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Originally posted by whadupg

No! They won't give it up to me!!! Please help!!!!

A k-hole is when you have done just a little too much special K and then you are F*CKED for a little while until it goes away. It's this intense intense f'ed up feeling. You can't really move, or talk too much, you just don't make any sense if you try and really have a conversation.

I have been in enough K-Holes to know they suck!!!! My roommate actually calls me K-Hole all the time now b/c when we first went to avalon together, I spent a good part of the night in a K-hole with her in the bathroom!

Oh, and as for these guys giving it up to you? trust me. you don't want what they have to offer! ;)

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Originally posted by snatch69

A k-hole is when you have done just a little too much special K and then you are F*CKED for a little while until it goes away. It's this intense intense f'ed up feeling. You can't really move, or talk too much, you just don't make any sense if you try and really have a conversation.

I have been in enough K-Holes to know they suck!!!! My roommate actually calls me K-Hole all the time now b/c when we first went to avalon together, I spent a good part of the night in a K-hole with her in the bathroom!

Oh, and as for these guys giving it up to you? trust me. you don't want what they have to offer! ;)

Oh thank you!!!! It was making me crazy trying to figure out what the hell they were talking about! Oh - and I'd like all you k-hole girl searching boys to wear matching shirts the next time you all go out together so I will be sure to know who I need to watch out for:D

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Sorry to interupt, but to return to the original topic for a minute, check this New York Times article out:

Team to Beat: The Patriots

September 11, 2002

By THOMAS GEORGE

FOXBORO, Mass., Sept. 10 - New England, whose team colors

include red, white and blue, was professional football's

patriotic symbol and champion last season. The Patriots'

championship embodied a country at war, a team that

coalesced in the postseason to claim the seemingly

unattainable, a stretch offering a snow-filled victory over

Oakland, a special teams delight over Pittsburgh and a

chilling kick in the last seconds over St. Louis.

If ever a team was charmed, the prevailing thought went,

this was the team.

You heard it from fans and players and other observers, but

you heard it most from the Patriots' coaching and ownership

peers. As the N.F.L. season unfolded last week, that group

often began talking about New England this way, "Well,

everybody knows the Patriots weren't the best team last

year, but. . . ."

Their leap from last place in their division in 2000 to the

top of the league a season later gave every team hope for

this season. Fluke was a word often linked to the Patriots

last year, and that is why so many people did not pick them

to win their division this season and why even more

predicted they would be looking in from the outside when

the playoffs arrive in January.

This served as the backdrop for New England's smashing

30-14 victory over Pittsburgh on Monday night in the

Patriots' new home - sparkling Gillette Stadium. With

championship rings on their fingers and the barrage of

doubt from others circling over their heads, they played a

possessed game, an emotional one, too, and delivered an

impressive opening performance.

They forced five Steelers turnovers and put so much

pressure on Pittsburgh that it melted mentally and

committed 13 penalties for 112 yards. New England generated

a 17-0 third-quarter barrage that turned a game it led at

halftime by 10-7 into a laugher. The Patriots squeezed

Pittsburgh's offense, stretched its defense, claimed the

special teams battles and watched quarterback Tom Brady (29

of 43 for 294 yards, 3 touchdowns and no interceptions)

play loose and daringly, and relentlessly pierce

Pittsburgh.

It said plenty about New England that it was eager to put

so much of this opening game squarely into Brady's hands.

It said more about the Patriots that in this setting, with

a free-fall routinely expected, that they could rise and

then soar and clearly, in just one game, erase so much

doubt and earn so much respect.

"I think right now you have to say they are the team to

beat in the A.F.C. and in the league," Pittsburgh running

back Jerome Bettis said. "You have to give them their due."

Undoubtedly, the Jets are doing so.

They will play New England at Giants Stadium on Sunday, and

they will spend this week preparing for a club that is

clearly the cream of the American Football Conference East,

a hungry team that was not spoiled by its Super Bowl

success.

That has been the trend in recent seasons: teams win the

Super Bowl one year and get fat and lazy and overconfident

and dawdle around into mediocrity the next one.

"But we're a humble group of guys," Patriots receiver David

Patten said.

Cornerback Otis Smith said: "Some people talk for their

confidence and that's what they do to get themselves going.

Pittsburgh did that. They said they should have been the

team from the A.F.C. in the Super Bowl. We just go out and

stay united and do what we do."

They do a lot of things. On defense, they give opponents so

many different reads and looks before the ball is snapped

and more complex ones after the snap that opposing offenses

look confused. More than one Pittsburgh player said that he

saw defensive alignments Monday night that he had never

seen before. Linemen dropping and linebackers blitzing and

safeties and cornerbacks rotating, all providing pure

pressure.

On offense the Patriots are daring, unafraid to be as

creative in their sets and calls as they are on defense.

(At one point Monday night, the Patriots ran 25 consecutive

pass plays.) Their special teams are sound and they proved

in the second half that they were the better-conditioned

team. They have an infusion of new talent; among others,

the free-agent safety Victor Green, formerly of the Jets,

was superb and the rookie receiver Deion Branch was

astounding in their Patriots debuts. Put it together, and

the Patriots' execution in the first game of the season, on

all fronts, was mesmerizing.

Coach Bill Belichick and his staff have the players' ears

and minds. And the Patriots never seem to forget that,

after all, this is football. Their games will always be

heavily physical.

"One of our goals was to come out against Pittsburgh and

step on them," cornerback Ty Law said. "They have a

reputation for being a physical team. Now you have to

mention us in the same breath. We played this game knowing

that in the back of our minds we are the champions. That

means a lot in tough situations, because you can rely on

the fact that you've done it before and you can do it

again."

Several Super Bowl champions have been unable to separate

that fine line between returning as champions yet not

relying on the previous year to automatically assume

success. In the first game, the Patriots mastered that

understanding beautifully. When challenged as the season

continues, that will be their test, to continue to perform

while understanding that in a new season, a new

championship must be won.

They seem to get the message. Now the rest of the league

gets a resounding one about the Patriots, too.

"We're a complete team," linebacker Willie McGinest said.

"This isn't a thing built around three or four guys, but a

true team concept. We've got to believe we can improve and

our best is yet to come."

That is no joke. No fluke.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/11/sports/football/11NFLL.html?ex=1032754677&ei=1&en=c9ef25efaacc69e2

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