He also has a Ph.D. in pain!ivstudios wrote:I didn't know they had PH.Ds specifically for evil.
Congrats, Lego! At some point I will have to come pay you a visit in Toronto and celebrate belatedly.

He also has a Ph.D. in pain!ivstudios wrote:I didn't know they had PH.Ds specifically for evil.
That's terrible =(legostargalactica wrote:Also on an even sadder note, it appears that a student from work that i've interacted with quite a bit died this week.
You're moving. Why can't you put them all in a box, and move them? Are legos illegal in Canada? I can't imagine if you can pack your clothing in a box, why you can't pack your legos in a box. Hell, why can't you just make a box out of your legos for that matter, and move that? You're telling us that you cannot move a large number of tiny, lightweight plastic objects that by their very design are made to fit closely compacted into containers? It's not like Amanda has lots of legos so really you're getting rid of half of them... but I bet she has silverware. Ditch your silverware, and take the dratted legos.legostargalactica wrote:it looks like i'm probably going to have to give up a lot of things temporarily when i move to toronto, including a large portion of the legos i have here, sure they're go to my parent's place and i'll get them back later, but i just can't take all of them with me and it is sad.
Well, that does indeed suck. Sorry to hear it.legostargalactica wrote:Also on an even sadder note, it appears that a student from work that i've interacted with quite a bit died this week.
you are dramatically underestimating how many legos i actually have. the boxes they're in right now, actually take up a decent amount of space and then there's the boxes full of stuff that's already built, things i guess i could break down, but part of the inherent problem is the level of organization i have now, everything is sorted out so i'm not just digging through a giant bin of mixed up legos, with the amount I have that's just not practical, but it may have to be part of the solution. And amanda does have legos, not nearly as many but she does have a big bin of them.rkolter wrote:You're moving. Why can't you put them all in a box, and move them? Are legos illegal in Canada? I can't imagine if you can pack your clothing in a box, why you can't pack your legos in a box. Hell, why can't you just make a box out of your legos for that matter, and move that? You're telling us that you cannot move a large number of tiny, lightweight plastic objects that by their very design are made to fit closely compacted into containers? It's not like Amanda has lots of legos so really you're getting rid of half of them... but I bet she has silverware. Ditch your silverware, and take the dratted legos.legostargalactica wrote:it looks like i'm probably going to have to give up a lot of things temporarily when i move to toronto, including a large portion of the legos i have here, sure they're go to my parent's place and i'll get them back later, but i just can't take all of them with me and it is sad.![]()
i have to get my hair to change to blonde before i can do that.Spriteville wrote:A little late on this, but congrats Lego! But where do you go from here? SUPER PhD?