I had one thing I had to remember today: to bring my financials to work with me.
They are sitting on the staircase at home.
Sigh.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I had one thing I had to remember today: to bring my financials to work with me.
They are sitting on the staircase at home.
Sigh.
ND, That sounds interesting. I may have to pick it up, along with the Abigail Adams book recommended by Cashmere on Facebook. This kindle is not doing good things for my spending. I read too fast.
I was trying to think of someone to split it with, and realized that there are only three unmarried people in the building who aren't living with their parents.
If it's a full family share, you could share it with a family, I bet.
This kindle is not doing good things for my spending. I read too fast.
You could save some money if you hit yourself in the head hard enough.
Wait, don't hurt your spicy brains!
The CSA concept intrigues me. I think I'm going to try it, but I do have the same issue, Sophia. I did see a few options for half shares with drop-offs near me, though.
It's so pleasant out. What a mood lifter.
This is the first CSA that has drop offs within 45 minutes of me! The car culture is so prevalent here that you had to go to the farm or the suburbs.
I wish there was a way people could pay for this with their food-stamp benefit and they could have a drop off down-town. I wonder if people would use it? They accept them at the farmers market, but it would be a huge time saver.
Sophia, I'm going through that book like a hot knife through butter. It's fascinating.
Isaiah Mustafa from the Old Spice ads is on Ellen today! (Edit: OMG, he's adorable and hilarious. And a former professional football player.) Also Ed Helms, who I just like more and more.
Quants, as I understand the term having read the awesome IOU: Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay, are super smart mathy folks who were sought out by the financial industry to come up with equations that justified every action they took that defied common sense.
So it's like the mathy equivalent of squints on Bones?