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  • Scar of Honour

    Some of you might know that in the olden days certain scars were carried with particular pride and some were marks of distinction and honour.
    Such scars were battle scars, and even the infamous chin cut on the side and just below the eye achieved in fencing at military academies i.e in Prussia or Austria.
    A couple of months ago when sitting on the porch one scolding summer evening smoking and dreaming away, I dropped 1 1/2 inch ash on the top of my naked six pack (the one which these days is rather hidden), and although I woke up and got on my feet in a split second the burn was imminent.
    And now after a long summer and the greatest tan in memory, what do I notice ? A greyish blue penny size spot in that same place. MY scar of honour!

    Tell me about yours, or did you just burn a shirt or two or a suit ( like the old man Sir WS himself was infamous for).


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  • #2
    Firstly Custard! [emoji16]

    Secondly I thought this thread would be deep ...

    Thirdly I've a great scar from walking past and brushing a palm tree 20 odd years ago... Looks good though!

    Sent from the interwebz
    .--
    I think I may finally have this CAD under control...

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    • #3
      Scars aren?t badges of honour they are being too slow to get out the way

      In my line of work ... are to be avoided and usually mean you have won a 2nd prize


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      • #4
        Non-cigar related but I?ve got a Harry Potter-esque scar on the underside of my ring finger after the tendon snapped playing rugby. It was quite entertaining being able to clench a fist with my ring finger still pointing to the sky....


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        • #5
          I've got a good one on my finger with underlying nerve damage where I crushed down the rubbish in the recycling bin and encountered the tin lid that cut through to the bone.
          'Cigars are a hobby, cigarettes an addiction'

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          • #6
            Does an appendix operation scar count?

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            • #7
              Mine would be semi cigar related, just out of college, it was when I was working at a timber mill, producing all sorts of finished timber products - Spanish Cedar included.
              I was planing down a raw piece of timber through a rotary plane bench. The shavings would build up on the bench, and we would use a hand brush, to clear the excess shavings from the machine, so the rotary cutting edge could do its job, without burning or scarring the wood. We would do this, often without turning the machine off - mid plank if there was a big build up....
              Well, on one such occasion I couldn’t find the hand brush, so brushed away the shavings using my hand - I was wearing thick safety gloves at the time, thought nothing of it, until my glove got ripped from my hand...I thought phew! Lucky escape there.....That was until I turned to my colleague, as blood spurted from the tip of my little finger - 10 feet across the workshop.....never felt a thing, but the whole tip of my little finger had been taken off....the X-rays showed it had shaved the tip of the bone off my finger at a sharp 45 degree angle....I now have a pointy little finger....my badge of honour for second place, not being quick enough.....
              Last edited by Vitola; 20-08-2018, 08:33 PM.

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              • #8
                Its our ladies who carry the scars of life, we just carry the scars or stupidity and misfortune
                'Cigars are a hobby, cigarettes an addiction'

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by PeeJay View Post
                  Its our ladies who carry the scars of life, we just carry the scars or stupidity and misfortune
                  Well that belongs on a plaque!
                  Only the impossible is worth the effort.

                  JEANETTE WINTERSON,

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Vitola View Post
                    Mine would be semi cigar related, just out of college, it was when I was working at a timber mill, producing all sorts of finished timber products - Spanish Cedar included.
                    I was planing down a raw piece of timber through a rotary plane bench. The shavings would build up on the bench, and we would use a hand brush, to clear the excess shavings from the machine, so the rotary cutting edge could do its job, without burning or scarring the wood. We would do this, often without turning the machine off - mid plank if there was a big build up....
                    Well, on one such occasion I couldn’t find the hand brush, so brushed away the shavings using my hand - I was wearing thick safety gloves at the time, thought nothing of it, until my glove got ripped from my hand...I thought phew! Lucky escape there.....That was until I turned to my colleague, as blood spurted from the tip of my little finger - 10 feet across the workshop.....never felt a thing, but the whole tip of my little finger had been taken off....the X-rays showed it had shaved the tip of the bone off my finger at a sharp 45 degree angle....I now have a pointy little finger....my badge of honour for second place, not being quick enough.....
                    Sheeet, I knew exactly what you were going to tell once that brush came into the story. A colleague did exactly the same on a plastic cutting saw many years back. I saw it and screamed to him across the machine hall, but too late, - he lost both little finger and the next one. Awful. Glad you didn’t hurt yourself more.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Vitola View Post
                      Mine would be semi cigar related, just out of college, it was when I was working at a timber mill, producing all sorts of finished timber products - Spanish Cedar included.
                      I was planing down a raw piece of timber through a rotary plane bench. The shavings would build up on the bench, and we would use a hand brush, to clear the excess shavings from the machine, so the rotary cutting edge could do its job, without burning or scarring the wood. We would do this, often without turning the machine off - mid plank if there was a big build up....
                      Well, on one such occasion I couldn?t find the hand brush, so brushed away the shavings using my hand - I was wearing thick safety gloves at the time, thought nothing of it, until my glove got ripped from my hand...I thought phew! Lucky escape there.....That was until I turned to my colleague, as blood spurted from the tip of my little finger - 10 feet across the workshop.....never felt a thing, but the whole tip of my little finger had been taken off....the X-rays showed it had shaved the tip of the bone off my finger at a sharp 45 degree angle....I now have a pointy little finger....my badge of honour for second place, not being quick enough.....
                      I too could see what was coming, I've cut myself doing exactly what you did but with the machine off. I wiped away some wood chips with my hand from the surface table not thinking, and one of the knives was facing straight up. Gave myself a nasty cut but nothing more thankfully. Having seen many older joiners with missing digits i generally have a healthy respect for my machinery.

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                      • #12
                        this is a fascinating topic, and [MENTION=13402615]PeeJay[/MENTION]s point about stupidity rings utterly true! I am a walking patch work quilt of scars... mostly from misadventure and bloody good fun!

                        I have a scar in each eye brow where I have split myself skull deep in various misadventures - mostly my head hitting other heads and rocks, variously on rugby pitches and not,
                        I have a scar in my top lip under my nose that was so deep I could blow bubbles through it - blacked out after a run, after a weekend of no sleep and lots of fun,
                        I have a scar of two front teeth in my right forearm... rugby... didn't know what it was until it healed and became exceptionally apparent that i'd been mistaken for steak,
                        I have a scar on a shoulder blade where someone screwed a stud into me as a part of a particularly savage shoe-ing at the bottom of a ruck... i probably deserved it.
                        I have scars all over the top of my heads from variously, hanging myself up on a hook by the scalp as a child (long story), having a clay pigeon smash on my head and peal me like a tangerine, slicing my head on someones nose cartilage....

                        Nothing overtly savage, but all are fond memories of mucking about and remaining mostly pretty much intact!
                        "Dear heart, you're talking to a man- a real man- who drinks straight Tequilla, with lime and salt on the rim, and smokes cigars" (J Zavala)

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                        • #13
                          ...and thankfully no photos!

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                          • #14
                            2nd post about Wiggs in one sitting. But perhaps he can show us the one on his finger that he got from a safety cutter and consequently tried to cauterize with a jet flame lighter. ������

                            Myself, I have a pretty gnarly one on my right arm from a 5" bone protrusion after breaking my elbow. Took over 12 months to use the hand again after severing tendons.
                            Licky Licky before Sticky Sticky. - Puff Scotty 22/03/14

                            Originally posted by PeeJay
                            I get longing looks from guys walking past

                            Originally posted by butternutsquashpie
                            A purge follows a rapid puffing session.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Emaresee View Post
                              this is a fascinating topic, and [MENTION=13402615]PeeJay[/MENTION]s point about stupidity rings utterly true! I am a walking patch work quilt of scars... mostly from misadventure and bloody good fun!

                              I have a scar in each eye brow where I have split myself skull deep in various misadventures - mostly my head hitting other heads and rocks, variously on rugby pitches and not,
                              I have a scar in my top lip under my nose that was so deep I could blow bubbles through it - blacked out after a run, after a weekend of no sleep and lots of fun,
                              I have a scar of two front teeth in my right forearm... rugby... didn't know what it was until it healed and became exceptionally apparent that i'd been mistaken for steak,
                              I have a scar on a shoulder blade where someone screwed a stud into me as a part of a particularly savage shoe-ing at the bottom of a ruck... i probably deserved it.
                              I have scars all over the top of my heads from variously, hanging myself up on a hook by the scalp as a child (long story), having a clay pigeon smash on my head and peal me like a tangerine, slicing my head on someones nose cartilage....

                              Nothing overtly savage, but all are fond memories of mucking about and remaining mostly pretty much intact!
                              These deserve a cigar an a story one day..

                              Sent from my ONEPLUS A3003 using Tapatalk

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