How many miles did you drive today?


I sipped it twice. Once to try it and the second time to confirm that it was indeed disgusting.
That's pretty common. I can easily live without it and my doctors (GP, vascular surgeon, and hematologist) all hate the hell out of it. I doubt that its ingredients other, than sugar (I assume it's the double sugar that they hate), are all that inimical to one's health.
 
That's pretty common. I can easily live without it and my doctors (GP, vascular surgeon, and hematologist) all hate the hell out of it. I doubt that its ingredients other, than sugar (I assume it's the double sugar that they hate), are all that inimical to one's health.
I am more than sure you know who Wayne Gretzky is. He wore the #99 hockey sweater.
At the Tim Hortons, Tim Horton also being a hockey player ironically.
Tim Hortons has a coffee called the Wayne Gretzky.
It is 9 sugars and 9 shots of cream, 99.

I know it sounds pretty gross because it probably is. I have never tried it.
 
That's pretty common. I can easily live without it and my doctors (GP, vascular surgeon, and hematologist) all hate the hell out of it. I doubt that its ingredients other, than sugar (I assume it's the double sugar that they hate), are all that inimical to one's health.
Other than a heart attack it has no redeeming qualities whatsoever.
 
Again with the work.
Aristotle and a lot of other guys that thought about things opined that work gave meaning to life. Those who don't work seek meaning in dumbass ways like busting windows, burning things, and other stuff that can't even get them ahead one iota. Thus:

"But it is clear that the lives of people who do not work are typically lacking in certain goods.

Research shows that physical and mental health are adversely affected by lack of work. You are more likely to suffer from obesity and depression, for example, if you are unemployed. This may be linked to another good that work helps to provide: self-esteem."
Source: A philosopher's view: the benefits and dignity of work
 
Aristotle and a lot of other guys that thought about things opined that work gave meaning to life. Those who don't work seek meaning in dumbass ways like busting windows, burning things, and other stuff that can't even get them ahead one iota. Thus:

"But it is clear that the lives of people who do not work are typically lacking in certain goods.

Research shows that physical and mental health are adversely affected by lack of work. You are more likely to suffer from obesity and depression, for example, if you are unemployed. This may be linked to another good that work helps to provide: self-esteem."
Source: A philosopher's view: the benefits and dignity of work
I'm not sure Aristotle did a day of hard work in his life.
 
I'm not sure Aristotle did a day of hard work in his life.
Said that guy who recently eschewed "work" as in a prior post, "Again with the work." Maybe it depends on your definition of a "day of hard work." Since a 3# brain consumes 20% of your oxygen on average; thus I'm guessing that brain work can be physically tough.
 
Said that guy who recently eschewed "work" as in a prior post, "Again with the work." Maybe it depends on your definition of a "day of hard work." Since a 3# brain consumes 20% of your oxygen on average; thus I'm guessing that brain work can be physically tough.
I work as little/smart as possible but at least I'm not opining that everyone needs to do it without actually doing it.
 
455.9 miles today per the trip-o-meter.

One load but otherwise just fetching empties, which doesn't pay that great. Had to get some out of a customer so we could take more loads in though. It's one of the few options on my normally lucrative paper run so I'm okay with taking the hit once in a while. Still profitable just not as good, and more time in for the money.

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