About me: I'm Drew. I play guitar, bass guitar, trumpet, mandolin, ukulele, some piano and I want to get a saxophone or a violin eventually, maybe both. You don't know very much about me, and you probably wont unless you're a good friend of mine, even some of them don't know too much about me. I'm not very open about myself, but if you have any questions, I'll probably answer them =D
Fare you well my honey
Fare you well my only true one
All the birds that were singing
Have flown except you alone
Goin to leave this Broke-down Palace
On my hands and my knees I will roll roll roll
Make myself a bed by the waterside
In my time - in my time - I will roll roll roll
In a bed, in a bed
by the waterside I will lay my head
Listen to the river sing sweet songs
to rock my soul
River gonna take me
Sing me sweet and sleepy
Sing me sweet and sleepy
all the way back back home
It's a far gone lullaby
sung many years ago
Mama, Mama, many worlds I've come
since I first left home
Goin home, goin home
by the waterside I will rest my bones
Listen to the river sing sweet songs
to rock my soul
Goin to plant a weeping willow
On the banks green edge it will grow grow grow
Sing a lullaby beside the water
Lovers come and go - the river roll roll roll
Fare you well, fare you well
I love you more than words can tell
Listen to the river sing sweet songs
to rock my soul
Twins are normally either identical—the result of a single sperm fertilizing a single egg, which then splits and duplicates itself—or fraternal, developing from two separate eggs fertilized by two separate sperm. But last March, doctors reported the first known case of semi-identical twins. “When we did some detailed genetic analysis, we discovered that there was a single maternal contribution to the twins but they had a mixture of two paternal contributions,” says Melissa Parisi, a doctor on the gender-assessment team at Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical Center in Seattle. “So that suggests that there were two sperm involved but maybe only one egg.” With these twins, whose identities were not revealed, each paternal contribution contained a different sex chromosome. This resulted in the conception of a boy with normal genitalia and a girl who was developing both ovarian and testicular tissue. It was the sexually ambiguous genitalia that brought her to doctors’ attention. After several years of studying genetic material from the twins and their parents, the team came up with two possible scenarios. In the first, a single egg divided on its own and was then fertilized by two separate sperm from the dad. The second theory proposes that the egg was fertilized by two sperm and then divided.