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Comfort.
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Anders Eliasson
Posts: 5780
Joined: Oct. 18 2006
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RE: Comfort. (in reply to guitarbuddha)
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Yeah, eating cures many things and calms the nerves. Thats why so many are fat because they are frustrated. Sounds like you have a sweet tongue. Its not what I would make, but if maybe you could serve it for me next time I´m in Scotland. I love eating raw. And no, its not because I´m a new age raw food freak. On the the contrary. I find them to be far out. I´m natural. Since I was a kid I´ve always loved raw vegetables. Besides all the standard salad things, carrots, brocoli, cabbage, caulifloor. (spell) squash.. green selery etc. My dogs love it to. half a carrot makes them crazy, but they prefer fruit. All kinds of fruit. I have a Japaneese fruit tree, calld a Nispero here in Spain and my Spanish water dog really likes that fruit, so she tried to climb the tree a month ago when the fruits were ready. She almost succeded but fell down and I had to tell her to stop.
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Jun. 4 2014 7:45:58
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Richard Jernigan
Posts: 3423
Joined: Jan. 20 2004
From: Austin, Texas USA
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RE: Comfort. (in reply to Anders Eliasson)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Anders Eliasson quote:
hackberry trees I liked that that story. And its just another picture of modern life. We consider many things to be trash. How can a tree be an annoyance. I love being in the forest. And I always think about how old some of the trees are and how bad we treat them...... But, well, in the en its just a mirror of how we treat ourselves. As some of you may know, I lived for more than 18 years on a tiny island in the Central Pacific. Part of the compensation of most workers on the island was free food in a cafeteria, all you could eat, three meals a day. The food was good, and well prepared, by Euro-American standards. One of the workers was from Kosrae, a small high island about 350 miles to the west. Mose seemed to regard much of the infrastructure where we lived as a temporary incursion of the white people. This included the cafeteria, and the food available in the store. Mose worked as a deckhand on one of the boats. He usually trolled in the wake with a handline. Other deckhands did the same, but Mose always caught the first fish, the largest fish and the most fish. He tended an assortment of trees in the jungle, and had a small pit of composted soil where he raised taro, whose roots he laboriously prepared and cooked. Though Mose was entitled to cafeteria meals, I never saw him eat anything that was imported. There was a thick growth of coconut palms on the island. I once spoke casually to Mose as he was opening a coconut. He responded by spending about 3/4 of an hour showing me the different stages of coconut ripeness, and the preparation and uses of the coconut at its different stages. Sometimes he would give me a banana from one of several kinds that grew in the forest, often he gave me fish. One of my fondest memories. RNJ
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REPORT THIS POST AS INAPPROPRIATE |
Date Jun. 6 2014 19:01:26
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