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Hey Dark Lady,
Any friend of language and Phil, is OK byme
WTF!!!
Hey guys,
Here in Florida it looks like it's going to rain, and then nothing happens.
I miss the fire in the fireplace, but I bless
the AC.
Sunny days ahead!!
Life
That is a terrible plight
for that lady.
the only good part of that story was the picture of your fish excel!!
Cute video from local Chabad
http://www.chabad.org/multimedia/movie_cdo/aid/683111/jewish/Underage-Underwriters.htm
I love this Board,
Thanks for all your time
Life
Good luck,
I'm going to try it!!
Life
Did someone change the size of font, and
color of text lately?
Everything looks slightly odd tonight????
Life
Good morning,
I've been car shopping and it is
improbable to find a used Civic>
No dealing on the new ones.
OT: I read this online, I hope it is OK to post this
Will the Jews sink Obama?
That's the question asked by Mike Madden over on Salon.
The theory isn't hard to grasp. Here it is:
The GOP is already pushing, and pushing hard, the idea that Obama has a problem with the Jewish vote, because of his proposals to sit down to negotiate with Iranian leaders who have threatened Israel, because of his former pastor's ties to Louis Farrakhan and (though most Republicans don't bring this up) because of false fears that Obama is secretly Muslim.
So do I buy it? I do not.
To start off there's the maths. Yes there are a few key states with a Jewish vote theoretically big enough to swing the contest against Obama.
But this involves the sort of figure work people were using a month or so ago to suggest that Hillary would win using superdelegates. The plurality of Jews voting against Obama would have to be great and that is simply not realistic. Even if there is a small swing away from Kerry's Jewish numbers, it is unlikely to be big enough to make a decisive difference.
However, I accept that the votes of Jews isn't entirely irrelevant. Which brings me to a second point. Jews don't vote exclusively, even mainly, on foreign policy. That's true here and it's true in America.
Nobody could have tilted so far towards the standard Jewish views on Israel as George Bush yet still Jews voted overwhelmingly for his opponents. The view of conspiracy theorists and lazy analysts that the Jewish vote in the US has been the critical feature of US elections and Middle East policy simply isn't borne out by the historical record.
US policy in the Middle East reflects US interests and US values. Not Jewish influence.
If they don't vote predominantly on so-called Jewish issues then what does determine Jewish votes?
Overwhelmingly it is liberal sentiment. From marching with Martin Luther King to becoming a mainstay of Democratic fundraising, Jews have overwhelmingly identified with the liberal movement in America.
I think Obama will have a great deal of appeal to Jews.
Posted by Daniel Finkelstein on May 19, 2008 in Barack Obama |
http://timesonline.typepad.com/comment/2008/05/will-the-jews-s.html
The importance of flossing
'American Life' highlights the strange
Posted: May 17, 2008
{on Showtime tonight}
Green Bay Correctional Institution inmate Timothy Dummer called it "an alternative to parole."
A Brown County Circuit Court judge called it an escape and sentenced Dummer and his co-defendant to another five years in prison.
The Showtime series, based on the popular public radio show of the same name, began its second season this month. It's one of cable's more unlikely successes of recent years, adding strong and original video to a series celebrated for its masterful use of the human voice.
Glass and his crew probably could have gotten a good radio piece out of the story of Dummer and Guy Dunwald's 1997 escape attempt and subsequent trial, as told by the inmates, a prosecutor, a defender and the guard who caught them.
But the radio couldn't show you the means by which the two Wisconsin men tried to light out for the territories: a thick rope ladder made of a staggering 18,975 feet of dental floss.
Green Bay Correctional Institution inmate Timothy Dummer called it "an alternative to parole."
A Brown County Circuit Court judge called it an escape and sentenced Dummer and his co-defendant to another five years in prison.
The 3½ miles of floss, braided, knotted and reinforced with bits of tape and whatever scraps of hardware the men could find, has been kept as evidence in the case. It's a sight to behold - 30 feet long and strong enough to support the weight of a grown man, though that turned out not to do these particular grown men much good.
After concealing the floss, constructing the rope, making elaborate plans and finally throwing the rope over a wall while they were assigned to shovel snow in a prison courtyard, the would-be runaways were unlucky enough to encounter a guard who had been a linebacker in high school and executed a perfect tackle on Dummer.
