Posts Tagged ‘Bearing’
Monday, January 19th, 2009
For many years skincare has been the sole preserve of the ladies. After all, men don’t need it, do they?
As I came downstairs to breakfast the other day, my wife stroked my cheek lovingly.
‘Your skin is so soft!’ she said almost wonderingly. ‘I really don’t know how you manage it!’
Now my wife is a dear, dear woman but she thinks that a soft skin is only achievable by using amounts of night cream, day cream, anti-wrinkle cream (not that she has any anyway!), protein cream and just about any other cream that the cosmetic companies can dream up.
She, like many other ladies, is convinced that many men have made a pact with the Prince of Darkness in return for facial skin that is not only soft but free from spots and blemishes. I will probably be marked for use as a bridge support filler or receive a nice pair of concrete overshoes from the League For Excessively Scratchy Chins for revealing the truth but I can contain myself no longer: men really do use skincare products!
There. I’ve said it. What a relief to finally ‘come out’ (about men’s skin, that is). The thing that is different about men’s facial skincare and that used by women is that men don’t pay anywhere near as much for theirs – and that’s because men do something to their faces every day that women never, ever do. They shave.
Now I know women shave their legs and sometimes other unmentionable bits. All we men know that. But they don’t do it every day. So why does that make a difference?
Oh, well, the cat’s out of the bag now so I may as well tell you everything. The act of shaving, when done daily, is an excellent exfoliant. A razor doesn’t only take away the stubble from the chins and cheeks of the average male, it also removes quite a few of the old dermal cells. This tends to leave our homely pans soft and smooth – especially if you use (as an increasing number of today’s guys do) a straight razor.
That’s the reason why – when we’re freshly planed off – the facial skin of your everyday male is as soft as a woman’s that has had enough cream on it to make a raspberry pavlova. The only problem is that it doesn’t last. Hence the tendency in recent years for an increasing number of guys to reach for the bottle.
The skincare-for-men bottle, that is. I’m not convinced that I am the first to have uttered this truth as to the original method of skincare for men – shaving – and doubtless the cosmetic companies’ intelligence task force has been keeping their ear well and truly stuck to the floor over the years. So what do we have now? You got it in one – cream for men.
Oh, they don’t call it ‘cream’. Far too girly. It’s called ‘rejuvenating facial cream’ or something equally crafty – it simply wouldn’t do to call it ‘day cream’ or ‘cool night cream’, would it? It’s done like this. After we men have carefully eradicated all traces of stubble, in proper manly fashion with some horribly sharp steel, we are smiled at from some webpage by an incredible hunk with biceps like footballs and a six-pack made of very large ballbearings who suggests that it would be a good idea to – moisturise our skin!
And do you know what the worst thing about it is? Yep. It works. Guess what I got for Christmas last year? Worse still, guess what I bought recently? Resistance, as has been said, was futile.
The male skincare culture steamroller is gathering momentum. We poor males, hapless victims of our own primitive but effective skincare method, have been sucked into mainstream skincare by forces we can hardly comprehend. What happened to the good old days when the only perfume men wore was good, honest sweat and we all changed our socks once a week even if they were reasonably pong-free? When boxer shorts were things boxers wore and after-shave lotion was considered only fit for wearing on a hot date?
Don’t know about you but I sure thank my lucky stars they’re firmly in the past! Now where’s my anti-aging wrinkle-destroying masculine protein emollient?
Steve Dempster is a recent and happy convert to modern men’s skincare and doesn’t mind anymore who knows it. Learn more here about shaving and skincare products for men.
Tags: Bearing, cia, dea, Diffe, doubt, ears, face, fashion, fit, for men, Fre, girl, guess, heir, home, hot, inc, intelligence, Irs, ladies, large, legs, lot, Mai, male, man, men, men's, met, mom, old, perfume, Proble, Prope, Protein, reason, rent, resistance, scratch, shoes, smile, socks, steam, Stu, t pay, Target, tendency, truth, wear, woman, women, work, Yea
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Sunday, December 7th, 2008
For many years skincare has been the sole preserve of the ladies. After all, men don’t need it, do they?
As I came downstairs to breakfast the other day, my wife stroked my cheek lovingly.
‘Your skin is so soft!’ she said almost wonderingly. ‘I really don’t know how you manage it!’
