German brothels, Microbooking, Canadians Who Shave and Stay Off Twitter

– George Parker on German Brothels in hard times like these.

Microbooking is the new…?

– Social media IS like sex. (For the record, I don’t pay for social media.)

– Microsoft blowing up on campus like Google used to.

Swiping for hookups.

– For when love dumps on you.

– Something’s rotten in Denver with Chipolte.

– Join Twitter’s Canadian Club.

– Oprah’s burger list.

– Fusion called for icing.

– I told you people, but do you listen? MT. DEW.

– Earth Day? That’s a wrap.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

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Grandparents who build real relationships with their grandchildren aren’t the ones who try hardest — they’re the ones who are most genuinely themselves in those relationships, who don’t perform grandparenthood but simply show up as a person the child finds worth knowing, and children are extraordinarily accurate detectors of the difference between someone who is interested in them and someone who is interested in the idea of being close to them

Grandparents who build real relationships with their grandchildren aren’t the ones who try hardest — they’re the ones who are most genuinely themselves in those relationships, who don’t perform grandparenthood but simply show up as a person the child finds worth knowing, and children are extraordinarily accurate detectors of the difference between someone who is interested in them and someone who is interested in the idea of being close to them

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Psychologists explain that happiness after 60 often arrives not as a feeling but as an absence. The absence of pretending. The absence of urgency. The absence of the persistent low-grade fear that you’re falling behind a race that never existed.

Psychologists explain that happiness after 60 often arrives not as a feeling but as an absence. The absence of pretending. The absence of urgency. The absence of the persistent low-grade fear that you’re falling behind a race that never existed.

Global English Editing

Children who were raised by parents who never expressed affection openly often carry these 9 emotional patterns into adulthood — and psychologists say this is the silent epidemic behind why so many people over 60 feel isolated even in full households

Children who were raised by parents who never expressed affection openly often carry these 9 emotional patterns into adulthood — and psychologists say this is the silent epidemic behind why so many people over 60 feel isolated even in full households

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I raised my children the way I was raised — with high standards, clear expectations and not much room for emotional mess — and spent my 60s learning that what I’d experienced as good parenting they had experienced as a home where being imperfect was quietly dangerous, and that the distance my youngest maintains isn’t rudeness or ingratitude, it’s just the amount of space she needed to finally feel safe

I raised my children the way I was raised — with high standards, clear expectations and not much room for emotional mess — and spent my 60s learning that what I’d experienced as good parenting they had experienced as a home where being imperfect was quietly dangerous, and that the distance my youngest maintains isn’t rudeness or ingratitude, it’s just the amount of space she needed to finally feel safe

Global English Editing

I’m 66 and I just realized I’ve spent my entire adult life cultivating the kind of personality that makes me easy to be around and impossible to actually know — and the loneliness I feel now isn’t because people don’t like me but because nobody has ever met the actual person beneath the performance

I’m 66 and I just realized I’ve spent my entire adult life cultivating the kind of personality that makes me easy to be around and impossible to actually know — and the loneliness I feel now isn’t because people don’t like me but because nobody has ever met the actual person beneath the performance

Global English Editing

Psychology says the most isolating experience in aging is not physical distance from others — it’s realizing that the stories that shaped your entire life are no longer relevant or interesting to anyone around you

Psychology says the most isolating experience in aging is not physical distance from others — it’s realizing that the stories that shaped your entire life are no longer relevant or interesting to anyone around you

Global English Editing