"I knew he didn't stand a chance," the guard brags to an interviewer.
The Brown County jury deliberated for less than 10 minutes before convicting the two men.
Perhaps inevitably - and despite the fact that Dummer's name rhymes with "boomer," not "summer" - the pair became known as "Dumb and Dumber."
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=751391
This was cute. haven't seen this one before..
Great board!!
Love, Life
DOG DIARY
8:00 am - Dog food! My favorite thing!
9:30 am - A car ride! My favorite thing!
9:40 am - A walk in the park! My favorite thing!
10:30 am - Got rubbed and petted! My favorite thing!
12:00 PM - Wagged my tail! My favorite thing!
1:00 PM - Played in the yard! My favorite thing!
3:00 PM - Ran back and forth in the hall! My favorite thing!
5:00 PM - Milk bones! My favorite thing!
7:00 PM - Got to play tug! My favorite thing!
8:00 PM - Wow! Watched TV with the people! My favorite thing!
11:00 PM - Sleeping on the bed! My favorite thing!
CAT DIARY
Day 983 of my captivity.
My captors continue to taunt me with bizarre little dangling objects. They dine lavishly on
fresh meat, while the other inmates and I are fed hash or some sort of dry nuggets.
Although I make my contempt for the rations perfectly clear, I nevertheless must eat
something in order to keep up my strength. The only thing that keeps me
going is my dream of escape.
In an attempt to disgust them, I once again vomit on the carpet.
Today I decapitated a mouse and dropped its headless body at their feet.
I had hoped this would strike fear in to their
hearts, since it clearly demonstrates what I am capable of. However,
they merely made condescending comments about what a 'good little
hunter' I am.
They continue to pick me up and handle me, an obvi ous attempt to subvert me.
There was some sort of assembly of their accomplices
tonight. I was placed in solitary confinement for the duration of the
event. However, I could hear the noises and smell the food. I overheard
that my confinement was due to the power of 'allergies.' I must learn
what this means, and how to use it to my advantage.
Today I was almost successful in an attempt to assassinate one of my tormentors
by weaving around his feet as he was walking. I must try this again tomorrow -- but at the
top of the stairs.
I am convinced that the other prisoners here are flunkies and snitches.
The dog receives special privileges. He is regularly released - and seems to be more
than willing to return. He is obviously retarded.
Tonight I will again la y on their heads while they sleep and hope to smother them.
Hey Nova,
Wow, yes I've been good, not trading much cause the Mother
fell in Feb,she is still in Rehab.. Pretty bad falls when they aare 85!!
Spirits are up, and I feel good. How about you??
Marsha
That is great ROTFLMAO
I really enjoyed these photos..
Life
OT...
I got this silliness in the email,
thought I would pass it on.
Subject is a very unusual showman from Italy. Please give the following a click
and see a REAL show. He does this with PAPER, and the results are almost
unbelievable.
MEET ENNIO MARCHETTO
SORRY if you heard this silliness I recieved in the email...
THE BAGEL THEORY
It all started when my friend Doodie Miller-- who wears a kippah -- was back
in college and suffering through a tedious lecture. As the professor droned on,
a previously-unknown young woman leaned over and whispered in his ear:
"This class is as boring as my Zayde's seder."
You see, the woman knew that she did not "look" Jewish, nor did she wear any
identifying signs like a Star of David. So foregoing the awkward declaration,
"I'm Jewish," the girl devised a more nuanced -- and frankly, cuter -- way of
heralding her heritage.
This incident launched a hypothesis which would henceforth be known as the
Bagel Theory.
The Bagel Theory stands for the principle that we Jews, regardless of how
observant or affiliated we are, have a powerful need to connect with one
another. To that end, we find ways to "bagel" each other -- basically, to "out"
ourselves to fellow Jews.
There are two ways to bagel. The brave or simply unimaginative will tell you
st raight out that they are Jewish (a plain bagel). But the more creative will
concoct subtler and even sublime ways to let you know that they, too, are in the
know. (These bagels are often the best; like their doughy counterparts, cultural
bagels are more flavorful when there is more to chew on.)
Bageled at Boggle
I suspect that Jews have been bageling even before real bagels were invented.
And while my husband and I may not have invented bageling, we do seem to have a
steady diet of bagel encounters.
