Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Who is the MOST interesting person you've ever met - famous or not famous?


Heather Shay

Recommended Posts

  • Forum Moderator

FAMOUS - Peter Noone (Herman of Herman's Hermit's) - he was so real. He played at our annual festival in my town and I dumped into him and helped him figure out where his band was. I found the band and they were backstage waiting to go on and said - DUH! where is Peter. I found Peter in the dressing room standing in his boxer shorts and I told him the band was waiting for him to go on. What a weird memory but a fun one - the band played great and Peter was an excellent showman.

 

NOT FAMOUS - my producer Rod who taught me the ropes in the recording studio and had faith in my writing and singing abilities when no one else did.

Link to comment

Harold Ramis. I was doing some service work at his home. He was trying to order catering from a local deli and was having problems. What really impressed me was the fact he never once tried to use his celebrity status to gain an advantage. He also offered to shake my hand on the way out the door.

 

George Lucus is a lot shorter than I thought. He is also pretty down to earth. He just chilled on the couch watching tv while I fixed what I was there to fix. 
 

I’ve met others but these were the best two. 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Elizabeth Star wow - nice job being able to fix stuff for famous people. Best I did was doing sandwich delivery on Rodeo Drive for a week and running into the guy who played Julio on Sanford & Son and we chatted for a couple minutes about how hard it was to get acting work.

Link to comment

To be honest, I don't know how to answer this.  I want to say whoever I'm talking to at the time.  But that's kinda a cop-out.  Can't think of anyone famous.  There certainly have been jerks at times but…  

Guess I'm not much good at ranking people.

 

It's still interesting to see the replies though.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Jandi okay then .... how about the most interesting conversation that left an impression on you - be it a friend or a teacher or maybe a lecture you attended?

Link to comment
  • Admin

Actually two that are important in the LGBTQ world, and they have a relation to each other:

 

Delaware State Senator Sarah McBride -- five years before she ran for state office, but was a White House Intern at the time.  Sarah had been a speaker at the Southern Comfort (Transgender) Conference that year. 

 

The Right Reverend +Gene Robinson, -- the first OUT gay Bishop in the U.S. Episcopal Church who was consecrated wearing bullet-proof body armor under his vestments due to credible death threats.    I met him at one of the first church events I attended as Vicky, and had not really intended to come out to him, but it was wonderful I did.

 

Bishop Robinson married Sarah McBride and her husband Andy who died of cancer three days after the wedding.  (Andy was a Trans man). 

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@VickySGV that must have been a thrill - I have seen Sarah speak on the news and she was absolutely wonderful and I am very proud of how she represents the trans community.

Link to comment

The most interesting people i knew:

 

1) My wife's uncle. He was a young man during the depression and spent several in the CCC. He was very quiet but on several occasions spoke of his experience in the CCC and life during the height of the great depression.

 

2) A college friend's brother was one of John Gacy's lawyers. His stories of the meetings with Gacy would scare you more than any horror movie or book. Gacy was a serial killer in Chicago in the 70s.

 

I was very fortunate to work on cellphones during their infancy which resulted in being exposed to well known people at conferences: I've met Mark Cuban, Malcolm Gladwell, Dean Kamen (invented the Segway), 2 billionaires and the Microsoft Product Manager who bundled Internet Explorer with Windows resulting in the anti-trust issues with US.

 

I also had to travel substantially and got to fly business and first class frequently. On places and at the airport lounges I've met BB King, Chrissie Hynde, Dennis Farina, Phil Mickleson and Steve Lawrence and Edie Gorme.

 

The billionaires were different but civil. Edie may have been having a bad day but she was a diva. Steve L. was your favorite goofy uncle. He was very friendly. Otherwise all were decent to others. Until thinking about the question, I had forgotten how interesting that part of my life had been.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

Famous, will have to be Stacy David of the TV show Gears. Me and my wife met him at a bike show during Sturgis bike week. he is a great down to earth guy. I have also met some local news people when I was younger. Marylin Turner and John Kelly of channel 7 in Detroit. It was at a dog show when I was a teen. Marylin Turner was very nice and down to earth. We even have a picture of her trying her sunglasses on our Collie. On the other hand John Kelly was an arrogant snob. And those two were married.

