In Option A, one can be the wife one's husband always wanted to marry.
Some might consider that name appropriate.Volkswagen make the Audi brand vehicles. Audi make an electric vehicle model called, etron. Etron is the French word for turd (or sh*t). The French don't buy Audi Etrons. Go figure
I do tend to like hippies! Especially the women, if they just weren’t dope smoking pacifists!@The Revolting Man, you would have fit right in with the young-to-middle-aged hippies of the early 1980s, because everyone with whom I associated in Nacogdoches (and, believe me, northeast Georgia is downright balmy compared to Deep East Texas and western Louisiana) was a big believer in eschewing air conditioning and other creature comforts. Learn to live with it, was the motto, because things can always get worse. In addition, there's this little factoid that most people who claim inability to adjust to life without A/C: almost all of us in North America experience an annual adjustment of 60 degrees from winter highs to summer high temps (or from winter low temperatures to summer low ones, whichever focus works best for you).
So, even if you don't prepare for it, making the adjustment won't be a tremendous big deal anyway. I declare that most anyone who doesn't rapidly adjust to a situation that requires absence of air conditioning may just be better left behind anyway.
I believe I know of at least one mushroom-ingesting non-pacifist hippie man you like pretty good.I do tend to like hippies! Especially the women, if they just weren’t dope smoking pacifists!
...who claim they will only put natural foods and medicines into their body, but eat birth control pills like lollies...I do tend to like hippies! Especially the women, if they just weren’t dope smoking pacifists!
not most of the ones I've known....who claim they will only put natural foods and medicines into their body, but eat birth control pills like lollies...
Either that, or her husband’s sperm had spent over three years searching for that egg.The power of your imagination....
"In France in 1637, a noblewoman, Madeleine D'Auvermont, was put on trial for adultery. She had given birth to a healthy baby boy, which in itself was no crime, but she had been separated from her husband, who was out of the country, for four years! The birth of the baby caused a huge scandal at the time; her husband was a wealthy nobleman, and the boy would stand to inherit a substantial hereditament as well as a title. Madeleine’s reputation was at risk, and possibly her life as well.
At the trial, her defence was that she had thought about her husband so vividly at night, often having dreams of an intimate nature about him; her claim was that she had conceived his child through the power of imagination!
The claim was quite a wild one, but she insisted she had been faithful to her husband and the child was his. Experts in the fields of medicine and theology were brought in to testify in the case. After much discussion, all experts agreed that it was possible to conceive in this way if her imagination was very vivid and she dreamed really hard. The court found in her favour, and her son was legitimised and declared his ‘father’s’ heir. The reaction to the judgment by her husband is unknown."
For you younger folks, that was the picture of when he was informed about the twin towers on 9-11 where he had been reading to the school children.
Sounds like the judgement for Adam trying to pass the buck. YHWH made him accountable for all of it.Plus, there's this: "Men can be prosecuted or held accountable by family courts for all aspects of wedding vows that apply to them, but women are never prosecuted or held accountable for their transgressions."
That's right. As it should be. Accountable for all from that point forward, including his woman's transgressions. Being the ruler is only a covetable position in feminists' wet dreams. A king's crown is heavy.Sounds like the judgement for Adam trying to pass the buck. YHWH made him accountable for all of it.