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Random Thoughts...or...What's on Your Mind?

I am just wondering if I am the only one who has to re-watch an action movie more than once to get content? I get overwhelmed by the action and miss so much. I drive people crazy when I go out to a movie with friends and they ask how I liked the movie? If it was an action movie I always say "I will let you know when I can watch it again." Does anyone else feel that way?
Yes, it can be difficult to keep your eye on ALL the balls in the air at once! I often re-read books for that reason, too.
 
I am just wondering if I am the only one who has to re-watch an action movie more than once to get content? I get overwhelmed by the action and miss so much. I drive people crazy when I go out to a movie with friends and they ask how I liked the movie? If it was an action movie I always say "I will let you know when I can watch it again." Does anyone else feel that way?
I don't like modern action movies: usually the plot is sacrificed to the action - not my cup of tea

One fun thing about being my age, is that I can remember that I enjoyed a book, but can't remember the plot or much about it. So, I can enjoy it as if reading it for the first time again,
that would be great for me, I could read Mark Twain and others for the first time again
 
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One fun thing about being my age, is that I can remember that I enjoyed a book, but can't remember the plot or much about it. So, I can enjoy it as if reading it for the first time again,

This is me. I lose most of the details of even some of my favorite books and I almost always have the order of my favorite movies wrong in my mind and it's almost like a new experience every time I read or see them.
 
A buddy texted me this morning saying "TGIF." I replied that in retirement I have no weekends and that this is my calendar - the only way I know what day it is:
s-l1000.jpg
 
mine start with montag and has no braille dots on it (the letters are mostly gone on all of them)
Yeah - the letters on mine are pretty much worn away (though they are embossed in the plastic so you can still read them) and the braille dots have no paint - they're the same color plastic as the rest of the tray.
 
There is a pair of cardinals nesting in my lilac bush in the back corner of the yard. They are not afraid of me, but Gus pisses them of. Their songs are beautiful. Tomorrow I will go out with the camera to see if I can get a photo. The lilac is huge and the nest is tucked away pretty well, but I should be able to get a pic. I never knew they nested so close to the ground - the nest is about waist high.
 
There is a pair of cardinals nesting in my lilac bush in the back corner of the yard. They are not afraid of me, but Gus pisses them of. Their songs are beautiful. Tomorrow I will go out with the camera to see if I can get a photo. The lilac is huge and the nest is tucked away pretty well, but I should be able to get a pic. I never knew they nested so close to the ground - the nest is about waist high.

you are going to name that flieder (german name for lilac) the kremlin?
russia.gif
 
We now know where hypervelocity stars come from. Binary stars systems are very common and as a matter of fact, there is a good chance that our solar system started that way. Our Sun had a twin that was pushed away at some point in the remote past. So, once in a while, one of these binary systems comes too close to the central black hole of our galaxy, one of the stars (the unlucky one) goes beyond the event horizon of the BH and consequently it is captured by it, never to be seen ever again!! the other, on the other hand, gets released (kinda like in a hammer throw) and pushed away from the BH at a very high speed. So high in fact, that in a mere thirty million years, a short time at the scale of a solar system, the star moves beyond the borders of the galaxy and finds itself in the intergalactic void, literally in the middle of nowhere. Imagine a totally starless sky!! It's estimated that there are about ten to the eighteenth power such stars in the entire universe, one billion of billions!!!
 
what happened to our sun's twin and how do we know there ever was one? (Just curious)
I once read a pretty good SciFi where a counter-Earth shared our orbit and always kept at the other side of the sun so that it could only be discovered when mankind started space travel. I always found that an intriguing idea with great possibilities, plot-wise.
 
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