An early bagel favorite occurred when my kippah-wearing husband and I were
dating, and we spent a Saturday evening at a funky coffee house with friends. We
engaged in a few boisterous rounds of Boggle, the game where you must quickly
make words out of jumbled lettered cubes. Observing our fun, a couple of college
students at a nearby table asked if they could play too. After we rattled the
tray and furiously scribbled our words, it was time to read our lists aloud .
One of the students, who sported a rasta hat and goatee, proudly listed the word
"yad." Unsuspecting, we inquired, "What's a yad?" He said with a smirk, "You
know, that pointer you read the Torah with." Yes, we were bageled at Boggle.
On our honeymoon in Rome, we were standing at the top of the Spanish steps
next to a middle-aged couple holding a map. The husband piped up in an obvious
voice, "I wonder where the synagogue is." My husband and I exchanged a knowing
look at this classic Roman bagel and proceeded to strike up a conversation with
this lovely couple from Chicago. After we took them to the synagogue, they asked
to join us at the kosher pizza shop. As we savored the cheeseless arugula and
shaved beef pizza -- to this day the best pizza I have ever had -- this
non-religious couple marveled at traveling kosher and declared they would do so
in the future. A satisfying bagel to be sure.
Holy Bagel
In the years since, our bagel encounters have become precious souvenirs,
yiddishe knick-knacks from our family adventures in smaller Jewish communities.
Like the time the little boy at the Coffee Bean in Pasadena, California, walked
up to my husband, pulled out a mezuzah from around his neck, smiled and ran
away. (A non-verbal bagel!) Or our day trip to the pier in San Clemente,
California when an impish girl in cornrows and bikini scampered over to say
"Good Shabbos."
We have been bageled waiting at airline ticket counters, in elevators, at the
supermarket checkout. And I myself have been known to bagel when the situation
calls for it, like the time I asked the chassid seated a few rows up on an
airplane if I could borrow a siddur.
On a recent trip abroad, however, we did not get bageled even once. That was
in Israel where, thankfully, there is just no need.
We bagel in a quest to feel whole.
Ultimately, why do we feel this need to bagel? Does it stem from our shared
patriarchs, our pedigree of discrimination and isolation, a common love of
latkes or just the human predisposition to be cliquey? I maintain it is
something more. Our sages say that all Jews were originally one interconnected
soul which stood in unison at Mount Sinai to receive the Torah. Now scattered
across the Earth, as we encounter each other's Jewish souls, we recognize and
reconnect with a piece of our divine selves. The bagel may have a hole, but we
bagel in a quest to feel whole.
So the next time a sweaty stranger at the gym says to you, "I haven't been
this thirsty since Yom Kippur," smile. You've just been bageled -- adding
another link in the Jewish circle of connection.
.
wow, never imagined that!!
I thought so too.
Us "Boomers" are not going to like the
way people are treated today. Hopefully, the
LOVE generation will continue to make changes!!
Love, Life
For the Elderly, Being Heard About Life’s End
HANOVER, N.H. — Edie Gieg, 85, strides ahead of people half her age and plays a fast-paced game of tennis. But when it comes to health care, she is a champion of “slow medicine,” an approach that encourages less aggressive — and less costly — care at the end of life.
Grounded in research at the Dartmouth Medical School, slow medicine encourages physicians to put on the brakes when considering care that may have high risks and limited rewards for the elderly, and it educates patients and families how to push back against emergency room trips and hospitalizations designed for those with treatable illnesses, not the inevitable erosion of advanced age.
Slow medicine, which shares with hospice care the goal of comfort rather than cure, is increasingly available in nursing homes, but for those living at home or in assisted living, a medical scare usually prompts a call to 911, with little opportunity to choose otherwise.
At the end of her husband’s life, Ms. Gieg was spared these extreme options because she lives in Kendal at Hanover, a retirement community affiliated with Dartmouth Medical School that has become a laboratory for the slow medicine movement. At Kendal, it is possible — even routine — for residents to say “No” to hospitalization, tests, surgery, medication or nutrition.
Charley Gieg, 86 at the time, was suffering from a heart problem, an intestinal disorder and the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease when doctors suspected he also had throat cancer.
