featherynscale (
featherynscale) wrote2003-12-30 09:13 am
Guess what?
I almost caught the house on fire last night! Whee. I left a votive candle burning in the fire-pot on my altar when I went to sleep. As the fire-pot is made out of clay, I didn't think that this would particularly be a problem. At least, not until I woke up at 4 a.m. with the strong urge to stick my head around the corner and look at the altar, at which point, I discovered that the side of the fire-pot was on fire. So I blew it out, and went back to bed. I managed to catch it before it even scorched the altar-cloth, but the fire-pot is going to have to be replaced (more for safety reasons than for damage).
So, thank you to who- or what- ever woke me up this morning. Please let me know who favors are owed to... thanks.
So, thank you to who- or what- ever woke me up this morning. Please let me know who favors are owed to... thanks.
Huh.
Re: Huh.
Nah
Yeah for not being on the news
Re: Yeah for not being on the news
My asthma is an evolutionary advantage! When atmospheric irritants exist, I can't breathe and wake up, thus saving me from dying in toxic fire fumes. Well ... maybe ...
BTW - Glad the damage was trivial ... fire pots can be replaced.
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At this point, Navy Safety training should have kicked in, and I should have gone for the baking soda, but it had, by that time, been a while since my time in the Navy. Nope, said sleeping brain directed me to fill a cup with water and attempt to douse the fire. Now, in retrospect, I should have remembered that one does not fight a chemical fire with water. I am reminded by the interesting burn scar on my right forearm.
But the apartment didn't burn down.
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