ThatOwlWoman
Not Nice
It’s an original, I learned it the moment I was diagnosed with cancer.
If you've come close to death, as you and I both have, time is a treasured commodity that seems sometimes to fly faster than you can run to catch it.
It’s an original, I learned it the moment I was diagnosed with cancer.
Amen to thatIf you've come close to death, as you and I both have, time is a treasured commodity that seems sometimes to fly faster than you can run to catch it.
I'll have to disagree. In fact, video games actually help improve brain function. Some of them require LOTS of imagination. The best ones are real-time strategy games. These are very good for improving neuroplasticity. The right games engage your brain on several levels. It has been shown that they can also prevent Alzheimers disease.
It’s an original, I learned it the moment I was diagnosed with cancer.
Some of those role-playing games are excellent brain stimulation. But long hours of playing aren't not so great for physical conditioning.
It may have been a slow three weeks but you killed it.Having spent some time in jail, I'll have to disagree. It was only three weeks, but it seemed like forever. And some asshole stole my shoes the day before I got out.
It may have been a slow three weeks but you killed it.
Hey! Dead is dead.Read the OP again.
Hey! Dead is dead.
Not to the dead.Dead by slow poison, or dead from being shot in the head. There's a difference.
I prefer reading books
Find a good novel and you're set for the weekend. I finished Pillars of the Earth in 36 hours. Didn't sleep much, but when I finished it, I boarded a plane to the south Pacific and then slept.
With books you can still use your imagination, with video games, there is not much imagination, imo
Pillars of the Earth was superb...and I gotta acknowledge you for doing it in 36 hours. It was a book I took a while to finish...and then went right on to World Without End. Enjoyed Caleb Carr's The Alienist and am now reading his The Angel of Darkness. One of my all time favorites was James Clavell's Shogun. Kind of book to read a couple of times.
(Think I'll start a thread devoted to good books to read.)
Personally, I prefer to kill time playing golf. Up until ten...twelve years ago, I often played 54 holes a day...walking and carrying my bag. Too old for that kind of endurance now. But I still play at least 4 times a week during the season. A round can use up almost 4 hours...and it flies.
That is awesome. I don't play golf much but I do enjoy ocean sports, like snorkeling, body boarding and more inland... Hiking and gasp* hitting local farmer's markets for local food.
I will look up the books up the books you mentioned, thank you.
Also, I read Pillars of the Earth right before I was leaving overseas for a year. Could have been nerves, excitement, I don't know, but I was seriously hooked on that book.
Did you like the movie adaption?
Frank, if you don't mind, start the thread about books. If I start it I have to ban one poster on principle and I think your thread would be more well received.
Shogun... James Clavell I've read that a few times, between my father and I we wore out a paperback version, so I went and bought the 2 volume hardcover version.
IT... Stephen King I've read that one a few times too.
Ken Follett is one of the best writers around. Frederick Forsyth is way up there, too.
Re: Follett, check out A Place Called Freedom if you never have before. Great read.
![]()
Some other Follett novels I've read, all of them good...
Eye of the Needle (1978) (a.k.a. Storm Island)
The Key to Rebecca (1980)
The Man from St. Petersburg (1982)
On Wings of Eagles (1983)
Lie Down with Lions (1985)
Pillars of the Earth (1989)
Night Over Water (1991)
A Dangerous Fortune (1993)
The Third Twin (1996)
The Hammer of Eden (1998)
Lie Down With Lions took place in Afghanistan amongst the Mujahideen. Hence the title. Was written during the Russian occupation of Afghanistan.
Check out The Fist of God by Frederick Forsyth, too. Set in Baghdad during Desert Storm. Another great read.