![]() |
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Cherie |
Quote:
FG, I just thought you were venturing an educated guess, being a gardenologist and all. Ah, heck! I thought it was supposed to be a riddle or something. So I gather a fly and a leaf have veins that make them similar? Well, then, you oughta take a look at the tops of my hands! Egad! :eek: |
Now wait a gosh derned minute! I just read Gazelle's post that's after yours Cheryl!
I'm so confewzed. Quitcher messin wit my haid! Good thing I didn't have to take that same test, I wouldn't have made it past the fly/tree question. :confused: |
When I was going through the process of trying to get diagnosed, my neuro suggested "we could do a neuropsych exam" or something like that.
Well, I didn't know what he meant. I was overwhelmed, he didn't explain what it was, and what it was for, and I thought it was another one of those "it's all in your head and we're gonna prove it" things. So in his office notes, he wrote that he had recommended a neuropsych exam but I was "hesitant". It makes me sound non-compliant. I wonder if I should have, or if it would have made any difference, other than stress me out? |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
I don't know if "hesitant" makes you sound non-compliant. I don't think that it would HELP you get diagnosed and it's expensive testing. Heck, you could be "hesitant" to get spinal surgery and that's probably a prudent response to that. So don't worry about the effect of a "hesitant" in your records for a test that's not essential to a diagnostic path. ;) The testing is rather interesting. It's just exhausting. And they do stop if you get frustrated or too stressed. So if you think you would want to do it, don't be afraid of it. It's a lot but it's useful if you have cognitive problems. A good neuropsych should be able to give you suggestions on how to compensate for cognitive issues you might have. That in itself is worthwhile because it can help you make your life LESS stressful than it is right now if the cog problems are causing you stress. |
Quote:
I have this strange capacity for remembering odd details, meaningless trivia, strange facts. For example, water weighs 8.33 pounds per gallon. I don't know if there's a difference in the weight of a gallon of salt water. It would be fun to know that. In school, I was the one bound to remember the weird rules about things. I could recite all the strange factual scenario details from a given hypothetical problem. So it bugs me when I can't remember the speed of light (I know it now) or who wrote a certain piece of literature. I also know what a certain scientist is famous for and what that scientist died of (but the latter part wasn't part of the test--just something I threw in as a bonus). I need a life. :rolleyes: |
Quote:
I do know the weight of salt water depends on how much salt is in the gallon of water, and a cubic foot of fresh water weighs 62.2 lbs and that there are about 7.5 gallons of water in a cubic foot! ( it pays to know your hydraulics when in whitewater!)... (Marie Curie and radiation and aplastic anemia as a result of radiation poisoning?) |
Quote:
Aviation fuel weighs 6 pounds/gallon. |
Quote:
Either that or you've watched the movie Enchanted WAY too often! Quote:
So let me draw some conclusions here: Most people do not know the ratio of salt to water in their salt water. Salt water weighs more per gallon than does fresh water. Aviation fuel weighs less per gallon than both salt and fresh water. Aviation is more inflammable than both water and salt water. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:56 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by
vB Optimise (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.