Now my wife is a dear, dear woman but she thinks that a soft skin is only achievable by using amounts of night cream, day cream, anti-wrinkle cream (not that she has any anyway!), protein cream and just about any other cream that the cosmetic companies can dream up.
She, like many other ladies, is convinced that many men have made a pact with the Prince of Darkness in return for facial skin that is not only soft but free from spots and blemishes. I will probably be marked for use as a bridge support filler or receive a nice pair of concrete overshoes from the League For Excessively Scratchy Chins for revealing the truth but I can contain myself no longer: men really do use skincare products!
There. I’ve said it. What a relief to finally ‘come out’ (about men’s skin, that is). The thing that is different about men’s facial skincare and that used by women is that men don’t pay anywhere near as much for theirs – and that’s because men do something to their faces every day that women never, ever do. They shave.
Now I know women shave their legs and sometimes other unmentionable bits. All we men know that. But they don’t do it every day. So why does that make a difference?
Oh, well, the cat’s out of the bag now so I may as well tell you everything. The act of shaving, when done daily, is an excellent exfoliant. A razor doesn’t only take away the stubble from the chins and cheeks of the average male, it also removes quite a few of the old dermal cells. This tends to leave our homely pans soft and smooth – especially if you use (as an increasing number of today’s guys do) a straight razor.
That’s the reason why – when we’re freshly planed off – the facial skin of your everyday male is as soft as a woman’s that has had enough cream on it to make a raspberry pavlova. The only problem is that it doesn’t last. Hence the tendency in recent years for an increasing number of guys to reach for the bottle.
The skincare-for-men bottle, that is. I’m not convinced that I am the first to have uttered this truth as to the original method of skincare for men – shaving – and doubtless the cosmetic companies’ intelligence task force has been keeping their ear well and truly stuck to the floor over the years. So what do we have now? You got it in one – cream for men.
Oh, they don’t call it ‘cream’. Far too girly. It’s called ‘rejuvenating facial cream’ or something equally crafty – it simply wouldn’t do to call it ‘day cream’ or ‘cool night cream’, would it? It’s done like this. After we men have carefully eradicated all traces of stubble, in proper manly fashion with some horribly sharp steel, we are smiled at from some webpage by an incredible hunk with biceps like footballs and a six-pack made of very large ballbearings who suggests that it would be a good idea to – moisturise our skin!
And do you know what the worst thing about it is? Yep. It works. Guess what I got for Christmas last year? Worse still, guess what I bought recently? Resistance, as has been said, was futile.
The male skincare culture steamroller is gathering momentum. We poor males, hapless victims of our own primitive but effective skincare method, have been sucked into mainstream skincare by forces we can hardly comprehend. What happened to the good old days when the only perfume men wore was good, honest sweat and we all changed our socks once a week even if they were reasonably pong-free? When boxer shorts were things boxers wore and after-shave lotion was considered only fit for wearing on a hot date?
Don’t know about you but I sure thank my lucky stars they’re firmly in the past! Now where’s my anti-aging wrinkle-destroying masculine protein emollient?
Steve Dempster is a recent and happy convert to modern men’s skincare and doesn’t mind anymore who knows it. Learn more here about shaving and skincare products for men.
Tags: Bearing, cia, dea, Diffe, doubt, ears, face, fashion, fit, for men, Fre, girl, guess, heir, home, hot, inc, intelligence, Irs, ladies, large, legs, lot, Mai, male, man, men, men's, met, mom, old, perfume, Proble, Prope, Protein, reason, rent, resistance, scratch, shoes, smile, socks, steam, Stu, t pay, Target, tendency, truth, wear, woman, women, work, Yea
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Thursday, November 27th, 2008
For many years skincare has been the sole preserve of the ladies. After all, men don’t need it, do they?
As I came downstairs to breakfast the other day, my wife stroked my cheek lovingly.
‘Your skin is so soft!’ she said almost wonderingly. ‘I really don’t know how you manage it!’
Now my wife is a dear, dear woman but she thinks that a soft skin is only achievable by using amounts of night cream, day cream, anti-wrinkle cream (not that she has any anyway!), protein cream and just about any other cream that the cosmetic companies can dream up.
