Archive for the ‘fun’ Tag

09/30/2025 💥💥LIMERICK ALERT💥💥   Leave a comment

Today I’m going to make this post quick and simple. Here are five moderately bawdy limericks from our recent past. They’re rated PG-13 due to some of the sexual content but I edited some of the harsher foul language so as not to have it too disgusting. Enjoy.

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There was a young man from Perdue,
Who was only just learning to screw.
But he hadn’t the knack,
And got too far back-
In the right church, but in the wrong pew!

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There was an old fellow named Hewing
Whose poor heart stopped while he was screwing.
He gasped: “Really, Miss,
Don’t feel bad about this-
There is nothing I’d rather die doing!”

💥💥💥

There was a young fellow named Menzies
Who’s kissing sent girls into frenzies.
But a virgin, one night,
Crossed her legs in a fright,
And fractured his bifocal lenzies.

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A pretty young lady named Flo
Said:” I hate to be had in the snow.
While I’m normally hot,
In this spot I am not-
So, as soon as you come Joe, let’s go!”

💥💥💥💥💥

There was an old fellow named Bill,
Who swallowed an atomic pill.
His naval corroded,
His asshole exploded,
And they found both his nuts in Brazil.

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

I LOVE THIS POETRY!

09/25/2025 “SARCASTICALLY SKILLED”   Leave a comment

I’ve been called many things in my life. Some were complimentary and others not so much. My all-time favorite without a doubt is that I’m a sarcastic son-of-bitch. To me that is nothing more than a badge of honor which I wear proudly. Most people know the word sarcastic but have no idea what it really means. I’ve spent many years honing my sarcasm skills so today I’m now willing to share some of them with you. Here are some commonly used words with a beautiful yet sarcastic explanation. Read on my sarcastically uneducated and challenged readers.

  • CALM-What you are usually urged to remain around the time the third engine on the aircraft has failed.
  • PERFECTIONIST-The worst kind of boss; the best kind of sex partner.
  • PERKY-Lively, jaunty, brisk, or to put it another way, just asking for a punch in the damn face.
  • PUBLIC RESTROOM-A place containing toilet seats that make you wish you could be taught how to hover.
  • REALITY-A state in which you assume everybody else resides, until you start dating.

  • REGRET-The gnawing, inescapable feeling that behaving like a total dick for your entire life may not have been such a good idea.
  • MACHO-A form of overstated masculinity, requiring males to live in a state of constant readiness to whip it out and see whose is bigger.
  • NITPICK-To rip someone a new one without leaving anything out.
  • DRUNK-Intoxicated with alcoholic beverages. An absolutely crucial component in the decision to photocopy one’s ass cheeks.
  • DRESS-Something that does not, I said not, make you look fat.
  • DEGREE-A certificate of academic achievement awarded at the college level. Comes in very handy when asking people if they want fries with that.
  • CHIVALRY-Considerate behavior that a man completely abandons right after as many dates as it takes to get a woman into bed.
  • BAR-A place where lonely, desperate people go to get hammered enough to find other lonely, desperate people suddenly irresistible.
  • HOTDOG-The toenails, lips, and eyebrows of various animals served on a bun.
  • HUNGOVER- A condition that makes figuring out who was next to you in bed this morning take anywhere from five minutes to a lifetime.

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

CLASS DISMISSED!

(Thank you Mr. Napoli)

09/18/2025 🧑🏻‍⚕️DOCTOR’S👩🏻‍⚕️   Leave a comment

I’ve spent the last five and a half years being tended to by a score of doctors and nurses and it saved my life. It’s given me time to really examine their profession and the the abilities they have to save lives. Todays post will introduce odd facts and historical information where the roots of our current medical treatments began. Some of it is a little strange and also a little frightening but that’s how we’ve learned the skills being used today.

