From: owner-angry-psychos-digest@smoe.org (angry-psychos-digest) To: angry-psychos-digest@smoe.org Subject: angry-psychos-digest V4 #29 Reply-To: angry-psychos@smoe.org Sender: owner-angry-psychos-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-angry-psychos-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk X-To-Unsubscribe: Send mail to "angry-psychos-digest-request@smoe.org" X-To-Unsubscribe: with "unsubscribe" as the body. angry-psychos-digest Saturday, January 30 1999 Volume 04 : Number 029 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: npr: mono and psycho [VR5SBloom@aol.com] hey this is cooll npr [radiof@pipeline.com] Re: Want an AP shirt for five bucks? ["Isabelle-Marie Longpré" ] Re: Want an AP shirt for five bucks? ["Isabelle-Marie Longpré" ] Re: AP Shirts (not for $5 though) ["LAFF.ORG" ] Re: angry-psychos-digest V4 #28 [Clergy666@aol.com] This is Cool... (fwd) [Rebecca Lynn Clark ] Very NPR but I think relevent [Fwd: a simple gesture (fwd)] (fwd) [Rebec] Re: This is Cool... (fwd) [steve ] Re: This is Cool... (fwd) [Rebecca Lynn Clark ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 01:38:37 EST From: VR5SBloom@aol.com Subject: Re: npr: mono and psycho From: "Sad Alcoholic Clown" >what's the song that mono does on psycho sdtk? It's called "Madhouse" and I love it ::D Check the page, of course!! And you can order the soundtrack from there ;) http://members.theglobe.com/formicablues/ - --Michele ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 14:07:46 +0000 From: radiof@pipeline.com Subject: hey this is cooll npr Hey, for all you people who have Netscape 4.0 or IE 4.0 or higher check out my site. other people can check it out to but you want have a flying cupid, i think next will be flying POE's. www.neeraj.net thanks byebi also if the people who message me about having hearts flying around please tell me your name so i can give you credit on the ideal. since they balls are sorta silly. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 13:07:17 PST From: "Isabelle-Marie Longpré" Subject: Re: Want an AP shirt for five bucks? making a shirt for the ap's like that would b really kewl. and IF Poe would sign the image or something, it would be great. could ne 1 would make that happend? Isa ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 13:13:37 PST From: "Isabelle-Marie Longpré" Subject: Re: AP Shirts i want 1 too! it's great that we finally found something to do related to POE while waiting for her new album :) Isa > >oh, me too!! I want a necklace too!!! > > >oh yeah...and speaking of poe mercandise.. > >i remember reading a couple years ago about how you could get poe >necklaces at >her concets. does anyone know where i could get one, or does anyone >have >one??? > >~cait > > > >______________________________________________________ >Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 13:17:39 PST From: "Isabelle-Marie Longpré" Subject: Re: Want an AP shirt for five bucks? i live near Montral and no1 knows poe here, but if i get a t-shirt or some other poe stuff, i'll wear it and i won't listen to what other ppl will saay, 'cuz i really like poe and i want ppl to know it and i want ppl to get to know poe. Isa ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 13:53:52 PST From: "Kung-Gene Chu" Subject: AP Shirts (not for $5 though) Hey, if you guys really want AP shirts, Cocky Clothing used to make them for every concert. You could check them out at www.cocky.com and ask them to see if they still had any in stock or if they could make them. They were mostly concert specific, though, but they had some generic (for instance a red shirt with Angry Pyschos "scrawled" on the front) which were nice. They weren't a bad price, either, but more than $5 (I think the AP shirts for LeVar and Rochester were $10, correct me if I'm wrong...). Good luck. regards, Kung-Gene ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 17:04:17 -0500 From: "LAFF.ORG" Subject: Re: AP Shirts (not for $5 though) LAFF has plenty of their T-shirts for sale, if there is some interest let me know and we can set a price, not more then 10 probably. If you have an interest please reply privately. thanks, - -robby At 01:53 PM 1/29/99 PST, Kung-Gene Chu wrote: > >Hey, if you guys really want AP shirts, Cocky Clothing used to make them >for every concert. You could check them out at www.cocky.com and ask >them to see if they