Random thoughts 1: Just Sayin'

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Birb pick up snek. Snek goes on adventure. Birb drops snek on odd and unfamiliar island. Snek decides this is its new home. Babies.

:think:

Birb better pick up two sneks, of different genders, for the last part of that scenario to play out.
 
Going to an Irish pub tomorrow with some friends. Is black and tan made with Guinness and bass ale or with Guinness and harp lager? I have seen two websites that state the exact opposite.

https://vinepair.com/wine-blog/why-you-should-never-order-a-black-and-tan-in-ireland/
"A so-called “Black and Tan” is just a combination of Guinness and Bass Ale (though you can use other pale ales or lagers, Bass is traditional)."

vs

https://www.beeradvocate.com/food/recipe/9/
"A Black & Tan is traditionally Guinness and Harp Lager, but it can be a mix of Guinness and Bass Ale"

Ultimately I'll just tell the bar tender hey I want a black and tan with harp whatever you call it. Cus I like harp more than bass.

I also learned today that black and tan in Ireland refers to the uniforms of the British military force that suppressed Irish independence in the 1920s so it's actually an offensive drink name made up by Americans. Sort of like Irish car bombs.
 
Anyone know anything about ancient headgear?

I'm looking for the name of a metal headband that has the metal strips that go down by the cheekbones or in front of the ear.

So much so it is my waking mission.

Like Cassia in Diablo universe/hots? Sort of like a valkarie diadem or circlet?
 
I did a Google Image search of "ancient headgear circlet" to see what we might be talking about, and a random image of Howie Mandel appears among all the others.
 
I also learned today that black and tan in Ireland refers to the uniforms of the British military force that suppressed Irish independence in the 1920s so it's actually an offensive drink name made up by Americans. Sort of like Irish car bombs.

You say it's a drink name made up by Americans? That's news to me.

I thought it was an offensive drink name made up by the Irish. Or possibly the British. Or possibly both.

Hmm.

Or is it the name of a dog?

Aren't Manchester terriers sometimes called black and tans on account of their colouring. Which is, quite coincidentally, black and tan.

I think you're quite wrong to dislike Bass, though. Imo, one of the finest ales there is.
(And not to be diluted with Guinness at all.)

As for Harp Lager, iirc, that couldn't be called "tan" by any stretch of the imagination. So Guinness and Harp would be called black and pale yellow?

But there you go. Each to their own, when all's said and done.
 
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I did a Google Image search of "ancient headgear circlet" to see what we might be talking about, and a random image of Howie Mandel appears among all the others.
You must continue this line of search. Sounds promising.
Like Cassia in Diablo universe/hots? Sort of like a valkarie diadem or circlet?
Yeah, without the wings on top, although when searching "winged diadem" and "winged circlet" did produce the closest results. In my minds eye I'm seeing it straighter and plainer, covering less face than the form fitting cheeks armor of Cassia. But yeah, that direction.
 
A sort of tiara, you mean?
 
Plainer, damn. This going the entirely wrong direction then?

Spoiler :
 
It had never been a problem for me for anything until the other day, when a teller at the bank seemed confused by me signing my name using the short form instead of the longer version (which I don't think I've ever actually signed in my entire life!) She made me cross it out and sign using the longer form. It seems weird to me that she made me alter my own signature.

Even in the past when doing more official things, like government forms and licenses, me printing out my full given name but then signing the shorter version has never been a problem.
You should have asked her why she was forcing you to sign your name in a way you had never used as your legal signature. A lot of people just use their first initial and last name. It's still legal.

Some tellers go on a power trip sometimes, or for some reason they just decide to be jerks. I've been at the same bank for over 35 years, and suddenly one day a teller got all officious and told me to fill out a new signature card. I asked her why, and she said, "We do this every year."

Liar. I didn't call her one, but considered it. So I signed the new card (the signature looked identical to every other time I ever signed anything there), and told her to get on with what I went in for.

Oddly enough, my signature has changed a little during the last 20 years - sometimes the fibromyalgia makes my fingers lock up partway through writing a word and it might not come out quite right. Nobody's said anything, though. Maybe that one day, 25 years ago, I wasn't dressed nicely enough or something, or she was like the teller who got paranoid when I went in to do some banking for my grandmother (I had power of attorney). The conversation consisted of him flatly saying "No" every time I pointed out that I had power of attorney and she'd asked me to do this bit of business. So finally I said, "I'd like to speak to your supervisor, please."

"No."

"I'd like to speak to your supervisor NOW." (in the meantime, a lineup at least 6 people deep was behind me, and I had no intention of leaving)

So his supervisor showed up, took me back to her desk, and said it would have been easier if I'd had an account at that bank... and I said, "Well, I do have an account here - for over 10 years."

"Why didn't you tell him that, and show him your card?"

So I told her that he'd never asked, just kept saying "No."

She got the papers so I could finish my grandmother's business, and hopefully the teller got a remedial course in how to deal with customers who wanted more than the standard deposit/withdrawal sort of transaction.
 
Plainer, damn. This going the entirely wrong direction then?