 

interesting has to be my grandfather. He was by far the smartest man I have ever met. He was an electrical engineer. even inventing an adding machine. He taught at Ohio state. Alumni of Michigan agricultural collage, now known as Michigan State. He even did some consulting at the infamous Green brier resort government bunker. (before it became known to the public) While I never confirmed it. I believe he did some work with the Communication bunkers that are scattered around the country. Originally owned by the Gov and operated by the Bell (telephone) system.

 

Kymmie

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@KymmieL we're just a few degrees and cities off. I went to the University of Toledo and graduated with Industrial Engineering degree - so your grandfather at OSU is cool. I visited Ann Arbor often and maybe I was lucky enough to have seen him without knowing it.

Link to comment

I've met a few people in the software world back in the 80's.  Bill Gates, Bjarne Stroustrup, Philippe Kahn and Jerry Pournelle.  I have to say that Philippe was the most interesting of them.  He had a wild sense of humor and was a pretty good sax player.  Gates was pretty stuck up back then and I think he's improved with age.  Bjarne and I never saw eye to eye and had arguments about C++.  Jerry was always one for a party where he could hold court and spread his words of wisdom.

Link to comment

I can't believe I forget include Arnold Palmer in my first response. One of the most genuine people I have encountered.

Link to comment

I spent the last 8 years in a friendship with a Jewish woman named Ya'el.   My partner was her caregiver.   Yael was lesbian and a very dedicated fighter for lesbian-gay rights.   She dressed male yet she always made it clear she was a woman.   She was born in 1927 and escaped the holocaust and became a beatnik in New York in the 40's and 50's.  She would hang out in the gay bars and smoke pot with the black band members in the alley.  Most of them never knew she was a woman.   She had an IQ of 158, read books on quantum physics and non-euclidean geometry.  I have her library now, they are full of handwritten notes in the margins of most pages.   She was a very outspoken woman.   When she first met me she put up her butch lesbian,in your face, your a man and I have you pegged, defense.   That only lasted a few minutes and she just gave up on all that and we became the best of friends.     At first she told me I was a cross dresser, then she told me I was a woman, which made me transgender.   I was dressed male-ish and had a male name at the time.  I didn't tell her anything before hand.  She truly enjoyed watching and helping me transition.  She had a medical degree and she would sit there and bluntly discuss my breasts in medical terms beyond me.

   She passed away 2 January's ago.   I cried off and on for days.  I still can't come up with good words to express how much she meant to me.   When I get upset about how tough and unfair trans life is, I just think of what she had to fight and endure for 93 years.

 

Willow

Link to comment

Shortly after meeting the woman who became my wife. I walked through her front door to find her naked in the lounge modelling for a Photographer / Sculptor. I was initally upset / confused, but soon the situation was explained. Albert Devine (he was around 70 then) was the most interesting person I ever met.

 

He wrote the Smokey Dawson comic strip in the Australian Sun newspaper back in the 30's & 40's. Did Pin-Up photography for Man magazine in the 50's. Set up a modelling agency, but ran out of good looking women in 50's Australia, so moved to New York where he studies art and met his wife... An ex-Nazi nurse who worked for Dr. Mengele... who later killed herself. He then moved to England where he worked for Air-fix creating the model air plane kits many people in the UK would remember and also inventor of that famous 70's toy "Weebles Wobble, but they dont fall down!". He also worked on many film sets over the years in stop-motion special effects and wrote a few books. I think he worked on the model for the Posiden adventure and some of the Sinbad movies.

 

So skilled, intelligent, clever and modest. A childlike fascination for everything. His house was a movie set. Literally, the place was amazing, but everything was bolster wood and glue!  A four poster bed in the most amazing room you ever saw, looked 400yrs old was just paint, glitter and charity shop curtains. 6' tall bronze statues throughout his house were just plaster of paris and paint. His TV, looking like a 40's oak cased unit was a modern LCD with formica trim. Each room being a set and a theme. He was a genius!

 

Surrounded by the most gorgeous women I had ever seen, yet he was not interested in any of them. He never had children of his own, so adopted our family as his own. It was all about the Art. My wife had modelled for him for years, and despite my curiousity as to the pictures he held of my dear wifey (The statues were obvious), he would never show me in case I found them indecent. When he passed away aged 81, he left an envelope addressed to me with all the pictures I had enquired about and I felt deep regret that he felt he couldnt share at the time.

