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RE: The Guinea-Pig Journal. No.1.

in #guinea-pigs5 years ago

Scientists discover that pigs cope better with their own poor self-image by imagining themselves as a delious sandwich.

Added the I and see in order to correct the spelling of delicious. Funny how our (first typed hour here) minds just fill in the blanks when their are actual letters missing.

Hours because it really does come down to each and every on what we ingest.....

Again, thanks for your guidance.

But, so difficult to pretend I can't get out of the cage, things might be worse (okay, I know those aren't true), stop eating the fatty, like you write, those are the familiar goods I am used to.

Please pray for me, or I in turn hear I ought to pray myself.

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And, I happened to catch (probably owing to it being Big Down-Load Day) there was also a u missing in the first line!
The edits have been made in accordance with the errors pointed out by the I's which fill in what is missing.
In trust of these eyes, we pray.

Exactly the deletions I needed for just a slight movement in the circle in order to see from a different vantage point--that is my point, even though one I've closed my eyes to. Delious is as much like delirious as much as delicious. Align with I see (c) or I are (r).....In each moment a choice.

..... to err is human, to read in between the letters divine....

Yes :)

Must be those late night write-ups getting sloppy when their, there, are actual letters misplaced in every on, one. The brain is indeed good at lovingly filling in the blanks where our fingers have failed us, or a when composer deliberately left out a note to engage the listener.

Yes, exactly, to see, to hear!

Love having a precise reader amongst my followers! There simply is no margin for error in this Stem platform. One careless cut with the scalpel pen and you'll end up as mute as a potato or a cauliflower, or pick any vegetable of your own liking, why not, since we are working in a totally free-speech environment.

Is Stem another engaging absence of note?

Notee by all means, I'd say.