583 Comments Posted by Rekrats

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@autoguy - HAHAHAHAH!!! I can imagine that creepy old towel slinking around in the darkness, leaving bits of dried, crumbly sputum in its wake. Blech!
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PS - I'd really hate to see that thing back up. If you're late for work, you get to unclog the sputum chute! There's an incentive that would work for me!!
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Ew.

'Nuff said.
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Excellent perspective, Motts!
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Wow!! I can totally envision this as a prestigious boy's academy of old. As a military training facility... not so much. Bet most of those eager young recruits in the 40s and 50s never saw this part of Bainbridge.
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I love the chronological conflict... the large, almost-ancient looking doorway with the retro-fitted exit sign hanging dark and useless overhead.
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How bizarre that something of this nature could be left on a shelf somewhere, disregarded and forgotten for so very long. Nowadays, it would be horrifying to think of pieces of human tissue sitting unattended in a jar of liquid outside of a laboratory, in a place of treatment but utterly overlooked. Everything is considered bio-hazard now, and no one would just walk off from a biological floatie such as this. Not only did these doctors walk away but the entire device was just pushed aside and no one ever thought of it again. Absolutely fascinating!!

Thank you Motts!!!!
Ephemera: Consumption
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Oh my...! This shot grabs me deep down, it's just... ((gasp)).

Please, can we consider a wallpaper of this one? It's gripping... I can almost feel the cold wind slicing through me, can almost smell the ocean and the decaying leaves on the late-fall trees.

Wow, just... I would pay for this, enlarged and frame-able. Please, wallpaper, please?
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I love this. I wonder about the last name this tag was used to display, what was their story, what became of them... lost in time, just like the bed they laid in.
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Very nice!
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Wow, I bet that plastic (or vinyl, probably) is brittle.
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Buried in drifts of passing time, measured only by the ever-increasing layers of debris.
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It boggles the mind - that chair has not moved in over 30 years. It's like, frozen... locked in that final resting spot, forgotten entirely by those who once depended on its basic, yet essential, function.

If you sat upon it, it would likely fall completely apart.
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The gurney is disintegrating right before your eyes! Yet there are still small reminders of ongoing life in the presence of the leaves...
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Looks very... intimidating...