still had any in stock or if they could make them. >They were mostly concert specific, though, but they had some generic >(for instance a red shirt with Angry Pyschos "scrawled" on the front) >which were nice. They weren't a bad price, either, but more than $5 (I >think the AP shirts for LeVar and Rochester were $10, correct me if I'm >wrong...). Good luck. > >regards, >Kung-Gene > >______________________________________________________ >Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com > ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 17:23:49 EST From: Clergy666@aol.com Subject: Re: angry-psychos-digest V4 #28 Well I got alot of replys about my suicide input from yesterday. After the first letter I was bawling. Its not the individual stories that get to you, its the reminder that you aren't ever really in control of your self and the realization that you will never forget or forgive for the past. I know that in casual conversation the mention of my stay in the psych ward if fine with me, but anyone that mentions it anything more than in passing I fall to peices. It seems the mental carriage of those memories are lead by 6 or 7 wild bulls, that come dragging it up with an instoppable force, and complete disreguard for me. And talking to most of you was just a lovely thrill a minute joy ride down memroy lane. By the time I was done the carefully prepared make-up for work was running down my cheeks. I am glad to know that there are so many of you out there that have survived something like this. And to the few letters I did get giving me slack for my input, I really wasnt trying to "diss" any of you by saying that talking to someone doesnt really help. I was jsut saying how I, and many other people in the situation feel. It starts from within and must be healed from within, on your own. I am not here to judge you and any of your intentions so please grow up and stop taking offence to a personal statement of a medical nature. Love, meghan "Its better to forget, than to think of me and cry" ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 21:52:08 -0500 (EST) From: Rebecca Lynn Clark Subject: This is Cool... (fwd) I don't normally forward stuff, but this is VERY relevant. Wrong Number Saves Suicidal Woman By JUDIE GLAVE .c The Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) -- Elizabeth Hartley listened a few seconds to a wrong-number caller and heard volumes in the slurred speech of a forlorn woman who had ``just called to say goodbye.'' Ms. Hartley and co-worker Emlyn Philbert said they never gave any thought to hanging up. They kept the Virginia woman on the phone for nearly an hour as she drifted in and out of consciousness -- and they saved her life long- distance. The unlikely connection came about Wednesday when the 55-year-old woman, whose identity was not released, misdialed and rang the J. Streicher securities firm where Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert work in sales. ``She asked to speak to Liz and I got on the phone,'' Ms. Hartley, of Rutherford, N.J., recounted Thursday. Right away, she knew the caller was in trouble. ``Nobody loves me,'' the woman told her, slurring her words. ``I just called to say goodbye.'' Ms. Hartley said she never considered hanging up. ``You hear something in somebody's voice and you know something's terribly wrong.'' She motioned for Ms. Philbert to pick up the phone and for the next 45 minutes they talked and pleaded with the woman until she gave them her name, address, telephone number. Ms. Hartley called police in Hampton, Va. ``She was just so sad,'' said Ms. Philbert. ``Such a sad, sad person.'' The woman drifted in and out of consciousness all the while, speaking haltingly about her broken life. She talked of being all alone, of wanting ``Brian'' to hug her. She spoke about a son who was murdered four years ago. Ms. Philbert didn't ask too many questions for fear ``it would push her over the edge.'' Instead, she posed as the friend, Liz, and kept telling the woman that she loved her. ``I just kept talking and talking,'' Ms. Philbert said. ``Elizabeth says I can talk paint off the wall. I don't know if that's bad or good, but in this case it was good.'' Police arrived to find the woman semiconscious in a bedroom, still on the line with Ms. Philbert. The woman, who had overdosed on a combination of alcohol and prescription pills, was taken to a psychiatric facility, said Sgt. Jeff Walden, a Hampton police spokesman. Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert believe they were guided by a guardian angel. A friend of Ms. Philbert who died this week meant for them to help the despondent woman, they said. ``What are the odds that this lady dials a wrong number and finds us in the city of New York,'' asked Ms. Philbert, 44. ``You gotta believe.'' Ms. Hartley, 48, agreed. ``We're all supposed to have a guardian angel, right?'' she said. ``I think Emlyn's friend just earned her wings.'' ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 22:06:06 -0500 (EST) From: Rebecca Lynn Clark Subject: Very NPR but I think relevent [Fwd: a simple gesture (fwd)] (fwd) >> >>>A Simple Gesture >>> >>> Mark was walking home from school one day when he noticed the >>>boy ahead of him had tripped and dropped all of the books he was >>>carrying along with two sweaters,a baseball bat,a glove and a small tape >>>recorder. Mark knelt down and helped the boy pick up the scattered >>>articles. Since they were going the same way, he helped to carry the >>>burden. As they walked Mark discovered the boys name was Bill,that he >>>loved video games,baseball,and history, that he was having alot of >>>troublewith his other subjects and that he had just broken up with his >>>girlfriend. They arrived at Bill's home first and Mark was invited in >>>for a coke and to wattch some tv. The afternoon passed pleasantly with >>>a few laughs and some shared small talk, then Mark went home. They >>>continued to see each other around school, had lunch together once or >>>twice, then both graduated from high school. They ended up at the same >>>college where they had brief contacts over the years. Finally the long >>>awaited senior year came, and three weeks before graduation, Bill asked >>>Mark if they could talk. Bill reminded him of the day years ago when >>>they had first met. >>> "Do you ever wonder why I was carrying so many things from school >>>that day?" asked Bill. "You see, I cleaned out my locker because I >>>didn't want to leave a mess for anyone else. I had stored away some >>>of my mother's pills and I was going home to commit suicide. But after >>>we spent some time together I realized that if I had, I would have >>>missed that time and so many others that might follow. So you see, >>>Mark, when you picked up my books for me that day, you did alot more. >>>You saved my life." >> >> >> >> >> >> > ___/^\___ > ('O~O') >> ----------ooO-(_)-Ooo------------ >> HADEEAH JAMIL > DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE >> ---------------------------------- >>***************************************** > > "Faith is not by hope, it is what occurs >in the heart and is proved by the deeds." > > ******************************************* > > > ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 22:16:59 -0500 (EST) From: steve Subject: Re: This is Cool... (fwd) call me an uncaring bitch...but this thread is getting *Really* annoying. steve On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, Rebecca Lynn Clark wrote: > > I don't normally forward stuff, but this is VERY relevant. > > Wrong Number Saves Suicidal Woman > > By JUDIE GLAVE > > .c The Associated Press > > NEW YORK (AP) -- Elizabeth Hartley listened a few seconds to a wrong-number > caller and heard volumes in the slurred speech of a forlorn woman who had > ``just called to say goodbye.'' > > Ms. Hartley and co-worker Emlyn Philbert said they never gave any thought to > hanging up. They kept the Virginia woman on the phone for nearly an hour as > she drifted in and out of consciousness -- and they saved her life long- > distance. > > The unlikely connection came about Wednesday when the 55-year-old woman, whose > identity was not released, misdialed and rang the J. Streicher securities firm > where Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert work in sales. > > ``She asked to speak to Liz and I got on the phone,'' Ms. Hartley, of > Rutherford, N.J., recounted Thursday. > > Right away, she knew the caller was in trouble. > > ``Nobody loves me,'' the woman told her, slurring her words. ``I just called > to say goodbye.'' > > Ms. Hartley said she never considered hanging up. ``You hear something in > somebody's voice and you know something's terribly wrong.'' > > She motioned for Ms. Philbert to pick up the phone and for the