Spoiler :
yeah wrong way, but not because it's ornate. The ornateness of that and the busy-ness of the cheekbone guard of the diablo are flavor differences. This one above lacks the front, and goes over the top, both not it.

I found the German term for helmets that basically have the feature, the spangenhelm.

Maybe we can call it a spangencirclet, spangendiadem, or for takhisis, a spangentiara.
 
Sutton hoo chiseled the top of my helmet off?
 
You say it's a drink name made up by Americans? That's news to me.

I thought it was an offensive drink name made up by the Irish. Or possibly the British. Or possibly both.

Hmm.

Or is it the name of a dog?

Aren't Manchester terriers sometimes called black and tans on account of their colouring. Which is, quite coincidentally, black and tan.

I think you're quite wrong to dislike Bass, though. Imo, one of the finest ales there is.
(And not to be diluted with Guinness at all.)

As for Harp Lager, iirc, that couldn't be called "tan" by any stretch of the imagination. So Guinness and Harp would be called black and pale yellow?

But there you go. Each to their own, when all's said and done.

I don't like ales as much as lagers. So you think official black and tan is guiness and bass? We'll go with that then. As far as the name I was just lifting info from one of the links I posted. It might be inaccurate.
 
Has anyone ever come across a solution to my problem?

I am looking for some sort of an ear covering device that:

- Would allow me to easily sleep on my side
- Would not fall out in the middle of the night
- Would still somehow allow me to wake up in the morning and not miss work

Right now I use earplugs. They pop into my ears and do a really good job of blocking outside noise. However, they also easily fall out, when I'm sleeping. They also make it a bit annoying to sleep on my side (which is how I prefer to sleep). If they manage to stay in, it may also mean that I might miss my alarm in the morning.

What happens is that at around 7am there is some noise. Doesn't matter what the noise is, but it wakes me up, and so I pop in an ear plug into just one of my ears, so I put the other ear on my pillow and fall asleep, until I have to wake up again at 8:45am or so. Because my other ear is uncovered, I will hear the alarm, but the offending noise that wakes me up at 7am (and continues for a while) is muffled enough for me to sleep through the rest of it.

It would be amazing if there was some device I could put on my head/in my ears, sleep comfortably on the side, sleep through the noise at 7am, but then somehow wake up when my alarm goes off at 8:45am. I have no idea if something like this would be possible, but.. I figure I might as well ask if anyone's come across anything that would do the job
 
A white noise machine would probably do that and not entail putting anything in your ears at all.
 
What type of earplugs?
The ones I use (actually party plugs, against the loud music; couldn't be bothered to buy any others) fit right in, stick, and are not very annoying to sleep on.
They also only muffle parts of the sound (because they were meant for music), no problem with hearing.

If you have a solution, which makes you sleep, but prevents you from waking up, then maybe get one of these alarm clocks for deaf people.
They're basically small vibrating pillows, which you put below your normal pillow. They vibrate instead of making noise. Wakes them up apparently good enough. No clue about the price though.
 
A white noise machine would probably do that and not entail putting anything in your ears at all.

But it wouldn't prevent the noise at 7am from waking up. I'm a very light sleeper.

What type of earplugs?

It's something like this
Spoiler :
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The little hole has a plastic piece that goes in. I assume it's meant to make it easier to insert into your ear, but if I leave it in there (while I sleep) it actually seems to do a better job of keeping the ear plug in my ear. But the problem is that half the time it'll fall out, and the plastic piece will fall out, and it's small, so then I have to look for it the next day.

The ones I use (actually party plugs, against the loud music; couldn't be bothered to buy any others) fit right in, stick, and are not very annoying to sleep on.
They also only muffle parts of the sound (because they were meant for music), no problem with hearing.

Hmm.. Maybe I just have freak ears.. or maybe it's my insistence of sleeping on my side? If I do that I always feel the ear plug pushing into my ear, which is not comfortable.

If you have a solution, which makes you sleep, but prevents you from waking up, then maybe get one of these alarm clocks for deaf people.

They're basically small vibrating pillows, which you put below your normal pillow. They vibrate instead of making noise. Wakes them up apparently good enough. No clue about the price though.

That's actually a pretty good idea, thanks! I am a light sleeper, like I said, so my alarm should be able to wake me up.. I set it to pretty loud settings.. but.. if I get an ear plug solution that is good enough to muffle the 7am sound, I am worried that it will also muffle enough of my alarm clock. So this vibrating business will have to be investigated.

It's very possible I don't even need a new alarm clock and I'm worrying over nothing. I just imagined some sort of a solution that wraps around your head or something, and insulates a lot more sound than earplugs would.. and somehow blares music right into your ears when it's time to wake up. And is comfortable to sleep in. If something like that existed I would buy it
 
But it wouldn't prevent the noise at 7am from waking up. I'm a very light sleeper.

Well, that's exactly what it's supposed to do. A white noise machine is supposed to prevent you from being disturbed from outside noises (like cars, trains, factories, etc) while not being deafened to local noises. Especially if you're a light sleeper.

Unless this "a noise at 7AM wakes me up" business is an elaborate euphemism for a lady friend leaving you for their walk of shame out the front door and thus the noise is indeed "local".
 
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