Comments

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In my experience life at places like this was not great. Being locked in a room like that, people did not understand or care if they did about the effects of solitary confinement or the need for human interaction, the patient would probably resort to trying almost anything to get the door opened. With the peephole up high they could hide at the base of the door forcing the staff to open it up to make sure they were OK. With the peephole down low they could see the patient at the base of the door or hiding under the bed.
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Went inside the dark oval kinda dusty hehe
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Just went here yesterday got told to leave before we really got inside aparently they are doing tours on Saturdays defiantly coming back. Just got a glimpse of the deer head
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love to see a close up of these
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Looks brand new
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i like how that picture kinda looks like a wall mounted tv, thats on
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always like these old buildings are just destroyed but the tiles are so shiny
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ceiling looks very low
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I wonder what is the round spherical thing laying in between the burial plot markers , it strangely looks like the top of a skull...
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Pat-I had this problem after Motts changed the format but somehow got it figured out but don't remember ????????? hang in there bud -U'll not disappear cos there is too much life in ya wink wink
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When I visited Fort Breendonk, also in Belgium, the tour guide called them "French Toilets." I'm not sure what they call them in France because they're there also. Maybe the French just call them "toilets"
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A new year brings an new gallery, please keep them coming.
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Eerie and very pensive... Sad, really.
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I was referencing a trait I did not know was PTSD induced OCD at the time.
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FreeSpirit76 the tiled walls is meant to be more sanitary. They can be cleaned and sterilised much easier than plaster walls which absorb liquids and would require demolition and replacement if contaminated.