Comments

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Why is it, whenever you find a typewritter, the keys are jammed?
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Orchid Lunar, weren't you surprised at how salty it was. I loved the smell so much, I had to try it too. It wasn't very tasty.
All children seem to have pica to a limited extent.I even tried eating play dough when I was a kiddo.I think pica might be one of the reasons why paints are not lead based anymore.Kids eating paint flakes with lead in them was not a good thing.
Uh mark this is an abandoned places exploration site not a horror site.Some of the pics on here are eerie true but that isn't what this site is about.
I would not call this pic evil or depressing.Yes the Pit of Oblivion was but this picture is different from the other ones here as it seems to give hope.I wonder who painted all of these anyways?Was it the same artist?
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Jude... I agree... ;-)_
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If it wasn't for session 9, I wouldn't have found Mott's site, the description on the back of the vid said "Abandoned" and "Mental Hospital" Thats all I needed to read to rent it, I watched it once, and then ordered it on DVD, and here I am!!! I guess I need to thank Brad Anderson!! ;-) (And Mr. Motts for bringing me the "real" Danvers!!!) ;-)
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I really like the linear style of this one. It seems surreal, like a gingerbread house or something. Also, the addition of the black and white make even the plants look fake, like frosting.
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I'd hate to sweep THAT chimney..
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It's a water tower, dummy. Who said it was supposed to be scary?
THE AMOSKEAG MILLS IN MANCHESTER, N.H. ARE THE BEST EXAMPLE IN AMERICA OF HOW THESE MARVELOUS HISTORIC BUILDINGS CAN LIVE ON.
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Daytime, What is that?
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"Another popular "spa treatment" to calm agitation was hydrotherapy, which was more than a nice warm bath. For instance, one practice was to wrap an agitated patient in cold (50 degree), wet sheets. A very disturbed patient could be placed in a continuous bath 18 hours a day for 2-3 weeks"”or whatever it took to change the aberrant behavior. The dangers of hydrotherapy were hypothermia, convulsions, and even drowning. "

Stripling, M. "BIOETHICS AND MEDICAL ISSUES IN LITERATURE." Westport Ct.: Greenwood Press, 2005

http://www.medicalhumanities.net/chapter.html
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I love your hair, do you ever put it up in a mohawk?
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Viveka, it's called pica behavior. It's an abnormal craving for and eating of substances not normally eaten.