goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 09:15
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Couldn't you have walked to hospital Alan, instead of using valuable resources/polluting the atmosphere by going in an ambulance? Shame on you!
Take it easy, make sure 'er indoors gives you plenty of sympathy etc and, erm, lay off the cigs for a while, and leave me to drink a toast to a full recovery!
Steve
hewittalan6
- 12 Jun 2008 09:22
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Been warned off over enthusiastic sympathy from the missus for a while :-(((
The ciggies are somewhat less frequent at the mo, but no doubt I will be nagged about that when the nurse comes to abuse me.
Quote of the week competitor;
Paramedic (in back of ambulance) "Are you having any kind of panic attack, Alan?"
Me, "Not yet, I haven't seen your qualifications, or the standard of your mates driving, but I'll let you know".
The wondeful thing about any illness is the opportunity to air ones humour.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 09:30
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By "etc" I meant cups of tea and weak soup, what else? ;o)
Nice quote!
ExecLine
- 12 Jun 2008 10:03
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"...leaving me to walk the few dozen yards behind her into the resusitation rooms..."
Sheesh! Hmmm? This stuff reminds me of a trip to the doctor's surgery quite a few years ago.....
"And when do you get the angina?"
"Well, Doctor, even sometimes in the evening, whilst I'm sat on the settee watching the telly."
"Well, just sit there and don't move, whilst I make a couple of phone calls."
About 10-15 mins later, having been lifted onto a stretcher and taken to the hospital, I'm in a bed the heart ward at the local hospital. A senior nurse and her assistant instruct me that I am not so much as to lift a finger as they proceed to unbutton my clothes.
"We need to test for enzymes in your blood. If they are present or not, then that will tell us whether you have actually had a heart attack or not.
Until we get the result, we will assume you actually have had a heart attack. If you have, well, in the short term the only thing we can instruct you to do is to rest your potentially injured heart. It must not be exerted. You are not to move a muscle. Are you allergic to aspirin? No? Good. Please take these."
etc, etc.
partridge
- 12 Jun 2008 10:25
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Hells bells Alan - makes you appreciate what's really important i.e you won the match, but please don't ignore it.
hewittalan6
- 12 Jun 2008 10:37
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Trying a few lifestyle changes here, partridge, like the good boy I am.
The quack suggested a more "Mediterranean" diet and lifestyle. When I commented that I am a master at sitting on terraces arguing, drinking enormous quantities of wine and smoking very high tar cigs, he suggested I was being facetious and said he meant tomatoes and olive oil.
So now I have much fewer cigs, less salt on my food and free range petrol in the car.
Funnily enough the consultant is a cricketer and understood my reactions perfectly. I asked when I could return to cricket. He said next season, until I told him who I played for and at what standard. He smiled and said I could play next week. ;-))
moneyplus
- 12 Jun 2008 11:21
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Best wishes from me Alan. No more rants just lie back and chill out!
Guscavalier
- 12 Jun 2008 11:34
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Speedy recovery Alan. Keep up with your witty form, nothing like a smile on the face. Gus.
hewittalan6
- 12 Jun 2008 14:18
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Thats the other good thing.
No-one now shouts at me for having an afternoon nap..........fantastic.
They say laughter is the best medicine, and it helps, but for a bad infection you just can't beat Penicillin.
robertalexander
- 12 Jun 2008 14:50
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HA
Would keep out of banking and housebuilding stocks for a while too.
Don't want too many anxious moments for the near future.
hope you have a speedy recovery.
Alex
porky
- 12 Jun 2008 15:32
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Keep taking the tablets.
Speedy recovery.
The Other Kevin
- 12 Jun 2008 16:30
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I'm writing to someone in Wales who is called Non. M or F? Where's Dil? He'd know.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 18:42
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Non is female T.O.K., it is a derivative of Nona, who was the mother of the patron saint of Wales, David.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 18:43
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Non is female T.O.K., it is a derivative of Nona, who was the mother of the patron saint of Wales, David.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 18:45
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Hmm, no it wasn't worth repeating really was it?! Got a twitchy finger this evening, I wonder what else I can do with it?
Frampton
- 12 Jun 2008 18:54
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I know a male Non in West Wales, not sure if it's short for anything.
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 19:14
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I have a non-male wife but that could be confusing matters more?! Male Non could be short for Goronwy, though that would usually just be Gron, or it could be just a nickname. Best to address your letter "To whom it may concern" T.O.K.!
kimoldfield
- 12 Jun 2008 19:28
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The 'old' Welsh translation of Non, by the way, is Stream or Current.
Iechyd da.
hewittalan6
- 12 Jun 2008 20:11
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Could be Non de Plume, then its only a pen name so it doesn't matter.
And if one gets it wrong is it a non sequiter????
Perhaps its a sheep.
Or in the great Welsh traditions of Jones the Steam for railway drivers and Jones the shop for grocers it might be a teacher called non the wiser.
If there were a family of them could it be non plussed?
Or just like many shorten my name to Al, it could really be no-one.
Confusing, innit?
kimoldfield
- 13 Jun 2008 08:08
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Non, mais ouis.