A specialist outlined what he was facing: biopsies, anesthesia, surgery, radiation or chemotherapy. Ms. Gieg doubted he had the resilience to bounce back. She worried, instead, that such treatments would accelerate his downward trajectory, ushering in a prolonged period of decline and dependence. This is what the Giegs said they feared even more than dying, what some call “death by intensive care.”
Such fears are rarely shared among old people, health care professionals or family members, because etiquette discourages it. But at Kendal — which offers a continuum of care, from independent living apartments to a nursing home — death and dying is central to the conversation from Day 1.
So it was natural for Ms. Gieg to stay in touch with Joanne Sandberg-Cook, a nurse practitioner there, during her husband’s out-of-town consultation.
“I think that it is imperative that none of this be rushed!” Ms. Sandberg-Cook wrote in an e-mail message to Ms. Gieg. The doctor the Giegs had chosen, the nurse explained, “tends to be a ‘do-it-now’ kind of guy.” But the Giegs’ circumstances “demand the time to think about all the what-ifs.”
Ms. Sandberg-Cook asked whether Mr. Gieg would want treatment if he was found to have cancer. If not, why go through a biopsy, which might further weaken his voice? Or risk anesthesia, which could accelerate her husband’s dementia?
“Those are the very questions on my mind, too,” Ms. Gieg replied. The Giegs took their time, opted for no further tests or treatment, and Charley came back to the retirement community to die.
Such decisions are not made lightly, and not without debate, especially in an aging society.
Many in their 80s and 90s — and their boomer children — want to pull out all the stops to stay alive, and doctors get paid for doing a procedure, not discussing whether it should be done. The costliest patients — the elderly with chronic illnesses — are the only group with universal health coverage under Medicare, leading to huge federal expenditures that experts agree are unsustainable as boomers age.
Most of that money is spent at certain academic medical centers, which offer the most advanced tests, the newest remedies, the most renowned specialists. According to the Dartmouth Health Atlas, which ranks hospitals on the cost and quantity of medical care to elderly patients, New York University Medical Center in Manhattan, for instance, spends $105,000 on an elderly patient with multiple chronic conditions during the last two years of life; U.C.L.A. Medical Center spends $94,000. By contrast, the Mayo Clinic’s main teaching hospital in Rochester, Minn., spends $53, 432.
The chief medical officer at U.C.L.A., Dr. Tom Rosenthal, said that aggressive treatment for the elderly at acute care hospitals can be “inhumane,” and that once a patient and family were drawn into that system, “it’s really hard to pull back from it.”
“The culture has a built-in bias that everything that can be done will be done,” Dr. Rosenthal said, adding that the pace of a hospital also discourages “real heart-to-heart discussions.”
Beginning that conversation earlier, as they do at Kendal, he said, “sounds like fundamentally the right way to practice.”
That means explaining that elderly people are rarely saved from cardiac arrest by CPR, or advising women with broken hips that they may never walk again, with or without surgery, unless they can stand physical therapy.
“It’s almost an accident when someone gets what they want,” said Dr. Mark B. McClellan, a former administrator of Medicare and now at the Brookings Institution. “Personal control, quality of life and the opportunity to make good decisions is not automatic in our system. We have to do better.”
The term slow medicine was coined by Dr. Dennis McCullough, a Dartmouth geriatrician, Kendal’s founding medical director and author of “My Mother, Your Mother: Embracing Slow Medicine, the Compassionate Approach to Caring for Your Aging Loved One.”
Among the hard truths, he said, is that 9 of 10 people who live into their 80s will wind up unable to take care of themselves, either because of frailty or dementia. “Everyone thinks they’ll be the lucky one, but we can’t go along with that myth,” Dr. McCullough said.
Ms. Sandberg-Cook agrees. “If you’re never again going to live independently or face an indeterminate period in a disabled state, you may have to reorganize your thinking,” she said. “You need to understand what you face, what you most want to avoid and what you most want to happen.”
Kendal begins by asking newcomers whether they want to be resuscitated or go to the hospital and under what circumstances. “They give me an amazingly puzzled look, like ‘Why wouldn’t I?’ “ said Brenda Jordan, Kendal’s second nurse practitioner.
