A Conversation for LIL'S ATELIER
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Styx the Rat Posted Feb 1, 2004
heh heh heh
Styx is a demon rat
*scampering into kitchen*
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Mrs Zen Posted Feb 1, 2004
*Puts down a plate of something for Styx to eat. Best not to look too closely to see what it might be.*
B
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Styx the Rat Posted Feb 1, 2004
sniff sniff
Feh!
I want some pork pie
old buddy back in town! *jumps on counter and doing demonic snooping dance*
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Garius Lupus Posted Feb 1, 2004
*Waits to see what demonic snooping happens after the dance.*
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Mrs Zen Posted Feb 1, 2004
*returns from the Kitchen with a Calling Card from [Z] who's PC is poorly*
He'll be online tomorrow from the University though.
Ben
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Courtesy38 Posted Feb 1, 2004
[{Courtesy}]
*prepping for a Super Bowl party*
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Hypatia Posted Feb 1, 2004
I like the feeling of belonging that comes from living in a small town. But there is absolutely no privacy. You can't get away with much.
People drop by without calling - call about things that should wait until I'm at work, etc. But it's wonderful to have a support system.
Speaking of the village idiot (not the smellfungus)- he has decided not to run for reelection to the city council. And his seat is being taken (no opposition) by someone the smellfungus is terribly jealous of and therefore hates. Maybe I'll get some relief.
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
LOOPYBOOPY Posted Feb 1, 2004
Tell you what folks...and styx will appreciate this...I was shocked at the amount of adultery about. The partner turnover rate would please any manager of any trade you would care to name.
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
logicus tracticus philosophicus Posted Feb 1, 2004
[LTP] i did not find the sentence or sentance was bizzarely punctuated or any of letters standing funny
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Toccata Posted Feb 1, 2004
I grew up in a very small village, my parents moved there when we were a few months old, but the fact that we were twins, and that Mum eventually got a job in the local shop helped no end Still we moved when I was 12. Since then I never really settled much.
I have just had to list all my addresses since I was 14 for a job application. Interesting to do, but it works out to 18! (I’m only 31)
Ben, My Gran tells of the shock when she ended up with my Granddad (his village was all of five miles away) and she still says “well, there were a queer lot from ****field”
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Mrs Zen Posted Feb 1, 2004
Ach, they felt like that about each other in the two villages my father was clergyman of, Toc, and they were two and a half miles apart!
a hick called Ben
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Hypatia Posted Feb 1, 2004
Do the small villages still have their own schools? In my area the smaller towns have about all lost their schools and have merged into consolidated districts in larger towns. When the schools closed down a lot of the feeling of community went with them.
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Z Posted Feb 1, 2004
*Z pops in, having emperically treated the PC with a re install of internet explorer*
It's time I got my Linux box online I think. At the moment the problem is that the softwear modem isn't recognised by the system (Suse 8.5) and I know I need to purchase a hardwear one. But how do I find whether a hardwear modem is compatable with Linux?
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
Z Posted Feb 1, 2004
Hypatia, yes some small villiages do still have their own schools, though of course some are being shut down. They are campaigning strongly to keep them open though.
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
LOOPYBOOPY Posted Feb 1, 2004
My kid goes to school with others from 20mls away. All the kids are bussed in. Scattered rural communities. You find these at the extremeties of the UK.
66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
GreyDesk Posted Feb 1, 2004
Hypatia, yes losing the village school, much like losing the village shop or pub, can be a death nail for small rural communities. In many ways I was blessed by being raised in West Somerset [population: 20,000 - area: about the same as North London] as the County Council had a policy of keeping village Primary schools open even when they only had as few as a dozen kids enrolled.
The upshot of this was lots of children aged up to about 9 years old who had attended a school where there was strong sense of community, and and indeed a sense of history. One of my most treasured possessions is two school photographs, one of me and one of my Grandfather. Both aged about 7, both taken from exactly the same spot in our old school playground some 60 years apart.
It was only at aged 10 that we congregated into the middle schools where kids had to be bussed in, that the process of knocking us all into indentikit little drones started.
Hidden
Mrs Zen Posted Feb 1, 2004
They have been closing down the schools for 30 years, Hypatia. Mind you, as the housing gets more expensive, the demographics change, and so there are fewer children in the villages anyway. Hell, *I* can't afford a cottage in one of the local villages, and I am ludicrously well paid for what I do. (When I can get work, that is).
Ben
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66Xth Conversation at the Atelier
- 821: Styx the Rat (Feb 1, 2004)
- 822: Mrs Zen (Feb 1, 2004)
- 823: Styx the Rat (Feb 1, 2004)
- 824: Garius Lupus (Feb 1, 2004)
- 825: Mrs Zen (Feb 1, 2004)
- 826: Courtesy38 (Feb 1, 2004)
- 827: Hypatia (Feb 1, 2004)
- 828: LOOPYBOOPY (Feb 1, 2004)
- 829: logicus tracticus philosophicus (Feb 1, 2004)
- 830: Coniraya (Feb 1, 2004)
- 831: Toccata (Feb 1, 2004)
- 832: Montana Redhead (now with letters) (Feb 1, 2004)
- 833: Mrs Zen (Feb 1, 2004)
- 834: GreyDesk (Feb 1, 2004)
- 835: Hypatia (Feb 1, 2004)
- 836: Z (Feb 1, 2004)
- 837: Z (Feb 1, 2004)
- 838: LOOPYBOOPY (Feb 1, 2004)
- 839: GreyDesk (Feb 1, 2004)
- 840: Mrs Zen (Feb 1, 2004)
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