Yup, it is a specific definition. We use the UK class system definitions.
Yup, it is a specific definition. We use the UK class system definitions.
Come on, don't slide into the US conceptions of class. In Australia we don't have "upper class" people (no aristocrats). We have upper-middle class and then "establishment" and "squatocracy" families.
But you don't know you have an undiagnosed heart condition. You just suspect you do. A lengthy post about someone's health concerns, when her doctor isn't concerned, isn't exactly exciting stuff for Facebook.
I was like this at university. I was a very happy person. I'm now a well-adjusted and successful 32 year old, despite depravity, hedonism and sluttishness in almost every way from ages 18-25.
I am sure that Dorian - if she has anything else going in her life in terms of career, intellectualism etc - will actually find a certain kind of liberation with losing the 'youthful' part of her 'youthful good looks'.
Well... Obviously it's ridiculous to go to uni for the sole purpose of meeting a man, but if you're a woman who wants to get married to an academically-minded man, it's not bad advice.
.
Exercise.
I don't agree. At 55 my mum got a PhD, left my dad, lost 20kgs, died her hair blonde, moved to the inner city, got a high paying job and is now (only six years later) the Dean of a school at a university.
Yes! I second Panache! 12f here!
My husband and I never have, after eight years! I prefer to keep those issues little mysteries. I think farting in front of each other is a slippery slope.
I've been with my husband for eight years, married for four. We've never raised our voices at each other, let alone sworn. I'd hate that.
It's not common outside the US. Australian men are usually only circumcised for religious reasons.