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Call Me a Cab
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- London and Midlands, UK
Strange thread, so I understand if bartenders remove it for being too strange for the lounger.
I blacked out yesterday for the first time in my life after a blood test for jaundice. At first I was a little embarassed (until I accepted that it's a perfectly normal thing when on an empty stomach and having a comparatively large amount of blood taken out and having anaemic symptoms), but then I wondered what people would have thought back then.
In Victorian times fainting was the done thing for women, but obviously not for men as that wasn't manly enough. How were men who fainted viewed in the Golden Era?
I blacked out yesterday for the first time in my life after a blood test for jaundice. At first I was a little embarassed (until I accepted that it's a perfectly normal thing when on an empty stomach and having a comparatively large amount of blood taken out and having anaemic symptoms), but then I wondered what people would have thought back then.
In Victorian times fainting was the done thing for women, but obviously not for men as that wasn't manly enough. How were men who fainted viewed in the Golden Era?