She replies with CPR survival statistics: A 2002 study, published in the journal Heart, found that fewer than 2 percent of people in their 80s and 90s who had been resuscitated for cardiac arrest at home lived for one month. “They about fall out of their chairs when they find out the extent to which we’ll go to let people choose,” Ms. Jordan said.
Kendal, where the average age is 84, is generally not a place where people want heroics. Dr. George Klabaugh, 88, a resident and retired internist, found himself at the center of controversy a few years back when he tried to revive a 93-year-old neighbor who had collapsed from cardiac arrest during a theatrical performance. Dr. Klabaugh, who was unaware that the man had a “Do Not Resuscitate” order, said he regretted his “automatic reaction,” a vestige of a professional training that predisposes most physicians to aggressive care.
Ms. Jordan surveyed Kendal residents and found only one that wanted CPR — Brad Dewey, 92, who dismissed the statistics. “I want them to try anyway,” he said. “Our daughter saved a man on a tennis court. Who’s to say I won’t recover?”
Some of the 400 residents, who pay $120,000 to $400,000 for an entry fee, and monthly rent from $2,000, which includes all health care, pursue no-holds-barred treatment longer than others. One woman, for example, arrived with cardiac and pulmonary disease but was still capable of living in her own apartment. First, she had cataract surgery that left her vision worse. Next, during surgery to replace a worn-out artificial hip, her thigh bone snapped. She spent a year in bed and wound up with blood clots. Then she broke the other leg.
Only then, Ms. Jordan said, did the woman decide to forgo further surgery or hospitalizations. The woman was too ill to be interviewed.
Some of those most in tune with slow medicine are the adult children who watch a parent’s daily decline. Suzanne Brian, for one, was grateful that her father, then 88 and debilitated by congestive heart failure, was able to stop medications to end his life.
“It wasn’t ‘Oh, you have to do this or do that,’ “ Ms. Brian said. “It was my father’s choice. He could have changed his mind at any time. They slowly weaned him from the meds and he was comfortable the whole time. All he wanted was honor and dignity, and that’s what he got.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/05/health/05slow.html?ei=5070&en=c7f8624893905068&ex=1210737600&adxnnl=1&emc=eta1&adxnnlx=1210082908-rHcFTpf3H7anrLnGRlyJvw#
Wow, that is news!
I fwd it to some friends with that problem.
Thanks excel
That is really funny.
I love that ALL those plants,
they are in straight lines lol
They are impressive machines,
good cartoon excel.
Anyone ever do brain games?
It freaks me out, the power,,,
and the poor trees can't even run away!!
This machine did the day's work of an entire Crew in 5 minutes. I have no idea of the cost
If I didn't watch this I'd never believe such a machine existed...
Great plan with the bison herd.
Excel, is that you on a sailboat???
I saw that on TV the other day.
He was pretty amazing....however, his next stunt
will be to stay awake for 11 days. I think that is just
plain ridiculous. JMO!!
Life
That is hysterical!!! thanks
Hi everyone,
Just got this in the email.. the Jewish Cardinal
There used to be a joke in Paris, what is the difference between the chief
rabbi in France and the Cardinal of Paris? The Cardinal speaks Yiddish!
Jean Marie Cardinal Lustiger was buried yesterday; he died this week of
cancer. He was born almost 81 years ago to Polish parents who ran a dress
shop in Paris. When the German army marched in his parents sent him and his
sister into hiding with a Catholic family in Orleans. Their mother was
captured and sent to Auschwitz.
In 1999 as Cardinal of Paris, Jean Marie Lustiger took part in reading of
the names of France's day of remembrance of Jews who had been deported and
murdered. He came to the name Gesele Lustiger, paused, teared and said, my
mama. The effect in France during a time of revived anti-Semitism was
electric.
He was just 13 and in hiding when he converted to Catholicism, not to escape
the Nazis he always said, because no Jew could escape by conversion, and not
of trauma, he said. Among his most controversial observations, I was born
Jewish and so I remain, even if that is unacceptable for many. For me the
vocation of Israel is bringing light to the goyem. That is my hope and I
believe that Christianity is the means for achieving it.
There were a great number of rabbis who consider his conversion a betrayal.
Especially after so many European Jews had so narrowly escaped extinction.
Cardinal Lustiger replied, to say that I am no longer a Jew is like denying
my father and mother, my grandfathers and grandmothers. I am as Jewish as
all other members of my family that were butchered in Auschwitz and other
camps.
