Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Dr. Jesse Chatmon, Stigma Buster



Moment of truth: what's your first reaction when you see a homeless man? Do you immediately lock your doors? Look away and avoid eye contact? And what is your first impression of the often dirty, hungry, desperate man? Pity? Superiority? Anger, even? At least 25% of the homeless population has a serious mental illness, but 100% have names and birthdays and parents and hopes and dreams and pasts, so let me introduce you to a fascinating and brilliant man who has just recently overcome his homelessness- Dr. Jesse Chatmon. Yes, I said Doctor Jesse Chatmon, a stereotype-basher if I've ever met one. A real life stigma buster! Dr. Jesse and I met at the MS Leadership Academy, and from the first time I heard him speak I was captivated and shocked by his unapologetic honesty, intriguing observations, gentle humor, and surprisingly confidant dignity. Upon my request he shared with me his life's story and gave me permission to pass it on to you. Dr. Jesse was born 59 years ago and grew up in Atlanta, spending much of his time playing piano and worshipping in the Southern Baptist church. The National Science Foundation gave the 16-year-old HS graduate an academic scholarship to Howard University in Washington, DC, where he chose to study his passion, mathematics. Drafted to Vietnam immediately after receiving his bachelor's degree, he served as one of the relatively few black officers, facing fierce resistance by his white subordinates. He said he got around this resistance by becoming their friend. Like many veterans, he is still haunted by the 62 men he killed, and suffers, believing the deaths were unjustified. He developed PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) and also began having the first symptoms of the schizophrenia that would plague him for the rest of his life, affecting his relationships, career, and sense of self. Once home from the war, he married his college sweetheart, and they both returned to Howard University to pursue their Masters' degrees, his in math and hers in psychology. Along with his PTSD and schizophrenia came visual and auditory hallucinations, and the usually kind Dr. Jesse began to attack Asians on the street, unable to distinguish them from the Asians he was instructed to kill in the war. To cope with these voices in his head, he began (like so many others) to drink and do drugs while still functioning in school, eventually getting his Masters degree and taking a high school teaching position in NY. It was during this time when he began to wake up in the middle of the night with his hands around his wife's neck, choking her in his sleep. They went back to Howard once again, Dr. Jesse obtaining his PhD in mathematics, and his wife graduating in psychiatry. His violent attacks persisted, and they eventually decided to separate for her safety, though Dr. Jesse continued to love her passionately, believing they would one day reunite. He took a sabbatical after the separation and began talk therapy with a psychiatrist twice a week for four years, getting on Haldol reluctantly, only after reading the drug trials. He believes, "armed with the proper information the brain can heal itself." Dr. Jesse eventually went back to teaching at a public school in Brooklyn, NY, and started his own internet-based computer company, writing custom programs and building computer infrastructures. A firm believer in the important need for black people to learn IT skills, he began lecturing on the black college circuit. His life and career success came to a screeching halt when he found out his wife had died, his best friend and fierce supporter. He suddenly developed a stutter, and told me, "my brain said I had nothing worth saying. I shook my fist at God and man, and allowed my disease to consume me. I didn't care if I lived or died." So he started "bumming around the country, living with friends I'd made over the years, taking odd jobs, still keeping the computer company going." Back in Atlanta he started working with a nonprofit organization which trains persons with mental illnesses for jobs, then Katrina struck. He graduated the last class, and spent his money on a bus ticket to Biloxi, thinking he could strike it rich reconstructing computer networks at casinos, etc. This turned out not to be the case. Now he was out of meds and completely broke, so on a suggestion from a man for which he had repaired a computer in the Salvation Army, he came to Jackson. No one would hire him to do the very work in which he is a specialist, just odd jobs here and there repairing a computer or creating a company's website. So Dr. Jesse became one of the surprisingly many homeless men in Jackson, MS, hungry and ignored, all the while having a better education than the vast majority of the privileged who snubbed him. Discovering the location of the MS Dept. of Mental Health, Dr. Jesse walked in and asked to speak to the person in charge, and eventually got to talk to Aurora Baugh. She helped him get into a group home facility, which he is currently managing, and they have become fast friends. Everyone I know who has gotten the chance to actually talk one-on-one with Dr. Jesse will tell you what an amazing person he is, how impressive his intelligence is. And he is also a very kind-hearted man, a fatherly type, calm and reassuring. In my own struggle with mental illness I have also lost people I loved, lost the career I dreamed of, and lost all my self-esteem. I have not, however, lost housing, or I, too, would be one of the one-in-four you see and ignore every day. When you look into Dr. Jesse's face, what stares back at you, after the years of schizophrenia and its torturous hallucinations, violence-inducing delusions (remember the Asians and his hands around his wife's throat at night,) poverty and homelessness, is not what you expect the face of a PhD in mathematics to look like. But it is, indeed, the face of brilliance and determination, the face of a man who fights the stigma of mental illness every day by getting back up, dusting himself off, and trying again. And I am very proud to call him my friend.