next 45 minutes > they talked and pleaded with the woman until she gave them her name, address, > telephone number. Ms. Hartley called police in Hampton, Va. > > ``She was just so sad,'' said Ms. Philbert. ``Such a sad, sad person.'' > > The woman drifted in and out of consciousness all the while, speaking > haltingly about her broken life. > > She talked of being all alone, of wanting ``Brian'' to hug her. She spoke > about a son who was murdered four years ago. > > Ms. Philbert didn't ask too many questions for fear ``it would push her over > the edge.'' Instead, she posed as the friend, Liz, and kept telling the woman > that she loved her. > > ``I just kept talking and talking,'' Ms. Philbert said. ``Elizabeth says I can > talk paint off the wall. I don't know if that's bad or good, but in this case > it was good.'' > > Police arrived to find the woman semiconscious in a bedroom, still on the line > with Ms. Philbert. > > The woman, who had overdosed on a combination of alcohol and prescription > pills, was taken to a psychiatric facility, said Sgt. Jeff Walden, a Hampton > police spokesman. > > Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert believe they were guided by a guardian angel. A > friend of Ms. Philbert who died this week meant for them to help the > despondent woman, they said. > > ``What are the odds that this lady dials a wrong number and finds us in the > city of New York,'' asked Ms. Philbert, 44. ``You gotta believe.'' > > Ms. Hartley, 48, agreed. > > ``We're all supposed to have a guardian angel, right?'' she said. ``I think > Emlyn's friend just earned her wings.'' > ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 22:37:22 -0500 (EST) From: Rebecca Lynn Clark Subject: Re: This is Cool... (fwd) well, since so many people are benefitting from this....and so many people may decide NOT to kill themselves, i think it isn't a whole lot to ask of you to grin and bear it a little while.... maybe you don't care if some of the people on this list live or die... but a lot of us do.... stop being selfish....did you ever stop to think what it might be like to walk a mile in our shoes? "THEN you really might know what its like to sing the blues" Rebecca Clark ACRN 99.3 caFM, Traffic Director Office: (740) 593-4909 Poetry page: http://www.pathetic.org/member-works.cgi?siteid=876026929 - -"Perfect Love is the most beautiful of all frustrations because it is more than one can express" -Charlie Chaplin help give to RAINN: http://www.eyegive.com/html/ssi.cfm?cid=103&mid=7856 IT COSTS YOU NOTHING BUT A FEW SECONDS OF TIME! On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, steve wrote: > totally! but we have talked this one to death. when people start > forwarding cutesy little stories, i think we've crossed the threshold. > > i mean, i think it's wonderful that people know that they can talk to each > other about this stuff. that's cool. im glad everyone came forth and > said that > > but now this is turning to a therapy session (or is it 1-800-dont-do-it!) > > it's quite obnoxious. > > steve > > On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, Rebecca Lynn Clark wrote: > > > ya know, you can just delete this stuff.... > > it isn't like there is any friggin poe news happening now anyway... > > we have to talk about SOMETHING > > > > Rebecca Clark > > ACRN 99.3 caFM, Traffic Director > > Office: (740) 593-4909 > > > > Poetry page: http://www.pathetic.org/member-works.cgi?siteid=876026929 > > -"Perfect Love is the most beautiful of all frustrations because it is > > more than one can express" -Charlie Chaplin > > help give to RAINN: http://www.eyegive.com/html/ssi.cfm?cid=103&mid=7856 > > IT COSTS YOU NOTHING BUT A FEW SECONDS OF TIME! > > > > > > On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, steve wrote: > > > > > thanks. > > > > > > steve > > > > > > On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, Rebecca Lynn Clark wrote: > > > > > > > uncaring bitch > > > > > > > > Rebecca Clark > > > > ACRN 99.3 caFM, Traffic Director > > > > Office: (740) 593-4909 > > > > > > > > Poetry page: http://www.pathetic.org/member-works.cgi?siteid=876026929 > > > > -"Perfect Love is the most beautiful of all frustrations because it is > > > > more than one can express" -Charlie Chaplin > > > > help give to RAINN: http://www.eyegive.com/html/ssi.cfm?cid=103&mid=7856 > > > > IT COSTS YOU NOTHING BUT A FEW