There is only one product in my life that I've been using for over a decade, longer than anything else. Over the years, my preference in nearly everything has changed and evolved; from the face wash I use to the jewelry I wear to the coffee I drink, everything's gotten an upgrade. Everything, that is, except for the trustiest pen on the market. Pen lovers already know which one it is—the good ol' Pilot G2. |
|
|
Join Esquire's Creative Director, Nick Sullivan, on a journey into the world of haute horlogerie in Switzerland. |
|
|
The reunion tour is a once-in-a-lifetime event—and these tickets are at once-in-a-lifetime prices. |
| Just in time for "the airline lost my luggage" season. |
|
|
| The cell at Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center, where Missouri executes those the state finds guilty of capital offenses, had a phone. They'd brought Marcellus Williams there September 23, the day before he was scheduled to die. His son called that afternoon. Marcellus Jr., thirty-four, has a son of his own, a three-year-old who is on the autism spectrum. "Maybe you can get some proceeds from me getting executed," Williams told Marcellus Jr., "and you can use them to put your son in a better school, work on his therapy." That's the way he was, say those closest to him. The fifty-four-year-old devout Muslim with a shaved head and salt-and-pepper beard was always thinking of others, wanting what was best for them—even after he was gone. But he wasn't gone. Yet. There was still a chance. He'd petitioned the state supreme court. The U. S. Supreme Court. The governor. He might get one more reprieve. |
|
|
| You have to love the irony of hiring two people to run the Department of Government Efficiency. You don't have to love the notion of Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy running anything, let alone a new Cabinet-level agency dedicated to the continued demolition of the administrative functions of the national government. But, really, now, I think the first thing these guys should do to make the government more efficient is fire each other. |
|
|
| Marriage is a bizarre business: a maze, a plot, a prison—a reason to live. It is, for most of us, the narrative spine of our lives, the epic on which we hang our sense of who we are and where we have come from. Marriage is our great American novel. But we are a people more suited to MTV. Marriage made sense once. It made sense when it was about money and children. Now marriage is no longer an economic contract but an emotional rip cord, the thing that we hope will land us gently in life, cushion the fall, soften the blows. On it, we stake all our claims to happiness— not the wisest of investment strategies. It is impossible, of course, and yet we persist—out of a still-lambent sense of romance? Or a sheer lack of imagination? |
|
|
Posts les plus consultés de ce blog
Periods are normal, but kids pointing them out in their sketches is something else. Australian woman Penny Rohleder shared a photo of her son's drawing on the Facebook page of blogger Constance Hall on Jul. 25, which well, says it all. SEE ALSO: James Corden tests out gymnastics class for his son and is instantly showed up by children "I don't know whether to be proud or embarrassed that my 5 year old son knows this," Rohleder wrote. "Julian drew a family portrait. I said 'What's that red bit on me?' And he replied, real casual, 'That's your period.'" Well, at least he knows. To give further context, Rohleder revealed she had pulmonary embolism in October 2016, and was put on blood thinning treatment which makes her periods "very, very bad," she explained to the Daily Mail . Read more... More about Australia , Parenting , Culture , Motherhood , and Periods from Mashable http://mashable.com/2017/07/31/period-mo...
British rider Chris Froome launched one of his blistering mountain attacks to win the Criterium du Dauphine race for the second time, clinching the eighth stage to take the yellow jersey. from Articles | Mail Online http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/othersports/article-3123660/Chris-Froome-sends-strong-message-rivals-storms-win-Criterium-du-Dauphine-second-time.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490
For centuries , humans have used fish oils, orally or topically, to treat a wide array of ailments, from aches and pains to rickets and gout. The popularity of this supplement has shifted over the years, as have its primary uses. But over the past couple of decades, the hype around fish oil has arguably reached an all-time high. According to National Institutes of Health statistics , in 2012, at least 18.8 million Americans used about $1.3 billion dollars worth of fish oil, making it the third most widely used supplement in the nation. (Sales reportedly flattened out at about that level around 2013.) Today, many use it because they believe it will broadly help their heart health , but others hold that fish oil can help with renal health, bone, and joint conditions, cognitive functions and mental wellness, and any number of other conditions. But is fish oil really as good for you as millions of Americans believe it is? Who should be taking it and when? We dove into the research and ...
|
|
Commentaires
Enregistrer un commentaire
Thank you to leave a comment on my site