quote:Slumdog millionaire
I know we are all suppose to know this movie - but I can't place it
quote:Slumdog millionaire
I know we are all suppose to know this movie - but I can't place it
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Have you ever STFU?
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Have you ever STFU?
why don't you open your own thread to ask this question?
quote:quote:quote:
Have you ever STFU?
why don't you open your own thread to ask this question?
Are you going to quote me twice to keep your stupid thread going, assbag?
quote:Exceptionally well done, sir!
I haven't ever been shot but my brother pulled a gun on me once. We were orphans growing up after our mom died in the riots and my older brother basically raised me. We also had this girl who ran with us. I secretly loved her. She ended up getting kidnapped by a really bad guy but a few years later we found her and my brother killed the guy. That night he pulled the same gun on me and made me leave while he hooked up with the girl. I was devastated at the time, but I later ended up winning a bunch of money and my brother ended up dead in a gunfight with some other bad guys. I also ended up with the girl but it was really weird to everyone who knew the story because my brother had already banged her.
Sorry for the long post. You probably already knew all this anyway op.
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Yep. .30-06 in the abdomen in Nov 2014. One month in the ICU, one month in a regular hospital room, 9 surgeries, and still not 100% yet.
It's not fun.
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Hunting with my wife and her cousin (he was 15 years old), at dusk she went to get the truck and I was grabbing a card from the camera about 50 yds away across a pipeline. We had all agreed that we were done hunting, so he was supposed to wait at the blind until we came back. Instead, he walked around the back of the blind and saw movement across the pipeline, so he picked up the rifle and shot at it before thinking. It wasn't a deer, it was me. Hit me left of my belly button, below my ribcage and blew a nice 4 inch hole in my back as it came out. I never lost consciousness, and we were 7 miles north of town, so my wife helped me climb into my truck and drove me to the hospital where I was careflighted to Abilene.
Surprisingly, I didn't feel the bullet hit me, but I felt my back explode when the bullet exited. It was a burning, throbbing pain that was excruciating, but adrenaline is a hell of a drug so I was able to stay calm, alert, and focus on getting to a hospital.
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Hunting with my wife and her cousin (he was 15 years old), at dusk she went to get the truck and I was grabbing a card from the camera about 50 yds away across a pipeline. We had all agreed that we were done hunting, so he was supposed to wait at the blind until we came back. Instead, he walked around the back of the blind and saw movement across the pipeline, so he picked up the rifle and shot at it before thinking. It wasn't a deer, it was me. Hit me left of my belly button, below my ribcage and blew a nice 4 inch hole in my back as it came out. I never lost consciousness, and we were 7 miles north of town, so my wife helped me climb into my truck and drove me to the hospital where I was careflighted to Abilene.
Surprisingly, I didn't feel the bullet hit me, but I felt my back explode when the bullet exited. It was a burning, throbbing pain that was excruciating, but adrenaline is a hell of a drug so I was able to stay calm, alert, and focus on getting to a hospital.
quote:
Hunting with my wife and her cousin (he was 15 years old), at dusk she went to get the truck and I was grabbing a card from the camera about 50 yds away across a pipeline. We had all agreed that we were done hunting, so he was supposed to wait at the blind until we came back. Instead, he walked around the back of the blind and saw movement across the pipeline, so he picked up the rifle and shot at it before thinking. It wasn't a deer, it was me. Hit me left of my belly button, below my ribcage and blew a nice 4 inch hole in my back as it came out. I never lost consciousness, and we were 7 miles north of town, so my wife helped me climb into my truck and drove me to the hospital where I was careflighted to Abilene.
Surprisingly, I didn't feel the bullet hit me, but I felt my back explode when the bullet exited. It was a burning, throbbing pain that was excruciating, but adrenaline is a hell of a drug so I was able to stay calm, alert, and focus on getting to a hospital.