Seriously. I was told lulu would change my life so I went on a whim and tried on some crazy $90 pair of leggings. Could barely tell the difference between them and the old navy wear I have currently. Not worth the $70 extra bucks.
Seriously. I was told lulu would change my life so I went on a whim and tried on some crazy $90 pair of leggings. Could barely tell the difference between them and the old navy wear I have currently. Not worth the $70 extra bucks.
It’s common in many businesses that have clients — massage, hair dressing, etc. So, I apply the same principles.
Business is basically “Survivor” — Outlast.
I have a pair of knee length spandex pants from Lululemon that I hate. I HATE THEM. I can’t wear them running because they fall down (and I have a butt so it’s not just gravity), so I can only wear them to spin class. I have several pairs of spandex leggings from old navy that I LOOOOOVE, and I bought them on sale for…
I’m waitin for so many studios to die.
I teach yoga for a living (and have for 21 years — so I’m no newbie), and truthfully, dance wear/simple basics are best performers. my uniform came from dance wear. I order every 3 yrs from American Apparel (tights/tanks/skirt) and capizio (shrugs). Total cost every 3 yrs: $500 ($167/yr). And, it’s a business expense.…
looks like people up and realized old navy athletic wear exists.
I hate all pad/tampon adverts that do not depict the truth about periods...
Because all of my friends who’ve had one have said the insertion was the singularly most painful experience of their lives, even the friend who had a back injury that got so bad she needed prednisone injected into her spine? Oh, and because all of them have had their period cramps get an order of magnitude worse. Oh,…
Almost all women are appropriate candidates...unless you talk to a woman with PID or similar lady parts issues. It's cool that these work, but the 9 months I had mine were basically the most painful 9 months of my life.
Well from appearances one of them has been living in a basic camp on a backwater planet no one really cares about and the other has been living in a totalitarian state.
I have not seen combat, but I can assure you no one is worried about diversity when fighting. They are worried about not dying and protecting those around them. If a female is capable of picking me up and throwing me on her shoulders, and running 100 yards with me, then I would not care if she were in combat. But a…
Except the majority of combat happens within 50 yards... there is a good chance someone is getting shot and you’re going to need that disposable mule to get him to cover.
As a person, I am all for equality. Women and men should absolutely be treated the same, paid the same, etc... But as a Marine, there is absolutely no room for women in combat. I have never seen combat, but if I were to see it with a female Marine, most of them would terrify me.
Yeah fuck you for not letting me bring my child into an inappropriate workplace environment! Fuck you for not agreeing with me!
Yeah I don’t get that either. That’s like bringing a chef with you into your kitchen but insisting on doing the cooking yourself. Odd choice, and frankly seems kinda silly to me.
Who cares? I was commenting on a specific person and a specific situation. The vast majority of my friends are scientists and work in labs—they are also people who are having kids later and seem to think their children should be able to go everywhere with them.
No, I was saying the sitter could have been with the baby outside of the meeting space—meaning, onsite, but in a different room than the meeting itself.
I’m sorry, but unless you’re paying that student as a babysitter (and actually, a couple of my grad school friends made a bundle as the go-to babysitters for faculty), that’s inappropriate. Profs and adjunct profs have a power dynamic with students, and it would not be appropriate to ask a student you are grading or…
If the baby has already disrupted the event prior to its’ removal, it’s too late. Given that infants are unpredictable around unfamiliar environments, it’s a reasonable expectation.