He confessed to a biographer that he had a spiritual crisis in the 1970's
provoked by persistent anti-Semitism in France. He studied Hebrew, and
considered emigrating. He said I thought that I had finished what I had to
do here, he explained and I might find new meaning in Israel. But just at
that time the pope appointed him bishop of Orleans. He found purpose he said
in the plight of immigrant workers. Then he was elevated to Cardinal.
The Archbishop of Paris. Jean Marie Lustiger was close to the Pope. They
shared a doctrinal conservatism. He also battled bigotry and
totalitarianism. For years Cardinal Lustiger's name was among those who was
considered to succeed John Paul. Without putting himself forth, the Cardinal
joked that few things would bedevil bigots more than a Jewish Pope. They
don't like to admit it he said, but what Christians believe, they got -
through Jews.
The funeral for Cardinal Lustiger began at Notre Dame Cathedral yesterday,
with the chanting of Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead."
Sometimes there are profound inconsistencies in our world
Thanks bootz
I agree. the world is in trouble!!
That is really scarey Striper....
I signed up for the news letter. A Friend told me her mother got the Shingles vaccine, and was sick for sic months(at 86 yr. old)
and another friend got some birth control injection and
has been loopy ever since.
Scarey stuff!
Life
That IS an original frito pie....
Hi everyone,
Just got a new digital camera last week. A Panasonic Lumix.
Can I have some suggestions on a site to upload, edit, and share photos?
Been to Shutterfly, Koday and photobucket. Wonder if
there is somewhere with more editing possibilities, and so forth. Hope to be back here, been a long time..
Life
I still love this car for in town nooddling
Smart says poor crash scores for tiny ForTwo were 'expected'
Jay Binneweg
Photo: People check out a Smart ForTwo, cut away to show off its safety features, at an event last year in Albuquerque. Official U.S. crash scores highlight the high safety hurdle Smart's U.S. sales team has to climb in order to overcome American buyers' fears about driving the smallest vehicle on the road.
The Smart ForTwo two-seat minicar received one of the lowest crash-test scores among 2008-model cars for protecting passengers, according to federal test results released last week.
While the other tests of the Smart produced better results, the scores highlighted the high safety hurdle Smart's U.S. sales team has to climb in order to overcome American buyers' fears about driving the smallest vehicle on the road.
Smart said the results were as expected, although the company has told customers the ForTwo was designed to get four stars in testing. The Smart scored four out of five stars for protecting drivers in a head-on collision under tests by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
But the Smart garnered only three stars in the same test for passenger protection, meaning the agency estimates passengers face a 21 percent to 35 percent chance of serious injury.
Only one other 2008 car model — the BMW 5 Series — has garnered fewer than four stars in front collision testing for either drivers or passengers. The agency gave the Smart five stars for side-impact crashes, but noted that the vehicle's door popped open during the test, raising the chances of ejection during an accident. Several other vehicles have received similar warnings in side-impact tests.
Technically, NHTSA says the Smart's front crash-test scores can't be compared with any other vehicle on the market. For its tests, the agency runs vehicles into a barrier at 35 mph, which simulates a head-on crash with a model of the same size. NHTSA says the scores should not be compared across different types of vehicles — cars versus trucks, for example — or between vehicles with more than a 250-pound weight difference.
The ForTwo weighs about 1,800 pounds, 500 less than the next smallest model on U.S. roads, the Toyota Yaris; the extended-cab version of Ford's F-150 pickup weighs three times more. Many auto-safety advocates have long maintained that smaller cars are less safe, but some automakers have argued in recent years that better safety technology eliminated the disparity.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which is testing the Smart this week, has said that, for vehicles of different sizes with similar frontal crash test results, "the heavier vehicle will typically offer better protection in real-world crashes
http://www.santafenewmexican.com/DriveMagazine/Smart-says-poor-crash-scores-for-tiny-ForTwo-were--expected-
Me too
Now that's a trick!!!
good idea, slaughter without too much pain..
Who am I to talk, I like seabass!! :(
Now that is quite a kid.
Can't say I've ever heard of anyone
else like her!!!
Great story
I hope the rabbit sends you LOTS and LOTS and LOTS of luck.
cute kitty rabbit