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5 Pretty Ways to Conceal Your Condoms

itsjustsex:

“These days, a woman has got to be prepared. You can’t leave it up to the man. And if you’re packing some condoms, you’re more likely to use them not only as a means of birth control but, just as importantly, as a way to ensure that you aren’t exposed to any STD

But you don’t want to be obvious about it by dropping a few condoms in your purse. Or having them just hanging out on your night stand.”

These ideas are cute, but I still don’t see anything wrong with the drawer in a bedside table and hidden pocket in a purse.

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I don’t think writers are sacred, but words are. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones in the right order, you might nudge the world a little or make a poem that children will speak for you when you are dead.
Tom Stoppard (via nathanielstuart)

(via booklover)

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madmenfootnotes:

 How did you feel when Don wolfishly smirked at his next possible sexual conquest? If you’re like me, it was a twinge of disgust, then a rallying sense that “we got our boy back.” While the afternoon of spooning post anxiety attack seemed delightful, it’s Don’s delinquency that enthralls us. Characters with mass appeal win their audiences not by demonstration of their heroic dimensions but through their display of weaknesses and ambiguities. When we get glimpses of nihilistic, fuck-all instinct in our hero, it’s difficult not to feel twitches of worship. Pauline Kael, in an essay on appeal Dean and Brando called this certain kind of charisma “the glamour of delinquency”:

Footnotes of Mad Men: The Delinquent Hero on Hands and Knees

madmenfootnotes:

 How did you feel when Don wolfishly smirked at his next possible sexual conquest? If you’re like me, it was a twinge of disgust, then a rallying sense that “we got our boy back.” While the afternoon of spooning post anxiety attack seemed delightful, it’s Don’s delinquency that enthralls us. Characters with mass appeal win their audiences not by demonstration of their heroic dimensions but through their display of weaknesses and ambiguities. When we get glimpses of nihilistic, fuck-all instinct in our hero, it’s difficult not to feel twitches of worship. Pauline Kael, in an essay on appeal Dean and Brando called this certain kind of charisma “the glamour of delinquency”:

Footnotes of Mad Men: The Delinquent Hero on Hands and Knees

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The town hall meeting was rough on Obama today. Why don’t people ask their elected officials these same questions? Oh I know, because our representatives are too busy pretending to work with our best interest in mind…I’m sick of it. I wish Congress would grow some balls and focus on effective policymaking rather than politics and ignore the bullsh*t that comes with it.

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I miss being a kid! I’m glad that I was able to really enjoy my childhood. I was one of those who was in no rush to get older. A late bloomer in every sense of the word.