Sugar Publishing is having a karaoke party to celebrate our move to a bigger office (yay!) and I hope it's as rockin' as this one (minus the coffin). Seriously, who among us could turn down a Journey song, no matter how badly we sing? I wouldn't even be ironic about my love for them. I'd just belt it out, baby! "I'm just a small town girl/Livin' in a lonely world..."
Nice on the outside, naughty on the inside? They could be describing me, but they're actually describing this awesome Raunchy Wrapping Paper that looks ordinary on the outside, but has a montage of nudie girls or boys on the inside. At first I thought it said girls AND boys. That would've been even better. Just don't accidentally wrap Mom a present with this. I could sooo see myself doing that...(Thanks Geek!)
I got my hair cut a few months ago--- short. I used to have fairly long hair that I enjoyed, but unfortunately I get bored with my looks quite often. I used to dye my long hair a different color every few months, but I decided back in March that dyeing it just wasn't cutting it, and I wanted to do something drastic.
So, on impulse (like I do everything) I decided to go get it cut. My boyfriend fully supports me and really likes the look, but I HATE IT. He never hesitates to tell me how gorgeous he thinks I am, but I still feel unattractive. I've been growing it out, and while I think it's a cute cut, I miss my long hair and just don't feel as pretty as I used to.
I'm 5'3, weigh a normal 120 lbs and I have always felt fairly attractive until now. It has gotten past just missing my hair - I feel fat (I used to weigh 109-112 and am now 119-122) and I can't afford extensions. Are there any more tips you can give me to help me look and feel like my old self again? I feel ugly.
Meet Jim Stutts, a claims adjuster from Ft. Wayne, IN. He's been named as one of the top 299 million least influential people in America. What does his wife say about it all? "He's finally getting recognition for not having any effect on anyone." Oh, and Mr. Newscaster? Bite me!
In a recent Forbes Magazine article, research shows that anorexia is transcending the age barrier, now affecting women in their late 20s, 30s, and even in their 40s. This might come as a shock to some of you, seeing how anorexia has typically been viewed as a young woman's problem, so why the older diagnosis? You would think that older, more mature women would know better, but research suggests that older women are being treated for this disease because of growing public awareness of the disease, social pressure to be thin, an aging group of baby boomers, and women who simply have not yet fully recovered from a previous eating disorder.
I unfortunately know women in their teens, in their 20s, 30s, and even 50s who struggle with eating disorders, so what I want to know is, does anorexia or bulimia play a role in your adult life, affecting you either personally or a loved one?
Following in the footsteps of the news anchor who refused to report on Paris a while back, this guy doesn't want to utter the words "Lindsay Lohan" ever again. Justified? Perhaps. But I can't say I wasn't all up in her business yesterday like everyone else. The way I see it, responsible citizens need to know which drunken celebs to watch out for on the roads at night-- right?! It's a matter of public safety, really.