Maxine's regrets


Kitty: "I've got you now, Maxine! Always torturing me with disgusting, dry cat kibble while you indulge in tuna casserole right in my face. We'll see how YOU like using a filthy, clumpy litter box, and from now on you can sleep on the foot of the bed with no pillow and smell my stinky feet! Ha! No more hairballs!"

Maxine: "Oh dear, I should have never ordered that magic cat nip Kitty wanted. It was so easy since she'd already filled in the order form, I just had to send $5 for the potent powder! This must be what they meant when they said, "just like Freaky Friday.......Freaky Feline Friday, starring Maxine and Kitty. From now on I have to LICK where it itches?"

Monday, May 26, 2008

Sorry it's been so long

For the past 3 days I've been catching up on my sleep after mentoring a Peer to Peer class in Newton, MS, which is why I haven't posted. When I don't post something every day I have a feeling of loss, like an opportunity lost, as well as a bit of failure mixed in to top it all off. But this blog has become so close to my heart that I don't want my natural tendency to judge myself too harshly to overshadow that positivity I've gained from sharing my opinions! So I forgive myself for not posting in quite a few days, and will go easy on myself in the future when I need some time to let my mind relax when it doesn't feel quite like focusing on an opinion, etc. I tend to isolate myself for a couple of days after any significant sleep loss, but this isn't a sign of weakness or a warning sign for my illness. Quite the opposite, it is a coping mechanism that allows me to focus my energies on myself, reflect on what I've just experienced, and just get some unlimited sleep without a red-light-numbered alarm clock taunting me in the middle of the night, and waking me with a start while my newly-awakened mind throbs with its unnatural and damn-near offensive honking. This Peer to Peer was a pleasure, and I met some cool and interesting people with amazing stories of their own. It's the stories of my peers with mental illnesses that draw me in and enthrawl me, whether it be in a support group, Peer to Peer, or just hanging out with a friend. We have all been around the block, so to speak, some of us more than others, and we all have mind-boggling stories to share with whomever we trust to listen without judgement. Listening to these stories from people with histories so like my own often makes me laugh with understanding and acknowledgement, realizing experiences which I thought to be limited to myself are not just mine and mine alone. With that comes a sense of belonging and relief, and I see that, relatively speaking, I AM NORMAL! HA! Though I know a lady who proclaims, "Normal is just a setting on a dryer," and I'm inclined to agree.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Evening opposites




Tonight I saw two of the most opposing creatures that, in my eyes, were equally beautiful. Mom called me into the backyard to take a look at a baby bunny hiding under one of the flower pots, and on Baggins' nightly walk I came across this beautiful slug on the sidewalk. As soon as I got home I grabbed my camera and ran back halfway around the neighborhood to get a couple of shots of the shrinking, slimy, but intricately decorated, antenna-eyed slug. And as I was squatting on the sidewalk in front of someone's house, I realized that it is things like this that make me odd, b/c most 33 year old women don't do such things. And then I remembered why I'm cool with it- b/c when people expect you to be odd you can do pretty much anything and no one is surprised! It works out nicely, really! But I can't escape the metaphor of the bunny and slug, the fast and the slow, the beautiful and the ugly. It's all in the eye of the beholder, because I truly cannot make a distinction between the furry, doe-eyed rabbit's beauty and the slick, moist, striped slug's. Maybe it's just me....

