catwomyn
catwomyn
catwomyn

Maybe 11% or more of millennials are moving to both? Maybe 11% or more of millennials are constantly moving between these two cities.

I've been all over the US, there are tons of places that are great to live, have good jobs, low cost of living, and tons of amenities. I think it's more like people need to get over their fantasy of thinking a good life can only mean living on the coast.

I am an unashamed disco queen and my husband prefers country and blue grass. We've helped each other expand our musical libraries and it's pretty fun. We both have headphones for when we need them though.

It's true, but also... you're going to be eating together. You can read separate books, watch different shows, listen to different music, but preparing separate meals and/or going to separate restaurants all the time is tough.

Obviously this person should stay in the relationship as the smug sense of superiority they get over their partner is more than enough to sustain them.

Isn't it all just a matter of priority? You obviously hold up the food thing as a high priority, so you would never do such a thing, which is fine. But somebody else may not care about that, and instead their priority might be the types of books the other person reads, or their clothes, or really anything else. To

I didn't even read the whole article, but the headline alone reminds me of one of my coworkers. She always talks about how her husband refuses to eat vegetables as if it is an endearing quality of his. One time I had enough and said "what is he, five?" And she got really mad. But really I can't understand someone who

I couldn't marry someone with completely different eating patterns since we'd be eating together every day and raising kids together - I'd never want to have to explain why daddy doesn't have to eat green beans but Jr. does.

That's pretty much how smart, accomplished yet not-too-corporate women used to dress in the twentieth century, back when there was a large, stable upper middle class and before the Barbie-feminine backlash. That's my mom's wardrobe and to some extent, mine (I'm 45). Makes me nostalgic. That's one of the things about

you're half right

Pretty sure the button-down and blazer look was par for the course style-wise for those periods in time.

"Even with the best intentions — why tell your girlfriend you're getting that drink with your ex just to get her all upset over nothing? — secrets often start to fester before you know it."

See, the premise here is off — it's usually not done "with the best intentions"; it's done to avoid hassle or awkwardness or

I was just in my local grocery store and they had a "child abduction drill." Seriously - like a fire drill, only for kidnapping! All the employees stopped work, fanned out to block the exits and did a sweep until they found a fake "child" (a safety cone). In the 100 plus years this town has been incorporated, there

When I was five, my family temporarily relocated to a foreign country. Every day, I walked a half a mile to a tiny market so that I could buy a peach and candy cigarettes. This was after walking to and from school by myself, of course.

And if they ARE living in the vicinity, go arrest them since they are breaking actual laws!

"Numerous sex offenders living in the vicinity of the park"

I don't think he so much "delivered" the baby as dropped the baby that his wife delivered - into the friggin toilet!

Birth, a.k.a. "taking a number 3"

I think it's the "schoolgirl" label they're commenting on, not the mention of her nationality.