Anything and everything!

RSS Feed
    1. D
    2. D
    3. D
    4. D
    5. D
    6. D

      To be perfectly honest they are all as bad as eachother. None of them are inspiring but Cameron is a "pretty boy" like Blair was, maybe him? Maybe because his first name is David! Lets go with that!

    7. D
    8. D

      No.

      He cheated to get into office and he was an idiot in it. Enough said.

    9. D

      Yes, saw one of his rallies in Florida too :)

    10. D
    11. D
    12. D

      I guess you are, if I were you I would use google or go to the doctor, google is probably more reliable

    13. D
    14. D

      Itching, also known as pruritus, starts with some kind of external stimuli, including bugs, dust, clothing fibers and hair. Like tickling, itching is a built-in defense mechanism that alerts your body to the potential of being harmed. In this case, it might be the potential of being bit by a bug.

      When the stimuli lands on your skin, it may not bother you at first, but soon it will begin to rub back and forth across your skin. Once the hair or dust scratches your skin's surface layer, receptors in the dermis of the skin will become irritated. In a split second, these receptors send a signal through fibers in the skin to your spinal cord and then up to the cerebral cortex in your brain.

      The same fibers that send itching signals are also used to send pain signals to the brain, which once led some scientists to believe that itching was a form of light pain. That notion has since been dispelled by research, which showed that pain and itching elicit opposite responses. Pain causes us to withdraw and itching causes us to scratch.

      As soon as we feel an itch, our first natural response is to scratch the spot of the itch with our fingernails. The reason for this response is simple -- we want to remove the irritant as soon as possible. Once you've scratched the area of irritation, you are likely to feel some relief. When your brain realizes that you've scratched away the irritant, the signal being sent to your brain that you have an itch is interrupted and therefore no longer recognized by the brain.


      That's why. :)

    15. D
    16. D
    17. D
    18. D
    19. D

      I personally don't mind the USA except I think some areas and people in it are idiotic, it is a great nation as a whole. Erm, I'd say quite alot of us like USA just because of Florida and California lol

    20. D
friends
smiles
1 all-time

D’s Bio

I'm a guy, 19.

Who D responded to

  • hyperactivbliss
  • Liam Sheasby
  • Marko
  • Hannah
  • sair
  • Taylor
  • Ro
  • cydoniababy
  • Natasha
See all »