NurseSnell
NurseSnell
NurseSnell

My NOLA-born aunt said "bless her heart" about her former daughter-in-law and I knew it was all over. Only after the divorce would she call the woman a huckster. I just want to crawl in her accent and live there.

Folks, I can't even tell you how awesome it is to see the huge crowds of couples, their supporters and officiants at our various Utah county courthouses this morning. There's almost no coverage on local news but there are clips all over Facebook of people who started waiting overnight. I haven't had dry eyes all

Keeping with the creepy Evangelical theme, my friend pinned this. I dub the style "folk Orwellian."

You missed the point by a mile and a half, kiddo. Unless your fiancee is also your daughter.

I commented on one of those. Something to the effect of "Oh great, a new way to let your impressionable daughter know she's a piece of property! She "belongs" to her father until he decides to let someone pork her? Great way to let a young woman know her worth!"

I may have to save this picture as a warning for my son when he starts dating on who he may want to steer away from.

burlap & mason jars are the birdseed & blush and bashful of the modern day wedding. mark my words.

I work for a wedding magazine & this is the shit that makes me (& all our planners) cringe. (I'm using the non-directional "you" here...) Mostly b/c while you are planning your "unique, personal-to-you" wedding, someone is doing the exact same thing at the same time like some time/space continuum of unoriginal ideas &

I think it's the ridiculous mason jar overkill that's worth mocking. If you need a pin to tell you you can store things in jars, you're probably too dumb to use the internet safely. But that doesn't stop 9 million bored Mormon housewives from posting "19 Things You Didn't Know You Could Put In A Jar."

I've said it before on Jez and I will say it again. I blame Pinterest for MULTIPLE weddings I have attended that took place in a barn and featured mason jars, hydrangeas, burlap and chalkboard.

Exactly. This is tweens. My daughter is 11, goes for small sleepovers but hasn't done the 10 girls/all night thing. No one hosts those yet. But even with the small sleepovers, my kid comes home useless the next day. One mom made them hot fudge sundaes at midnight. Awesome - you win the fun mom contest. Now keep her

This exact situation happened with me and one of my students. It's why I left the classroom to get involved in public health and sex education.

Word. I grew up in a healthy house so whenever anyone asked if I wanted to spend the night, I said "Sure. What kind of cereal do you have?"

This would have been great for my kiddo before I adopted her. Foster children have restrictions that basically eliminate sleep overs. A couple of times when she mentioned a sleepover, we talked about using "having to go somewhere early" as an excuse to stay til 1op or 11p but not overnight. I hosted one sleepover and

Yay for assembly line proposals!

You might want to try a gluten free diet, it would appear that your current diet is causing issues with higher brain function.

a close family friend married a hotel worker from Jordan, though her situation was different because she travels to Jordan a lot for work and always stays at the same hotel so she s him often and they got to date. We were worried that he only wanted to marry her for the citizenship and were cold towards him, also

Does that threat even work now that there are antibiotics?

Looking at her, I am thinking of this: