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Ellie: I had a slice of ham in my hand. I was going to drop it, so I slapped it hard. It attached itself to the wall
But most noticable, I have a wierd tendency to either twirl my hair between my fingers or to pull a bit in my mouth and begin swirling it with my tongue. It is beyond my control, happening on impulse. I don't even notice I'm doing it until I've been doing it for about five minutes.
I general I'd say I agree 98% with Grandy's post above.
Have it ever occured to you that that might be solved by cutting your hair?
something about my electrical system being backwards. (so when they hook me up to EKG's or whatever, the lines aren't where they're supposed to be and it practically reads that I'm dead. Any doctor that doesn't know what I have is always baffled to no end.)
Ed, you win for being the first person to totally agree with me about fake diseases being fake. Can we add clinical depression to the list?
I'm fairly sure that's because the people around me are faggots who keep causing problems that I'm required to solve.
Real depression is real, depression requiring medication is fake.
My dad's side has Manic Depression and my mother's side has Bipolar Disorder
Also called bipolar affective mood disorder until recently, the current name is of fairly recent origin and refers to the cycling between high and low episodes; it has replaced the older term manic-depressive illness coined by Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926) in the late nineteenth century.[1] The new term is designed to avoid the social stigma associated with the conflation of "manic" and "depression."