She, like many other ladies, is convinced that many men have made a pact with the Prince of Darkness in return for facial skin that is not only soft but free from spots and blemishes. I will probably be marked for use as a bridge support filler or receive a nice pair of concrete overshoes from the League For Excessively Scratchy Chins for revealing the truth but I can contain myself no longer: men really do use skincare products!
There. I’ve said it. What a relief to finally ‘come out’ (about men’s skin, that is). The thing that is different about men’s facial skincare and that used by women is that men don’t pay anywhere near as much for theirs – and that’s because men do something to their faces every day that women never, ever do. They shave.
Now I know women shave their legs and sometimes other unmentionable bits. All we men know that. But they don’t do it every day. So why does that make a difference?
Oh, well, the cat’s out of the bag now so I may as well tell you everything. The act of shaving, when done daily, is an excellent exfoliant. A razor doesn’t only take away the stubble from the chins and cheeks of the average male, it also removes quite a few of the old dermal cells. This tends to leave our homely pans soft and smooth – especially if you use (as an increasing number of today’s guys do) a straight razor.
That’s the reason why – when we’re freshly planed off – the facial skin of your everyday male is as soft as a woman’s that has had enough cream on it to make a raspberry pavlova. The only problem is that it doesn’t last. Hence the tendency in recent years for an increasing number of guys to reach for the bottle.
The skincare-for-men bottle, that is. I’m not convinced that I am the first to have uttered this truth as to the original method of skincare for men – shaving – and doubtless the cosmetic companies’ intelligence task force has been keeping their ear well and truly stuck to the floor over the years. So what do we have now? You got it in one – cream for men.
Oh, they don’t call it ‘cream’. Far too girly. It’s called ‘rejuvenating facial cream’ or something equally crafty – it simply wouldn’t do to call it ‘day cream’ or ‘cool night cream’, would it? It’s done like this. After we men have carefully eradicated all traces of stubble, in proper manly fashion with some horribly sharp steel, we are smiled at from some webpage by an incredible hunk with biceps like footballs and a six-pack made of very large ballbearings who suggests that it would be a good idea to – moisturise our skin!
And do you know what the worst thing about it is? Yep. It works. Guess what I got for Christmas last year? Worse still, guess what I bought recently? Resistance, as has been said, was futile.
The male skincare culture steamroller is gathering momentum. We poor males, hapless victims of our own primitive but effective skincare method, have been sucked into mainstream skincare by forces we can hardly comprehend. What happened to the good old days when the only perfume men wore was good, honest sweat and we all changed our socks once a week even if they were reasonably pong-free? When boxer shorts were things boxers wore and after-shave lotion was considered only fit for wearing on a hot date?
Don’t know about you but I sure thank my lucky stars they’re firmly in the past! Now where’s my anti-aging wrinkle-destroying masculine protein emollient?
Steve Dempster is a recent and happy convert to modern men’s skincare and doesn’t mind anymore who knows it. Learn more here about shaving and skincare products for men.
Tags: Bearing, cia, dea, Diffe, doubt, ears, face, fashion, fit, for men, Fre, girl, guess, heir, home, hot, inc, intelligence, Irs, ladies, large, legs, lot, Mai, male, man, men, men's, met, mom, old, perfume, Proble, Prope, Protein, reason, rent, resistance, scratch, shoes, smile, socks, steam, Stu, t pay, Target, tendency, truth, wear, woman, women, work, Yea
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Saturday, November 8th, 2008
Most women’s initial excitement that follows the knowledge that they are now pregnant is soon shattered by the realization of the medical financial burden about to confront them. It has been found that maternity insurance coverage for women who fall pregnant is about 87%; other 13% isn’t covered.
The women are faced with having to look to their own resources to meet the costs and may have insufficient funds to get appropriate pre-natal care. If the pregnancy brings about complications the burden will be increased.
Maternity health care is not necessarily covered even where a health insurance plan is paid for. An expensive add-on may need to be included. Some insurers avoid providing maternity plans or treat it as a condition pre-existing. Federal law does not permit this, but there are loopholes.
You may have COBRA (coverage extending from your previous employer). You need to check if maternity health is covered. The cost may be high, but it is certainly worth it.
