Missing body parts
Now there are some bits of your body you don't mind losing - my dad's just got rid of a kidney stone, my own tonsils once tried to asphyxiate me, and nobody wants warts.
Other bits are more useful - a family friend recently lost an arm... which would be OK if his job wasn't managing dis-armament talks.
What have you lost, and where did you leave it?
( , Thu 1 Jun 2006, 18:22)
Now there are some bits of your body you don't mind losing - my dad's just got rid of a kidney stone, my own tonsils once tried to asphyxiate me, and nobody wants warts.
Other bits are more useful - a family friend recently lost an arm... which would be OK if his job wasn't managing dis-armament talks.
What have you lost, and where did you leave it?
( , Thu 1 Jun 2006, 18:22)
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part of my skull
I was born with craniosystosis (all the plates in the skull are fused together, preventing the skull from expanding with the brain), which would have hypothetically left me with a skull shaped like the head of an Alien from the film of the same name.
Fortunately it was diagnosed early, and they literally cracked my skull at the age of 2. Unfortunately it didnt work, so they did it all over again, a year later, but due to the irregular healing of my skull from the 1st attempt they had to take some chunks out, leaving me with a skull not unlike the surface of the moon, as well as a huge S-shaped scar that spans the top of my head. I remember the doctor telling me it stands for super, which helped me take the mind-shattering headache so much better.
As a result, I possibly have the most felt up head in England.
lickmylovelength
( , Tue 6 Jun 2006, 1:18, Reply)
I was born with craniosystosis (all the plates in the skull are fused together, preventing the skull from expanding with the brain), which would have hypothetically left me with a skull shaped like the head of an Alien from the film of the same name.
Fortunately it was diagnosed early, and they literally cracked my skull at the age of 2. Unfortunately it didnt work, so they did it all over again, a year later, but due to the irregular healing of my skull from the 1st attempt they had to take some chunks out, leaving me with a skull not unlike the surface of the moon, as well as a huge S-shaped scar that spans the top of my head. I remember the doctor telling me it stands for super, which helped me take the mind-shattering headache so much better.
As a result, I possibly have the most felt up head in England.
lickmylovelength
( , Tue 6 Jun 2006, 1:18, Reply)
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