
The Number 23, why is it so important?
who knows??.................my number 22 goes back to an old school game........we played it in class when i was about 8.................
perhaps it's always been his number....perhaps he doesn't even have a special number........ or perhaps it's his numerology number...............but does it really matter???
fluffy
perhaps it's always been his number....perhaps he doesn't even have a special number........ or perhaps it's his numerology number...............but does it really matter???

fluffy

Fluffy
I think he said it was. Plus he uses this no. for his own personal use(Don't ask) and it is his favorite part of the bibleHow do you guys know that his favorite number is 23? Does anybody know why?
Last edited by cotton on Fri Sep 23, 2005 5:07 pm, edited 2 times in total.
hmmmmm...............i don't think he'll turn into a mad killer though.................it depends how dark it is..............i hope it's classy and not some slasher thriller.............i hope it does mess with our minds........and i hope it blows the Da Vinci Code out of the pond!!..........lol..........they will have similiar release schedules i'd imagine..........lol.........'go Jim'.......make Tom Hanks sweat!!!.........
fluffy

fluffy

Fluffy
- Cheryl Anna
- Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
- Posts: 522
- Joined: Wed Jun 25, 2003 6:58 pm
- Location: Glendora, California
Sometimes, I feel that I am stuck at the number 23.
I went to see the neurologist when I was 23. I just had had a C.T. scan (x-ray of the brain)of my brain to prove to everyone, besides me-the former horse back rider and the dodge ball champion of the 5th grade, that I was not becoming handicapped. I was sure that my mild staggering was due to stress-college, exams, being 23.
The neurologist came into the room and read my C.T. scan. "Cheryl, your Cerebellum is smaller than a healthy persons. Do you have a relative with Cerebellar Degeneration?"
I answered yes.
The doctor continued, "I'm sorry, but you have a progressive degeneration of the Cerebellum. There is no cure. You will become more handicapped as you get older.
I went to see the neurologist when I was 23. I just had had a C.T. scan (x-ray of the brain)of my brain to prove to everyone, besides me-the former horse back rider and the dodge ball champion of the 5th grade, that I was not becoming handicapped. I was sure that my mild staggering was due to stress-college, exams, being 23.
The neurologist came into the room and read my C.T. scan. "Cheryl, your Cerebellum is smaller than a healthy persons. Do you have a relative with Cerebellar Degeneration?"
I answered yes.
The doctor continued, "I'm sorry, but you have a progressive degeneration of the Cerebellum. There is no cure. You will become more handicapped as you get older.