Jump to content

Recommended Posts

A friend of mine keeps on talking about her special 'furry cup' which is never full and seldom used. I am confused as I have been to her kitchen and looked in the cupboards and not seen any cups that are either made of fur, have a fur cover or even growing a culture.


I recently questioned her about this, where she keeps this fabled furry cup and why it is never full, I also offered to go down to the shops and get her something that I can slip into her cup to try and solve the problem....she gave me a funny look, told me to get out and hasn't called me since.


Shhhheeessshh some people are so temperamental about their pessimism!!

I've realised that I must be an optimist.

On hearing that Jennifer Aniston is 40 and single this morning I felt immensely cheered up.

I mean seriously pleased at the thought that me and Jen are two singletons in the world and hey, you never know.

From now on I will live my life on the basis of 'Hey, you never know'.

Does she ever visit Brixton when she's in town?

Hey, you never know.

See.

Mikecg Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> It's actually half full now, coz ive got 5 days

> off after my 3 block of 12.......


You'd need at least 5 days rest after dealing with the Dirty Dozen from 3 Block.

Surprised you can still walk.

Half full, half fall, half fall, half fall,

Half full, half fall, half falllll,

Half full, half full,

Half full, half fall,

Half full,

Half full,

Half fullllllllllll>:D<


As we used to say at Millwall....E-I-O, E-I-O, E-I-O. E-I-O...for Quidsy and all denegenerate West Ham Fans, whereever you may be...B)

ONE DAY, Millwall, like The Phoenix, SHALL rise again(!)

sadly, probably not in my lifetime)....

indiepanda Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Right now mine is brimming over, but going to a

> good gig always does that for me. And it's only

> one more day to the weekend too so I am a happy

> bunny. Bet it won't feel quite so good when the

> alarm goes off in the morning though!


If you like Rock, I bet you wish that had attended this Gig that I have just seen on You Tube:


"Rory Gallagher - Bullfrog Blues"......5 minutes of a Masterclass in how to please and engage your audience from one of the Guitar Greats!

t l s

Good to hear you are a fan of the boy gallagher.

Its neither rock nor exciting but one of my first jobs was doing rory gallaghers tax return.

The closest i got to hearing him play was when he was due to play at the fleadh in the early 90s but he was not able to appear due to illness and unfortunately died a year or so later.

Mick Mac Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> t l s

> Good to hear you are a fan of the boy gallagher.

> Its neither rock nor exciting but one of my first

> jobs was doing rory gallaghers tax return.

> The closest i got to hearing him play was when he

> was due to play at the fleadh in the early 90s but

> he was not able to appear due to illness and

> unfortunately died a year or so later.


One of my GREAT music regrets is never seeing Rory playing 3 million notes a minute:))


I would have loved it and can't understand how I missed out.I used to see a couple of his Band playing at The Half Moon which was good.

Also. what a fabulous Human Being Rory was! Modest, talented, friendly, down-to-earth unlike some of the poseurs one occassionally encounter who are erudite, cogent, literate and articulate but worth diddly squat as people.

Half full....


Let's see, it's the weekend and...


I did a really good work-out at ESPN. I can be a bit slack so I'm allowing myself a little smugness here.


I'm about to put some really sparkly high heels and go have dinner with my best bitches in Franklins. I'll be having anything that comes with mash potatoes.

I'm thinking, Giggi that you and your best bitches in full flight would be a sight worth seeing.

Mash potatoes as opposed to 'mashed', spot on. 'Mashed'sounds as if they've been oppressed into submission, 'mash' on the other hand feels like the spuds have consented and worked with the utensils involved.

The really sparkly high heels are of course a bonus.

Franklins should consider themselves the luckiest restaurateurs in all of Christendom and make every Friday 13th Giggi And Her Bitches night.

HUGS.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • If you're a fundraising intermediary, reporting promptly and accurately on how you've raised and spent funds seems quite important.
    • Does anyone know when the next SNT meeting is? I am fed up with my son being mugged on East Dulwich Grove! 
    • The issue must be everywhere at the moment. I was visiting a friend last week in Bermondsey, think we were walking  down Linton Rd & we dodged 7 dog poos. It was disgusting. 
    • Thanks for your message — I actually took the time to look into what CityHive does before posting my original comment, and I’d encourage anyone with questions to do the same. Yes, the Companies House filings are overdue — but from what I’ve gathered, this seems likely to be an accountant or admin issue, not some sign of ill intent. A lot of small, community-based organisations face challenges keeping up with formalities, especially when they’re focused on immediate needs like food distribution. Let’s not forget CityHive is a not-for-profit, volunteer-powered CIC — not a corporate machine. As for the directors, people stepping down or being replaced is often about capacity or commitment — which is completely normal in the voluntary and community sector. New directors are sometimes appointed when others can no longer give the time. It doesn’t automatically mean bad governance — it just means people’s circumstances change. CityHive’s actual work speaks volumes. They buy most of the food they distribute — fresh produce, essential groceries, and shelf-stable items — and then deliver it to food banks, soup kitchens, and community projects across London. The food doesn’t stay with CityHive — it goes out to local food hubs, and from there, directly to people who need it most. And while yes, there may be a few paid staff handling logistics or admin, there’s a huge volunteer effort behind the scenes that often goes unseen. Regular people giving their time to drive vans, sort donations, load pallets, pack food parcels — that’s what keeps things running. And when people don’t volunteer? Those same tasks still need to be done — which means they have to be paid for. Otherwise, the whole thing grinds to a halt. As the need grows, organisations like CityHive will inevitably need more support — both in people and funding. But the bigger issue here isn’t one small CIC trying to make ends meet. The real issue is the society we live in — and a government that isn’t playing its part in eradicating poverty. If it were, organisations like CityHive, The Felix Project, City Harvest, FareShare, and the Trussell Trust wouldn’t need to exist, let alone be thriving. They thrive because the need is growing. That’s not a reflection on them — it’s a reflection on a broken system that allows people to go hungry in one of the richest cities in the world. If you're in doubt about what they’re doing, go check their Instagram: @cityhivemedia. You’ll see the real organisations and people receiving food, sharing thanks, and showing how far the impact reaches. Even Southwark Foodbank has received food from CityHive — that alone should speak volumes. So again — how does any of this harm you personally? Why spend time trying to discredit a group trying to support those who are falling through the cracks? We need more people lifting others up — not adding weight to those already carrying the load.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...