lonicerafragrantissima
Lonicera
lonicerafragrantissima

Sweatpants, no makeup, and bedhead would have taken that video to a whole new level of awesome!

I would think that that world just went zero-gravity and my knees would buckle, then I would fall down on my hiney and realize that, no, it’s just P!nk and she is magical.

Just last night I listened to the “Be the Change” episode of the “Hidden Brain” podcast. It reported on an interracial couple that raised their daughter without gender-specific toys and clothes. It was poignant on so many intersectional levels. Highly recommend to anyone who’s interested in

“Lee,” not “Leigh.” That’s all!

In both the top pic and in yours, I thought she was Khaleesi.

She was using the Paul Ryan definition of “family.”

That’s not Hope Hicks. That is a photo of me, waiting for the school bus, back in the Reagan era. I’ve always been proud of this photo. My mom did my hair. Lauren was sooo jealous!

Revisiting my comment, I just realized we need to change “himself” to “hisself” too. Time to clean up the English language!

Hey, while we’re talking grammar, I’d like to propose a change from “themselves” to “theirselves.” We say “myself” not “meself,” “himself” not “hisself,” “ourselves” not “usselves.” What say you all?

“Beg the question” used to hide in the shadows of argument logic textbooks, rarely seen in mainstream journalism. Then a few people saw it in contexts where its meaning wasn’t obvious and started using it in a way that really does seem to make sense, and that took off. Should we just let it take on its new meaning,

Great, now I’ll never get to sleep.

So... the second person on Earth to complete the climb took the picture?

But... but he loves women in general!

“Make love” used to mean flirting, courting, or wooing, not actual sex.

“Make love” used to mean flirt or court, not sex.

There’s an old white guy on my local nextdoor.com who always chimes in on any discussion about wildlife with “shoot ‘em and eat ‘em” garbage. Whether it’s a squirrel in an attic or a chipmunk in a pool or what kind of bird seed to buy, he’s guaranteed to show up with his joke. I was mystified this morning when I saw a

Thanks for the tip! Here’s a link to Project 333:

Thank you for telling us this. Should we avoid any clothing that says “Made in Cambodia”? And is there anything else we could do to help?

Yes, even on Amazon, if you type “ethical” or “eco” or “organic” or “fair labor” or “fair trade” in the search box, you will find companies that cover all of those bases. It’s certainly worth the 30 seconds. Of course you have to pay more for non-evil stuff — but what better way to use our “privilege”?

So don’t even try? If you go to Amazon and search for “organic cotton” (because 16-25% of pesticides on earth are used on conventional cotton), and then read up on the companies that use it, you’ll see that most of them have a fair trade/ fair labor policies. It’s not a bad start!