  • The first image of the doctors stitching up a wound can be found on the Edwin Smith Papyrus (1600 B.C.).
  • Ancient Egyptian medicine was considered so advanced that the rulers of neighboring kingdoms would often bribe, cajole, or even send someone to kidnap the Pharaoh’s best doctors.
  • The 3000-year-old “Ebers Papyrus” was written on a 65 foot long scroll and describes treatments for the eyes, skin, extremities, and organs. It also lists medicinal plants such as mustard, saffron, onions, garlic, thyme, sesame, caraway, and poppy seed, and offers more than 800 recipes for their use.
  • The Egyptians used opium as crude forms of anesthesia when operating on patients. They also created a milder painkiller by mixing water with vinegar and adding ground Memphite stone. The resulting “laughing gas” was inhaled.
  • The first known surgery for cataracts was performed in the Egyptian city of Alexandria in about A.D. 100.

  • A collection of 37 surgical instruments is engraved on the wall in the Egyptian Temple of Kom-Ombo (2d century B.C.). Some show amazing similarities to modern surgical instruments and includes scalpels, scissors, needles, forceps, lancets, hooks, and pincers.
  • The original Hippocratic Oath was written by a school of philosophers known as the Pythagoreans and was actually a reaction against the writings of Hippocrates. The Pythagoreans were conservative and even backward looking in many ways forbidding many medical practices, including the surgery.
  • The Romans considered cabbage to be a magically protective food. The philosopher Cato wrote that Romans should not only eat cabbage at every meal, but also drink the urine of someone who’d eaten cabbage two days before.
  • In both ancient Greece and Rome, doctors didn’t need licenses or any formal training to practice. Anyone could call himself a doctor. If his methods worked, he attracted more patients, if not, he found himself another job.
  • Most Roman surgical instruments were made of bronze, or occasionally of silver. Iron was considered taboo by both Greeks and Romans and was never used for surgical instruments on religious grounds.

I’M FEELING BETTER ALREADY . . . HOW ABOUT YOU.

09/14/2025 “LOVE THAT HISTORY”   Leave a comment

I like finding information in history that I’ve never heard before. Here are two samples of incidents that apparently are not common knowledge. Enjoy!

HARRY CARAY
  • We don’t know where or when the “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” seven-inning sing-along began, but one early claim and perhaps the one that popularized it was the result of a prank. In the 1970’s, baseball broadcaster Harry Caray, then a play-by-play announcer for the White Sox, was known to sing along to the song while in the broadcast booth, which was normally with the microphone off. Bill Veeck found out about this and one day unbeknownst to Caray he turned the broadcaster’s microphone on and piped Caray’s rendition to the fans. The fans absolutely loved it, and when Caray moved to the crosstown Chicago Cubs, he kept it going.
FORT SUMTER

  • Here’s a little tidbit from the Civil War era. Officially, the siege of Fort Sumter had a death toll of just two men, both Union soldiers. But those deaths weren’t at the hands of the Confederacy. Fort Sumter, low on provisions and undermanned, was unable to thwart the Confederate bombardment. Major Robert Anderson, the commander of the fort agreed to surrender after less than two days of bombardment, under the condition that his men be allowed to give a 100-gun salute when lowering the American flag. During that ceremony, some ammunition went off accidentally, killing Pvt. Edward Galloway and Daniel Hough, the only casualties.

09/04/2025 💥💥J. Ciardi Limerick Alert💥💥   Leave a comment

I’ve stated many times as to my love for limericks especially those written by Isaac Asimov. Along with Isaac you must give a shout out to John Ciardi as well. He and Asimov had great fun trying to outdo each other with their written limericks. They even jointly published a book about their limerick feud which is a classic. These four limericks were written by John Ciardi for that book in response to a few that Asimov had written. I’ve read their book many times and still enjoy their bawdy humor. I hope you will enjoy it as well.

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The Times tells the world what is doing;
Who’s winning, who’s losing, who’s suing,
Whose striking, who’s stealing,
Who’s dying, whose healing,
But won’t say a word on who’s screwing.

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The girl who is really unbeatable
Is the one with whom sex is repeatable.
Who’s eternally screwable
And always renewable,
And who, most of all, is found eatable.

💥💥💥

There was a young woman named Cora Lee
Who said, “I will do it immorally
On top and bottom,
Any way that I’ve got them,
Vaginally, anally, and orally”.

💥💥💥💥

There once was a wicked old squire
Who burned with libidinous desire.
After screwing a nun
And the minister son,
He took all the girls in the choir.

