...OK. I admit it. I occasionally pick up my DW's magazines and read a few articles.
The January Woman's Day has an article about changing your life by Susan Sulich. She says that making even a small change in one's appearance enables you to see the possibility for more significant changes in other areas of your life, and gives you the confidence to go for it no matter what life throws your way. To regain balance and counteract the negative, concentrate on what you CAN control. Her number one suggestion? Cut your hair...
Wow... That's what everyone here has been saying for years... So, if your wife or girlfriend isn't exactly supportive of your slyness, just let them know that Woman's Day says its the right thing to do...
Were you reading that during the commercial breaks while watching Oprah? Just kidding of course.
Were you reading that during the commercial breaks while watching Oprah? Just kidding of course.
No, i need something to read at breakfast, and the paper didn't show up this morning...
That issue ought to be in a doctor's office waiting area soon, I'll catch it then. Good find, useful--very useful.
I get
Martha Stewart Living by subscription myself. Great recipes and insider stock tips.
Red
I knew a guy years ago who.....how to put this politely? Scored more strange @$$ than a truck stop toilet seat! There was no place this guy couldn't go where he didn't end up picking up some woman and disappearing. He always had a solid line, not overbearing or coddling, he just seemed to get across that he really understood what was going on in their lives or, if he didn't understand that he really wanted to..
I asked him one time if I could sit at his feet and observe so that I, too, could learn.
He told me that it wasn't that complex.....just start reading Cosmo. He actually had a subscription. He said that he got his best material from that publication.
Gee, you mean actually read it??? The most I ever did was look at the pictures.
The thing I can't understand about those superficial magazines is how they can pump out issue after issue of the exact same material year after year after year. At least the pointless entertainment magazines like Us Weekly, Rolling Stone, and People can gossip about different celebrities, movies, and CDs every week, but how many times can you promote "The bestest diet evar that will shed the pounds with no effort whatsoevar!" before you audience says "Wait a minute, why's this needed when they did this last week, last month, last year, and last decade?"