Not exact matches
I wanted to ask him if he was the first person who was ever be late for something, mostly because he is 20 years old, and in the same situation at his age
most people are sleeping in
beds without box springs,
destroying microwaves by accidentally leaving forks in them while heating water for ramen, and discovering that things in your house stop working when you don't send strangers in businesses money in the form of checks.
Even the
most well - behaved puppy will
destroy shoes, clothing, paper, remote controls, telephones, leashes, dog
beds, carpeting... anything and everything.
The
most aggressive chewers can get through almost anything other than metal, so this
bed won't last against a dog that's determined to
destroy it.
For the
most part he didn't
destroy them either (except for the fake tennis balls designed for dogs which are for some reason, much easier to tear apart than real tennis balls — those would be methodically picked apart into pieces and then left in neat piles by his
bed).
Photojournalist Antrim Caskey has a story at AlterNet that focuses on the residents who are affected by the sludge slide more than
most stories have to date — the house that was
destroyed just after 3.5 years of extensive work, the man who leapt out of his
bed and kicked out a window to escape his home and who suffers from insomnia now — and a truly amazing slideshow of photos taken around the area at the bottom of page two.