Friday, May 16, 2008

Miracle

Webster's dictionary defines "miracle" as "a marvel ("a wonder, something very astonishing",) a supernatural ("being above or beyond nature") event." A marvel or supernatural event! I read an article in a magazine recently given to me by a man whom I respect very much, and the topic was the relatively new idea of recovery from mental illness. There is a huge consumer movement in this country, consumers of mental health services, and I am a part of it. We are no longer willing to be mistreated, ignored, joked about and not taken seriously. Until just less than one year ago I was unaware of this snowballing movement, and unaware of the concept of recovery from mental illness. This recovery idea is elusive and misunderstood, and not clearly defined by either consumer or mental health professional, such as a psychiatrist or psychologist. There is no universally accepted, definitive answer or model for recovery, just the budding, exciting proof of resilience within the world of consumers, who are taking a stand and demanding to be listened to, as well as the professionals who believe in our future. Of course, until there is a plan, a written and popularly understood, mapped out and researched model of what exactly recovery means to the mental health world, it is perhaps impossible to strive for. If no one can agree and understand exactly what recovery is, how can one strive for it and achieve it? In the ten years I've been diagnosed with Bipolar I disorder, I've never been urged to believe I could recover, just perhaps be as comfortable as possible. Four years ago my illness reached its pinnacle, its terrifying head, and I was not functioning in even the slightest way. The psychosis I had feared and dreaded all my life, the sort that is accompanied by auditory and visual hallucinations and horrifying delusions, the king of them all, had landed firmly in my brain and just insisted upon staying there and making a cozy spot in which to build an eternal home. My depressions and manias were so staggering and destructive, the need to end my life so deep, that I lost every single thing I had in this world, simply because I had lost the ability to be human and recognize myself. After relieving myself of the unattainable duty of working by getting on disability, changing my geography and living situation entirely, getting and staying on a regimen of medications that relieved my symptoms and let me relax, I began the four-year migration from insanity to sanity, from non-functioning to functioning. Slowly I remembered who I was, slowly my personality and sense of humor returned, slowly my attention span was lenthened, and slowly I craved social interaction and was ready to step out of the shadows. This is when, as I said was less than a year ago, I joined NAMI and attended the MS Leadership Academy. I'm still unsure about the concept of recovery, I mean, am I recovered? Not fully, if you consider the determining factor to be full-time employment, but again- there is no recovery model that lays out what it means to recover from mental illness. But I do have part-time employment, and mentor a class, as well as help with the MS Leadership Academy. Then there's the matter of this little blog, the outlet for me to share with whomever is reading my opinions (which are many) and feelings about whatever I choose! It's part of how I contribute to the consumer movement, how I put my best foot forward to tell the world that I am not ashamed of my illness or my life. Yes, mental illness has snatched some precious things from my hands, but it has taught me compassion, tenacity and strength that I am proud to live with every day, and I know that nothing can break me. This makes for a woman ready and willing to take up the cause of my peers and stand up for our rights as people living with serious mental illness. And the miracle is that after living a lifetime with mental illness, I know how to appreciate my happiness when I hang out with a new friend, or wake up realizing I can't wait to participate in my own life.

Guess who!

Draco Malfoy, Harry Potter's nemesis at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, is a budding musician! Who knew?! Okay, so his real name is Tom Felton (I wonder if he likes Draco Malfoy better, b/c I certainly do!) and his real passion in life is fishing. But I'd like to picture him as Malfoy, arrogantly waving his wand around, inevitably losing to Harry's natural talents, then later going to some private room and strumming the guitar while singing these silly little numbers. It's so much more fun than listening to Tom Felton, Fishery Management major in some British university (seriously). Oh well, I'll use my imagination!

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Big ole hypocrite (video could be offensive)

If there's one thing I cannot deal with, cannot swallow, and cannot accept, it's hypocrisy. Around a certain age a person is endowed with the sudden and unexplained gift of discerning hypocrisy. Luckily or unluckily, I had a wealth of material to choose from, a virtual hypocritical playground to romp around on, as I was raised very religious and practically lived at church. This provided me with enough practice to hone my hypocrite-detecting skills down to an art, and the first time I laid eyes, and ESPECIALLY ears on Bill O'Reilly, I knew I'd found me a good one! This man has criticized and demoralized nearly every person, on his show or not, who looks differently than him, sounds differently than him, acts differently than him, and thinks differently than him. I have seen clips of his shows where he is downright verbally abusive, name-calling and picking apart without mercy those who are guests of his own show, just to impress and amuse the millions of viewers he has in mostly red states, but that's just an assumption. He insists he is of high moral virtue, much higher than you, might I add, even though he's been accused of sexual harrassment and accused a teenaged victim of sexual abuse of enjoying it. So for all his lofty standards, we've come across a clip of him at his former show, caught on tape ripping apart an intern, and cussing like the man he insists he is not. This is definately NSFW! Thanks Kirbi!

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Shout out to Noemi

Sometimes when you love someone you find yourself taking them for granted, especially when you know the relationship is tucked safely away in a special place- a place reserved for those particularly solid friendships that live happily on their own, requiring little effort and toil to keep them healthy and thriving. It's magical to know my friend Noemi is always there, but I have been very neglectful lately, and I need to say, "Hey, Little Miss Doo Doo Curl! I miss you!!" For the short time we're here on this spinning sphere, we encounter thousands and thousands of people, ending up tied in love and trust and respect with a relative few. Most of those relationships are by default, we're simply born into them, and we call those "family." But sometimes the planets line up and strange occurrences take place which change people forever, and my random and unbelievable encounter with Noemi literally changed my life and helped shape me into who I am today. What are the chances of meeting an adorable, dimple-cheeked, curly-headed Spanish girl in the blazing, dog-days-of-summer, MS sun, in the bleachers of the football field, during a bomb threat the first day of your senior year of high school, which happens to be situated in a tiny town barely on the map?! Fairly low, I'm certain. From the moment I met her, I was fascinated by her new and amazing perspective on everything, turning the stale and bland into fresh and delicious! Never one to shy away from a discussion of any kind, always with an opinion, an intelligent opinion none the less, she and I turned over every rock with our words. Noemi taught me, an unexposed, sheltered girl from MS, the simplest, but most important lesson of my life: there is a world out there that I've never seen! There are people out there living their lives, and I must witness it! That summer I visited her world for the first time, and I fell in love with Spain immediately. She wasn't the only opinionated Spaniard, I found that out pretty quickly, and her family treated me as if I was one of them. Through the years, as life rolled along and I rode its waves, we maintained our friendship, seeing each other every now and again. But for the past 3 years I've been lucky enough to spend some time there with her and her family, and even though we don't look quite the same as we did back in 1992 when we met, we still have our bond. Noemi is easily one of the most interesting people I know, a melting pot on her own, having lived and studied in many countries and speaking many languages, with an opinion on everything, a keen observation ready at all times. She has shown me many beautiful and perfect places that I would have never seen without her, and she has been there for me when others closer to me have not. Because I have only a small window of time to call her (appropriate time!,) it seems I just can't make it line up lately! But tonight when I saw on perezhilton a music video of Willy Nelson and a new country singer from Norway, of all places, I had a rush of emotion come over me, and I missed my friend. She loves country music better than any American I know, and this Norwegian guy, cowboy hat on his head while singing a duet with Willy Nelson, reminded me of her uniqueness and ability to make me smile, which reminded me what friendship is really about. At least 5,000 miles separate us, but when I close my eyes she's right here, right where I need her.
Here is the link to that music video- it is beautiful, the guy sings like an angel, check it out:

Monday, May 12, 2008

"50% Warrior, 50% Lover"

Walt Disney has outdone itself this time! "Beverly Hills Chihuahua" is coming soon to a theater near you, and it's going to be like attack of the taco bell dog x 10,000! This trailor is SO PERFECTLY OVER THE TOP and bizarre, just like you've come to expect from Disney, and it's going to be a cult favorite, I feel it. Ancient Aztec ruins swarmed by tiny, rat-sized dogs performing song and dance routines without shame. The whole freakin' country is in an uproar about the border-crossing situation, and Disney (who caters to middle-American, cookie-cutter families willing to spend their savings to wait hours in line in blistering heat to ride a 5 minute round and round in a tea cup) spends millions to deliver a film in which, if you close your eyes, by the accents you'd swear you were in your local Mexican restaurant sucking down margaritas and burning up your lips eating salsa chock full of jalapenos and possibly laced with a secret Mexican radioactive substance! But I'm a sucker for an anthropomorphic Disney dog movie...remember the original black and white "Shaggy Dog?" Loved it! Thanks Disney, I think I'll wait for the DVD, but there can never be too many talking, dancing, singing and prancing dog movies!

Most popular man on the "other side"


Irvine Robbins, ice cream guru and co-founder of Baskin-Robbins has passed away. He is responsible for this country's first and largest ice cream empire, and their deliciously famous "31 Flavors." This man lived to be 90 years old! From these facts can we make a fair and correct assumption that ice cream will prolong your life and assure you a timely demise following decades of enjoying your favorite frozen confection? They say you can't take it with you, but aren't they talking about the money? Surely you can take the secret recipes for the 31 flavors stored securely in your old noggin after a lifetime of cooking up the good stuff, and share it with whomever you meet when you get there, wherever that is. I hope so, because when I get there I'm going straight for the Rs in the directory, and I plan to get the inside scoop (bad pun) on how they get that peanut butter to maintain its integrity as it lives and peacefully coexists in the creamy, melty chocolate ice cream. My favorite! Rest in peace Mr. Robbins!

Putting High Times out of business


DAILY, on the Internet I come across offensive and depraved stories of citizens of the world behaving in ways that I'd love to believe does not come naturally for most humans. But some people, for one reason or another, whether it be a lack of guidance in childhood or a predetermined defect in their character live among us with a complete lack of respect for themselves and the rest of us. Matthew Gonzalez and Kevin Jones, according to the Houston Chronicle, have been charged with a misdemeanor offense of abuse of a corpse, along with an unnamed juvenile. These 3 less-than-stellar-examples-of-humanitarians chose on March 15th, to dig up a man's grave in Humble cemetery in Harris County, TX, decapitate the head, and use it as a bong to smoke pot. Now I'm not an easy one to shock, but......

Saturday, May 10, 2008

MS Leadership Academy

Serenity is the setting, positive the atmosphere, energetic the mood, and united the front of this season's MS Leadership Academy. As a member of the staff, my experience has been that of an observer, and what I've seen and felt has been astounding. To my left is a table-full of men, black and white, tied together by mental illness, budding friendship, and Spades! Held at the Episcopal retreat, the Gray Center, it's easy to lose yourself in its bucolic beauty and restful rural placement overlooking a lovely lake, complete with turtle-covered logs and goose families. When I leave here tomorrow, I'll do so armed with a renewed sense of pride in my position as a survivor living with mental illness, and I'll be in good company.
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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

We're all in this together



I received this story via email today from KK, and was so happy with its obvious truth and the way it is told that I had to share it!


"A mouse looked through the crack in the wall to see the farmer and his wife open a package. "What food might this contain?" the mouse wondered, and was devastated to discover it was a mousetrap. Retreating to the farmyard, the mouse proclaimed the warning: "There is a mousetrap in the house! There is a mousetrap in the house!" The chicken clucked and scratched, raised her head and said, "Mr. Mouse, I can tell this is a grave concern to you, but it is of no consequence to me. I cannot be bothered by it." The mouse turned to the pig and told him, "There is a mousetrap in the house! There is a mousetrap in the house!" The pig sympathized, but said, "I am so very sorry, Mr. Mouse, but there is nothing I can do about it but pray. Be assured you are in my prayers." The mouse turned to the cow and said, "There is a mousetrap in the house! There is a mousetrap in the house!" The cow said, "Wow, Mr. Mouse, I'm sorry for you, but it's no skin off my nose." So the mouse returned to the house, head down and dejected, to face the farmer's mousetrap alone. That very night a sound was heard throughout the house, like the sound of a mousetrap catching its prey. The farmer's wife rushed to see what was caught. In the darkness, she did not see it was a venomous snake whose tail the trap had caught. The snake bit the farmer's wife. The farmer rushed her to the hospital, and she returned home with a fever. Everyone knows you treat a fever with fresh chicken soup, so the farmer took his hatchet to the farmyard for the soup's main ingredient. But his wife's sickness continued, so friends and neighbors came to sit with her around the clock. To feed them, the farmer butchered the pig. The farmer's wife did not get well; she died. So many people came for her funeral, the farmer had the cow slaughtered to provide enough meat for all of them. The mouse looked upon it all from his crack in the wall with great sadness. So the next time you hear someone is facing a problem and think it doesn't concern you, remember...when one of us is threatened, we are all at risk."

