17 Questions To Ask Yourself That Will Help You Honestly Address How Well You’ve Spent Your Year Thus Far
As Annie Dillard said, “How we spend our days is of course how we spend our lives.” How do I honestly, actually spend my days?
As Annie Dillard said, “How we spend our days is of course how we spend our lives.” How do I honestly, actually spend my days?
“A study that took almost 40 years shows that regularly smoking marijuana can make people worse at their jobs. When asked how they knew that, researchers said: ‘Cuz that study was supposed to take two years, man.'”
iOS upgrades are the spawn of the devil, and you usually ignore them for a month until your phone finally tricks you into clicking “Install” when you’re half-asleep or drunk.
It’s time to ignore your impostor syndrome. Because no matter how far or how fast you run, you can’t leave that part of your brain behind. It’s part of our human nature, to chase obsessively after that which we desperately want, and then to convince ourselves it’s too good to be true the moment that we have it in our hands. We’re used to wanting, not having. We don’t know what to do once we have something in our grasp. We don’t know how to stop running.
“Leo walks onstage. He grabs the Oscar. He leans into the microphone. “The meme is dead,” he whispers. He vanishes in a puff of smoke #Oscars”
You start calculating the number of hours of your life that you spent watching this series, but you stop halfway through because the number gets too high/depressing.
Not looking like you’ve been inflated with an air pump, because you’ve stopped drinking so much beer.
Having standards does not automatically mean you are shallow, foolish, and a hopeless dreamer.
Here’s what I know about Princess Leia: she spends the majority of her time in a white gospel singer robe, and when she’s not wearing that, she’s wearing the bestselling slave costume from Party City.
Initially, Trump supporters seem like mythical creatures – they can’t possibly be real, can they?