There are several group plans that provide maternity health coverage to their members. Some may have from 3 months to one year waiting period before access to the benefit is possible. What happens then if one falls pregnant during this gap?
Like Medi-cal in California made states do have programs pregnant women. Other programs, federally sponsored, like Medicaid are mainly for the benefit of low income groups.
The Maternity Card is another option now available. This program designed to provide assistance to pregnant women and is doing quite well. The program covers many aspects maternity medical needs and costs less than standard insurance packages. Generally, maternity coverage is available immediately.
There are other plans though they have exclusion periods, some as long as 30 days. Scrutinize each package offered to ensure that you know all options and restriction before choosing one.
The best advice for women is that they should ensure that they get maternity health insurance at the earliest opportunity, for the whole of their child-bearing years.
For more information about Maternity Health Insurance Coverage please go to Low cost health insurance guide.
Tags: avail, Bearing, Benefit, bra, cia, cobra coverage, ears, Employ, Employe, excitement, face, fall, financial, financial burden, fit, gap, group plans, health coverage, health insurance, health insurance plan, heck, heir, inc, income groups, informat, initial excitement, insufficient funds, Insurance, insurance coverage, insurance packages, insurance plan, knowledge, loopholes, lows, Mai, man, maternity, maternity coverage, maternity health, maternity insurance coverage, medi cal, meet, men, men's, own resources, periods, Plans, pre natal care, pregnant women, standard insurance, Target, the women, ups, waiting period, women, women's, Yea
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Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Bearing in mind all the Coach forms the patch work form has been one of the most renowned. With a mixed array of disorganized patched possibilities the Coach patchwork form has matured into a huge series of styles.
Often believed to be more of a conventional form the patch work styles have evidently appeared underground. Yet this perception is deceiving as Coach patchwork styles have developed into a stylish array of flamboyant patched motifs that fuse well in the modern world.
Coach patch work styles have become associated with an innumerable number of styles including sharp blended denim patched bags, elegant bags consisting of serrated soft leather oblong shapes and modern handbags comprising of erratic mismatched vibrant squares.
What Is The Patterned Patchwork Form Exactly?
The word patterned patchwork is more or less defined as “disjoined motifs” where squares of textile are stitched as one using a muddled design to make a sharp interfusion of pleasing shades and colors. Its contrasting jig-saw of shades often makes it look as if it is just like it is a collection of disguised material.
Conventional utilization of the form was previously in quilting, yet it still wasn’t a long time before it was modified for bags. Coach is just one of many designer brand name bags showing off a variety of patchwork styles.
In olden times the patchwork patterning was composed of basic diamonds that had been trimmed with lineal edges to eventually make a continued pattern that developed into the finished design. Nevertheless, over the years the patch work styles have developed into much more embellished fashion items.
Coach Patterned Patchwork – The Most In-Demand Form?
The Coach patchwork form is regularly believed to be lodged in the outer reaches of current fashion styles. Regardless of this notion is the concrete fact that Coach patch work has developed into one of the most popular bag forms by Coach.
The conventional view that patch work form bags are a stranger to popular fashion circles held back its movement into the media.
This could have resulted in its deep seated popularity. Because Coach patch work has almost never been deemed to be in-fashion, it will never become out of fashion.
An Excellent Coach Patchwork Purse
Coach has been a bag brand that’s aspired to define itself as the fairly priced trendy bag brand. So even though Coach is a lot more affordable compared to a lot of other designer brand name handbags, designer quality is definitely well preserved.
This is noticeable in true Coach patch work bags that rest totally flat and won’t crease up with folds.
If you are aiming to discover a phony Coach bag, crumpling is a fault to watch out for as designer-grade patch work styles won’t pucker.
Coach patterned patchwork has continued to be my preferred form of purse for ages. While alternative designer bag brands have drawn my interest I continue to be smitten with Coach patchwork bags on account of Coach’s high-class quality and terrific prices.
Tags: Bearing, boy, bra, business, cia, Coach, collectio, collection, Coul, current, designer, diamonds, discover, disguise, ears, fashion, fashion style, fashion styles, fine, handbags, inc, leather, Long Time, lot, man, Match, mature, men, name, notion, old, patter, perception, popularity, possibilities, Rate, Regard, rent, shape, squ, strange, style, Target, trend, trendy, variety, work, Yea
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