Showing posts with label Hairstuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hairstuff. Show all posts
October 9, 2012
October 6, 2012
HAIRTHANG
I love my red hair, but I really hate that I have to dye it all the time and brown roots look awful. So I'm going back to brown! Which one of these 3 colour you like.
RED
BROWN
BLACK
October 2, 2012
SOMEONE LIKE YOU
Don't worry, this blog isn't going to turn any Instagram and iPhone photo blog.
I got some cheap deco gem stickers from Tiger and I decided to pimp my Rilakkuma case.
Atm I'm reading book ''Someone Like You'' by Roald Dahl. It's full of different short stories. Roald Dahl is known for his amazing children books that I also love.
My favourite tattoos. They're so prettyyyy.
This photo reminds me of 60's (bottom lashes, hat, that plaid jacket, b&w). I love this hat, I don't even remember where I got it but it's just so cute.
I've had my hair in this style for a while. I just love it, sassy baby spice.
I haven't been writing almost at all about my personal life in a long time. I don't even know why, I've just been kinda tired of writing. I know most of you care about what I write, even if it's nothing special, so I'm gonna try.
I've been going to this free Business Class. It started yesterday and it's kinda fun. I thought that it would be really boring, but I enjoy it.
I'm not gonna say what the class is for, but someday you'll see.
February 28, 2012
BOOKS N. 2
New skeleton hair clips from Cyber Shop. Love them.
And more of my favourite books:
''The story is narrated by a man in his mid-twenties who suddenly becomes disillusioned and confused by life and therefore quits university. The narrator becomes fascinated by both modern scientific theories of time and relativity (by reading a book by Paul Davies) and also by repetitive childish activities such as playing with wooden BRIO children's toys and repeatedly throwing a ball against a wall. In the end, the narrator visits his brother in New York City and returns to Norway with a renewed sense of meaning in life.''
''Allison Burnett's novel reads as both a searing glimpse into a tortured teenage psyche, and a skillful meditation on the cruel excesses of the Internet Age. Katie Kampenfelt's voice feels utterly authentic, disturbingly so, making for a protagonist who is as riveting as she is infuriating.''
''At the starting point of Tom's narration, which looks back from five years or so in the future, she is three months pregnant. She has just been involved in a tube train derailment, forced to stumble down the tunnel breathing years' worth of dust: "soft, felt-like layers of human hair and skin cells". Things are never quite the same for Ann after that. She has - in more ways than one - gone off the rails.''
''Esther Greenwood, a young woman from the suburbs of Boston, Massachusetts, gains a summer internship at a prominent magazine in New York City under editor Jay Cee. At the time of the Rosenbergs' execution, Esther is neither stimulated nor excited by the big city and glamorous culture and lifestyle that girls her age are expected to idolize and emulate. Instead her experiences frighten and disorient her. She appreciates the witty sarcasm and adventurousness of her friend Doreen, but also identifies with the piety of Betsy (dubbed "Pollyanna Cowgirl" by Doreen, because she's from Kansas), a 'goody-goody' sorority girl who always does the right thing. She has a benefactress in Philomena Guinea, a formerly successful fiction writer (based on Olive Higgins Prouty), who will, later during Esther's hospitalization, pay for some of her treatments.''
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