 

He had no family of his own, and no wealth depsite his life of success. He left what he had to us and we traced and donated all his paintings and art to the models that had sat for him for atleast the past sixty years.

 

It was also a wakeup call about age. One of his most amazing paintings had been taken from some photo's of the prettiest woman I we had ever seen. Dressed as a ballet dancer wearing nothing but a black tutu and fishnets. Leg tucked up against her ear whilst balancing en-point. We traced her and wanted to return the painting and photo's. She came to the door with the aid of a walking frame. She must have been nearly 90yrs old. It was hard to imagine her being the same lady. She cried when she saw the photo's, stroking them and marvelled at the painting. They had been taken back in the mid 50's when Albert first came to the UK in a studio he set up. Amazing man and sadly missed.

Link to comment
6 hours ago, LusciousTheLock said:

Shortly after meeting the woman who became my wife. I walked through her front door to find her naked in the lounge modelling for a Photographer / Sculptor. I was initally upset / confused, but soon the situation was explained. Albert Devine (he was around 70 then) was the most interesting person I ever met.

 

He wrote the Smokey Dawson comic strip in the Australian Sun newspaper back in the 30's & 40's. Did Pin-Up photography for Man magazine in the 50's. Set up a modelling agency, but ran out of good looking women in 50's Australia, so moved to New York where he studies art and met his wife... An ex-Nazi nurse who worked for Dr. Mengele... who later killed herself. He then moved to England where he worked for Air-fix creating the model air plane kits many people in the UK would remember and also inventor of that famous 70's toy "Weebles Wobble, but they dont fall down!". He also worked on many film sets over the years in stop-motion special effects and wrote a few books. I think he worked on the model for the Posiden adventure and some of the Sinbad movies.

 

So skilled, intelligent, clever and modest. A childlike fascination for everything. His house was a movie set. Literally, the place was amazing, but everything was bolster wood and glue!  A four poster bed in the most amazing room you ever saw, looked 400yrs old was just paint, glitter and charity shop curtains. 6' tall bronze statues throughout his house were just plaster of paris and paint. His TV, looking like a 40's oak cased unit was a modern LCD with formica trim. Each room being a set and a theme. He was a genius!

 

Surrounded by the most gorgeous women I had ever seen, yet he was not interested in any of them. He never had children of his own, so adopted our family as his own. It was all about the Art. My wife had modelled for him for years, and despite my curiousity as to the pictures he held of my dear wifey (The statues were obvious), he would never show me in case I found them indecent. When he passed away aged 81, he left an envelope addressed to me with all the pictures I had enquired about and I felt deep regret that he felt he couldnt share at the time.

 

He had no family of his own, and no wealth depsite his life of success. He left what he had to us and we traced and donated all his paintings and art to the models that had sat for him for atleast the past sixty years.

 

It was also a wakeup call about age. One of his most amazing paintings had been taken from some photo's of the prettiest woman I we had ever seen. Dressed as a ballet dancer wearing nothing but a black tutu and fishnets. Leg tucked up against her ear whilst balancing en-point. We traced her and wanted to return the painting and photo's. She came to the door with the aid of a walking frame. She must have been nearly 90yrs old. It was hard to imagine her being the same lady. She cried when she saw the photo's, stroking them and marvelled at the painting. They had been taken back in the mid 50's when Albert first came to the UK in a studio he set up. Amazing man and sadly missed.

Thank you for your story.   I understand.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@LusciousTheLock what an amazing story. I am so glad I asked I have Bern rewarded beyond my wildest dreams. Thank you.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I guess as i think of  the definition of interesting it includes a form of being able to hold my interest over time.  If exciting were to replace interesting my answer might be different.  I met a young woman in 1968 who initially attracted me sexually.  As we hiked oner a field of boulders she moved with a grace and strength that i remember to this day.  Perhaps it had been her training in acting and ballet that produced such grace.  I had actually seen her before as the lead in an amazing play but at the time i never though i'd meet her.  This was all over 52 years ago.  We were married on June 26th 1971.

Today she is in wheelchair living with MS with a non complaining grace that constantly amazes me.  I'm still finding out things about strength and grace that not only interest me but give me strength to continue life with my own difficulties.  She is not famous but certainly has had my interest through the years.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Charlize what a beautiful story and woman. You are lucky and blessed as is she with you.

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Charlize said:

I guess as i think of  the definition of interesting it includes a form of being able to hold my interest over time.  If exciting were to replace interesting my answer might be different.  I met a young woman in 1968 who initially attracted me sexually.  As we hiked oner a field of boulders she moved with a grace and strength that i remember to this day.  Perhaps it had been her training in acting and ballet that produced such grace.  I had actually seen her before as the lead in an amazing play but at the time i never though i'd meet her.  This was all over 52 years ago.  We were married on June 26th 1971.

Today she is in wheelchair living with MS with a non complaining grace that constantly amazes me.  I'm still finding out things about strength and grace that not only interest me but give me strength to continue life with my own difficulties.  She is not famous but certainly has had my interest through the years.

 

Hugs,

 

Charlize

Charlize,

 

    After my second divorce and buying my farm now 3 times, I met a non-binary person who is 11yrs younger than I.   She was at the end of her physically healthy rope when we met, so we never got to enjoy active youthful years together.   We love each other very much and we are just making the best of it.

Much Love to both of you!

Willow McKenzie and Bonnie

Link to comment

Not really famous, but locally famous. I know a few local djs at a some what personal level. From when I worked in radio. 

 

I also got to meet one of our local news anchors when I was a bouncer, and it didn't click who she was till I asked for a id. She was super nice, and we chatted for a few minutes. As I was getting her a voucher for a free ride home. A few days later. I was walking in to the gym as she was leaving, and she looked at me like she has seen me before. 

Link to comment
  • Root Admin

Unfortunately, I am now unable to remember very clearly those famous people I have met, I know I met some of the Grumblweeds (a UK band in the 80’s), local personalities but the person who made the most lasting impression on me was the team leader of the Stoke team when I was hospitalised following a couple of strokes.

she helped me come to terms with the way my life changed, having survived two strokes, her words, survived the weekend when the nurses didn’t think I was going to make it, and giving me the support I needed to not just survive but improve my life and my health afterwards.

It was a delight to be able to return a few years later, meet her, and thank her for her support, and to be honest, show how much improved I was from the day I was discharged.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

@Red_Lauren. I love hearing about good memories thank you.

 

@Petra Jane what a refreshing and inspiring story. I am so glad you recovered and prospered from the meeting of another kind person.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   7 Members, 0 Anonymous, 173 Guests (See full list)

    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • marysssia
    • Petra Jane
    • April Marie
    • Ashley0616
    • Maddee
    • Carolyn Marie
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.6k
    • Total Posts
      767.9k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,014
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Quillian
    Newest Member
    Quillian
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. l.demiurge
      l.demiurge
  • Posts

