DAMN...shes hot!!
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
Will I have a separate footbrake and handbrake with this? I'm pretty clueless when it comes to handbrakes.
http://www.fullthrottleinc.net/store...roducts_id/239
http://www.fullthrottleinc.net/store...roducts_id/239
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
can someone explain to me what lent is...i'm reading about it on wikipedia, but i'd like it dumbed down for me to understand it....from what i get you have to give something up for 40 days. i understand that you do it for 40 days because thats how long jesus was in the desert....and i know that it's for temptation
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
I made my confirmation and all that **** but still don't have a clue. I think it's when Jesus died and you're waiting for him to rise from the dead or some ****. I don't know, religion ain't for me. Believing there's some dude in the sky running **** seems kind of ridiculous.
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
can someone explain to me what lent is...i'm reading about it on wikipedia, but i'd like it dumbed down for me to understand it....from what i get you have to give something up for 40 days. i understand that you do it for 40 days because thats how long jesus was in the desert....and i know that it's for temptation
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
basically lent is suppose to be a time of spiritual preparation leading to the celebration of easter (christ rising from the dead) ... the lent season is suppose to be all about prayer and fasting, the practice of giving something up is a descendant of the fasting that was done further back in history. good excerpt explaining it:
Originally Posted by somesite
Once the 40 days of Lent were established, the next development concerned how much fasting was to be done. In Jerusalem, for instance, people fasted for 40 days, Monday through Friday, but not on Saturday or Sunday, thereby making Lent last for eight weeks. In Rome and in the West, people fasted for six weeks, Monday through Saturday, thereby making Lent last for six weeks. Eventually, the practice prevailed of fasting for six days a week over the course of six weeks, and Ash Wednesday was instituted to bring the number of fast days before Easter to 40. The rules of fasting varied. First, some areas of the Church abstained from all forms of meat and animal products, while others made exceptions for food like fish. For example, Pope St. Gregory (d. 604), writing to St. Augustine of Canterbury, issued the following rule: "We abstain from flesh, meat, and from all things that come from flesh, as milk, cheese and eggs."
Second, the general rule was for a person to have one meal a day, in the evening or at 3 p.m.
These Lenten fasting rules also evolved. Eventually, a smaller repast was allowed during the day to keep up one's strength from manual labor. Eating fish was allowed, and later eating meat was also allowed through the week except on Ash Wednesday and Friday. Dispensations were given for eating dairy products if a pious work was performed, and eventually this rule was relaxed totally. (However, the abstinence from even dairy products led to the practice of blessing Easter eggs and eating pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday.)
Over the years, modifications have been made to the Lenten observances, making our practices not only simple but also easy. Ash Wednesday still marks the beginning of Lent, which lasts for 40 days, not including Sundays. The present fasting and abstinence laws are very simple: On Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, the faithful fast (having only one full meal a day and smaller snacks to keep up one's strength) and abstain from meat; on the other Fridays of Lent, the faithful abstain from meat. People are still encouraged "to give up something" for Lent as a sacrifice. (An interesting note is that technically on Sundays and solemnities like St. Joseph's Day (March 19) and the Annunciation (March 25), one is exempt and can partake of whatever has been offered up for Lent.
Second, the general rule was for a person to have one meal a day, in the evening or at 3 p.m.
These Lenten fasting rules also evolved. Eventually, a smaller repast was allowed during the day to keep up one's strength from manual labor. Eating fish was allowed, and later eating meat was also allowed through the week except on Ash Wednesday and Friday. Dispensations were given for eating dairy products if a pious work was performed, and eventually this rule was relaxed totally. (However, the abstinence from even dairy products led to the practice of blessing Easter eggs and eating pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday.)
Over the years, modifications have been made to the Lenten observances, making our practices not only simple but also easy. Ash Wednesday still marks the beginning of Lent, which lasts for 40 days, not including Sundays. The present fasting and abstinence laws are very simple: On Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, the faithful fast (having only one full meal a day and smaller snacks to keep up one's strength) and abstain from meat; on the other Fridays of Lent, the faithful abstain from meat. People are still encouraged "to give up something" for Lent as a sacrifice. (An interesting note is that technically on Sundays and solemnities like St. Joseph's Day (March 19) and the Annunciation (March 25), one is exempt and can partake of whatever has been offered up for Lent.
Re: DAMN...shes hot!!
not that good. i'm not a good housekeeper and sometimes i'm not classy...i'm working on it though.
we're going to be having a big party here when our remodeling is done...can you guys make it? probably not, but i just wanted to get the invite out there.
if you make it, bring some cow meat! i called my dad yesterday and he said his freezer is FULL of meat, my brother won't eat the cows because he used to take care of them HAHAHAHHAA
we're going to be having a big party here when our remodeling is done...can you guys make it? probably not, but i just wanted to get the invite out there.
if you make it, bring some cow meat! i called my dad yesterday and he said his freezer is FULL of meat, my brother won't eat the cows because he used to take care of them HAHAHAHHAA 






