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Coffins used to be built with holes in them, attached to six feet of
copper tubing and a bell. The tubing would allow air for victims buried
under the mistaken impression they were dead. Harold, the Oakdale
gravedigger, upon hearing a bell, went to go see if it was children
pretending to be spirits. Sometimes it was also the wind. This time it
wasn’t either. A voice from below begged, pleaded to be unburied. “You
Sarah O’Bannon?” Yes! the voice assured.
“You were born on September 17, 1827?”
"Yes!"
“The gravestone here says you died on February 19?”
"No I'm alive, it was a mistake! Dig me up, set me free!"
“Sorry about this, ma’am,” Harold said, stepping on the bell to silence
it and plugging up the copper tube with dirt. “But this is August.
Whatever you is down there, you ain’t alive no more, and you ain’t
comin’ up.”
--
Tim Cook
http://empyrean.digitalartsuk.com
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Version: 3.12
GFA dpu- s: a?-- C++(++++) U P? L E--- W++(+++)>$
N++ o? K- w(+) O? M-(--) V? PS+(+++) PE(--) Y(--)
PGP-(--) t* 5++>+++++ X+ R* tv+ b++(+++) DI
D++(---) G(++) e*>++ h+ !r--- !y--
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:)
Interesting storry.
Did you know, that the believe of an undead life underlie simple biological
processes?
Stories of an unholy life afterlife came up, when several people heard smackings
from the coffins.
When they opend them the dead person looked alife and well-fed. They found
around the dead persons mouth marks of blood, so they thought, that this undead
person must have fed from living ones.
Collecting all these stories, Bram Stoker gave those evil an identity.
The biological process of rotting wasn't well examinated. The gases make the
body looks quite "fat". When they try to escape, they do take blood (of the
lungs) out of the body. When they leak out of the body, it should (as I never
experienced these descriptions) make a creepy sound...
Regards
bluetree
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Bah, that's *nothing*!
I still like the story of the trainee nurse who was cleaning a corpse's
body. As she wiped his hand, the long-dead muscle twiched and his
fingers clamped around her hand.
She flipped her lid. ;-) Well, wouldn't you??
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 21:29:18 +0000, Orchid XP v7 wrote:
> Bah, that's *nothing*!
>
> I still like the story of the trainee nurse who was cleaning a corpse's
> body. As she wiped his hand, the long-dead muscle twiched and his
> fingers clamped around her hand.
>
> She flipped her lid. ;-) Well, wouldn't you??
My wife took a course in forensics in college; one time was running late
for class, so picked up a bowl of chili in the cafeteria and took it with
her.
Imagine the responses from other students in the class when she used her
spoon to point out interesting things in the cadaver they were performing
an autopsy on that day.
Jim
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Jim Henderson nous apporta ses lumieres en ce 2008/01/31 16:56:
> On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 21:29:18 +0000, Orchid XP v7 wrote:
>
>> Bah, that's *nothing*!
>>
>> I still like the story of the trainee nurse who was cleaning a corpse's
>> body. As she wiped his hand, the long-dead muscle twiched and his
>> fingers clamped around her hand.
>>
>> She flipped her lid. ;-) Well, wouldn't you??
>
> My wife took a course in forensics in college; one time was running late
> for class, so picked up a bowl of chili in the cafeteria and took it with
> her.
>
> Imagine the responses from other students in the class when she used her
> spoon to point out interesting things in the cadaver they were performing
> an autopsy on that day.
>
> Jim
Eating while performing an autopsy? She realy have a well hung stomach.
--
Alain
-------------------------------------------------
If all the world is a stage, where is the audience sitting?
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On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 17:54:43 -0500, Alain wrote:
> Eating while performing an autopsy? She realy have a well hung stomach.
That's one way of putting it. ;-)
But yes, she does have a strong stomach when it comes to "real" trauma/
blood/etc. Faked stuff (like in the movies) tends to be really
overblown, and she can't take that, or when it involves animals or
children.
I can handle fake gore pretty well, but the real stuff I can't handle at
all.
Jim
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Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 21:29:18 +0000, Orchid XP v7 wrote:
>
> > Bah, that's *nothing*!
> >
> > I still like the story of the trainee nurse who was cleaning a corpse's
> > body. As she wiped his hand, the long-dead muscle twiched and his
> > fingers clamped around her hand.
> >
> > She flipped her lid. ;-) Well, wouldn't you??
>
> My wife took a course in forensics in college; one time was running late
> for class, so picked up a bowl of chili in the cafeteria and took it with
> her.
>
> Imagine the responses from other students in the class when she used her
> spoon to point out interesting things in the cadaver they were performing
> an autopsy on that day.
>
> Jim
And the other students are now suffering a classical conditioning?
Everytime they smell a bowl of chili, they remember the autopsy. ^^
Regards
bluetree
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Jim Henderson wrote:
> I can handle fake gore pretty well, but the real stuff I can't handle at
> all.
I remember when we visited my mum in hospital. (I have no idea why we
bothered. She was on another planet. Too much morphine...)
A nurse came to change the drip in her arm, and my sister almost
literally turned green. I have to admit, I was pretty freaked out too...
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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On Fri, 01 Feb 2008 01:37:42 -0500, bluetree wrote:
> And the other students are now suffering a classical conditioning?
> Everytime they smell a bowl of chili, they remember the autopsy. ^^
LOL! I don't know about that, but that would be funny.
Jim
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On Fri, 01 Feb 2008 09:24:59 +0000, Invisible wrote:
> Jim Henderson wrote:
>
>> I can handle fake gore pretty well, but the real stuff I can't handle
>> at all.
>
> I remember when we visited my mum in hospital. (I have no idea why we
> bothered. She was on another planet. Too much morphine...)
What was she in for, if you don't mind my asking? I had a morphine drip
once (when I broke my leg), and it was an interesting sensation; for me,
it didn't dull the pain at all, but I didn't care. At the same time, it
totally messed with my sense of time. After the surgery (I broke it
really badly and had to have a rod put in), I was told I could self-
dispense it every 5 minutes, and I'd swear I only pressed it once every 5
minutes, but they had records showing that I tried to dispense it over a
period of a couple of hours about 500 times.
> A nurse came to change the drip in her arm, and my sister almost
> literally turned green. I have to admit, I was pretty freaked out too...
I really don't like needles. When I was a kid I used to get penicillin
shots (which are dispensed here with a huge honkin' needle in the
backside), and those damned things HURT.
I've been doing allergy shots since August, and I still get tense at the
thought of getting the shots - and when I started, it was a twice-a-week
thing.
Jim
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