Just buy a perpetual time share. That way, you can pay for your progeny’s vacation forever and close the books on that issue.
Just buy a perpetual time share. That way, you can pay for your progeny’s vacation forever and close the books on that issue.
Actually, it’s especially terrible for the people who work there, women who rely on PP for medical care of any kind, the people of Colorado who had this nut job running around. But how exactly is it terrible for those in the “pro-life” movement?
If anyone’s curious why Mr. Wells starts off his statement with “Every time this happens,” well, let’s just say he has a long and sordid history of this kind of behavior. Specifically, he was the guy that made so much noise over Jennifer Lawrence being “too big” for The Hunger Games, and said that readers should…
This is a story about a magazine named lucky...
that is beautiful. I need to research this and find a professional jewelry maker who can make these kind of brooches.
A memento that was also a gift from her mother. This article is so judge-y. What’s the alternative to keeping the doll?
This poor girl’s father committed suicide. She has had to live with that horrible fact all of her life. In some ways it has defined her. Why not cut her some slack about keeping a memento.
This isn’t creepy. I think it’s sweet for her to give that to her daughter. Our culture has a weird aversion to anything death-related.
my family had (i don’t know where they are now) braided “broaches” of dead people’s hair. Women wore the mementos.
So with you. When my mom died 3 years ago, the funeral home sent all 4 of her daughters home with a crushed velvet bag containing some of her hair.
Why is that creepy? He was her father. He died when she was tiny. I think it’s kind of sweet.
Death dolls and other momento mori are not uncommon artifact. They exist in multiple cultures world wide. It’s only in the weirdly puritanical modern western culture where death and mortality in general is considered such a taboo topic that people find such things “creepy”. People die. remembering the dead through…
That’s what I heard from that statement, too. She should have returned it to Courtney Love.
I love how in the past, every older generation used to look at the new generation as so weird and out there. Like I would hear my friends’ grandparents complain about, “Kids these days with their Satanic music and devil clothing. Blah, blah, blah, get off my lawn.” But I can’t do that with Millennials. Because I think…
Y’all need to get back to bringing Caitlyn Doughty around because the Death Fear around here strooong.
Asking for locks of hair is INCREDIBLY common when families lose a loved one. Much more than people realize, I think. But everyone is so afraid to talk about it...
I actually think this is quite lovely. It’s a one-of-a-kind item with a connection to a loved one. Then again, I’m an aging goth who loves the macabre so I might be in the minority here.
In Victorian times jewelry made from the lock of a loved one’s hair was very common. It was often a beautifully crafted brooch like this:
Deadmau5, bro. Stick to dropping the base, not dropping the tears.
Amy Adams is sweetness and light, I can not imagine anyone doing that to her. What a fucking monster.
I don't think corporations are all sociopaths, but the CEO of Nestle...probably.