Hey man, don't knock it till you try it. Hydratheist.Grosser than that was the episode where he was in africa and demonstrated how you could take a pile of Elephant dung, squeeze it, and drink the water to hydrate
Hey man, don't knock it till you try it. Hydratheist.Grosser than that was the episode where he was in africa and demonstrated how you could take a pile of Elephant dung, squeeze it, and drink the water to hydrate
Settle down, Luke.Hey man, don't knock it till you try it. Hydratheist.
I'll see your elephant dung water drinking, and raise you the episode where he ate a freshly cut raw camel's testicle.Grosser than that was the episode where he was in africa and demonstrated how you could take a pile of Elephant dung, squeeze it, and drink the water to hydrate
It’s way better without a dog. That’s where you fucked upI spent about 2 years living in a 1998 Toyota Camry.
About 2005ish to 2007ish.
Me and my dog.
I don't think I'd care to do it again.
At least you could step outside and run around onece in a while. I grew up on a yaught.As someone that lived in his car for a while in HS and lived out of a truck for half of 94 I can confirm it does indeed suck.
It's funny, when I was a kid watching Paul fight, always viewed him as the fighter with the clear upper hand just due to his God-given size. Listening to him on Lytes Out and finding out just how little he had to prepare with for fights really changed my view of him. You don't ordinarily think a 6'8 guy as an underdog, but in a lot of ways he was. Respected him even more for it. Bummed me out to hear him passing not long after.Little known trivia for you old school UFC enthusiasts. When Paul "the Polar Bear" Varelans got kicked out of his Santa Cruz football scholorship, he was homeless. He bought a very used Volvo station wagon. He said it was relatively comfy (he was 6'8" 300+ lbs). Eventually, he got a job working the door at the Kit Kat Club owned by some sheisty Croatian mafia-types. For an interesting story about those days: When We Were Bouncers: Paul Varelans. As a side note: I lived in Fairbanks, Alaska and I used to hang out with the big lug.
My parents drank Canadian whiskey and told us to shut the fuck up and go outside.Yep, I’d spend the summers in my parents rv driving around the US and during the school year I’d live in other countries. We weren’t rich but you could buy water front property in Florida for cheap.
I blame the boomers. They didn't think about us very much while they were "finding themselves"At least you could step outside and run around onece in a while. I grew up on a yaught.
Yeah we had circumnavigated the world by the time I was 9 years old , which is cool in hindsight, I don't have much sympathy for "Van life ".
In short, pro's and cons. For parents and children.
What passes me of a bit is people in my parents generation ( boomers) could fuck off and do this kind of shit half their life and still have a house paid off at retirement age while I know there's not a single fucking chance in the world my kids will be able to do the same.
I'm not saying this from a place of bitterness. I love my parents. They led extraordinary lives. I make good money.
My ( our) kids are fucked though and nobody seems to realise that. Not even my wife. I want to leave them something. All going well I'll leave them with a good work ethic like my parents left me but that just isn't going to be nearly enough. Not for these kids .
They're getting set up to get fucked over hard.
Appoligies. I haven't even started ranting yet and I've already been ranting.
Great story!Yeah, I was an MP at the missile base 100 miles south of Fairbanks(Ft. Greeley). Went to Fbks. to do some shopping, walked out of Safeway and saw the Polar Bear walking in with a shopping cart. Same haircut, same walk, but about 100 lbs. heavier. Of course, being a fan, I went back in. I was awestruck and I asked him what he was doing later. He said, "nothing much-- just gonna play some video games." I told him I had a half-gallon of JD in my car and would he mind going to Ft. Greeley. My buddies who taught combative thought I was bullshitting about meeting him. So I brought him to their front door and they nearly shit themselves. He was really cool. Helluva sense of humor.
Why did John J feel the need to pop his collar before heading back to town?
Cause that is what a bad ass did in the 80'sWhy did John J feel the need to pop his collar before heading back to town?
Was his neck cold? Or was this a mental thing like flipping a switch - sort of like what Hawks would do in his arm wrestling touraments?
They didn't think about anyone but themselves.I blame the boomers. They didn't think about us very much while they were "finding themselves"
Same, the forgotten generationI'm Gen X and we grew up in their shadow.