SteveFord
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 481
You were probably having more fun than I was last week, though.
At 7:00 p.m. "thinking" about going to bed is the only thing I can do because I'd be laying there until well after midnight still trying to fall asleep.I start thinking bout going to bed around 7:00 pm.
I used to toss and turn, but at some point in life, I became one of those people who falls asleep the moment my head hits the pillow.
Hiya
And thanks for the welcome....are you a hat or coat guy here? Hat guy myself.
Stu
Irnoic, as we southpaws on average dieseven years earlier than dextrous types...
I dunno, in my more uncharitable moods, the more I knowe about John Lennon, the more I tend to feel Chapman had a point.
Oh yes, they say a picture is worth a thousand words:I usually fall off quickly, too.
If only I could stay asleep for a solid seven or more hours. As often as not I’m awakening after five or six hours, which I understand is a fairly common complaint among us senescent sorts.
I usually wake up in the middle of the night, but it is to use the restroom. I know, another sign that I am getting old.I usually fall off quickly, too.
If only I could stay asleep for a solid seven or more hours. As often as not I’m awakening after five or six hours, which I understand is a fairly common complaint among us senescent sorts.
Last night a leg cramp awakened me after maybe three and a half or four hours. I hear that is not at all untypical for those of my age, either.
Maybe I should get a Winnebago and a BarcaLounger.
Oh, right, that's the other issue. When I finally fall asleep, at best I take a series of short naps. I can't remember the last time I slept longer than 60-90 minutes without waking up for either no apparent reason, or because I need to use the bathroom. Either way I try to fall asleep again as soon as I can, but 60-90 minutes later I'm awake again. Rinse, lather, repeat. If I'm really lucky, when I add up the time taken by my series of naps it'll be longer than six hours, but that's a rarity these days; I usually average four to five hours of interrupted sleep per night....If only I could stay asleep for a solid seven or more hours. As often as not I’m awakening after five or six hours, which I understand is a fairly common complaint among us senescent sorts...
That because of his flaws he deserved to be murdered by a talentless psychopath?
Ha! We saw what was left of The Doors (well, except for John Densmore) at the Orange County (California) fair about 10 years ago. They shanghaid Dave Brock from Wild Child (a Doors tribute band) as lead singer and Ty Dennis on drums, and it wasn't bad for a county fair concert.... when the "Beach Boys" are scheduled to play your local county fair.
Lennon never set out to be liked, he could be as crude and crass as he was arrogant. He once famously remarked about popular music that: "Before Elvis, there was nothing." Back then there wasn't the access to the internet that we enjoy today and Lennon was probably referring to the popular music, pre-Elvis, that of the crooners and the big bands. In doing so he dismissed, out of hand, the African American influence on popular music, his remark was unforgivable.Well, I did say I was being uncharitable. Lennon was one of those hypocrites in extremis that I fidn very hard to stomach, and just sometimes I forget myself and fall into the temptation to judge.
Back then there wasn't the access to the internet that we enjoy today and Lennon was probably referring to the popular music, pre-Elvis, that of the crooners and the big bands. In doing so he dismissed, out of hand, the African American influence on popular music, his remark was unforgivable.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_music
... when the "Beach Boys" are scheduled to play your local county fair.
Lennon never set out to be liked, he could be as crude and crass as he was arrogant. He once famously remarked about popular music that: "Before Elvis, there was nothing." Back then there wasn't the access to the internet that we enjoy today and Lennon was probably referring to the popular music, pre-Elvis, that of the crooners and the big bands. In doing so he dismissed, out of hand, the African American influence on popular music, his remark was unforgivable.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_music
Well said Lizzie, Lennon might have had a troubled upbringing, but he was callous and caustic in equal measure. The Beatles manger was one, Brian Epstein, a gay man who kept his sexuality under wraps, it would be 1967 before The Sexuality Act became law, by which time Epstein would be dead.
A Cellarful of Noise is the title of Brian Epstein's 1964 autobiography. His assistant, Derek Taylor, was the ghostwriter of the book, which describes the early days of The Beatles. Epstein asked John Lennon what he thought the book should be called, and Lennon suggested "Queer Jew."
As something of a Brianista (we’d have never heard of The Beach Boys if not for that eldest Wilson boy) I have zero interest in what Messrs. Love and Johnston and four guys named Joe do under The Beach Boys banner. I’ll go with Brian’s band, with original Beach Boy Al Jardine and longtime collaborator Blondie Chaplin and those Wondermint kids.
Fun, fun, fun.
Mind you, I don't think any of the Beatles really amounted to much (or contributed anyhting of real note) to popular culture after 1970 - but then did they need to?