Thank you! You’re doing excellent work here.
Thank you! You’re doing excellent work here.
From the survey of men who grew their hair out in the pandemic here:
Honestly, and I hope I’m not alone in this, but the “pandemic hair” and “pandemic beard” stuff is so, so very old. Sure maybe people got a little shaggy, maybe some ends got split and frizzy, but those days are gone and if you haven’t seen your stylist by now (unless you’ve been out of work or have been dealing with…
Remember when the establishment Dems would occasionally croon about Cuomo as a potential future presidential candidate, and everyone who wasn’t attending DNC-hosted cocktail parties was like, “eww, no”?
Other than one other couple, every single one of our friends has done this and multiple times. One of my husband’s female friends was remarried within 6 months of her divorce, to a guy she met after the divorce.
We don’t teach people how to stay married, and don’t provide mental health programs to teach people how to…
They’re just as brainwashed by romantic culture norms as the rest of us.
That photo of the underground pool is giving me anxiety. I feel strongly that there needs to be more traction on the marble staircase—wet pool feet and slick flooring are a terrible combination. I’ve always kind of wanted an indoor pool since as a child I visited a rich friend in Mexico City and got to swim in theirs…
Ha. I did the same time. I had had the same hair style since college and the inability to get a haircut during the pandemic led me to grow it out to the longest it’s ever been. It was kind of fun, but I learned that longer hair is a chore. The ultimate result is I now sport a slightly different hair style, which isn’t…
Just don’t be the guy in his 60s growing out super thin hair so he can have one of those nasty, greasy little ponytails.
I imagine for most celebrities it’s motivated by a desire for stability/closeness in a life that is hectic and unreal.
I think there’s a great chance he’s lying because he seems like an egotistical idiot. I think his statements should be fully investigated by law enforcement (or some other group who won’t fuck it up. Librarians? Can we have librarians investigate him?) just in case he’s not lying.
That...is not happiness. It’s comfort. I am absolutely happier because I have enough money to be comfortable and don’t worry about food, shelter and bills, but I am only truly happy because I have meaningful relationships with my family and friends and I find value in the work and hobbies that I partake in every day.…
One problem with being rich and famous: You don’t know who your real friends are.
I hate the phrase “money doesn’t buy happiness”. Sure, having money doesn’t make you happy, but it does give you peace of mind knowing you’ll be able to pay your bills, rent, buy food and clothes, or anything else you need. To me, that’s happiness.
She needs to spend some quality time with her therapist exploring her pathological need for validation from complete strangers on the internet.
She’s not really cancelled. She is facing some consequences for her actions. It is temporary. She can come back from it, if she behaves intelligently during her exile.
If I was rich, I wouldn’t need the internet to cope. So it’s always mystifying to me that rich people are seeking validation from anyone because money is supposed to free you from those kinds of concerns, your income does not depend on being a good person at this point. You don’t even have to work ever again, you can…
And if she’s one of the many, many people who just can’t stand to be alone with their own thoughts for any length of time, therapy is probably a really good idea.
With all that money (and friends, it appears), why doesn’t anyone tell her that the best way to get beyond this is NOT to whine about cancel culture, but to simply do some good works? Why didn’t she take the time to meet with Stodden and maybe launch an anti-bullying thing for girls? Or work with teens “in trouble”…
Allegedly, money can’t buy happiness but if I had Chrissy Teigen kind of money (and two small children) I’d fine a way to be happy. It is incredibly sad that you could go through your adult life and have all the tools of happiness at your disposal but your addiction ends up being Twitter attention.