FULL TIME
So many Questionable calls
So much CHAOS
So much DRAMA.
But one thing is for sure.
PORTUGAL 🇵🇹 ADVANCE
Portugal 🇵🇹 2-1 🇭🇷 Croatia
#PORCRO#FIFAWorldCup
If you follow me, it’s probably because you love the Blue Jays. Regardless of the result, here’s hoping you cherished the journey; the road taken can be just as important as the destination.
I must say, the Reds, Phillies, and Brewers did not give the Dodgers a run for their money and go toe to toe with them quite like the Jays just did. Always remember that.
#WorldSeries#WANTITALL
LIFE ACCOMPLISHMENTS THAT GO UNNOTICED:
1. Being happy in your marriage
2. Taking a pay cut to do a job you love
3. Making a major life shift at 50 or 60
4. Enjoying your own company
5. Being able to say “no” comfortably
6. Using your gifts to help others
7. Divorce from a dysfunctional situation
I was laid off from Twitter today. I was the designer in charge of our new rebranding to X.
I learned so much in my 2.5 weeks at the company but I’m excited to see where I land next.
If you’re hiring a self taught, junior designer please DM me. Graphic design is my passion!
remember when cupcakes had this huge moment in like 2010 and cupcake shops opened everywhere and you couldn’t get normal desserts anywhere u had to eat gigantic dry cupcakes that were $15 each
Not sure how effective blasting The Cranberries “Zombie” over my four year olds tantrum in the car was- but it sure made me feel better. Also my three year old is singing it to himself while playing -so win?
This is a side by side of two women gracing the front covers of two well known magazines.
The one on the right we all know is Martha Stewart, age 81. The one on the left is Apo Whang-Od, age 106, a tribal tattooist in a remote province in the Philippines.
There seems to be an unwritten rule which equates beauty with youngness. In an interview, Martha Stewart told the reporter she credits her organic, home-grown, farm-to-table eating, yoga, and actively healthy lifestyle to her youthfulness. While that’s an admirable journey for her, let’s not forget the amount of privilege that kind of lifestyle requires.
On the left is Apo Whang-Od, who is a 106-year-old tribal tattooist in the Philippines. The wisdom she carries in every forehead wrinkle and frown line is stunning. Her eyes are glass, reflecting back all that she’s witnessed over a century of lived experiences. Her tattoos a reminder of the ancestors she seeks to honor.
Both women are beautiful in their own right. But I wish we as women didn’t play into this idea that we have to look younger—and thinner—in order to fit some unrealistic beauty standard which will grant us acceptance and relevance in the world around us.
I’m writing this for any woman who, like me, may have had a punched-gut reaction to seeing an octogenarian in a swimsuit on the cover of a magazine looking more like a woman in her forties or fifties: Anti-aging is not a beauty standard.
There IS beauty in wrinkles, and saggy skin, and drooping breasts. These are markers of a life hard fought for and well lived. It seems odd to try and erase these battle scars.
So while I applaud Martha for her fortunate body, carefully curated procedures, and pristinely styled makeup, I also applaud Whang-Od for what others may perceive as imperfections.
Anti-aging is not a beauty standard.
Authenticity is.
@ FeministNews