My mom died when she was 35, but I have a pretty awesome stepmother. I hope she lives to 100.
My mom died when she was 35, but I have a pretty awesome stepmother. I hope she lives to 100.
My Great-Grandmother was widowed right after my Great Grandfather came home safely from war seventy years ago and she single-handedly raised six children and helped raise over twenty grandchildren. My son would have made her a Great, Great-Grandmother last year. She would have been 100. Life is so painfully…
Agree. People complain about seeing undies, but if you're seeing undies your leggings just suck and/or they are tights.
This. Leggings can be perfectly fine as bottoms, but I always feel embarrassed for women I see in public whose patterned underwear I can distinctly see through their sheer tights.
Just imagine what he'd do to a Thomas Kincaide painting!
Just one more reason to go for Red Mango instead...
Christmas-loving atheists represent!! My tree makes Martha Stewart green with envy. My stocking are hung with goddamn CARE. My carefully-selected, hand-wrapped gifts are tasteful as fuck. And I can bake the shit outta some cookies, you better believe.
First!!!!
Oh yeah. A discussion was had.
It's like he used the Nabokov automatic sentence generator.
I see someone didn't go to the European School of Luxembourg in 1993.
My first birth wasn't so bad. Second was excruciating. Two words: epidural failure.
And I love that we can admit now to not being 100% fulfilled by babies and baking and cleaning without being branded as Unwomen. Some people like baking, some people like babies, some people like investment banking and rocket science. And these likes don't have to be gendered!
The predominance of male test subjects in the past is due to what our bioethics seminar instructor referred to as "protecting to death" women and children. It took a while for it to occur to medical professionals that women and children were physiologically different and deserved studies aimed at their care, and,…
I am not a science person, but why do certain diseases show up more in certain populations if there is no difference? Like Tay sachs in the Jewish population, or sickle cell anemia among blacks? How does that work?
But is it called a fex? Or a Sfax?