View Full Version : My first Xmas pressy !
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 12:08
Parcel and card through my letterbox last night. :woohoo: :waver::huepfen024::603785::603785:
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I tear open the gold wrapping paper like an excited little kid.
:Jump:
It's HEAVY...:):Erm:
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Chocolate ? mmm yum yum.
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It's a book ! :xxgrinning--00xx3:
....Hope it's something I'm interested in. :Erm:
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THANKS !!! :rolleyes:
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http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/2513/mormonbook.jpg
.:reaction:
joebloggs
22nd December 2011, 12:18
:NoNo: i've got nothing up to now, probably not get anything at all :bigcry:, looks like i'll have to play with what i bought for the misses :D
allyn
22nd December 2011, 12:54
hahahahah,,, thats so hilarious!!!!!!
Englishman2010
22nd December 2011, 13:04
That will teach you for proudly announcing you're an atheist:icon_lol:
Hopefully you won't get a knock on the door from the JW's at 1.00 pm on the 25th:icon_lol:
South-east boy
22nd December 2011, 13:04
Mine arrived from Viva a month ago! I've been a good boy though and not opened it until I retrieved the Christmas cards from her on Monday, but I didn't look at the other things inside and just found the cards by feeling and not looking! :)
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 13:22
That will teach you for proudly announcing you're an atheist:icon_lol:
Hopefully you won't get a knock on the door from the JW's at 1.00 pm on the 25th:icon_lol:
Oh I love those nutters.
Bring it on ! :D
Tawi2
22nd December 2011, 13:27
Always treasure a book whatever the topic,I have(IF E-bay values are anything to go by)made £4000 in the last 3 weeks due to buying a few boxes of limited edition books last month :heartshape1:I am not selling them yet,put them in storage,maybe the bible will increase in value,just watch the movie "The book of eli" ;) Maligayang pasko :)
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 13:39
You're right. :xxgrinning--00xx3:
I've even got a few of my books given to me for Xmas as a child, plus three 'Observers' books I received as a 'Spoken English' prize I received from school when I was 12. :)
South-east boy
22nd December 2011, 16:10
Any ideas as to how you came to receive it Graham?!
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 16:54
Yes, my next door neighbours are Mormons. :D
My rebuffal will be polite, as they are nice people.
Englishman2010
22nd December 2011, 17:05
Yes, my next door neighbours are Mormons. :D
My rebuffal will be polite, as they are nice people.
Polite? Does that mean you will thank them when you are shoving it back down their throats:icon_lol:
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 17:07
No, I will just thanks very much, and as it happens I WAS wondering if my existing supply of bog paper would see me through the Xmas period. :xxgrinning--00xx3:
Englishman2010
22nd December 2011, 17:10
No, I will just thanks very much, and as it happens I WAS wondering if my existing supply of bog paper would see me through the Xmas period. :xxgrinning--00xx3:
Can tell you're a tough northerner, i prefer nice soft stuff
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 17:21
Oh, it all goes pretty soft in the outside toilet. :cwm3:
Englishman2010
22nd December 2011, 17:43
Oh, it all goes pretty soft in the outside toilet. :cwm3:
I'm surprised you can find it to see it's gone soft in an outside toilet in December:omg:
stevewool
22nd December 2011, 18:11
paper in a bog, you are so lucky, when we where a kid we had the dog to wipe our:action-smiley-081:
RickyR
22nd December 2011, 18:59
Well, tried to resist showing off, but have just ordered a new car as a Christmas present. It's the first time buying a new car, and it's helping to cheer up the mood at the moment.
Although I'd like to say its mine, it's the model and colour (white) that my darling wife chose, so I think she's going to decide its hers...
http://www.carsmodel.info/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/2012_kia_sorento_white_front_view.jpg
stevewool
22nd December 2011, 19:10
very nice indeed,
imagine
22nd December 2011, 19:17
paper in a bog, you are so lucky, when we where a kid we had the dog to wipe our:action-smiley-081:
i remember the outside bog, newspaper squears threaded on a wire, and the tin bath lol
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 21:37
Aye, happy days Stewart. :)
Going up and down on the pedal of a fixed wheel bike.
Buying a 'Penny Dainty' or 4 'Farthing Chews' at the sweet shop.
Chasing the Rag and Bone man with enough old clothes or metal to get a Goldfish.
Toasting bread and Crumpets (Pikelets to us Yorkies) on the open fire. :xxgrinning--00xx3:
imagine
22nd December 2011, 21:48
i can only just remember the farthing, a little robin ,
push bike no gears chrome brake bars not wires,
rag and bone man , his horse and cart, could exchange rags, for horse ride,, blue and white tea
sets, and of course the gold fish ,,
and i toasted bread and crumpets on that open fire,
and 2 peneth of chips with scraps, the scraps were free then :icon_lol:
stevewool
22nd December 2011, 22:01
just a tad younger then you old boys , but the rag and bone man, the bloke coming around the street on his bike to sharpen your knives and stuff, the ice cream man where you took out the bowl for him to fill and ask for broken waffers, and pikelets, i remember them well, :)
Tawi2
22nd December 2011, 22:29
the rag and bone man
I am 46 and I still remember the rag and bone man,the french onion guy who was seasonal but used to turn up in sunderland of all places selling onions on strings :Erm: I remember the pop wagon that delivered bottles of pop and took away your empties every week :icon_lol: and I have recollections of following the coal delivery wagon collecting the spills in a bucket :icon_lol: what strange lives we lived :icon_lol:
Terpe
22nd December 2011, 22:37
...what strange lives we lived :icon_lol:
To those of a certain age, it really does seem strange. During my lifetime there has been an incredible amount of truly outstanding achievements and 'progress' both technological and social.
I consider myself lucky to have lived during such times. How wonderful, to have memories of an almost bygone era and then to use our smartphone in our pocket for global communication and image sharing.
It's like magic happened.
Me, I'm blessed :olddude:
grahamw48
22nd December 2011, 23:57
I agree, it is amazing.
I left England bound for Malaya when I was just turned 4 years old, but I'm lucky that my memory started when I was only two and a half.
The tin bath, the outside toilet, the two up two down was all before I was 4, the trip to Ireland, the stay on my relations' farm there that I remember so clearly was before my third birthday. Incredible really. We wonder at the complexity of computers and other modern technology, but still that thing inside our heads takes some beating.
imagine
23rd December 2011, 00:15
To those of a certain age, it really does seem strange. During my lifetime there has been an incredible amount of truly outstanding achievements and 'progress' both technological and social.
I consider myself lucky to have lived during such times. How wonderful, to have memories of an almost bygone era and then to use our smartphone in our pocket for global communication and image sharing.
It's like magic happened.
Me, I'm blessed :olddude:
they had smartphones when i was a lad , 2 tin cans and a piece of string :icon_lol:
amazing acheivments to have witnessed in a lifetime, but im not sure all are good
imagine
23rd December 2011, 00:19
i used to do car spotting when i was a kid, almost all the cars were black, some grey and wow look that ones blue :omg:
cars past by either side of the main road, im guessing at about 3 in 5 minutes, today you try cross that road :yikes:
grahamw48
23rd December 2011, 00:24
Oh yes, my brother and I were great car spotters too...an interest that grew for me later on.
Oh, and we didn't get a phone in our house until I was 16....and I can still remember the number. :)
RickyR
23rd December 2011, 08:40
Did the rag and bone man have a Nokia?
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