odette1
odette1
odette1

Like the pap shots of Kim K in her leggings.

agreed. I mean, you actually have to look through stuff, but I'm 28 and a couple of my cutest (and most complimented) dresses come from Dress Barn, and they were each like 40 bucks! I just got this one teal lacey dress from there a few months ago and it's super cute and was on sale for 30. It looks like it came

for me, it's all about the stretchy knit dresses, $45 but $10 off if you buy two.

Nope, they're appropriate at any age.

Okay, the hair: As I climbed through my forties, I noticed pressure between my parents and my hairdresser to cut my hair shorter and shorter. Now that I have realized this, I am going to tell my hairdresser to leave the length alone. Dammit.

That is all.

BUT STILL BE HOT!!! (Within the confines of these rules, of course.)

I could give not one half of one solid fuck what anyone thinks I ought to wear. I'd rather go to my grave at 99 in sequins than ever spend one day dressing like a fucking sweater set khaki yawn monster.

saw this on facebook, love it

100% pilot error. He opted for a visual approach (confirmed via ATC) and ended up way short of the runway. He then flared to extend the approach a bit but lost speed and struck the tail WAY short of the lines. Pilot botched his landing BAD.

I don't know the brand she's speaking of, but hospital quality burn cream actually helps regenerate skin/collagen so I could see the connection for using it as an anti-aging cream. Kinda like using Prep H to get rid of the bags under you eyes.

She spends a lot of time on beaches.

I went on vacation with a friend and we took a lot of goofy pics in our dirty hiking clothing. All of that was fine and good, until I went through the photos she'd posted on FB and found one where I was squatting to look at something and fully six inches of my buttcrack were exposed. Not a coin slot. Six inches.

Another "ridiculed out of math" story here. I was told by my Trigonometry teacher on the first day of class that he'd "never given a passing grade to a cheerleader before". The whole class laughed. I was a straight A student. But within 3 weeks I dropped out because I couldn't take his "teasing". It hurt me in

Oh, it's not harmful. It's just not particularly efficacious. SPF 100 and SPF 50 are going to be roughly the same in real-world application. SPF is logarithmic in efficacy, so you see serious diminishing marginal returns after around SPF 50 (which is what the FDA suggested "capping" SPF claims around).

Something similar happened to me as well. As a child I had a problem with math. We had timed sets (something which they did away with later on) and I was awful at completing them on time. I would get maybe one or two finished out of twenty or so, and my teacher would ridicule me in front of the entire class, even when

As you had already secretly longed for in your latent heart, Diagon Alley is now explorable in Google Street View, in all 360 degrees of glory (more accurately, it's the set of Diagon Alley from the Warner Bros. studio tour in London, but let's not get nitpicky because that will ruin the magic). Go ahead forth and

Yes, you are correct that educators are doing some things. But women are not on the verge of winning the war.

Anecdote time! I've always loved math and it came quite easily to me, but never had any particular confidence in my ability to do math well, never had a teacher praise me in the subject. Until my sophomore year of high school: I took pre-calc (trig) with a woman who was known for being an insanely competent math

I had a similar experience: did wonderfully in both math and science, advanced classes all the way from 1st to 7th grade. In 7th grade, my teacher was fine, but my dad decided to inform me that it was really unusual for girls to be as good in math and science as I was. After that, my grades plummeted.