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Why is Heatherrae banned?

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foreigngirl said:
nobody minds you posting. Its fun at the begining and than it starts being same old same old. Then you just skim through the threads and say - jeez, nothing interesting :lmao:
Well then, I'll have to try and keep it interesting... :)
 
foreigngirl said:
omg, 300 posts and joined March 2007 :lmao: I thought I was bad my first month
lol you were bad
hahaha
wait, so was i :worried:
 
Big Rick Rock said:
She was suspended for 3 days by a moderator...

She got a little out of hand... She'll be out for a couple of days and come back sweeter than ever.


(


dang, i leave for 3 hours to get the oil changed and come back to this.. what is the world coming too???
 
I, God, made it happen and I apologize to all that who are upset.
You see, Stilleto is a wonderful child of my creation and I sent an instruction, the likes of which she did not know the means since I work in mysterious ways. That would help save HeatherRae's life.
You see, if not for the intervention of my lovely child Stilleto, Heatherrae would have died this weekend from a DVT. That is a blood clot in the deep vein system of the leg by sitting too long at the computer. Then that loosens and travels through the right heart and into the lungs causing a pulmonary embolism and death.
You see, Heatherrae from my God's eye view just sits like a motherhen at EF all day long, never stretching her legs or getting that bloodflow moving like the normal humanbeing does.
This was to culminate in her death this weekend, but it happened to show up as a blip on my godscreen as I was taking care of Blueeta and I quickly sorted it out.
Now she is out walking as we speak, moving her legs for the first time in a weeks on a trip longer from the bed to the computer which became her longest daily journey.
She will survive the weekend, but will you?

OFFICE workers are more at risk of developing deep vein thrombosis (DVT) than passengers on long-distance flights, startling new research says.
Sitting immobile at a desk for hours at a time will be revealed as a major risk factor for so-called "economy-class syndrome".

A study to be presented at the annual conference of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand later this month has found prolonged immobility at work is the most common factor shared by DVT patients.

Researchers found one in three people attending an outpatient clinic reported sitting for eight hours or longer before suffering a venous thromboembolism, while only one in five had travelled on a long-haul flight.

The worst-affected were managers, IT workers and taxi drivers, according to the Medical Research Institute in Wellington, New Zealand. Latest figures show Australians work among the longest hours in the world, with many spending more than 50 hours a week at their desk and almost a third regularly working on weekends.

DVT is the formation of a blood clot in a deep vein, most commonly in the legs, which may cause death if untreated.

Symptoms include pain, swelling, redness and dilated surface veins.

Immobility from sickness or post-surgery, taking the oral contraceptive pill, obesity and air travel are among other risk factors.

DVT occurs in about one in every 1000 people a year, with a one to five per cent fatality rate.

Dr Christopher Ward, of the department of haemotology at Sydney's Royal North Shore Hospital, said he had encountered cases of DVT among IT workers who did "crazy hours".

"Prolonged immobilisation is not good for you," he said.

But Dr Ward emphasised that most workers would not get DVT and even those who did would be unlikely to die from it.
 
God__ said:
I, God, made it happen and I apologize to all that who are upset.
You see, Stilleto is a wonderful child of my creation and I sent an instruction, the likes of which she did not know the means since I work in mysterious ways. That would help save HeatherRae's life.
You see, if not for the intervention of my lovely child Stilleto, Heatherrae would have died this weekend from a DVT. That is a blood clot in the deep vein system of the leg by sitting too long at the computer. Then that loosens and travels through the right heart and into the lungs causing a pulmonary embolism and death.
You see, Heatherrae from my God's eye view just sits like a motherhen at EF all day long, never stretching her legs or getting that bloodflow moving like the normal humanbeing does.
This was to culminate in her death this weekend, but it happened to show up as a blip on my godscreen as I was taking care of Blueeta and I quickly sorted it out.
Now she is out walking as we speak, moving her legs for the first time in a weeks on a trip longer from the bed to the computer which became her longest daily journey.
She will survive the weekend, but will you?

OFFICE workers are more at risk of developing deep vein thrombosis (DVT) than passengers on long-distance flights, startling new research says.
Sitting immobile at a desk for hours at a time will be revealed as a major risk factor for so-called "economy-class syndrome".

A study to be presented at the annual conference of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand later this month has found prolonged immobility at work is the most common factor shared by DVT patients.

Researchers found one in three people attending an outpatient clinic reported sitting for eight hours or longer before suffering a venous thromboembolism, while only one in five had travelled on a long-haul flight.

The worst-affected were managers, IT workers and taxi drivers, according to the Medical Research Institute in Wellington, New Zealand. Latest figures show Australians work among the longest hours in the world, with many spending more than 50 hours a week at their desk and almost a third regularly working on weekends.

DVT is the formation of a blood clot in a deep vein, most commonly in the legs, which may cause death if untreated.

Symptoms include pain, swelling, redness and dilated surface veins.

Immobility from sickness or post-surgery, taking the oral contraceptive pill, obesity and air travel are among other risk factors.

DVT occurs in about one in every 1000 people a year, with a one to five per cent fatality rate.

Dr Christopher Ward, of the department of haemotology at Sydney's Royal North Shore Hospital, said he had encountered cases of DVT among IT workers who did "crazy hours".

"Prolonged immobilisation is not good for you," he said.

But Dr Ward emphasised that most workers would not get DVT and even those who did would be unlikely to die from it.
HAHAHAHAH! Dude, best POSTER EVER!!!!!!!!
 
InquisitivePsyche said:
In all seriousness... why was she banned? I haven't been on here long but she seems like a cool girl. ?

she had a warning, and replied back by calling me an ass.
the constant name calling (of me, ortiz, and anyone else that was tired of the 300 posts a day) and continuing to post about some drama that should have been dropped.
I didn't want to give her a timeout, but if a moderator's request is replied to with yet another name and is the warning is ignored, how can we moderate?

Heather was alright when she first joined. hopefully she'll come back as that heather, and not the one we've been seeing for the past few weeks.

thats the last i'll say about that.
 
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