📕📕📕

THE BOOK IS TITLED – ISAAC ASIMOV & JOHN CIARDI – A WAR OF WORDS

09/02/2025 ⚖️ATTORNEYS GOOD, BAD, AND OMG⚖️   Leave a comment

👮🏻‍♂️🚓👮🏻‍♀️

My life has been relatively interesting even though I spent a large part of that life in courthouses, courtrooms, and dealing with an ungodly number of attorneys, both good, bad, and some really bad. The general rule of mine was to ignore almost everything attorneys said to me and that served me well for three decades. They made me a believer of an old saying quoted by Edgar Allen Poe, “BELIEVE ONLY HALF OF WHAT YOU SEE AND NOTHING YOU HEAR”. I have a few friends that are actually very good attorneys and that just tells me there are exceptions to every rule. Today’s post is one of my favorite stories about attorneys. If and when you’re ever required to hire an attorney make sure you don’t get one like the one I’m about to tell you about.

Clement Vallandigham was an attorney and former US Congressman. In 1871, while defending a murder suspect in court, he argued that the alleged victim had not been murdered and could’ve accidently shot himself. Vallandigham took out a gun, held it as if at the scene of the crime and thinking it was unloaded, he pulled the trigger. Good news: He proved his point and his client was acquitted. Bad news: Vallandigham died from an accidental gunshot wound to the head.

JUST PLED TEMPORARY INSANITY FOR EVERYTHING

08/30/2025 🌱FLORA Trivia🌿   Leave a comment

Are there any wanna-be botanists out there? If so, todays post should really interest you. Finding interesting trivia about plants was a serious challenge but I’ve had some success. Here are twenty items you never knew about plants and botany. Here we go . . .

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  • At 167 calories per 3.5 ounces, avocados have the highest number of calories of any fruit.
  • The foxglove plant can help prevent congestive heart failure.
  • The cellulose in celery (mostly in its stringy fibers) is impossible for humans to digest. Most of the celery passes right through your digestive tract.
  • Juniper berries smell so strongly of evergreen trees that they have been chewed as a breath freshener.
  • Orchids have the smallest seeds. It takes more than 1.25 million seeds to weigh one gram.

🪴🪴

  • Oak trees do not have acorns until they are 50 years old or older.
  • Pollen is considered the “male” part of a plants reproductive system.
  • The greens, you see covering ponds might actually be a carpet of duckweed – the smallest plant with a complete root, stem, and leaf structure.
  • Cayenne pepper stimulates the appetite, as do the herbs dill, celery, dandelion, caraway, anise, garlic, leek, mint, tarragon, saffron, and parsley.
  • The word “herb” is from the old Sanskrit word bharb, meaning “to eat”.

🌱🌱🌱

  • A lemon will lose 20% of its vitamin C content after being left at room temperature for eight hours, or in the refrigerator for 24 hours.
  • The eggplant is a member of the nightshade family, along with the potato and tomato.
  • An uncooked apple is 84% water.
  • If you wash an area of skin that has been exposed to poison ivy within 3 min. after exposure, the chemical urushhiol does not have time to penetrate the skin.
  • The herb peony, when dried and chewed, can help heal a cold sore.

🥬🥬🥬🥬

  • A banana is technically an herb because it grows on dense, waterfilled leaf stalks that die after the first fruit is produced. Botanists call the banana plant a herbaceous perennial.
  • Bananas are one of the easiest fruits to digest and trigger very few allergies. This is why they are an ideal food for babies.
  • It takes a coffee bean plant five years to yield consumable fruit.
  • The most widely cultivated and extensively used nut in the world is the almond.
  • Plant life in the oceans makes up 85% of all the greenery on earth.

🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱

FOR ALL OF YOU GARDENERS OUT THERE

08/28/2025 ⚾”OLD-TIME B-BALL TRIVIA⚾   Leave a comment

I’m what most of you crazy avid sports fans would call a “fair weather fan”. I confess to that description to a certain degree. Only one sport has ever been all-consuming for me and that is baseball. I spent the better part of my youth playing baseball in Little League, high school teams, American Legion teams, and one local semi-pro team. Playing baseball was my life. Being on the field and playing was heaven for me but it has made watching modern baseball absolute torture. I was never bored while I was playing but watching it now is painful.

