notquitened
notquitened
notquitened

I’m not religious but my in-laws are, and I never remember if it’s up-down-left-right or up-down-right-left when you cross yourself, but then Mike Myers did the spectacles-testicles-wallet-watch thing in Austin Powers so now I always remember.

Just discovered CW Seed— or more like I finally understood what it’s for as I’ve heard about it but never visited until few days ago. It’s basically WB’s version of Crackle. I have so far only used it to watch the vast amount of Whose Line is it Anyway? episodes. But there are definitely some other cool things like

Popsicles, booze and math make for a great article.

I guess these are good for regular working folks, bu they all suck for drawing IMO. As an illustrator there are many superior drawing pens.

I guess these are good for regular working folks, bu they all suck for drawing IMO. As an illustrator there are many

I would wager that a lot of people voting for the Pilot G2 have never tried a Jetstream, given that they are not nearly as common as the G2, at least in my experience. I have tried every pen on this list, and many others, and the Jetstream was the clear winner: smooth, consistent, smudge-free, etc. I’m just saying, if

I would wager that a lot of people voting for the Pilot G2 have never tried a Jetstream, given that they are not

Heathrow? Really? *shudder*

Wow, Heathrow is my least favorite airport; the four times I’ve connected through it were ALL horrible experiences (although I’ll admit, it’s been a few years). Things were dirty, badly lit, uncomfortable, and the people weren’t particularly courteous.
Hopefully my experiences are the exception.

“Is this person going to abuse me?”

I am seeing a lot of people saying this is naïve, but as someone who is older, has a lot of experience in life, has gone through it and has seen others go through it...this is the best advice. I have never seen a relationship go through this and not come badly on the other side. There is a reason the other person

I disagree. Having been in a several years-long relationship with someone who cheated, I was well aware of temptations and the opportunities for infidelity. But I also had the wherewithal to reject them. So I know it’s possible to be tempted and not follow through. I would expect my partner to do the same for me. If

Yep, that advice is bizarrely tone deaf.

Here’s the opinion of a person who’s been married & divorced (not due to cheating, about to marry again), & doesn’t have kids, but is old enough to be a mother to an adult offspring:

I agree with this. Following a bad experience, I found Chumplady.com, and my suspicions, (that cheating is a form of emotional abuse), were confirmed.

Dan has his head up his ass on ‘why people cheat’ mainly because his relationship is ‘monogamish’ and he thinks everyone should just get over the boning of other people. If it works for him, great, but Dan Savage is not the one to turn to for relationship advice when it comes to cheating. People don’t cheat because of

This article could have been a lot shorter... under no circumstance is it ever advisable to stay with someone after they have cheated. I’m sorry, but if anyone who has been cheated on and stays in the relationship made the wrong choice, plain and simple.

Take the week off work? Seriously, what world do you live in? Going easy on yourself and creating headspace is one thing, but that’s a helluva luxury to dedicate to the situation.

Sounds like you want to cheat

1. Find out she’s been cheating.

With brushy brush.

I gave up and and resigned that I’ll forever be covered in lonely people’s glitter.