Boner is missing.

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EL PRESIDENTE

Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.
Joined
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From Growing Pains. Its funny to say, but Boner was a big part of most of our young lives.

:sigh:
 
From Growing Pains. Its funny to say, but Boner was a big part of most of our young lives.

:sigh:

Is this a sex joke or something about a tv show?

barfo
 
That's what she said.

Ed O.
 
I totally remember who you are talking about. His dads name was "Sylvester Stabone"
 
RIP!

The body of missing Growing Pains actor Andrew Koenig has been found in a park in Vancouver, British Columbia, according to CNN.com. The 41-year-old actor, who was last seen Feb. 14 near a bakery in the Canadian city, is best known for playing Kirk Cameron’s friend, Richard “Boner” Stabone, on the 1980s ABC sitcom. Koenig is also the son of actor Walter Koenig, who starred as Pavel Chekov on television’s Star Trek: The Original Series.

“Vancouver police are investigating the discovery of a body found in Stanley Park around noon,” police said in a statement released to EW today. Before leaving for a trip to visit some friends in Toronto and Vancouver, the actor had moved out of his Venice, Calif., apartment and had reportedly sold a number of his possessions in a garage sale. On Feb. 16, Koenig’s parents received a “despondent” note from their son, and the actor missed a scheduled flight back to Los Angeles on the same day. The actor had been battling depression.

http://news-briefs.ew.com/2010/02/25/andrew-koenig-body/
 
:sad:

him and Buddy Lembeck from Charles in Charge were the best sidekicks of 80s TV
 
Bye bye, you won't be missed. You don't value your life, you are worthless, IMO.
 
Stanley Park is a beautiful place to die.
 
I'm gonna play "Find the Boner" with HCP's wife while he's on the road with the team.
 
I'm gonna play "Find the Boner" with HCP's wife while he's on the road with the team.
I don't think that sounds quite like how you intended it to.
 
Bye bye, you won't be missed. You don't value your life, you are worthless, IMO.

Dude. It's a mental illness. He didn't choose to feel that way. His brain chemistry caused that kind of thinking. I'm bipolar and I've been through this. Luckily, I never killed myself but I felt like it for probably 200 times until we found the right balance of medication. The real me never wanted to kill myself, but the mental illness made me feel that way. Made me feel like life was horrible and everything was awful and that I wanted to die. It was a horrible horrible horrible thing to go through. If you went through it, you would understand.

A) He will be missed by many. How would you feel if someone said that about your brother or sister or best friend after they went through that hell and died?

B) I'm sure he did value his life but the illness held him down.

C) Who are you to call someone "worthless"?
 
http://www.briancuban.com/living-on-the-edge-of-darkness/

this is Mark Cuban's brother btw.

I did not know Andrew but I knew his pain. As I followed the story of his disappearance and learned about his battle with depression and recent slide into the darkest finality of the suicide abyss, I was reminded of just how all so fast it happens. I read so many things that rang up painful memories of my past. My slide into the same abyss.

I do not know Andrews situation. The slide into darkness has its own unique components for different people. I was very lucky. I had everyone who loved me living in my city and within a few miles of me. They were all in my life and knew my routines. That is what saved me. If I did not have that I would be dead.

I do not remember placing the Italian 45-caliber automatic pistol that my best friend had given me for a gift on my nightstand. I do not remember emailing him for bullets. I do not remember emailing others of my desire to end my life. I realize now that it was my way of reaching out for help. My only memory of those terrible few days on the edge 6 years ago was being wakened out of a Xanax stupor by people who cared for me. It happens that easy. It was all so easy to slide in the fog from a Xanax coma to a 45 cal bullet. It did not happen. People loved me, cared and intervened.
 
Dude. It's a mental illness. He didn't choose to feel that way. His brain chemistry caused that kind of thinking. I'm bipolar and I've been through this. Luckily, I never killed myself but I felt like it for probably 200 times until we found the right balance of medication. The real me never wanted to kill myself, but the mental illness made me feel that way. Made me feel like life was horrible and everything was awful and that I wanted to die. It was a horrible horrible horrible thing to go through. If you went through it, you would understand.

A) He will be missed by many. How would you feel if someone said that about your brother or sister or best friend after they went through that hell and died?

B) I'm sure he did value his life but the illness held him down.

C) Who are you to call someone "worthless"?
I want your children.
 

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