By reb2632 - 29/05/2009 20:13 - United States
The Top
By KMROYALShottie - 27/05/2009 04:50 - United States
By SkeetinKeaton - 05/06/2013 15:24 - United States
Sorry…
By Anonymous - 02/10/2009 21:07 - United States
By cunts, cunts everywhere - 11/03/2013 11:57 - Australia
By Anonymous - 04/03/2012 07:07 - United States
Three's company
By cllutz - 07/02/2011 03:18 - United States
By whoreticulturalist - 27/10/2012 19:18 - United Kingdom - Plymouth
By wow - 28/11/2011 01:07 - United States
What are you doing?
By Ghostie - 02/07/2009 09:15 - United States
By PuddlePirate - 07/09/2012 16:23 - United States - Mountain Iron
By BerzerkelyBongBabe - 23/08/2011 21:55 - United States
By Anonymous - 01/09/2010 14:41 - Germany
PMS
By unappreciated husband - 28/03/2014 21:43 - United States - Pullman
Ski me to heaven
By Frostbitten - 27/02/2013 03:00 - United States - Freeport
By Rob - 18/12/2013 17:47 - United States - Franklin
By Anonymous - 08/08/2009 11:49 - United States
By Anonymous - 13/12/2014 20:21 - United States
By Rapunzel1974 - 01/09/2013 04:29 - United States - Gulfport
Rapunzel1974 tells us more.
By jj4320 - 17/09/2011 08:37 - United States
Alarm
By Anonymous - 09/08/2012 14:26 - United States
By panicked headaches - 07/12/2015 19:04 - United States - East Lansing
Timing
By kay_jay1819 - 19/11/2010 05:04 - United States
By swmmr - 07/08/2011 19:41 - United States
By Razi_tail - 25/06/2014 04:13 - United States - Nixa
Razi_tail tells us more.
I figured one of two things would happen: 1. He was in the same area we got separated or 2. He went back to the car. I chose to search the first option before getting a phone call that somebody found my dog. He has 3 ways to id him: dog park tag, name tag, and microchipped. It was the park tag that somebody had called on.
Neighbours from hell
By Anonymous - This FML is from back in 2012 but it's good stuff - Canada - Oakville
By displeased - 05/04/2012 06:47 - United States - Candler
Fight Club
By MyFaceHurts - 03/08/2010 10:40 - United States
By WildaRora - 14/03/2013 07:19 - Australia
WildaRora tells us more.
Hi guys, OP here. The dealer was femalel, I doubt she was older than 25 and we managed to laugh it off. After me nearly dying from embarrassment she actually asked what the book was. And no, it wasn't 50 Shades of Grey. It was not just the description of the act that was so bad, it was the moans and groans that the narrator put along with it. It sounded like really bad **** - not that I know what that sounds like! Thing is I was shocked when it came up in the audiobook, which is why it was stopped at that part. Later on I listened to the rest of it and boy was I glad that I managed to stop it when I did. I am really thankful that I found out about this feature before I took my parents for a drive.
By Ugly - 08/03/2009 08:47 - United States
Keywords
I'm the OP. I'm the one with the Fabulous Fingerbiters. These chickens aren't food: they're overindulged pets. Each one has a name, so chicken stew isn't an option. I've named them after various vaudeville stars or actresses because they're a lot of feathery drama queens. Actually, biting the hand that feeds them is right in line with the entertainment-industry theme I chose when naming them. A chicken bite from a baby bird isn't really painful at all because their little beaks are so soft. Even an adult bird's peck isn't painful in the same way a dog or cat bite is painful. They can't break the skin, although if they get you in the face it can leave a scratch or welt. A parrot, by contrast, can take your finger off. Chickens just aren't strong enough. These are going to be lovely laying hens. They're just a bit cheeky. I think I can break them of the habit by switching for a while to grass instead of mealworms, by *not* dropping the goodies no matter what, and moving on to the second phase of training, where I train them to hop onto my lap and sit there to be fed and petted. When training a chicken, it's important to use food as a reward. They're not like dogs and they don't consider attention a reward. They don't even consider petting a reward until they're conditioned to do so, because it's not a normal behavior or sensation for them. But it's straight-up operant conditioning, right out of B.F. Skinner