
you sick people love to see her cry. thankfully it also comes with a happy adorable ending.
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honestly i am EXACTLY this way even now if i break something or loose something i care about. If you notice Bane wanted the ball FIXED she didn't want a new one. I was like this with nearly all of my stuffed animals and toys, my mother learned to sew and my father was already good at fixing things, so USUALLY if things were accidentally broken or ripped, they'd be fixed.
I am the same, so much so that even when my old Ford suffered serious rust damage, I actually considered spending much more to get it repaired rather than destroy her, because 'i let it down, rather than it letting me down'. In the end it is being stripped so that it will live on in another form..........I get emotionally attached to things and it is something I have never managed to shake.
I'm with you there... I cried the day my Honda died. It was a 22 year old Civic that had been somewhat abused and had 92 arthritic and crippled horses when I got it.. It rode too low for the area so I always had to look for side routes and weave through parking lots to get where I was going and the trunk leaked like a siv but I loved that car.
http://fav.me/d2e87fy mine spend as much time out of action with electrical problems as it did on the road, it was too low for most driveways here, was rough to ride in (because the guy that lowered it did it the cheap way), was loud, cramped, the cabin heated up because of the lack of firewall heat shielding, when you got to 120kph the hood started to get up and dance around a bit and for a V8 (converted from straight 6 to V8 by previous owner) it was somewhat low on power. But i loved it and tried to care for it, but a 1985 car will eventually succumb to rust and be un-roadworthy.
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