Get your colonoscopy. I’ve been dealing with colon cancer for almost 10 years now. A colonoscopy can find and remove polyps, which can PREVENT cancer. Grow up and be an adult and deal with a little discomfort for your health. I hate it when comedians and sitcoms and now comic strips contribute to the misconception that a colonoscopy is horrible experience. You know what IS horrible? Getting gutted from navel to pubes to have a chunk of your colon removed. Round after round of chemotherapy. Having diarrhea for six months instead of one day. Being sick to your stomach so much that it just becomes part of life. Having your fingers split from the chemo. Losing the feeling in your hands and feet from chemo. Losing your career because you’re too sick to work a whole day. Grow up and get a colonoscopy.
I think she’s definitely a 1959. Nicely rendered by the artist, too. https://assets.hemmings.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/1959-Cadillac-Broadmoor-Skyview-2-970×647.jpg
Remember there are about 20 years of back story for these comics. Ryan Beckwith – For a few years, he kept a bat as a pet, first Friend Bat and later Comrade Bat (bought by Shelley for him at a pet store that Esther de Groot worked for, after Friend Bat died). http://tackleford.wikia.com/wiki/Ryan_Beckwith
What I find amusing about this partisan silliness is how quickly the devotees of both sides step up to spout their ideological rhetoric. Neither party has shown itself as being capable of running the country, but they sure succeed at indoctrination.
Get your colonoscopy. I’ve been dealing with colon cancer for almost 10 years now. A colonoscopy can find and remove polyps, which can PREVENT cancer. Grow up and be an adult and deal with a little discomfort for your health. I hate it when comedians and sitcoms and now comic strips contribute to the misconception that a colonoscopy is horrible experience. You know what IS horrible? Getting gutted from navel to pubes to have a chunk of your colon removed. Round after round of chemotherapy. Having diarrhea for six months instead of one day. Being sick to your stomach so much that it just becomes part of life. Having your fingers split from the chemo. Losing the feeling in your hands and feet from chemo. Losing your career because you’re too sick to work a whole day. Grow up and get a colonoscopy.