Not at all. I don't just go around randomly lighting stuff on fire. Never have.
It was my cousin who showed me originally and on the times I've done it I've been testing if it would make an appropriate substance to make delicate sculptures out of.
It's not, when it goes chalky it crumbles too easily.
I suggest lots and lots of hot chocolate. If it's your throat, then the heat will soothe it a bit, I suppose. Also, soup, because it seems to "burn out" fevers for me.
Reply
You serious? You've never seen one at a play or concert? They're machines that produce smoke on stage.
Reply
What's in them?
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
okay.
Yeah, stickytack.
okay.
...How do you know what it smells like when it burns?
Reply
It turns into a chalk like substance when you burn it.
Reply
For the sake of the conversation, I will, though.
Hmm. Somehow, I don't think it's mostly water.
Reply
It burns quite well.
Reply
Oh, well. Let kings be kings and pyros be... pyros.
Reply
It was my cousin who showed me originally and on the times I've done it I've been testing if it would make an appropriate substance to make delicate sculptures out of.
It's not, when it goes chalky it crumbles too easily.
Reply
I wouldn't really know, having never burned it myself. I don't really do art, anyway. Hmm.
I'm sorry you're sick. :c
Reply
I'll be hard pressed to do my lines. I'm rather distressed about the whole thing.
Reply
I suggest lots and lots of hot chocolate. If it's your throat, then the heat will soothe it a bit, I suppose. Also, soup, because it seems to "burn out" fevers for me.
Good luck, though.
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment