But I do dream of one day being able to wear a fab red. Sigh.
But I do dream of one day being able to wear a fab red. Sigh.
"How do you not feel like you're massively overdone if you wear lipstick on a regular basis?"
Because I'm lazy, and a bright/fun lipcolor makes people think I made an effort, when in reality I took less the 5 minutes to get ready. BB cream with sunscreen, one swipe mascara, bright lip, done.
It's my go to for tired or…
My boyfriend often leans in for a kiss and the closer he gets the more worried he looks. Sucker.
I wear lipstick urrday. I feel like if the rest of my face is made up, my lips disappear if I don't.
I love lipstick and will wear super bold reds, but it's a pain in the ass to wear all the time. It leaves marks on my teacups and if I eat anything it smudges away and if I wear long-lasting it dries my lips a lot. Not worth it unless I have to do a presentation or something.
I love teens, but they require a lot of patience.
She’s right, though. I sprung fully-grown from my father’s forehead at about age 25. #Athena
She’s right about this- most of us have forgotten what it’s like to be that age, and we don’t have a lot of patience for all the emotions that young people are going through.
True story: my HS boyfriend and I went to different schools, and because he didn’t care one way or another, we decided to go to my school’s prom (they were on the same night). I found a dress I was IN LOVE with and went to buy it, and the sales clerk asked where I went to school. I told her, and then she told me she…
Same here. Bless their hearts. But if some college aged wide-eyed girl asks about my blackness. I afraid I'll not be so nice to her.
My first reaction to this was that it's an incredibly cruel thing to force on your just-barely-above-minimum-wage-(maybe) employees of all races.
White people...I love them to death, I'm even married to one, but, bless them.
We were only freshman in college, but it still boggled my mind. She was from Maine, so I guess that explains it.
I'm white and the last time I was shocked by a race issue was way back in college, when one neighbor (who is white) told me and my other neighbor (who is black) that she was the first black person she ever talked to. Being from N.Y I was positively gobsmacked!
For real. Future employers (VPs of Business Development for the Midwest Region notwithstanding) need to know about them.
Nothing embodies a desire to escape racism like committing to Alabama.
"Bigoted Enclaves" is the perfect way to describe so many of the little villages and towns throughout the U.S. This is not just a frat problem or a southern problem. It's a problem wherever white people have managed to keep themselves isolated from the growing diversity of the rest of the country. I only hope that…
The only people that are "shocked" that this is happening in 2015 are white people. The rest of us are like "eh, it's just another [insert day of the week]."
[T]his situation shows that for all of the Selma 50th anniversary celebrations and wonderful speeches by President Obama, this country's first black president, we've got a while to go before buses filled with white dudes and their sorority friends aren't singing racial slurs and then acting like they didn't mean it…
If you search that hashtag, all the posts are RIPs for her right now. Maybe it was just about joining the conversation or spreading the word to fans of the show? It raises no red flags for me — it's not like he was all "and tune in next season, folks!"