Men are so private online. A guy could be moving to another country or having his first child, and he’d still only post a random football score on his story.
People who do GRWM to work have TIME, Real time. Every time I wake up for work, I have less than 30 mins to be ready, and every second is accounted for. The day I add "good morning guys" to my morning routine is the day I'm officially unemployed.
Mercy is when you can't even explain how you're surviving, but you are. You don't have it all figured out, but each day, God sends help right when you need it. Hallelujah.
I watched someone get fired for performance issues that had never once been raised in any of her reviews. When she asked for documentation HR said it was "observational feedback" and not the kind that gets written down. She got a lawyer.
Anyone who is home all day and expects the one away from home all day to come home to cook, is not a good person.
The responsibility is on who is home to cater to all. It is supposed to be common sense.
I tweet for me boo 😭 Twitter for the OGs was basically a diary. We wasn’t sitting around chasing engagement . You just had a thought, tweeted it, and kept scrolling. If somebody saw it, cool. If they didn’t, oh well 😂 Twitter originally wasn’t even about likes like that. It was just people broadcasting their random ass thoughts into the universe.
Most working UK adults haven't had an actual weekend in years.
Saturday morning is the chore catch-up — the food shop, the laundry, the bins, the post, the things you didn't have the energy for during the week.
Saturday afternoon is the only real free time most people get all week. About 4-5 hours of it. It usually gets spent recovering from the morning's admin.
Saturday evening is dinner, telly, a couple of drinks, an early-ish bed because Sunday isn't going to be much easier.
Sunday is part chores, part dread. By 6pm you're already mentally on Monday. By 9pm you're laying out clothes and checking the alarm.
What people call 'a weekend' is, in practice, about 6 hours of actual leisure — fragmented into 30-90 minute chunks between admin, recovery, and pre-emptive Monday anxiety.
This is why working people in their thirties spend their twenties thinking 'this will improve when I'm earning more.' It doesn't — the shape stays exactly the same, only the cost of living it goes up.