Sounds like you need a lift to work under instead of the old creeper.
"Max Power" <castle@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:%s%di.245092$NO1.44026@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> "Frank ess" <frank@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:7-6dnfZGQKMEt-XbnZ2dnUVZ_rWnnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>
>> Max Power wrote:
>>>> Working under a car gives me nausea so quick the intestinal part
>>>> doesn't get a chance to become an issue. My usual routine was work
>>>> twenty minutes, throw up for five, work anothey twenty, /ad
>>>> nauseum/, so to speak. In my case it's creeping vertigo, struck first
>>>> when I was about 55
>>>> years old. My doctor says there's no need to worry: no known cure. A
>>>> co-worker said her mother had vertigo 100% of the time, not just
>>>> when crawling (face up, right?) under cars. The mother takes
>>>> Dramamine before any occasion where it's im****tant to not fall down
>>>> or throw up.
>>
>> [ ... ]
>>
>>>
>>> elevator music was invented to combat vertigo. Maybe you could pipe
>>> some into your garage.
>>
>> Really? Sounds like a good plan. Guess I'll find a few music-ed
elevators
>> and do some auditioning. I've never laid down in an elevator before.
>>
>> --
>> Frank ess
>
>
> looked on the internet but found nothing, but according to a thing I saw
> on the history channel it was a WWI generals idea, he got it because
they
> found it to be effective in helping soldiers with shell shock.
>>
>
>


|