Originally posted by Grampy BobbyMaybe you're in the wrong neighborhood. Maybe your leather-clad guys aren't interested in girls.
Answer me this...
Once upon a time guys would invariably hang out on street corners, kid around like Fonzie, trade a few leather jacket punches
and unabashedly whistle at gals... whhhietT whhooOOOoooo!!! Nowadays, 'Man, is she hot' or 'Wow, she's totally cool' private
exchanges seem to have replaced this 'old gang of mine' rite of passage/bold behavior of days of yore. This a good thing?
-gb 🙂
Originally posted by rbmorrisOn the contrary, RB... those fantastic romances and lasting marriages spawned the next two generations to which many, many on the site
Maybe you're in the wrong neighborhood. Maybe your leather-clad guys aren't interested in girls.
belong. And, by the way, the leather was nothing more than an in vogue costume. That generation was humble enough (thanks to solid
parentals) to know beyond a shadow of doubt that it was butt naked.
-Bobby 🙂
Originally posted by Grampy BobbyPersonally, I think that gangs of young toughs (or is it hooligans?) should array themselves on streetcorners chanting, as if part of the West Side Story musical, "The Khabs is in the Khu, the Khabs is in the Khu." Or, quite possibly, the other way round. It doesn't seem to make any difference. (Or so says the Master of the Temple.)
Answer me this...
Once upon a time guys would invariably hang out on street corners, kid around like Fonzie, trade a few leather jacket punches
and unabashedly whistle at gals... whhhietT whhooOOOoooo!!! Nowadays, 'Man, is she hot' or 'Wow, she's totally cool' private
exchanges seem to have replaced this 'old gang of mine' rite of passage/bold behavior of days of yore. This a good thing?
-gb 🙂
Edit: They should simultaneously be rhythmically snapping their fingers, at knee level, whilst sort of squatting as they walk. You know: West Side Story style.
Originally posted by Grampy BobbyIt is today's younger grand speak. The essence of today's younger standard of mutual education of a sublime manner. It is beyond my comprehension as my standard was only how to differentiate and integrate coshines, use log books and dream of calculators. 'sorted' ,I guess, means it is all done and paid for?
C'mon, Mike... what does 'sorted laa' possibly signify or mean? 🙂
Originally posted by Mark AdkinsMark, respectfully, your post seems to imagine, convey and project an
Personally, I think that gangs of young toughs (or is it hooligans?) should array themselves on streetcorners chanting, as if part of the West Side Story musical, "The Khabs is in the Khu, the Khabs is in the Khu." Or, quite possibly, the other way round. It doesn't seem to make any difference. (Or so says the Master of the Temple.)
Edit: They shou ...[text shortened]... gers, at knee level, whilst sort of squatting as they walk. You know: West Side Story style.
ugly and grotesque (other culture or world infused surreal) scenario
much different from the innocent American reality I tried to portray.
-gb
Originally posted by Grampy BobbyI must also admit that I find it unlikely that they should be "hanging out" with leatherworking tools.
Answer me this...
Once upon a time guys would invariably hang out on street corners, kid around like Fonzie, trade a few leather jacket punches
and unabashedly whistle at gals... whhhietT whhooOOOoooo!!! Nowadays, 'Man, is she hot' or 'Wow, she's totally cool' private
exchanges seem to have replaced this 'old gang of mine' rite of passage/bold behavior of days of yore. This a good thing?
-gb 🙂
Originally posted by mikelomThank you, Mike, for taking the time to clue me in. You already know the level of my appreciation for the least
It is today's younger grand speak. The essence of today's younger standard of mutual education of a sublime manner. It is beyond my comprehension as my standard was only how to differentiate and integrate coshines, use log books and dream of calculators. 'sorted' ,I guess, means it is all done and paid for?
help in negotiating the rope bridge over the great gulf fixed... commonly known as the generation gap. -Bobby