Getbig.com: American Bodybuilding, Fitness and Figure
Getbig Main Boards => General Topics => Topic started by: Karl Kox on April 03, 2007, 07:40:58 PM
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and you could only save 3 things what would they be ?
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my sustanon
my study notes
my wine
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my wife
my son
myself
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my wife
my son
myself
DING DING DING!
(http://www.jaguarenterprises.net/images/trophy.jpg)
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My wife
My pets
my money... :-\
ps: and my picture albums..
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MY gf
Her daughter
My Viagra
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Does guns count as one or is that multiple... ;D
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say anyone els in your house like family, will get out. What would you take. People don't count.
For me it would be...
1) Photos
2) Money
3) Some jewelry my old man gave me.[/b]
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my weight room
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DING DING DING!
(http://www.jaguarenterprises.net/images/trophy.jpg)
people dont qualify as "things"
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1) Photos
2) Important documents file (although it SHOULD be fireproof)
3) Disk drives
If I'm not here when the fire happens, though, I'm totally screwed.
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Does guns count as one or is that multiple... ;D
AS! it counts as one. If someone doesn't like it then shoot them
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shit I for got about my porn !
I would definitely grab that.
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If your house was on fire, you wouldn't have time to think about which 3 things, okay?
But if you were sensible and had pre-thought the possibilities, you'd have your keys with you and your passport is in a fireproof waterproof container, no?
I just dealt with a full-on one in my house, last year, remember? ...the night after I found your webforum? I saw a neighbour home in a cab to the pub and came home one hour after leaving a candle under a calendar. The smoke was pouring out onto the front street.
I opened the door, didn't blink or take a breath and fetched the kettle from the back kitchen and put out the fire in the front room where it was smouldering. It was 3" visibility, if that, and no oxygen. The fire was just about to go back up again. It was about a million degrees in here.
I had to crawl out (still without breathing) and open all the back doors and windows. I'm fairly certain the whole place was about to blow up and that I caught it at about 1 minute to meltdown.
My computer was still alive and blinking at me in the far corner, which was amazing. Everything else was covered in thick black toxic soot and I'm still obsessively compulsively washing my hands 20-30x a day after I touch anything, even though I've washed everything 20 times already.
I knew it would take a long time to clean this up, but this is becoming one of the biggest problems a person could possibly have to deal with, equal to or worse than birth, divorce, death, you name it...
take care with candles, neighbours and the rest...
xL
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If your house was on fire, you wouldn't have time to think about which 3 things, okay?
But if you were sensible and had pre-thought the possibilities, you'd have your keys with you and your passport is in a fireproof waterproof container, no?
I just dealt with a full-on one in my house, last year, remember? ...the night after I found your webforum? I opened the door, didn't blink or take a breath and fetched the kettle from the back kitchen and put out where it was smouldering. It was just about a million degrees in here.
I had to crawl out and open all the doors and windows. I'm fairly certain the whole place was about to blow up and that I caught it at about 1 minute to meltdown.
My computer was still alive and blinking at me in the far corner, which was amazing. Everything else was covered in thick black toxic soot and I'm still obsessively compulsively washing my hands 20-30x a day after I touch anything, even though I've washed everything 20 times already.
I knew it would take a long time to clean this up, but this is becoming one of the biggest problems a person could possibly have to deal with, equal to or worse than birth, divorce, death, you name it...
take care with candles, neighbours and the rest...
xL
wow. When I was four our house caught on fire. My brother who was six and just started school learned about what to do if your house cough on fire saved me life.
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i live in a 2 family house. i 'd say, my neighbors upstairs, myself, and my parents. like duh?! ::)
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i live in a 2 family house. i 'd say, my neighbors upstairs, myself, and my parents. like duh?! ::)
No no not people, stuff. Lets say you new the people would get out.
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If your house was on fire, you wouldn't have time to think about which 3 things, okay?
But if you were sensible and had pre-thought the possibilities, you'd have your keys with you and your passport is in a fireproof waterproof container, no?
I just dealt with a full-on one in my house, last year, remember? ...the night after I found your webforum? I saw a neighbour home in a cab to the pub and came home one hour after leaving a candle under a calendar. The smoke was pouring out onto the front street.
I opened the door, didn't blink or take a breath and fetched the kettle from the back kitchen and put out the fire in the front room where it was smouldering. It was 3" visibility, if that, and no oxygen. The fire was just about to go back up again. It was about a million degrees in here.
I had to crawl out (still without breathing) and open all the back doors and windows. I'm fairly certain the whole place was about to blow up and that I caught it at about 1 minute to meltdown.
My computer was still alive and blinking at me in the far corner, which was amazing. Everything else was covered in thick black toxic soot and I'm still obsessively compulsively washing my hands 20-30x a day after I touch anything, even though I've washed everything 20 times already.
I knew it would take a long time to clean this up, but this is becoming one of the biggest problems a person could possibly have to deal with, equal to or worse than birth, divorce, death, you name it...
take care with candles, neighbours and the rest...
xL
Thanks Smokey. ::)
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hard drive, glock27, and my bass.
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ok, i'd try and save photos, money (if any around the house), and important documents (like birth certificates, my will, etc.)