I wore a denim skirt to my Oxford interview. Twenty years later I'm suddenly getting all appropriate?
My god, I can't believe my mother let me wear that. My blouse was very pretty, though.
I need more steel-toed shoes and more denim skirts, I'm suddenly convinced. But I don't need more shoes. And I don't need more clothes.
Now I'm worried that settlement is a Canadian usage, b/c every immgration reference I find to it is from Canada.
I've got some Gymboree coupon codes if anyone is interested.
30% off a reg price item
20% off entire purchase
$15 off $60 purchase or more
Thanks, y'all I smushed your excellent suggestions up into one, way improved, sentence and sent the whole document off to the VP.
A denim skirt sounds perfectly acceptable.
And I don't need more clothes.
I'm sure I don't either, and yet I'm browsing a bunch of different blazers. And skirts.
I also could do with more blazers and turtlenecks. Despite oncoming LA summer. It's still going to be wintry in this office, as long as I'm employed here.
I am getting many compliments on my Easter egg nails. Which is fun and all, but it makes me realized I NEED to see Kat very soon so I can trade her cash monies for some groovy Nubar nail polish.
The things that get shuffled to the bottom of my to-do list. Damn shame, I say.
Timelies all!
The check engine light went on in my car on my drive home. I'm going to drop it off at the dealer early tomorrow and hope it isn't anything major. Feh.
I think I need a reality check. There's this post on consumerist [link] about a vegan blog that put together a recipe for a vegan version of the KFC Double Down. I thought the post was funny. But a lot of the comments are things like "Vegans: You have the right to eat whatever you want, just don't try to get me to go vegan or act all morally superior about it" or "Why do vegans have to be so self-righteous? Different strokes for different folks, live and let live." And I'm puzzled. The one thing in that post that I can see as insulting anybody is a swipe at KFC.
But now I'm worried that, if people are seeing self-righteousness and moral superiority in a post where I see having fun with food and chemistry, do people hear that when I talk about my food? Is there something in that post that I'm not seeing that's provoking that reaction, something that I should try to avoid but don't know to avoid because I don't know it's there?
It's not you; it's them. Hell, if someone can't tell that the vegans are even poking fun at themselves in that post, they certainly can't tell the difference between self-righteousness and, uh, whatever is not self-righteous.