 03-A3 Springfield .30-06 with a 2-groove barrel, Timney trigger, and French Walnut thumbhole stock which my Grandfather (who built Olympic rifles in the '50s) cut down to fit me, the other was an M44 carbine in 7.62 Russian which my stepfather gave me to hunt deer with. The .22 rifles were a Remington bolt-action .22 with a little 4-round clip which my father gave me, and a Winchester single-shot "boy's rifle" which my stepfather gave me (and later took back when he divorced my mother) which was my first gun. My father gave me the 3-barrelled shotgun when I was 15, and I used it to hunt ducks

I didn't buy a gun myself until 1983- a H&R double-action 9-shot .22 revolver
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
I received a shotgun when I was 11-12, giant box of those clay pigeons and a launcher as well. I think I had more fun just launching the clay pigeons at stuff and watching them shatter. I was not a good shot. Had to go to a two day class that I guess the NRA put on.
 
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