fansubs_ca wrote:...
*It had been used to pack cotton under my toenail (I had an ingrown toenail at the
time)...
68Camaro wrote:fansubs_ca wrote:...
*It had been used to pack cotton under my toenail (I had an ingrown toenail at the
time)...
Not to digress - or gross anyone out, but does this technique work? - I've had sproadic problems over the years and I've been soaking my toe until the nail softens a bit and then trying to slowly bend it out, twice a day, but that seems to be working less well lately.
68Camaro wrote:fansubs_ca wrote:...
*It had been used to pack cotton under my toenail (I had an ingrown toenail at the
time)...
Not to digress - or gross anyone out, but does this technique work? - I've had sproadic problems over the years and I've been soaking my toe until the nail softens a bit and then trying to slowly bend it out, twice a day, but that seems to be working less well lately.
Bluegill wrote:he had taken off the top and was going through them, very roughly.barrytrot wrote:
You majorly over reacted. If you don't want people messing with things keep them out of "hands reach". Pretty simple.
Not at all dude. Not at all.
How would you like it if someone grabbed something of yours in your private home with out asking permission first, and open it up and started man handling the contents. What this guy did was flat out rude and disrespectful. A person shouldn't have to keep their possessions out of hands reach in their own home. The guest should have manners.
Of course that was how I was raised, so I'm probably gonna be the odd man out on this one...
barrytrot wrote:He didn't do $23 worth of damage and had you just said, "hey those are delicate" or something like that he would have stopped and not done it again.
You majorly over reacted. If you don't want people messing with things keep them out of "hands reach". Pretty simple.
Thogey wrote:My fencing instructor brought in a mint state 1916 Walker for me to look at.
This 14 year old little f$cker butts into the conversation, picks it up and drops it, then rakes it across the (linoleum),table, obverse down.
I believe he turned a 1000 coin into a 85 dollar coin in about 4 seconds.
68Camaro wrote:fansubs_ca wrote:...
*It had been used to pack cotton under my toenail (I had an ingrown toenail at the
time)...
Not to digress - or gross anyone out, but does this technique work? - I've had sproadic problems over the years and I've been soaking my toe until the nail softens a bit and then trying to slowly bend it out, twice a day, but that seems to be working less well lately.
nero12345 wrote:I had a friend over the other day, we were working on a new deck. During a break we were sitting in my " coin room" and he noticed a roll of maples I had just bought. Before I noticed what he was doing he had taken off the top and was going through them, very roughly. I tried not to freak out to much but then he started spinning it on the desk top saying how heavy it was. I asked him when he started collecting silver coins. His answer was I don't collect these things. I said " you do now that will be $23." He looked at me like I had ten heads. I said " that coins now scratched up pretty good, what the hell were you thinking" do non coin people really not know how to handle coins or what. Has this ever happened to anyone else?
P.S. he didn't buy the coin and also didn't really help with the deck much after that.lol. Don't really blame him I guess.
Thogey wrote:My fencing instructor brought in a mint state 1916 Walker for me to look at.
This 14 year old little f$cker butts into the conversation, picks it up and drops it, then rakes it across the (linoleum),table, obverse down.
I believe he turned a 1000 coin into a 85 dollar coin in about 4 seconds.
Engineer wrote:Rule 3:
If they want to steal something, I always leave out some bait bags of copper...with some boxes of shotgun shells to let them know they may need to hurry.
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