You're never as good as you think you are when you win; and you're never as bad as you feel when you lose.
Joe Paterno
Joe Paterno
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You're never as good as you think you are when you win; and you're never as bad as you feel when you lose.
Joe Paterno
Mine too. Then my mom would come along and have me wash it for 5 minutes to get the dirt off so it wouldn't get infected. Then she would put iodine on it to kill what was left. If you are not familiar with iodine, it's reddish orange and so I not only felt bad, I looked bad, but I guess the stuff worked.rub some dirt on it and get back to work
-my old man (and most of his generation)
if it didn't hurt, it wasn't any goodMine too. Then my mom would come along and have me wash it for 5 minutes to get the dirt off so it wouldn't get infected. Then she would put iodine on it to kill what was left. If you are not familiar with iodine, it's reddish orange and so I not only felt bad, I looked bad, but I guess the stuff worked.
Mine too. Then my mom would come along and have me wash it for 5 minutes to get the dirt off so it wouldn't get infected. Then she would put iodine on it to kill what was left. If you are not familiar with iodine, it's reddish orange and so I not only felt bad, I looked bad, but I guess the stuff worked.
My father grew up on a farm and ended up in the suburbs. One morning when I was in second grade, I told my parents that I didn't feel well and didn't want to go to school. I really didn't feel well. My mother agreed. Our doctor lived up the street. My father was a little peeved, grabbed me by the arm and took me straight to the doctor's office. I had tonsillitis. Thank goodness. I passed the test. He still wasn't happy about it.if it didn't hurt, it wasn't any good
My father grew up on a farm and ended up in the suburbs. One morning when I was in second grade, I told my parents that I didn't feel well and didn't want to go to school. I really didn't feel well. My mother agreed. Our doctor lived up the street. My father was a little peeved, grabbed me by the arm and took me straight to the doctor's office. I had tonsillitis. Thank goodness. I passed the test. He still wasn't happy about it.
Preferred the safety orange tint of Mercurochrome.
That's worthy of a movie scene.Ah, that reminds me of a time when I was in 4th grade. I had a test and I hadn't studied, so I told my mom I was sick. I groaned and tried to look as bad as I could. She said she would take my temperature, so she stuck a thermometer under my tongue and told me to leave it there for a few minutes and she would be back. I knew I didn't have a temperature, but the furnace was running, so I put the thermometer on the vent and when I heard my mom coming, put it under my tongue. She came in, looked at it and said, "Get dressed, you're going to school". I said "Mom, I have a fever". She said, "if your temperature was this high, you'd be dead". I guess I over did the furnace part. Anyway, I went to school and it turns out the teacher was sick and the sub did not want to give the test, so I got extra time to study and passed it. Funny how life works.
Ah, that reminds me of a time when I was in 4th grade. I had a test and I hadn't studied, so I told my mom I was sick. I groaned and tried to look as bad as I could. She said she would take my temperature, so she stuck a thermometer under my tongue and told me to leave it there for a few minutes and she would be back. I knew I didn't have a temperature, but the furnace was running, so I put the thermometer on the vent and when I heard my mom coming, put it under my tongue. She came in, looked at it and said, "Get dressed, you're going to school". I said "Mom, I have a fever". She said, "if your temperature was this high, you'd be dead". I guess I over did the furnace part. Anyway, I went to school and it turns out the teacher was sick and the sub did not want to give the test, so I got extra time to study and passed it. Funny how life works.
My son wrecked his bike and hurt his wrist. I put some ice on it and laid him on the sofa for a day. He complained it was sore for several days. Years later, he hurt it again and got an x-ray. Turns out he broke it back when he wrecked his bike. I will feel bad about that until the day I die. Problem is, as a father, you don't know when you are coddling and when you need to pull the rip chord.
Yep. Broke my thumb in third grade. Nobody believed me that it was broken. I mean nobody (school nurse, mother, father, siblings), except my one sister who was old enough to drive and take me to the no longer in existence Haverford Hospital. I had a broken thumb. When I got home, I got in the "I told you sos." After I did that, though, nobody was going to apologize. I had overstepped.
My son wrecked his bike and hurt his wrist. I put some ice on it and laid him on the sofa for a day. He complained it was sore for several days. Years later, he hurt it again and got an x-ray. Turns out he broke it back when he wrecked his bike. I will feel bad about that until the day I die. Problem is, as a father, you don't know when you are coddling and when you need to pull the rip chord.
