I broke the thread with my neediness.
Okay, but if I get a bad haircut, it's all y'alls' fault.
'Potential'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I broke the thread with my neediness.
Okay, but if I get a bad haircut, it's all y'alls' fault.
Teppy, I don't think I've ever seen you look like ASS. It is unpossible.
I like the length it was when you were in SF recently. I know it was a bit longer than your usual, but I thought it looked good.
I have no hair advice, Teppy, but I think you already look gorgeous in that picture.
I can't figure out how to turn on the heat in the apartment (we haven't needed to use it since we moved in. I thought the "on" button would make it work, but nsm. I don't feel like dealing with my landlord today, so I guess it's wrap myself in a blanket day until TCG gets home.
I like the length it was when you were in SF recently. I know it was a bit longer than your usual, but I thought it looked good.
It's just driving me nuts at this length. (And even at that length.) (But thanks!) I just feel messy and chaotic and all I do is pull it up or ponytail it anyway, which makes it sort of pointless to have long hair, at least for me.
There are a couple of shades of meaning. It can mean someone from New England (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachussetts--and I can't remember if Connecticut is on the list or not), with a certain stereotype of thriftiness and humorlessness lurking in the wings. It's also a term people in the American South use to refer to people from the North.From way back--Connecticut is most definitely part of New England/Yankee. I actually don't identify myself as British/Dutch/Irish/French American (my supposed ethnic roots); I identify as a New Englander. My family has been there for 14+ generations on both sides.
However, the concept of "Yankee" also has different connotations when you have older members of the family that grew up in rural, northern New England, as mine did. My family's "Yankee" has to do with being stoic, not complaining, putting in a hard day's work each day, and generally adopting a live and let live attitude. The thriftiness mentioned above? Oh hell yes. Talking about your personal life or getting "too personal" is frowned upon, which I think explains a lot of the Northeast reputation for being cold or distant to strangers. For my grandmothers' generation, asking people you don't know well any kind of question is intrusive, bad manners.
But my family is really far removed from the WASP old money stereotype, so I know my perspective on what it is to be a New Englander is skewed. I come from farmers and laborers (who were technically WASPs, but definitely don't fit the image that evokes). Despite the fact I have little in common with my grandmothers' Yankees, I'm very proud of that heritage.
ETA: I was shocked the first time I went to the South and came up against the anger about my home, though I understand where it comes from.
Go inverted bob! Choose inverted bob!
So, I'm thinking maybe an inverted bob: [link] [link], but with bangs.
It's a classic look, and would pretty on you.
Talking about your personal life or getting "too personal" is frowned upon, which I think explains a lot of the Northeast reputation for being cold or distant to strangers.
Hear hear! (clings to Boston living and our cold hard ways)
School types - I'm filling out my diploma application (yay) and one of the questions is whether or not I want my SSN printed on my transcript. At the moment I'm not planning on more school for my masters, so a transcript is kind of a non-issue. I think. Should I say yes, does it matter?