I thought so, too. I don't know why so few people seem to be getting it.
I thought so, too. I don't know why so few people seem to be getting it.
I just wanted to come back to this thread and say that I put a little bit of spicy brown mustard in some macaroni and cheese today, and it was excellent.
I was wondering the same thing.
Except that his despair was a *direct result* of his entitlement.
Assuming he had the ability to do so. But this guy's "services"—which capitalize on the same sense of entitlement that fuels this kind of violence—would not have been helpful.
He's probably already doing plenty of that.
I'm also in Michigan—though, thankfully, not in Saginaw.
I didn't know that (your second paragraph). That's horrifying :(
Aaah, yes. I knew there had to be some way to work in a second pun!
A figure like that is MADE for a-line dresses and retro styles with cute little fitted tops and full skirts. That lady just didn't want to have to do her job.
I agree. Her words should just stand as they are, not as some attempt at creating some fake drama/rivalry.
Pretty much my reaction, too. Everything there is just spot-on.
I imagine she was probably glad to have someone comment on her philanthropic work instead of her acting or just complimenting her looks.
That's what I was thinking, too.
Damn. I like the full quote even better.
Agreed.
I wouldn't say it has to do with narcissism so much as it is the pictures these guys paint of the relationships/women they're cheating on to the women they're cheating *with*. It's always a very one-sided tale, where he looks good and she looks bad. Since the "other woman" doesn't usually have contact with the wife…
Right. This has the potential to actually hurt people.
Yeah, it crosses that line for me, too.
Me, toooooo.