    • April Marie
      I love wearing a jeans skirt!! That looks like airport carpet. Safe travels if you're flying!!
    • Maddee
      Flight faraway forthcoming Fabulous forum friends 😊😊🎸🦂
    • Maddee
    • KathyLauren
      One of our cats is polydactyl.  He has 7 toes on each front paw and 5 on each back paw, for 24 toes total.   Another one, an ex-feral who, at the time, was free to roam, climbed 50 feet up a tree without having any thought about how he was going to get down.  His pal climed down backwards, but he couldn't.  He ended up coming down by leaping from branch to branch.  Which nearly gave us heart attacks, because he only has one eye and therefore has no depth perception.   The other ex-feral (both are now indoor cats) obviously does not have those soft pads on his feet.  At night, when we are in bed, we can hear him stomping around the house.
    • Abigail Genevieve
      The two o'clock Onshoring meeting was going well.  Taylor was leading, inviting other people up to speak on their specialties. Aerial photogrammetry and surveying, including the exact boundary, were out for contract signature  Gibson had handled that - Manufacturing was supposed to, but somehow hadn't happened.  Legal issues from Legal. Accounting reported on current costs, including all upkeep, guard salaries, etc.  Manufacturing was supposed to give those numbers, but they hadn't.   The downside was the VP of Manufacturing.  He had arrived at the meeting red-faced, his tie askew, clutching a bottle. It smelled strongly of vodka. He had never done anything in his twenty years of being VP of Manufacturing, and he did not like being asked now.   "Mr. ----, do you have the inventory we asked for?" Taylor asked politely.  VP Gibson had asked him to have his people go through the plant and not only inventory but assess the operational status of every piece of equipment.  They needed to know what they had. "I'm not going to take any f---- orders from a g-d- tra---," he snarled. "God knows what kind of perverts it has dragged into our fair city and bangs every night." "That is completely out of line." That was Gibson.  Taylor controlled herself.  That was a shot at Bob, not just at Taylor.  She was glad Bob was not there to do something stupid.  Had Mrs. McCarthy been talking? What had she said?  Was she given to embellishment?  Taylor took a deep breath. "I'm not sorry.  You f--- can take this stupid onshoring --- and shove it up your -" "That is quite enough."  This was the head of HR. "You can take your sissy ways and sashay -" "You are fired." "You can't fire me." "Oh, yes I can," said the office manager.  The VP took another swig from his bottle. "Try it."  He looked uncertain. "I will have you removed.  Are you going to leave on your own?  I am calling the police to help you leave." And he dialed the number. He stomped out cursing. They heard him noisily go down the hall.  This was the front conference room.  He actually went through security and out the door, throwing his badge on the ground on his way.  The guard picked it up. They could see this through the glass wall. "Can you fire a VP?" "The Board told me that if anyone gives me problems they should be shown the door. Even a VP.  I can fire everyone here. I won't, of course. Those were problems." "Are you alright, Taylor?" She nodded.  "I've heard worse.  Shall we continue?" And they did.   The last item was that certain business people in China had been arrested, and the corporation that had been supporting them all these years had been dissolved.  They were on their own, and the Board was dead serious on straightening things out.  After this meeting, Taylor believed it.  She did not attend the meeting to discuss how to distribute the few duties the VP of Manufacturing had done.  That was ultimately up to the Board.    
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Lunch was at Cabaret, still free.  The place was quiet: it was the sort of place you took a business client to impress them, and the few other people were in business suits.  Most of the legal profession was there.   She told him of the morning's frustrations, breaking her own rule about confidentiality.  She asked Karen how the branding was going, and Karen had snapped back that she had not started on it yet - they had all these proposals.  Taylor had explained that it was important, for the two o'clock meeting, and Karen told her to do it herself.  Karen pointed out that Taylor could not touch her - her uncle was on the Board and her brother was VP of Manufacturing.  Nor would the two computer guys go out to the plant - they were playing some kind of MMORPG and simply not available. If she wanted the pictures, she should go.  Mary prayed an Ave Maria, but both she and Brenda were racing to get the proposal out. The client wanted it Friday for review.   She didn't bring up what Mrs. McCarthy had told her.  She wasn't sure how to approach it.  She thought of telling her of a 'something more comfortable' she had bought in case he ever DID show up at her door. It was in the bottom drawer of her dresser, ready to go.  Instead she talked about moving to a place with a garage.  Several of the abandoned houses had one, and they had been maintained well with China cash.   Bob had finally realized that when he was introduced as Bob, Taylor's boyfriend, that was just how things were done here. Other people had introduced each other in terms of family relationships, which were strong.  Long before you found out anything else about someone, you knew how they were related.  Family kept people from leaving Millville.    "What is the real name of this town, anyway?"   She laughed.  "I am trying to find that out.  It's 'Welcome to Millvale' when you come into town from the north, and 'Welcome to Millville' on the south.  I have counted two other variants."   "What a town. Roosevelt is like that, with the families, but there is only one spelling."  