SECONDS OF TIME! > > > > > > > > > > > > On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, steve wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > call me an uncaring bitch...but this thread is getting *Really* annoying. > > > > > > > > > > steve > > > > > > > > > > On Fri, 29 Jan 1999, Rebecca Lynn Clark wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I don't normally forward stuff, but this is VERY relevant. > > > > > > > > > > > > Wrong Number Saves Suicidal Woman > > > > > > > > > > > > By JUDIE GLAVE > > > > > > > > > > > > .c The Associated Press > > > > > > > > > > > > NEW YORK (AP) -- Elizabeth Hartley listened a few seconds to a wrong-number > > > > > > caller and heard volumes in the slurred speech of a forlorn woman who had > > > > > > ``just called to say goodbye.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > Ms. Hartley and co-worker Emlyn Philbert said they never gave any thought to > > > > > > hanging up. They kept the Virginia woman on the phone for nearly an hour as > > > > > > she drifted in and out of consciousness -- and they saved her life long- > > > > > > distance. > > > > > > > > > > > > The unlikely connection came about Wednesday when the 55-year-old woman, whose > > > > > > identity was not released, misdialed and rang the J. Streicher securities firm > > > > > > where Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert work in sales. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``She asked to speak to Liz and I got on the phone,'' Ms. Hartley, of > > > > > > Rutherford, N.J., recounted Thursday. > > > > > > > > > > > > Right away, she knew the caller was in trouble. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``Nobody loves me,'' the woman told her, slurring her words. ``I just called > > > > > > to say goodbye.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > Ms. Hartley said she never considered hanging up. ``You hear something in > > > > > > somebody's voice and you know something's terribly wrong.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > She motioned for Ms. Philbert to pick up the phone and for the next 45 minutes > > > > > > they talked and pleaded with the woman until she gave them her name, address, > > > > > > telephone number. Ms. Hartley called police in Hampton, Va. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``She was just so sad,'' said Ms. Philbert. ``Such a sad, sad person.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > The woman drifted in and out of consciousness all the while, speaking > > > > > > haltingly about her broken life. > > > > > > > > > > > > She talked of being all alone, of wanting ``Brian'' to hug her. She spoke > > > > > > about a son who was murdered four years ago. > > > > > > > > > > > > Ms. Philbert didn't ask too many questions for fear ``it would push her over > > > > > > the edge.'' Instead, she posed as the friend, Liz, and kept telling the woman > > > > > > that she loved her. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``I just kept talking and talking,'' Ms. Philbert said. ``Elizabeth says I can > > > > > > talk paint off the wall. I don't know if that's bad or good, but in this case > > > > > > it was good.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > Police arrived to find the woman semiconscious in a bedroom, still on the line > > > > > > with Ms. Philbert. > > > > > > > > > > > > The woman, who had overdosed on a combination of alcohol and prescription > > > > > > pills, was taken to a psychiatric facility, said Sgt. Jeff Walden, a Hampton > > > > > > police spokesman. > > > > > > > > > > > > Ms. Hartley and Ms. Philbert believe they were guided by a guardian angel. A > > > > > > friend of Ms. Philbert who died this week meant for them to help the > > > > > > despondent woman, they said. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``What are the odds that this lady dials a wrong number and finds us in the > > > > > > city of New York,'' asked Ms. Philbert, 44. ``You gotta believe.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > Ms. Hartley, 48, agreed. > > > > > > > > > > > > ``We're all supposed to have a guardian angel, right?'' she said. ``I think > > > > > > Emlyn's friend just earned her wings.'' > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ------------------------------ End of angry-psychos-digest V4 #29 **********************************