Todays blog will return me to those early years of baseball and will test those of you super-fans who have knowledge of the history of the sport. Here are some nicknames of well-known players from the past. Lets see how you do! As always the answers will be listed below.

WHO?

High Pockets

The Iron Horse

Goose

Little Poison

Three Fingered

Gabby

Bucky

Rube

The Trojan

Lippy

⚾⚾⚾

Answers
George Kelly, Lou Gehrig, Leon Goslin, Lloyd James Warner, Mordecai Peter Brown, Charles Leo Hartnett, Stanley Raymond Harris, George Edward Waddell, John Joseph Evers, and Leo Durocher.

🧢🧢🧢

TOUGHER THAN I THOUGHT – I HAD 4 CORRECT

(GO PIRATES)

08/23/2025 💥💥SILLY LIMERICK ALERT💥💥   Leave a comment

As most of you are well aware, I love limericks. And I don’t discriminate, I like them dirty, sexy, sassy, and any other way you can think of. With that in mind I recently discovered a book, a very small little book of limericks that were written more than 25 years ago. They’re not dirty, sexy, or sassy, but they are cute. These are silly limericks that will make you grin just a little and were almost certainly written for children. So if your let loose your inner child for just a bit you should enjoy these immensely.

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A ghost in the town of Khartoum
Asked a skeleton up to his room.
They spent the whole night
In the eeriest fight
As to who should be frightened of whom.

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A glutton who lived on the Rhine
When asked what time he would dine,
Replied, “At eleven,
Four, six, three and seven,
And eight and a quarter to nine.”

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A cheerful old bear at the zoo
Could always find something to do.
When it bored him to go
On a walk to and fro,
He reversed it, and walks fro and to.

💥💥💥💥

There was an old fellow named Green
Who grew so abnormally lean,
And flat, and compressed,
His back touched his chest,
And sideways he couldn’t be seen.

💥💥💥💥💥

There was the man from the city
Who met what he thought was a kitty.
He gave it a pat
And said, “Nice little cat.”
Just look at him now – what a pity!

****

ONE OF MY FAVORITE SILLY LIMERICKS

There once was an old man from Nantucket

Who kept all his cash in a bucket.

But his daughter named Nan,

Ran away with a man,

And as for the bucket, Nantucket!

😍😍😍

08/21/2025 “A TRIVIA MISH MOSH”   Leave a comment

This blog is titled Every Useless Thing and I’m feeling today that you all must certainly need a huge dose of useless information. Just when I thought I’ve heard the weirdest s**t possible I just keep finding more and more and more. After all the years of my doing trivia it still amazes me how often I find things that boggle my mind. Let’s see if that will happen to you today.

  • The waist produced by a single chicken in its lifetime could supply enough electricity to run a 100 watt bulb for five hours.
  • The odds of being struck by lightning are one in 10 million.
  • Murphy’s Law: “Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.”
  • In 1992 convicted killer Robert Alton Harris stated just before entering the gas chamber: “You can be a king or a street sweeper, but everyone dances with the Grim Reaper.”
  • The highest score ever achieved for one word in a Scrabble competition was 392 for the word caziques down two triple-word scores.

  • Mike Love, Pancho Villa, and Zsa Zsa Gabor were each married nine times.
  • Groucho Marx ate his first bagel at the age of 81..
  • Harrison Ford’s first film role was as a bellboy and his only line was “Paging Mr. Ellis”. Ellis was played by James Coburn.
  • Click Eastwood, Yasser Arafat, Elizabeth Taylor, Patrick Swayze, Sting, Luciana Pavarotti, Rowan Atkinson, and Ted Kennedy all survived plane crashes.
  • The odds of being killed in a road accident are one in 15,800.

🎶🎵🎶

One of My Favorite Bands

The rock group 3 Dog Night obtained their name from an old Australian saying. “On a freezing night in the outback, a man would need to sleep with one dog to keep warm on a cold night, two dogs on a very cold night and three dogs on the coldest night.”

NOW YOU KNOW