    • Ashley0616
      Nothing wrong with that. I'm glad that you found what makes you happy! Just curious what does your wife think? If it's too personal I understand.
    • Ashley0616
    • Ashley0616
      – According to a recent survey, the most popular name for a dog is Max. Other popular names include Molly, Sam, Zach, and Maggie.
    • Ashley0616
    • Ashley0616
      Either new environment/ not potty trained
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Bob was on his way home from the dojo and he "just happened" to driver by her place. It was 10:30.  Her light was still on.  He knew exactly where she was sitting.  He saw her in his mind.   A fierce wave of desire that took his breath away suddenly showed up. All he had to do was stop, get out of the car, walk to the door and knock.  She would answer, glad to see him.  She would know why he was there and what he wanted. She would invite him in, maybe get him something to drink, disappear for a moment and return in "something more comfortable."  She would lead him back. Oh, joy.   And never, ever speak to him again afterwards.  Or she would not let him in but be angry about it.  In no way, emotionally, physically, mentally or spiritually, was she ready for this, and he knew it, if he was honest with himself, and she knew he knew it.  She would look upon it as another assault and their relationship would be irretrievably broken.  He would have to leave town. It would devastate her. It would devastate him.    He fought himself.  He was frozen to his seat as his reason and his body fought. He was twenty four years old, a full-blooded male with normal desires; he had just worked out and he was ready.  All he had to do now was open the car door. No one would know. He held his hands, one in the other, to keep one from moving, against his reason and will, to open that door.  He did not want to be a slave of his desires.   He looked across the street.  Mrs. McCarthy, sister of his landlord, was peeking though her window.  She knew his car.  Everyone in town would know by noon the next day if he got out of the car.  Taylor did not need that, either, and she would know, if he came to the door now, what a selfish thing it would be: in his own eyes, in the eyes of Taylor, in the eyes of the town, and worst of all, in the eyes of God.   He sat there a moment longer.  He was, as he reflected, entering into her sufferings in a small way that she would be made whole, healthy and happy: what he wanted more than anything.  But this hurt.  Why had all this come on her?  He asked God again, but there was only silence. He drove home in that silence. He chided himself for even going on her street and for driving on it other nights.  He would stop that, he told himself.   ------------------------------------------   The next morning Taylor went out to her car to go to work.  Mrs. McCarthy met her before she got to it. "I thought you were going to get lucky last night, dearie," she said. Taylor was puzzled. "Why, what do you mean?" "That young fellow - you know, Bob - he's been driving around here, going up and down the street some nights, not stopping.  Well, last night he parked and sat in his car for a while.   I think he was staring at your window.  I think he was trying to get up the courage to knock on the door. I was rooting for him.   But then he drove away.  Faint heart never won fair lady, as they say. What a shame. You two are a lovely couple.  Well, have a good day!" "Thank you, Mrs. McCarthy."  Taylor knew Bob extremely well and knew what had been going through his mind.  She was more than grateful he had not gotten out of the car. Better for him, better for her, better for everybody.  Surgery "down there" sooner than later.  This was driving the poor boy crazy. It was driving her crazy, too.  But she had a lot to work through. Surgery "up here" she said, pointing to her head.  She woke up her therapist on the way to work.  They were still talking when she pulled into her designated parking spot.  That was a perk that had happened yesterday.  She took a deep breath and headed into work. It would be another wild day.
    • Ashley0616
      bittersweet: especially : pleasure accompanied by suffering or regret
    • Abigail Genevieve
      I'm thinking about some interactions yesterday I did, while presenting as male but acting as female, that were far better than I did when I was presenting as male and acting as male.  #girlunderhood. I do a crappy job at acting as male and I am giving it up.  I am not talking about feminine gestures or presentation but just relating as a woman.  People don't realize I am doing it but it is a whole lot easier to do.   You don't just put on a dress and BOOM you are a girl.  You are a girl and you put on a dress.  Or not. Whether I am in jeans or a skirt (I wish, wife would have lots to say) I am a girl.  I don't need $250 in makeup and heels and hose and all that.  I don't need surgery. Honey, I have arrived.  Now I have to work out how that best works in my life, causing the minimal damage and creating the maximum good, but I have more working room.   Oh, and I am still pissed off at everyone and everything. #Contradictory.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      @Willow it is certainly possible that my husband planned it. Placing me in the path of an opportunity....he certainly does things like that. GF has done some work for the company as an outside consultant, so I'm sure the company owner knows what potential resources are around.    It could also have just happened randomly. He has taken me to work with him before, just because he likes to have me around. I remember one time that I fell asleep with my head in his lap, and he held a meeting with his subordinates without waking me and making me move.  The company culture is family oriented and relaxed.
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...