A husband and wife are waiting at the bus stop with their nine children. A blind man joins them after a few minutes.
When the bus arrives. They find it overloaded and only the wife and the nine kids are able to fit onto the bus.
So the husband and the blind man decide to walk. After a while, the husband gets irritated by the ticking of the stick of the blind man as he taps it on the sidewalk, and says to him, “Why don’t you put a piece of rubber at the end of your stick?
That ticking sound is driving me crazy.”
The blind man replies, “If you had put a rubber at the end of YOUR stick, we’d be riding the bus, so shut the hell up.”
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An elderly couple had spent fifty years together, their marriage filled with laughter, routine, and a fair share of playful teasing.
Every morning, without fail, the husband would let out an enormous fart as he climbed out of bed, always following it with his signature laugh.
His wife, shaking her head at the daily spectacle, never missed the chance to warn him, “One day, you’re going to fart your guts out.”
On Thanksgiving morning, as she prepared the holiday meal, an idea struck her.
With a mischievous grin, she scooped up a handful of turkey innards and quietly tiptoed into their bedroom.
With delicate precision, she tucked the slimy pieces into his underwear and waited for the inevitable.
An hour later, the familiar sound echoed through the house—his usual fart-laugh routine.
But this time, the laughter was abruptly cut short by a panicked scream, followed by ten minutes of eerie silence.
Concerned but stifling a giggle, she waited for him to emerge.
When he finally made his way downstairs, he looked pale, his fingers coated in something he clearly wished he hadn’t touched.
With a sheepish expression, he cleared his throat and said,
“Honey, I owe you an apology. You were right all these years—
I finally farted my guts out.” He took a deep breath and held up his dirty fingers.
“But don’t worry. By the grace of God and these two fingers, I managed to shove them all back in.”
Theirs was a love built on humor, mischief, and an understanding that even the silliest moments could become treasured memories.
Fifty years of marriage had taught them that laughter was just as essential as love—and on that
Thanksgiving morning, she had certainly given them both something to be thankful for.