Mine too. Then my mom would come along and have me wash it for 5 minutes to get the dirt off so it wouldn't get infected. Then she would put iodine on it to kill what was left. If you are not familiar with iodine, it's reddish orange and so I not only felt bad, I looked bad, but I guess the stuff worked.
That's worthy of a movie scene.
I think you're right. That may be where I got the idea. Maybe my Mom saw it too.Pretty sure I saw that on an episode of The Little Rascals.
Ah, that reminds me of a time when I was in 4th grade. I had a test and I hadn't studied, so I told my mom I was sick. I groaned and tried to look as bad as I could. She said she would take my temperature, so she stuck a thermometer under my tongue and told me to leave it there for a few minutes and she would be back. I knew I didn't have a temperature, but the furnace was running, so I put the thermometer on the vent and when I heard my mom coming, put it under my tongue. She came in, looked at it and said, "Get dressed, you're going to school". I said "Mom, I have a fever". She said, "if your temperature was this high, you'd be dead". I guess I over did the furnace part. Anyway, I went to school and it turns out the teacher was sick and the sub did not want to give the test, so I got extra time to study and passed it. Funny how life works.
Hey!!! I resemble that remark...You're never as good as you think you are when you win; and you're never as bad as you feel when you lose.
Joe Paterno
I still use a bottle from 1979 from a drugstore chain long out of business...and it still burns when applied and is orange, so it must still be in shelf life.Preferred the safety orange tint of Mercurochrome.
Bill Parcells once said that that if you lose a bunch of close games you weren’t a good enough team to win them.You're never as good as you think you are when you win; and you're never as bad as you feel when you lose.
Joe Paterno
Check your label. I remember Mercurochrome NOT burning...but Merthiolate hurt like all get out. My parents kept both in the bathroom cabinet. Do I have this backwords?I still use a bottle from 1979 from a drugstore chain long out of business...and it still burns when applied and is orange, so it must still be in shelf life.
Check your label. I remember Mercurochrome NOT burning...but Merthiolate hurt like all get out. My parents kept both in the bathroom cabinet. Do I have this backwords?
That’s how I remember it.Check your label. I remember Mercurochrome NOT burning...but Merthiolate hurt like all get out. My parents kept both in the bathroom cabinet. Do I have this backwords?
"Notre Dame will have a decided schematic advantage..."-You are what your record says you are.
--Charlie Tuna
You are 100% correct!!! I have merthiolate...Check your label. I remember Mercurochrome NOT burning...but Merthiolate hurt like all get out. My parents kept both in the bathroom cabinet. Do I have this backwords?
I think you're right. That may be where I got the idea. Maybe my Mom saw it too.
Your right My parents had bothCheck your label. I remember Mercurochrome NOT burning...but Merthiolate hurt like all get out. My parents kept both in the bathroom cabinet. Do I have this backwords?
I know, I know, "Oh, blow it out your ass, Woody"!
You're never as good as you think you are when you win; and you're never as bad as you feel when you lose.
Joe Paterno
Yep. Broke my thumb in third grade. Nobody believed me that it was broken. I mean nobody (school nurse, mother, father, siblings), except my one sister who was old enough to drive and take me to the no longer in existence Haverford Hospital. I had a broken thumb. When I got home, I got in the "I told you sos." After I did that, though, nobody was going to apologize. I had overstepped.
That would be 1970 Colorado & Wisconsin, Joe Pa's 4th year as HC and the best was yet to be seen.I'd bet he said that before he ever lost 2 games in a row............
Indeed, and that 1966 team lost to the (then ranked ) #1, #4, and #5 teams, Michigan State, UCLA, and Georgia Tech, all on the road.“He” lost the 2nd and 3rd games he ever coached
Mercurochrome.Mine too. Then my mom would come along and have me wash it for 5 minutes to get the dirt off so it wouldn't get infected. Then she would put iodine on it to kill what was left. If you are not familiar with iodine, it's reddish orange and so I not only felt bad, I looked bad, but I guess the stuff worked.
HA! I've never been confined.ha, I first thought of the Haverford State Hospital, a mental/psychiatric facility, which is also long gone (I moved from Haverford Twp. in 1966); was it Haverford Hospital that became Mercy Community Hospital? Is Bryn Mawr Hospital still around?
sorry for the Delaware County trivia...