No, the problem with the "what's your excuse" tagline is that it makes people come to terms with the fact that they are making excuses for not doing what they feel that they should be doing to achieve their ideal body.
No, the problem with the "what's your excuse" tagline is that it makes people come to terms with the fact that they are making excuses for not doing what they feel that they should be doing to achieve their ideal body.
What exactly about that exchange bothered you? Was this a prelude to harassment by one of them?
I think it's more an issue of buying bras in certain sizes than just buying bras.
I only do it for about two minutes each day.
Sure, your husband can talk about what it is like to be a white South African. He can talk about how white people experienced apartheid, he can talk about how white people experienced the end of apartheid. He can talk about his family recollections of the Boer Wars. He can talk about what is like to travel through…
I can see these types of things happening, though. I am black and was adopted by a black family. However, since I don't "sound black" and I "don't have a name that sounds black" white people assume that my adoptive parents are white about 95% of the time.
Dude, I effing love that green dress! It's incredible and I would salivate over it in person.
I was thinking that it makes total sense that the mid-1980s was the point when people started being interested in who made the dress that the actress wore (Wall Street, anyone?).
Yeah, better comparison.
Yeah, that's what I thought. I mean, you don't go chill with the Fox and Friends gang if you don't agree with them.
Well that post quite nicely illustrates my point.
He wrote an anonymous piece on a blog that is intended for people to write about their thoughts. How is that attempting to influence the woman? If she is out looking at blogs trying to see if he has written something about her, then it's on her for having done it. He's a sociopath for being upset over a break-up? …
So...valuing family would be staying in a marriage to someone that you no longer want to be married to? As opposed to say, recognizing that you've made mistake and moving on?
So, telling someone that you're about to royally fuck them over before you do it means that you love the person? And when the person about to be royally fucked over basically says "yeah, that's going to further your agenda, but blow mine out of the water, so I'd prefer you not do that" but other person still does it…
I've worked on sexual and reproductive programs for about 12 years in the US, London, five countries in Africa, and two countries in South East Asia.
Yes!
But that's exactly what DonnaFaye wrote in the initial post:
They get paid for this?
I don't agree that the way that they treat each other is exemplary. In the episodes leading up to the end of the season, it was very clear that Claire made clear choices to help herself because it was clear that Francis was willing to put her needs/ambitions/goals aside in order to achieve his goals. The final…
Hmmm...I'd go with "understand" and "accept" each other rather than use the term love.