See, look how quickly you catch on. Keeping up with me already. I like it.
Grandpa boring like what, you enjoy shuffleboard and screaming at children to get off your lawn or like Jeopardy and Sudoku boring? I need more details before I can settle on how I feel about it, you see.
Edited (dw random line breaking what the fuck tho.) 2020-10-25 05:23 (UTC)
I'm bird watching puzzle doing boring with a side of listening to the wife try her hand at jeopardy and whatever other show catchers her eye for the night boring.
( Ugh, of course he's married. Her luck couldn't have been good enough for Ben and Stanley to be single. Of course not, that would be too easy. Then again...he's died back home, so does death nullify marriage? Something to think about. For now, message received. )
I don't think bird-watching is boring, actually, believe it or not. I wouldn't personally have the patience for it, but if I did, I probably would do that. It sounds like a relaxing thing for someone that can sit and wait it out.
What kind of puzzles are your preference? Do you like the detailed images or those infuriating ones that are, like, a night sky or all one color, or whatever?
( Listen, he might be off the hook for the moment, but that doesn't mean she's going to let him know that she's been deterred. Then she looks embarrassed and Lydia doesn't embarrass easily. So, she can play the long game, for now, to ease back out of the flirtation. Revisit when he's been here long enough to mourn his own death properly and want to move forward. )
Most people do, it does take patience, but I've done it since I was a kid.
Well, not to be completely cliche but the last one was a bird scene, but I've not got the best eyes for the infuriating ones, so detailed images generally.
What made you want to do it as a kid? I wouldn't have thought of it as a kid, personally, so call me curious.
Cliche, endearing and adorable; po-tay-to, po-tah-to. I haven't done a puzzle in forever. I used to like to do them with my mom when I was a kid.
( False; she used to like to do them with her dad when she was a kid, but she's not going to say that to Stanley, partially because she doesn't want to solidify his whole "I could be your dad" thing, but mostly because she and her father did not leave things on a good note when he basically disappeared on she and her mother, so she doesn't generally like to think or talk about him.
Lydia Martin, the young woman attracted to men nearly twice her age, has daddy issues? Inconceivable. )
Have you gotten yourself a puzzle to work on here, yet?
I can see how something that appears monotonous but is actually low-key intellectually stimulating, like working on a puzzle, might be a nice way to unwind after a rough day.
Maybe the puzzle would help you get calmer. Just something to think about.
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See, look how quickly you catch on. Keeping up with me already. I like it.
Grandpa boring like what, you enjoy shuffleboard and screaming at children to get off your lawn or like Jeopardy and Sudoku boring? I need more details before I can settle on how I feel about it, you see.
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I don't think bird-watching is boring, actually, believe it or not. I wouldn't personally have the patience for it, but if I did, I probably would do that. It sounds like a relaxing thing for someone that can sit and wait it out.
What kind of puzzles are your preference? Do you like the detailed images or those infuriating ones that are, like, a night sky or all one color, or whatever?
( Listen, he might be off the hook for the moment, but that doesn't mean she's going to let him know that she's been deterred. Then she looks embarrassed and Lydia doesn't embarrass easily. So, she can play the long game, for now, to ease back out of the flirtation. Revisit when he's been here long enough to mourn his own death properly and want to move forward. )
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Well, not to be completely cliche but the last one was a bird scene, but I've not got the best eyes for the infuriating ones, so detailed images generally.
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Cliche, endearing and adorable; po-tay-to, po-tah-to. I haven't done a puzzle in forever. I used to like to do them with my mom when I was a kid.
( False; she used to like to do them with her dad when she was a kid, but she's not going to say that to Stanley, partially because she doesn't want to solidify his whole "I could be your dad" thing, but mostly because she and her father did not leave things on a good note when he basically disappeared on she and her mother, so she doesn't generally like to think or talk about him.
Lydia Martin, the young woman attracted to men nearly twice her age, has daddy issues? Inconceivable. )
Have you gotten yourself a puzzle to work on here, yet?
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Occasionally Patty'll give me a hand, but for the most part I do mine alone. It's nice to just sit down and work on them sometimes after a long day.
Nah, I haven't quite been calm enough yet, really. And things haven't felt settled enough to try either.
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I can see how something that appears monotonous but is actually low-key intellectually stimulating, like working on a puzzle, might be a nice way to unwind after a rough day.
Maybe the puzzle would help you get calmer. Just something to think about.