Oh, poor squalling bugs. And their parents.
I severely doubt I'll have the energy to get my brows done, sadly. There'd be parking and walking and all sorts of stuff I'm not up for.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Oh, poor squalling bugs. And their parents.
I severely doubt I'll have the energy to get my brows done, sadly. There'd be parking and walking and all sorts of stuff I'm not up for.
My brows are getting kind of crazy and Peter Gallagher-like.
And that makes me miss The O.C.
Season 1, that is.
Season 1, that is.
I think that goes without saying.
I do my own brows with a tweezer. It sometimes shows, but since I can barely schedule a haircut, it is for the best.
I wonder when I should make an appointment for getting the eyebrows done.
Thanks, Cass! But I have to say, sara's link ROCKS.Dude, it so rocks more!
Poor angry pepper...
Angry angry angry pepper.
I'm watching Pushing Daisies now and am cracking up. I LOVE Olive and I adore Emerson. I have to say, this makes me love Bryan Fuller.
hot pepper
I could use some eyebrown maintenance myself. AND I tweeze every day. I have crazy eyebrows.
Cruel 1960s pscyhology experiments
The Guardian has an article about the "most bizarre tests ever conducted in name of scientific inquiry."
My favorite involved 10 soldiers who went on a supposedly routine airplane flight in California in the 1960s. After a while, the plane started falling and the pilot announced they were about to crash.
While the soldiers faced almost certain death, a steward handed out insurance forms and asked the men to complete them, explaining it was necessary for the army to be covered if they died.
Little did the soldiers know they were completely safe. It was merely an experiment to find out how extreme stress affects cognitive ability, the forms serving as the test. Once the final soldier had completed his form the pilot announced: "Just kidding about that emergency folks!"
A later attempt to repeat the experiment with a new group of unwitting volunteers was ruined by one of the previous soldiers, who had penned a warning on a sickbag.
That's fucked up.