I Canberra-ly contain my own enthusiasm for them as well.
I Canberra-ly contain my own enthusiasm for them as well.
"Also, in my situation they call from Australia and get you to wire them money when it all goes down under"
I agree with you in general (fellow nose jobee right here) but in Amanda's case, I think she is over sharing due to her paranoid, delusional, and obsessed reasons behind speaking out about it. I'm guess I'm like, 'anybody but Amanda speak out about it', because she's just perpetuating the idea that those who get…
``But the most attractive thing about Nick was his passion. For the process of creating art, the beauty of free speech, his opinion about how the Rolling Stones were better than the Beatles. He was never serious but always serious....``
Her last sentence is pure awesomeness.
If it makes you feel better, I typed in "how to get more twitter followers" and 1.5 BILLION hits came up. So, it's not like you're exactly alone here lol.
lol, why the snark? I'm empathizing with you. If you look at my comment, I said "you *should not have* to spend that kind of money to get a good result", meaning, people should know how to cut your hair, regardless of its complexity, w/o gouging you.
Or a Ryan Lochte-esque comment where he actually thinks treadmills are vehicles meant to take people places and this new found discovery has left him dumbfounded.
Whaaaaa? I don't know where you live, but you should not have to spend that kinda money to get a good result. I have had known at least 5 women who have curly/kinky hair and they only need to spend *at most* $100 to get a good cut.
$70 dollars is my sweet spot too. I find anything lesser than and they rush or don't have enough of the techniques down pat, and anything much higher, and it's too much about the hairdresser's ego.
Funny, because while I agree with that in theory, I think social media has actually made people anti-social. I also think many time sites like Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram don't reflect the life you have but the life you *want*. For many people, it's about magnifying what you want people to see…
"I used to watch my ex-friend Jessica running on the treadmill—day after day, year after year—like a madwoman, and going nowhere."
Duh, didn't you see the documentary on Dubai women, Sex and the City 2?
Bingo.
No, read it just fine thanks.
When a person says 'women are moody', it's playing into the ancient old stereotype that women are *more* moody than men are *period*. Drew is playing into that misguided notion. So are you (despite the backpeddling). If men were just as moody, the comment "women are moody" would be considered an incomplete thought.…
Just because you're moody in general, doesn't mean women in general are moody.
See, and I'm too afraid that someone is going to take a picture of me taking a picture of my food and then the next day, I turn my computer on and I'm on some internet site being made fun of (yes, I realize I sound paranoid and self-absorbed).
Oh, I totally believe that too. I think it's one of those 'the line between interest and unhealthy obsession' is can be blurry, especially when it comes to something as emotionally-weighted as food.
Isn't Amanda's head shaved on her left side? Maybe she just flipped it over to cover it?