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Amy's in the race!


FACT

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I like his stand up, but the rest is rubbish.

Same and thought his Radio 6 show was very funny, his six form politics are cringy but they're an act, he's an entertainer not a politician. I enjoy the fact that the snobs can't see past the hair, heh.

 

Can't see past the hair to see the idiot?

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Sorry, I dissociated there for a bit.

In psychology, the term dissociation describes a wide array of experiences from mild detachment from immediate surroundings to more severe detachment from physical and emotional experience. The major characteristic of all dissociative phenomena involves a detachment from reality, rather than a loss of reality as in psychosis.[1][2][3][4] Dissociative experiences are further characterized by the varied maladaptive mental constructions of an individual's natural imaginative capacity.[citation needed]

Dissociation is commonly displayed on a continuum.[5] In mild cases, dissociation can be regarded as a coping mechanism or defense mechanisms in seeking to master, minimize or tolerate stress – including boredom or conflict.[6][7][8] At the nonpathological end of the continuum, dissociation describes common events such as daydreaming while driving a vehicle. Further along the continuum are non-pathological altered states of consciousness.[5][9][10]

More pathological dissociation involves dissociative disorders, including dissociative fugue and depersonalization disorder with or without alterations in personal identity or sense of self. These alterations can include: a sense that self or the world is unreal (depersonalization and derealization); a loss of memory (amnesia); forgetting identity or assuming a new self (fugue); and fragmentation of identity or self into separate streams of consciousness (dissociative identity disorder, formerly termed multiple personality disorder) and complex post-traumatic stress disorder.[11][12]

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sorry

/ˈsɒri/

adjective

adjective: sorry; comparative adjective: sorrier; superlative adjective: sorriest

1.

feeling sad or distressed through sympathy with someone else's misfortune.

"I was sorry to hear about what happened to your family"

 

synonyms:

sad, unhappy, sorrowful, distressed, upset, depressed, downcast, miserable, downhearted, disheartened, dejected, down, despondent, despairing, disconsolate, broken-hearted, heartbroken, inconsolable, grief-stricken More

"I was sorry to hear about his accident"

full of pity, sympathetic, pitying, compassionate, moved, commiserative, consoling, empathetic, caring, concerned, understanding

"he couldn't help feeling sorry for her"

 

antonyms:

glad, unsympathetic

 

filled with compassion for.

"I felt sorry for the poor boys working for him"

 

2.

feeling regret or penitence.

"he said he was sorry he had upset me"

 

synonyms:

regretful, remorseful, contrite, repentant, rueful, penitent, conscience-stricken, apologetic, abject, guilty, guilt-ridden, self-reproachful, bad, ashamed, shamefaced, sheepish, in sackcloth and ashes, afraid;

rarecompunctious

"I'm sorry if I was a bit brusque"

 

antonyms:

unrepentant

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Have you noticed that Amy has totally vanished from her own thread?

Ok - let's bring her back with a bang....there's a poster for her in a little cafe in Strand Street. That's it.

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