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jumpinjackflash

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Everything posted by jumpinjackflash

  1. haha I actually fell for that dog one and was thinking it was quite cruel! doh!
  2. just be thankful it's not a vindaloo eating Great Dane!!
  3. born in Mundania Court, lived briefly on Underhill, then Brenchley Gardens (not realy ED though), then Marmora and now Forest Hill!
  4. assuming you're talking about the pie?! Yes, nice and hot served with loads of creamy mash!
  5. M&S Beef & Ale pie with portobello mushrooms (think it's the Gastropub range). Best pie I've ever eaten!
  6. Marmora Man, I used to live on Marmora road too (moved out in '06). There was a guy in his fifties/sixties with a Jack Russell (always yapping) and he used to let it crap everywhere, I know this as I have a dog and used to see him do it all the time when out walking with mine. He never took it to the park, just used to walk it locally, probably why the surrounding streets are full of his poo. Not saying that it's him but it's a possibility - you probably know exactly who this character is anyway!
  7. oops!:-$
  8. cheers!! xx
  9. Thanks Lizzy - I only know it from the film with Whoopi Goldberg (before I knew it was a Stones record!)
  10. happy birthday to me, happy birthday to me, jjf is 29 todayyyyyyyyy, happy bithday to me. Jumpin Jack Flash will have a gas, gas, gas tonight! :)-D
  11. buy her a hat and scarf and some gloves and turn the rads off! Save yourself a fortune.
  12. probably be quite boring...no mother-in-law jokes for a start!
  13. to be fair to them they hadn't met each other until their 20's. The American 'couple' both had significant others however!
  14. ..no not me! did anyone watch this on Channel 4 last night? Am I alone in feeling a litle bit sorry for that Scottish 'couple'?
  15. A few ED references, was spotted in an ED pub apparently by a MySpace user but my work computer policy prohibits access to MySpace, Facebook etc.. Anyway, can't be bothered to investigate further! Richard Armitage (Robin Hood and The Vicar of Dibley's husband) goes to the Hamlet's Gym if that's of any interest!
  16. right, off to google 'Patrick Kielty + East Dulwich' back in a sec...
  17. I'm definitely taking part this year - I'll be there, watching it on the box from the comfort of my own sofa, leopard print blanket, jim jams and bacon sarnie.. However...I am doing the Run to the Beat Half Marathon at the O2 later this year - all to live music. Should be good. http://www.runtothebeat.co.uk/
  18. LizzygotDizzy Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > mightyroar Wrote: > -------------------------------------------------- > ----- > >> did he actually say 'I don't do oral' > > ?????????????? Dear god. > > His exact words were "but I don't really do oral" > , which probably along with "well aren't you going > to finish me off then?" made me chomp down on him > quite a bit harder than I'd intended to! > > Def will take your advice next time Chav! > (mwwoooahahahaha!) > > Sorry Lozzy if you were offended, I did kind of > put the warning in bold type for those of a > delicate disposition yuck that put me right off my hotdog that did!!
  19. wee quinnie Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Wow, everyone, and I was about to take my hat off > to JJF for managing 100 posts in 2 weeks - it took > me about 6 months to hit 100. I'm a bit slow, me. err, actually wee quinnie i meant 100 posts in 14 months!!!! I feel soooo inadequate now..:-$
  20. Ugg boots
  21. Thanks AnnaJ - only just saw this today - I actually can't believe it!
  22. http://www.westdulwichforum.co.uk/forum/read.php?9,564 has anyone seen this?!! sorry if it's already been picked up on previously.
  23. not sad, just bored at work like me!
  24. bignumber5 Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I've asked a group of kids that were kicking a > ball against my wall when I was on nights (so > trying to sleep) and I went for polite reasoning, > as this is how my parent-friends talk to their > children of same age - kids looked at me like I > was a moron, then kept on doing it. I went out and > again, polite, calm explanation that what they > were doing was not very nice for me, could they > please stop and maybe find somewhere else to play > with their ball. They said ok, but didn't move. I > stood and waited and eventually they moved... over > the road to a group of adults chatting. One child > talks to one adult, same adult comes over just > before I close my door to point out that I can't > tell her child what to do. Apologised for > misunderstanding, but I had asked, not told. She > turns away mumbling a combination of expletives > and patois. She tells the kids not to worry. The > kids eyeball me as they walk away. > > I think that there really must be a happy medium. > I'm not advocating the days of any adult giving > any child a swift cuffing, but the world revolves > around children in many ways, and I think that > child-protection and paedophilia have made people > very suspicious of adult strangers socially > engaging with children in any way. I also think > that the problem arises if parent and other adult > disagree over whether behaviour was wrong, because > the parent has the veto, and then disciplines the > other adult (as happened with me). Too polite? If > I had barked at the kids, then responded to the > defensive mother that if she managed them better > then I wouldn't have to, would my point have been > heard? Do you have to appear angry to demonstrate > that something is annoying you? > > Great, except what have the kids learned during > this situation? Behaviour excused, self-centred > view of world vindicated. Or strange adults are > scary, angry people. Can't win. But... > > Conversely, when I'm at work (as a nurse) and in > uniform, people waiting for doctors will hand me > their children with a level of blind trust, and > ask my opinion on their minor foibles of > parenting. They will also have no inibition in > physically disciplining their children in front of > me in a way that I doubt they would openly. Never > a comfortable experience. But if people are in > hospital and their children are running riot, I > can talk to the children and the parents and both > listen, almost like I'm disciplining the parents > too. > > I'm a stranger in both situations, yet it's > context that determines whether or not my opinion > counts for anything. The mother sounds completely stupid and ignorant and we wonder why a lot of kids nowadays grow up to be hooligans.
  25. I accidently hit 'My Control Center' which showed me that I had made 99 posts since I registered over a year ago. Thought I'd make my 100th! Do I get a telegram from Mr Administrator now?
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