That image, Andrew!
But I wasn't describing the equivalent of Delhi Belly, while travelling in the
USA; I was merely pointing out that the character of the food changed so as to
disturb the normal digestive process. It wasn't unclean food, but it was
rubbish.
Chris
On 14 Feb 14, at 06:14, Andrew Fildes <afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Yeahbut - he was in the bloody Hilton soothing wealthy tourists - not dealing
> with me s**tting my brains out behind a cactus in Morrocco. 'Disturbance'
> wasn't the word I had in mind at the time, especially after I managed to back
> into the Prickly Pear in question. Stress doesn't cause explosive
> decompression in humans.
> Andrew Fildes
> afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> www.soultheft.com
>
> Author/Publisher:
> The SLR Compendium:
> revised edition -
> http://blur.by/19Hb8or
> The TLR Compendium
> http://blur.by/1eDpqN7
>
>
>
> On 14/02/2014, at 3:31 PM, Paul Laughlin wrote:
>
>> Many long years ago, when I was stationed with the USAF in Spain, I read
>> a book by the house physician of the Castellano Hilton Hotel in Madrid.
>> He seemed to think that it was not the food or the water that caused
>> the gastric disturbances, but merely that the stresses of travel caused
>> the "flora and fauna" of the gut to arise. I thought, at the time,
>> that just might be appropriate.
>
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