My wife most of all. Computers, work, sleep, sex, my wonderful wife,mmm I said that, uhm sex, wait I already said that too, weapons, running, Mc Donalds, Mt. Dew, my wife naked, my wife clothed, my wife in anything, especially naked, music, movies, I know I said this - computers...definatley, I'm a nerd...
Which Horror Movie Icon Are You?
Pinhead
You can actually be bargained with, but that doesn't mean you just let people LIVE otherwise they wouldn't LEARN anything. Sadistic in your thoughts and actions, yet quite reasonable otherwise, you may be the more dangerous of the lot, simply because you do not let your blood lust get in the way of your intellect, but are always looking ahead to the desired end result, and learning in the process.
How do you compare?
Take this test! | Tests from Testriffic
STEWIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Sylvester Stalone, Steve Martin, anybody who has my last name...(Proenneke) and a ghost. Also it might be interesting to meet one of those umpa loompa dudes. Yea, I like midgets.
Most anything with a syncapated rhythm. Especially metal and/or Rob Zombie. Though I am not as passionate about rap as i am country, and I hate country. Who wants to hear about how sad some dude was when his dog died.
If it has blood and guts. Needs to go boom sometimes too.
Who needs TV when you got music and movies?!?!?!?
Anything C.S. Lewis. I also enjoy Frank Peretti, Stephan King, and a few other random authors. There is one book I also like alot, and it is entitled "Dominion". Definatly an interesting read by Randy Alcorn.
My Wife. She is my goddess, the light of my life, and the person that I smile everytime I think about her. I know I love her because I could not live without her. Ever.Puller, whose nickname was inspired by his barrel chest, was born in West Point, Virginia. He was a distant relative of U.S. Army General George S. Patton.Puller originally enlisted in the Army and obtained the rank of sergeant. He was then accepted into the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia. He resigned after his freshman year to enlist as a Private in the Marine Corps in August 1918. American involvement in World War I was intensifying at the time; his reasoning for his enlistment is summed up in the quote, "I want to go where the guns are."Puller was unable to reach an overseas theater during the First World War, but remained on duty with the Marine Corps for the next 37 years.He was appointed to the rank of Second Lieutenant in the reserves on June 16, 1919, but reduction in force following the war led to his being put on inactive status on the 26th of that month.Puller re-enlisted in the Marine Corps the same year. As an enlisted man, he saw action in Haiti with the Gendarmerie d'Haiti, which was working under a treaty with the United States, and participated in over forty engagements during the ensuing five years against the Caco rebels. In March 1924, he returned stateside and was again commissioned as a Second Lieutenant, afterward completing assignments at the Marine Barracks in Norfolk, Virginia, Basic School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and with the 10th Marine Artillery Regiment in Quantico, Virginia. He was assigned to the Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii in July 1926 and in San Diego, California in 1928.In December 1928, Puller was assigned to the Nicaraguan National Guard detachment, where he earned his first Navy Cross. He returned stateside in July 1931 and completed the year-long Company Officers' Course at Fort Benning, Georgia, thereafter returning to Nicaragua to earn a second Navy Cross for leading "five successive engagements against superior numbers of armed bandit forces".After his service in Nicaragua, Puller was assigned to the Marine detachment at the American Legation in Beijing, China commanding a unit of China Marines. He then went on to serve on the USS Augusta (CA-31), a cruiser in the Asiatic Fleet, which was commanded by then-Captain Chester W. Nimitz. Puller returned to the States in June 1936 as an instructor at the Basic School in Philadelphia.In May 1939, he returned to the Augusta as commander of the onboard Marine detachment, and then back to China, disembarking in Shanghai in May 1940 to serve as the executive officer of 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines. He later served as its commanding officer.Returning to the U.S. in August 1941, Puller was given command of 1st Battalion, 7th Marines (known as 1/7) of the 2nd Marine Division, stationed at MCB Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. This unit was briefly attached to the 3rd Marine Regiment for transport to the Pacific theater, and rejoined the 2nd Division on Guadalcanal.Soon after arriving on Guadalcanal, Puller led his battalion in a fierce action along the Matanikau, in which Puller's quick action saved three of his companies from annihilation. In the action, three of Puller's companies were surrounded and cut-off by a larger Japanese force. Puller ran to the shore, signaled a U.S. Navy destroyer, and then directed the destroyer to provide gunfire support while landing craft rescued his Marines from their precarious position. Later on Guadalcanal, Puller earned his third Navy Cross for action that was later known as the "Battle for Henderson Field", in which the 1/7 battalion was the only American unit defending the airfield against a regiment-strength Japanese force. In a firefight on the night of October 24–25, 1942 lasting about three hours, 1/7 sustained 70 casualties; the Japanese force suffered over 1,400 killed in action, and the airfield was held by the battalion.Following this action Puller was made executive officer of the 1st Marine Regiment. While serving in this capacity at Cape Gloucester, he earned his fourth Navy Cross for overall performance in December and January 1944, and was later (February 1944) made regimental commander, leading the regiment in numerous engagements on Peleliu during September and October 1944. Also during the summer 1944, Puller's younger brother, Samuel D. Puller, the Executive Officer of the 4th Marine Regiment, was killed by a sniper during the Battle of Guam.Puller returned to the United States in November 1944, and was named executive of the Infantry Training Regiment at Camp Lejeune. After the war, he was made Director of the 8th Reserve District at New Orleans, Louisiana, and later commanded the Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor.At the outbreak of the Korean conflict, Puller was once again assigned as commander of the 1st Marine Regiment, with which he made a landing at Inchon on September 15, 1950. In November of that year, Puller earned his fifth Navy Cross for action during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir. It was during that battle when he made the famous quote, "We've been looking for the enemy for some time now. We've finally found him. We're surrounded. That simplifies things."[3] Promoted to Brigadier General and made assistant division commander in January 1951, he completed his tour in Korea in May of that year.General Puller subsequently achieved promotions to Major General and Lieutenant General, and served in various command capacities until his retirement due to health reasons on November 1, 1955.In 1966, he requested to be reinstated in the Corps in order to see action in the Vietnam War, but the request was denied on the basis of his age.He died in 1971, at the age of 73, in Saluda, Virginia. He is buried in Christchurch Cemetery off Highway 33 (also called "General Puller Highway") in Christchurch, Virginia which is on the southeast side of Christchurch School. General Puller's widow Virginia died in 2006 at the age of 97 and was buried next to him.