My leukemia's back.

I'm glad you're here to talk to us (instead of just the walls) Sally!

dawwwwww
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I needed you all more than you can ever know, I so wish I had known before I left for the support groups
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I just reread this one in a completely different way. My son is a really great person. so... maybe I am too.
but then, I am so different than my parents... maybe nurture has nothing to do with it.
or nature for that matter.
maybe the good influence of my grandparents was greater than the bad examples of my parents.
Keep at it Sally, you are the good example your niece needs.

I will spend the rest of my adult life recovering from my childhood.
That is sad, a crime, but the crime is that it is still going on, to children all over the world. Children deserve to be respected as individuals, their age should not demean their souls.
Now I am bummed.
I am going to go kill some carrots in a violent and terrible way. (I feel so guilty when I juice.)
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ok I have read an article about doing alfalfa in the winter? as a feeding source? but this is also baled?

There is a fad in America for eating Kale. It is fairly reasonably priced so I buy a bag of it for the chooks each week. They love kale and will not eat alfalfa since they know they will get Kale.

I think I will grow some next year.

Stores will sometimes give you old produce if you ask. It might be worth looking into.
 
Eggsy, what do you do with the carrot pulp? Can the chickens eat it?

I was kind of diverting away from the message. I'm not in 100% agreement with the "your children will become who you are..." thing. I've seen horrible parents turn out wonderful adults and vice versa, great parents with monstrous children. Not sure what explains that other than it's up to each individuals born nature.
 
There is a fad in America for eating Kale. It is fairly reasonably priced so I buy a bag of it for the chooks each week. They love kale and will not eat alfalfa since they know they will get Kale.

I think I will grow some next year.

Stores will sometimes give you old produce if you ask. It might be worth looking into.

We've grown quite a bit of kale here Ron, it's not hard to grow at all. One little package of seed for less than $2 will give you all the kale you'll want in a summer. Our chickens and rabbits love the stuff. Probably more than me
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