Things no one tells you about weddings
Originally brides held bouquets so they wouldn't have to smell the guests!
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Things no one tells you about weddings
Originally brides held bouquets so they wouldn't have to smell the guests!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Vegetables are terrifying.Â
[via]
Who said veggies are always good for you?
Things no one tells you about teeth
True they say you should floss everyday, but you'll stave off what you need to as long as you floss three times a week, minimum.
When The Media Treats White Suspects And Killers Better Than Black Victicms.
via The Huffington Post.
Have you ever looked at how the media reports on perpetrators through a racial lens? Fascinating stuff.

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Reminder that Ferguson is a food desert and school is canceled. People’s movement is restricted. The work of the St Louis Food Bank is vital right now. Help if you can. (x)
STL FOOD BANK
No school = no food for many #ferguson kids. Here's how you can help.
If you want longer looking eyelashes, use an eyelash curler before applying mascara.
You can make gluten free bread out of almond meal! Here's the recipe from http://elenaspantry.com: INGREDIENTS 1 1/2 cups almond flour 2 tblspn coconut flour 1/4 cup flaxseed meal (golden if possible) 1/4 tspn salt 1 1/2 tspn baking soda 5 eggs 1/4 cup coconut oil 1 tblspn honey 1 tblspn apple cider vinegar Mix ingredients and bake in loaf pan for 30 min at 350 degrees.
Things no one tell you about flies
Want to keep them from following you inside? Hang a ziplock bag of water with a couple of pennies in it just outside the door.
When you post inspirational quotes in the office bathroom, people simultaneously feel uplifted and like they want to punch you in the face.

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Well whaddaya know? You can bake a cake in a crockpot! This gluten free cutie took 4 hours on high with a spoon under the lid to give it a little air. I just added water, ground flaxseed w/ water (instead of eggs) and coconut oil (instead of butter) to Betty Crocker GF devil's food cake mix and now it's moist, yummy and vegan, too! I didn't use a special pan, I just lined the bowl with parchment paper, which made it easy to lift out too. Next experiment: Gluten free bread!
Fun and easy ways to make great looking breakfasts, garnishes, dinners, apps and desserts! H/T to @Rx_for_catering #ftw
How do you mourn someone you've known your entire life?
As constant as the trees around your house, the seasons at home, your favorite breakfast, there is comfort in knowing people are around. Even if you don't see them every day. Even if you haven't spoken to them in years. You get used to people. You grow up with them, take them for granted. So what happens when they die? Life is full of random connections between people; people we grow up next to, work beside, graduate school with without ever really knowing. You may never have shared secrets, but without noticing, they somehow have become part of the fabric of your life. Perhaps the loss is more keen for knowing that you were never really close. Because your bond was so weak, their death seems all the more random, like a short story ending that comes out of nowhere. Your life doesn't stop. You feel no shock. Just a dull heavy feeling of loss you carry knowing that someone will miss them more. The person who truly loved this person will be destroyed by this loss and you're just a passerby. A minor player in the story of their life. How do you mourn someone you've known your entire life? Carefully, like you're folding up a piece of origami paper. Slowly, so you don't break anything. With great trepidation because it's in mourning those whom we barely know that we come close to seeing our own mortality for the fragile, unpredictable creature it is.
Is Google Glass worth it?
Wearing Google Glass in public provokes odd responses: sidelong stares, whispers. But you also make a lot of new friends who want to know: "Is it worth it?" Especially since Google has announced a limited number will be up for grabs to anyone with $1,500 to spend, people are wondering if they'll make the investment.
The No. 2 question people ask — "What does it do?" — is much easier to answer. Since getting my set March 25, I've worn it every day. Not just to get my money's worth, but so I can figure out how to integrate it into my day to day routine in ways that might not be obvious. In no particular order, this is what I do with Glass:
Answer/make phone callsÂ
Hangout with people
Find directions (walking/driving)
Take pictures (by winking!)
Record short videos (mostly of my daughter)
Have news stories read to me (reading them is kind of a drag)
Check the weather
Read brief emails (also kind of a drag)
Send tweets (voice recognition makes captions tricky, however)
Share photos with Facebook friends
Share photos/thoughts with G+ circles
Dictate notes when I get an idea and send them to Evernote
Play silly games while I'm waiting in line
Listen to music (and wish most of it was on Google Play instead of iTunes)
Work outÂ
Ok, so I haven't quite made it past workout No. 1, but I have big aspirations. I'm also really looking forward to using the golf apps that help you read the lie before you putt and correct your swing when you drive. As a full-time worker and mother of a toddler, rounds of golf are as rare as spa trips or vacations (not to mention workout time). But I'll get there. It feels as if I have a lot of exploring left to do with the apps I've downloaded but can't use every day, and that's exciting.
My biggest fear was that Glass would drive a wedge between me and my staunchly pro flip-phone husband. He doesn't understand why my job (which includes community management) requires I spend so much time in "tiny town," glued to my mobile. Although I am literally tethered to my phone through the Bluetooth headset, I feel Glass has actually liberated me from my phone. When I take a picture of my daughter or decide to film 10 seconds on a swing set, the point of view is mine, not my hands, which are free to hold, hug, clap and grasp. As a sometime travel writer, that's tremendously exciting.
When people stop to ask me about Google Glass, the first thing I do is let them try mine on. Just saying "OK glass" and seeing the options of what they can do on the menu screen appear seems to satisfy most. It's rare a person will do more than open an app. Most people prefer I scroll through the menu for them to take a picture or record a video and then they're done. (Incidentally, I have a lot of pictures of me grinning like an idiot taken by strangers). Only a couple of people have actually flipped through the options to play around.
And that seems to be typical of Google Explorers, too. Some of my friends in the program, who were among the first invited, have given up wearing their Glass. It just didn't do enough for them, they said. Others, like the helpful customer service Explorer I spoke with last week, guiltily confess they use theirs just to take pictures.
Co-existing with the Explorers is the Developers community. In it, people are designing Glass apps to assist doctors in surgery and help firefighters locate people within burning buildings. It's thrilling to think of the as-yet-unknown applications for Glass that will help people work and live. Of course, not every app can save the world, but there are lots of practical apps in development Explorers can side-load and test. It may seem prosaic, but as someone who ends up in the grocery store every day, I'm anxiously waiting for the shopping list app to become available. It's a tool  I know I'll use all the time, which is what my Glass are shaping up to be.
So when people ask, "Is it worth it?" I think the answer depends on how they'll use Glass. If all you're going to do is take pictures, than no. You can get a much better camera for $1,500 — one that zooms, has filters and can post to social media without getting you banned from San Francisco pubs.
But if you are truly interested in being an Explorer in the purest sense of the word, then yes, my answer is it absolutely is worth it. Every day I find some new way in which Glass has made my life easier. And learn about something in development that will make someone else's life better.

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It's coming! Big love to everyone who helped w/my #Glasshole campaign. Bummed the ONLY day #googleexplorers weren't available in SF was my one day in town. But it's COMING!Â