I will go at all the menfolk. They just require more decision making than the ladies, what with all the categories.
Yep. Hence the at some point. Also, I figured that as conditions go, that wasn't really one, since I know you like him.
'The Girl in Question'
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.
I will go at all the menfolk. They just require more decision making than the ladies, what with all the categories.
Yep. Hence the at some point. Also, I figured that as conditions go, that wasn't really one, since I know you like him.
OMG, Aims, that is a GROWN CHILD! WTF? Also, cute.
DINAO made me throw up a little in my mouth.
We had a sucessful crafting playdate in which no-sew fleece hats and felt Christmas tree ornaments were created.
I baked some banana bread which was yummy.
OMG, Aims, that is a GROWN CHILD! WTF?
I know!!
Also, cute.
Thanks, babe! She is pretty cute, huh???
F Craig, C Radcliffe, M Dae Kim
F: Daniel Craig
C: Daniel Radcliffe (sorry, Aims--more for you!)
M: Daniel Dae Kim
F - DDK, C - DR, M - DC.
M: Daniel Craig
C: Daniel Dae Kim
F: Damiel Radcliffe
Thouch the F and the M are interchangeable for me.
Well, she is at least involved enough with somebody to be having kids with him. . . so I don't know if she's married but she is taken.
Star Trek Stops Women From Becoming Computer Scientists
“You can get a message about whether you want to join a certain group just by seeing the physical environment that that group is associated with,” Cheryan says. “You walk in, see these objects and think, ‘This is not me.’”
Cheryan and colleagues tested this idea by alternately decorating a computer science classroom with objects that earlier surveys pegged as stereotypically geeky—Star Trek posters, videogames and comic books — or with objects that the surveys found to be neutral— coffee mugs, plants and art posters. Thirty-nine college students spent a few minutes in the room, then filled out a questionnaire on their attitudes toward computer science.
Women who spent time in the geeky room reported less interest in computer science than women who saw the neutral room. For male students, however, the room’s décor made no difference.
In follow-up tests, a total of 215 students were asked to imagine they were joining either a geekily decorated or a neutrally decorated company after graduation. For every possible scenario, women preferred the non-geeky space.
“It’s a consistent effect,” Cheryan says. “The environment can communicate a sense of belonging, but it also communicates a sense of exclusion, or a sense that this is not a place where I would fit in.”
I wonder if a poster of Kirk and Spock kissing would help....