dandelionsqueak
dandelionsqueak
dandelionsqueak

She used to have $1.4 million.

She probably also thinks that goddamned dress is White and Gold.

mark

NO. >:(

Yeah, I'm not bothered by this. I'm more disturbed by the way that the show keeps trying to present Adam the misogynist as a "complex" and sympathetic character.

If Mimi-Rose has good health insurance (which, if she's less than 26, she could still be on her parent's plan), her abortion could have been super cheap. An abortion would cost me $20.

Absolutely. He was in a position of power and abused it.

That's great and all but why do you think anyone (especially the author) needed to know, or even cares really, about your unwillingness to empathize or understand? Not every thought or feeling you have is important enough that you have to express it, especially when it only serves to compound someone else's trauma. I

She was 19..I was very, very confused when I was 19. He however..

I didn't know then what GSA was, or how common it is. (The incidence rate of GSA is unquantified due to the difficulty involved in reporting or researching it; a commonly cited, if disputed, figure puts it at 50% of relatives who meet as adults.)

This story is horrifying, but I don't see how we can find fault with the author for telling it. Well, some people can, but those people are terrible and the kind who say DV victims are stupid because "they don't just leave."

This is some brave shit.

Did you hear Kylie's going to be married off to Dorne?

I have a friend whose mother has been pressuring him for years to get a nose job so he'd look more like his brother.

I love kids, but I pretty much hate the other parents.

I heart this totally.

I can't wait for the days when those blogs now cover their teenaged kids, who now hate their parents to the bone.

Same. I feel like she's the sort to imply to mothers with post partum depression, or mothers who admit that sometimes things are hard and awful, that they aren't trying hard enough or aren't doing it right.

It's ok, In 2 years, she'll have a Mommy blog about her snowflake child who can't process the complex sugars in refined carbohydrates and is allergic to the colour red.

"Movie cancer" is absolutely right. The truth matters in that people with cancer often feel like they have to act, feel, and fight (or not fight) in certain ways, based on the idealized popular narrative of cancer. When someone dies from cancer, it's tragic, of course it's tragic, but rarely in such a photogenic sort