Wayne3100 wrote:
First question that popped up in my head was "What's this about?"
But that's probably not my business, so I'll just agree with Winter's answer instead of asking :3
^
+rep me and you'll get good karma, wich means you won't be reincarnated into a rock! Isn't that awesome?
JEFFY40HANDS wrote:
But yes this idea has been discussed more than Pam Anderson's tits in a plastic surgeons office.
jhoijhoi wrote:
... should you try to mend burnt bridges?
Only if you are an engineer.
Honestly - I doubt if this was the answer you are looking for, I just have trouble understanding your question :p
DuffTime wrote:
ok ok plz carry me omg
i was only waiting for you to ask
Temzilla wrote:
Too hot to be icecream.
Luther3000 wrote:
He looks like a hair gel advert on legs
Toshabi wrote:
Icecreamy, with hair as slick and smooth as the ocean waves of Cocobana
IceCreamy wrote:
Only if you are an engineer.
Honestly - I doubt if this was the answer you are looking for, I just have trouble understanding your question :p
"Burning bridges" is a saying that means to go ahead and do something despite knowing you probably won't be able to go back.
Once a bridge is burned down you can't exactly go back across it again, if you get my meaning.
Depends on what the bridge was made out of and why you burnt it down in the first place. It reminds me of this time one of my old friends made a bridge out of toothpicks for some fair at my school. He spent hours and hours of each day working on that bridge, tediously putting each toothpick together until his masterpiece was completed. An hour before the presentation, me and my friends made mini bows and arrows out of rubber bands and bent metal spoons/forks and were using lit matches as fire arrows. The instant we saw his bridge unattended, me and my fellow make-believe native Americans sprung up from our hiding places and assaulted his bridge, burning it down to the ground. He ran back to his suffering masterpiece in tears as we trotted away, letting out a battle cry most stereotypical of Indians. My people were victorious against many pale face that day, and that black pile of singed wood was a land mark of our victory for all future generations to come. That bridge shall never be mended and for that reason alone.
jhoijhoi wrote:
Also, I think the levels of immorality in this thread are astounding. You'd really throw a child off a boat for your own luggage? Wow.
Toshabi wrote:
Depends on what the bridge was made out of and why you burnt it down in the first place. It reminds me of this time one of my old friends made a bridge out of toothpicks for some fair at my school. He spent hours and hours of each day working on that bridge, tediously putting each toothpick together until his masterpiece was completed. An hour before the presentation, me and my friends made mini bows and arrows out of rubber bands and bent metal spoons/forks and were using lit matches as fire arrows. The instant we saw his bridge unattended, me and my fellow make-believe native Americans sprung up from our hiding places and assaulted his bridge, burning it down to the ground. He ran back to his suffering masterpiece in tears as we trotted away, letting out a battle cry most stereotypical of Indians. My people were victorious against many pale face that day, and that black pile of singed wood was a land mark of our victory for all future generations to come. That bridge shall never be mended and for that reason alone.
*Claps* *Claps*
On topic, if the bridge is very burnt, you should mend it. If the bridge isn't very burnt, then you shouldn't.

Thanks to Koksei, The_Nameless_Bard,JhoiJhoi, LaCorpse, JEFFY40HANDS and myself for the signatures! I am also a certified gangster.
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