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Toughest chick on the block!


Meet Xochitl Parra, toughest chick ever. The 17 year old hid her pregnancy from her family, and while alone in her home she gave birth to 8lb. 3oz. son, Alejandro, in the shower. Since the phone was disconnected she was unable to call 911, so she walked 4 blocks searching for help with the baby still attached by umbilical cord! I hope little Alejandro gets some of her spunk.

Monday, May 5, 2008

"Nothing exceeds like excess!"


Okay, I'll be the first to admit I love excess as much or more as the next person, but come on......fried macaroni and cheese? When Michelle Pfieffer said in Scarface, "nothing exceeds like excess!," she was not only giving me material for a lifetime of quotes in moments just like these, she was summing up the American lifestyle in only four words! Living the high life as the wife of a self-made millionaire Cuban immigrant, she correctly expressed the sentiment by which we live, now more than ever. Three of our country's successful restaurant chains: Sonic Drive-In, The Cheesecake Factory, and TGI Fridays all have fried macaroni and cheese balls on their menus! Mac and cheese is an American favorite, from coast to coast, sea to shining sea, you can order up a side with your Blue Plate Special, right next to your fried chicken or pot roast. Or you can go to your favorite supermarket and pluck any number of boxed varieties off the shelf, ready in your kitchen in a jiffy, and enjoy the gooey concoction at home. I've never witnessed a person turn their nose up at cheesy sauce and elbow macaroni living together in perfect harmony, and I've never heard one complaint as to it being unfulfilling in its original form. Who, then, decided to take the already over-the-top caloric atom bomb and morph it into an even more dangerous dish, one that justifiably should be accompanied by a warning label: "Owners and proprietors will not be held responsible for money or time lost due to inevitable triple bypass surgery following your meal." How could we be so discontent and bored as to have nothing better to do than rebel against Mom's advice and play with our food, turning it into an unrecognizable ball of crust that eerily resembles every other item on the appetizer menu? Or maybe I'm being too harsh, maybe I should look at it like this: Americans are inventive, creative people, competitive and upwardly mobile in every way. Maybe this is why we cannot leave well enough alone, but if we don't cut out some of the excess in our diets, our mobility will rely on our super-sized scooters! But it's fun to live in a land where life is so good and plenty that our toughest choice is the fried mac and cheese balls or the fried cheese sticks. Don't forget the dipping sauce!
Here is the recipe for Fried Mac and Cheese is you have the inclination-
FRIED MACARONI AND CHEESE BALLS 1 pound elbow macaroni 2 tablespoons unsalted butter 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 2 cups milk, warmed, plus 2 tablespoons for egg wash 1 pound grated Cheddar 1 pound grated smoked Gouda Salt and freshly ground black pepper 2 large eggs 3 cups seasoned bread crumbs Vegetable oil, for frying Marinara or Alfredo sauce, to serveCook the macaroni according to package instructions. Drain and rinse with cold water to stop the cooking. Drain again and set aside. In a saucepan, melt the butter over medium heat. Sprinkle the flour into the butter and stir it with a whisk. Cook for 2 minutes. Whisk the warmed milk into the flour mixture, working out any lumps. Cook until the sauce thickens, about 2 minutes. Remove from the heat, add the cheeses, and stir until melted and smooth; season with salt and pepper. Fold the cheese sauce into macaroni. Pour the mac and cheese into a shallow pan and refrigerate until cold, at least 2 hours. Shape the cold mac and cheese into meatball-sized balls and place them onto a waxed paper-lined tray. Freeze the balls overnight. Beat the eggs and 2 tablespoons milk together to form an egg wash and pour it into a shallow bowl. Put the bread crumbs into another shallow bowl. Remove the mac and cheese balls from the freezer. Dip the frozen balls into the egg wash then into the bread crumbs. Put the balls back into the freezer until you are ready to fry. Heat the oil in a deep-fat fryer to 350 degrees F. Fry the mac and cheese balls until they are golden brown and center is hot, about 5 minutes. Serve hot with your favorite marinara or Alfredo sauce or combination or both for dipping.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Jalapenos anyone?

Spicy much? Barrel full of mouth sores and watery eyes, Madison must have a much lower pepper demand! Buy in bulk, it's the (latin?) American way!
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