vanessakeepslosingherburnersss
vanessakeepslosingherburnersss
vanessakeepslosingherburnersss

Are they leaving something major out?

you arent the only one. I feel like im taking crazy pills..can some explain to me how it's about girl power when i can compose several arguments that it's actually the opposite? serious question.

Our whole movement is about girl power

I'm not really sure how shaking your ass is girl power?

If it existed, I wouldn't demean the individual redheads.

I see your point and agree with it, but for those of us who are naturally blonde, the current backlash against "cookie-cutter" women who are "blondely/blandly interchangeable" is getting a bit personal, don't you think? I doubt I could get away with saying that about any other hair color.

Seriously? I mean, OK, that's a lot of cheese but is it really so egregious it's worth publicly shaming this guy on the internet? Forever? It just seems like a lot of trollish bullying to me.

I'm not a Gretchen Carlson fan, but I should look so good without make up. Jeeez.

Good grief man, I hardly recognize Snooki.

Affordable and fun approach toward decor/shelter… Back before Apartment Therapy and Pinterest. I wrote about it a long time ago, here and here. Domino also had a book that was pretty cool.

I haven't read them, but I've heard that many times. My only advice is don't mention that to die-hard fans of the series because they will give you the death glare.

I, as a very adult adult, bought Hunger Games. I read the whole thing in about 3 hours. Great story/idea, but awful writing. Like, the most awful book I have ever read. I feel like it is written at about a fourth grade level?

But 'having it all' never originally meant based on what you personally want. Whenever a woman would say "I actually 'just' want to be a mom'", there were accusations (from other women) of cowering to the patriarchy and that you were holding women back. Actually, I would even say that there are still talks of this

I couldn't get beyond halfway on that Glee clip. I found the whole thing a bit gross. I just imagine them all being told, "Okay guys, so if you could all sit together on set, some of you could hold hands maybe? Great - then Lea's gonna lip-synch, while crying, to a song she recorded before (when she wasn't crying) and

$1200?

$1200 for a haircut?! IS HE CUTTING EACH HAIR INDIVIDUALLY?!

I agree. It's as if she think the only two people who exist in the world are white women and black women. Over the course of my life, I've seen thousands of Asian, Mexican, Persian, Egyptian, etc women "thoughtlessly" use braids for their hair when they were having a bad hair day. And as braids have become more trendy

But that's what I don't get about this issue: white ladies* have been wearing their hair in fashionable braids since the braid was invented! So then what's the issue? That this one article written by this one person who clearly has never met anyone with braidable hair says that it's popular now? It's always been

Now playing

One of my very very favorite things on the internet, Historic Hairstyling videos on youtube, demonstrates how braids have been a cross cultural thing for many a century.

Right, hey? This is even more stupid than the NYT article.