[quote=Prometheus]Oh and thanks for agreeing that you are terrified of your buddies realizing how you overreact to anything that threatens you. Like me...
You have no shame about being disingenuine when it comes to protecting the integrity of your beloved Brothel, do you? I guess you didn't see me taking issue when Syd was talking to a whole shit load of you all cozy like, yesterday? Why? Cause I don't care. Hell, I had a fairly civil chat with Jeremy yesterday myself.
I'll say this as impartially as I can. My big fight with Grimm was what started this whole thing so naturally I'd think it is bullshit when he talks about being civil just like I'm sure he'd think it's bullshit if I said something about being civil.
And you having nothing more to say than "prove it" is telling that you know you are guilty somewhere deep down.
yeah, you're not obsessed at all.

still broken.
I'm not. Just making a point, Lenny.
a point of your obsession.
Obsession just a word you use to take a shot at me, Lenny. You and I both know that. Hell, if I was a banal asshole like you I could claim that you always responding to me is obsession. But, unlike you, I don't need to rely on anyone's talking points.
yep, you're not obsessed at all. enjoying our circle jerk? I know you've spent all night just trying not to think about me!
I'm enjoying disrupting your circle jerk. Actually I was thinking of Syd and Mariska in a lesbian mind meld all night. But I know that you mother fuckers have spent years (or in my case 5 months) thinking about the guys who had "meltdowns" (aka, bitch slapped you). It's hilarious how you and your fellow morons pride yourself on internet fights yet claim none of this matters
there's that pesky dyslexia of yours acting up again. what a shame.
How does it feel to fall on your sword?
you wanna swallow my sword? dude, I told you last night, I'm taken. [/quote]
Don't you know what that expression means?

Fall on your sword
Meaning
Commit suicide or offer your resignation.
Origin
It's been some time since men routinely carried swords and the use of 'falling on one's sword' is now restricted to the figurative usage when someone takes personal responsibility for a group action. The expression was used widely following the resignation of Lord Peter Carrington, who resigned from his post as Foreign Secretary for the Thatcher government in 1982, following Argentina's invasion of the Falkland Islands. He was the last high-profile politician in the UK to take personal responsibility in such circumstances.
The actual practise of committing suicide by falling on one's sword dates back to ancient Rome. Plutarch records such a death in The Life of Brutus:
Finally, he [Brutus] spoke to Volumnius himself in Greek, reminding him of their student life, and begged him to grasp his sword with him and help him drive home the blow. And when Volumnius refused, and the rest likewise ... grasping with both hands the hilt of his naked sword, he fell upon it and died.
The above account was published in English in 1918.
The notion was already current in English in the 16th century. It appears in The Miles Coverdale Bible, 1535, in an account of the death of Saul - Samuel 31:4-5:
Then sayde Saul vnto his wapebearer: Drawe out thy swerde, and thrust it thorow me, that these vncircumcised come not and slaie me, and make a laughinge stocke of me. Neuertheles his wapenbearer wolde not, for he was sore afrayed. Then toke Saul ye swerde, and fell therin.
Now whan his wapenbearer sawe that Saul was deed, he fell also vpon his swerde, and dyed with him.
Shakespeare alludes to a similar scene, in the death of Mark Antony, in Julius Caesar, 1601, although he didn't use a version of the 'falling on one's sword' text.
The expression is the Anglicized equivalent of hara-kiri - the Japanese samurai custom of committing suicide by disembowelment with a sword rather than face the dishonour of surrender. The highly ritualised and formal hara-kiri suicide - literally 'belly cut', is no longer performed. It has been known about in the West since the mid 19th century and was referred to in 1856 in Harper's Magazine in the title of an article - Hari-kari of Japan. It that piece Harper's used, and possibly originated, the common misspelling 'hari-kari'