Coffee Break: The 6 Peptide Skin Booster
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Hat tip to the reader who turned me on to this lightweight serum from COSRX.
I just bought a second bottle of this, which is the first serum I put on after I wash my face. (Then my Vitamin C, then moisturizer, then sunscreen — but I'd love to hear if you'd do it differently!) The serum aims to boost overall skin condition such as pores, firmness, fine lines, skin texture, and skin tone. I've noticed my face is softer, pores are less noticeable, and just my whole face is brighter. I like how lightweight it is — not sticky or oily at all.
The serum is $21; you can find it at Ulta, Amazon, Target, and other spots.
Sales of note for 4/17:
- Nordstrom – Beauty savings event, up to 25% off – nice price on Black Honey
- Ann Taylor – Cyber Spring! 50% off everything + free shipping
- Boden – 25% off everything (thru Sun, then 15% off)
- Brooklinen – 25% off sitewide — we have and love these sateen sheets
- Evereve – 1000+ items on sale, including lots from Alex Mill, Michael Stars, Sanctuary, Rails, Xirena, and Z-Supply
- Express – $29 dresses
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- J.Crew Factory – Up to 60% off everything, and extra 50% off clearance
- Lands' End – 50% off full price styles and 60% off all clearance and sale – lots of ponte dresses come down under $25, and this packable raincoat in gingham is too cute
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As a teacher, I want to strongly encourage parents to start questioning your schools/camp emergency plans. I am horrified by what happened at Camp Mystic, and feel awful for the families who lost a loved one. There is no excuse for lack of emergency planning, and if parents ask me about our schools plans, I can explain all the different plans in place. No one ever asks. Plans are detailed on the family handbook, if parents read it. Being prepared won’t entirely prevent tragedies, but parents continually pushing for quality emergency preparedness and training will encourage places that don’t see the need for plans to put them in place. It will also help you weed out places that don’t meet your standards. Parents asking questions and pushing the school administration would get us more resources, and more trainings. Ask about severe weather, fire drills, lockdowns, everything. Don’t wait until something happens.
Ask the administration, don’t bug the teachers.
I would hope the teachers know the plans, too.
In our school district, parents’ asking administration these tough questions would result in retaliation against their children, not better plans.
To be honest, all plans are likely good plans. But plans are theory and then there is where the rubber meets the road. I am a summer camp chaperone at scout camp. To wit: youth and adults often carry pocket knives and go to classes where they shoot arrows and rifles. Maybe also shotguns? And also ride ATVs. Then there is the pinkeye and the COVID and the twisted ankles, blisters, vomiting, first period, etc. Then there is weather. The solution for me is to basically carry a CVS with me, do many Wilderness First Aid classes, and start getting my EMT. It’s a lot of psychological burden to go into the woods with other people’s children.
+1000. The entirety of Camp Mystic’s flood plan was “stay in your cabin” (literally – that’s what was written down, nothing else). Every single girl could have survived with hours to spare if only the camp had had an actual evacuation plan and then implemented it when the flood warning was issued at 1:14 am. Girls died within 20 steps of shelter because they were told to stay where they were. More would have died if quick-thinking counselors hadn’t defied orders and evacuated themselves.
3:11 chiming back in and this “quick-thinking counselors evacuating themselves” is where I stand. We absolutely rely on others and then at some point, we need to know what we need to do to self-rescue. My teen volunteered to be a camp counselor for one weekend and I was honestly impressed with how much training she had to do for months leading up to it. So much of success is this invisible planning that no one sees and that we hope gets done behind the scenes every time. But if you don’t know what to even look for, you won’t ever know when it is lacking.
For me: I always have a map (on paper, in a zip-lock), a headlamp, and try to keep my phone charged. You can’t check the weather enough before you go somewhere. We don’t camp next to water and never at the bottom of a hill. Sh*t matters.
I wish people understood better what happened at Camp Mystic. Obviously in hindsight they should have done more. It is an absolute tragedy. But I strongly believe no one could have prepared for that. It was entirely unprecedented. Don’t tell me there were other floods in that area; of course there were, but not like that. Most people in prior floods died from evacuating over low water crossings. Look up the bus that flooded evacuating from a camp in Comfort. As a result, the conventional wisdom has always been to hunker down. No one could possibly have imagined what was coming or that it would hit precisely on Camp Mystic. Imagine waking up little girls at 1:15 and telling them to march uphill. Now imagine if they had done that and it didn’t turn out that an inland tsunami parked over the camp; imagine the little girls writing home and how mad the parents would be about that. Obviously in hindsight that is what should have happened at Mystic, but it isn’t so easy to do. And in fact, no other camp did that; they just got lucky either not to have campers in session or not to have had the tsunami park on top of them. Also, the cabins by the river had never flooded, and the camp actually flooded from the creek, not the river anyway.
Ah, that “inland tsunami” phrasing rears its head again – the defense was suddenly all in on that phrasing at the hearing and the couple of Mystic supporters on R3ddit are using it now too! Not very subtle for you all to zero in on that just in the last two weeks.
The conventional wisdom in flooding has never been to “hunker down,” but the opposite – “seek higher ground.” Other camps did this (Waldemar, Mo Ranch) and got their kids to safety. Obviously you don’t drive a vehicle into an already flooded area – something Dick Eastland knew and ignored when he loaded an entire cabin into a Tahoe and ensured it met a 100% fatality rate.
While I’m positive that parents who lost their girls in violent, terrifying drowning deaths would have preferred that they get a little rained on during a walking evacuation after 1 am, you know what the absolute best way to avoid any discomfort or fear would have been? Evacuate the girls to James Hall on the Cypress Lake side the night before for a massive slumber party. Would have made a lot of sense given how Camp Mystic’s layout cut off staff from campers and campers from evacuation routes very early on in the flooding, which was very predictable given its location in the floodway and floodplain and its history of flooding.
Camp Mystic will never reopen.
Don’t just ask about plans. Ask if those plans have been exercised. The plan has to be written down, but people also need to instinctively know what their role is and what that first step is.
I agree for camps, but I’m surprised this information isn’t continually pushed to parents by schools. It certainly is at our schools, both in communication from the Superintendent/board at the district level, and at the school level in Back-to-School Nights and newsletters.
Im 44. I care about how I look. Lately I been on camera a lot for a few reasons and it’s probably time to look into cosmetic surgery. I can’t stand the laxiety in my lower face. I have a great life and feel young and don’t want to look as old as I do.
The other thing that has been really really bothering me is my nose. As a kid I never liked it but everyone acted like I was crazy when I asked for a nose job as a teenager. It’s not big nose but it is not a cute shape. I kind of forgot about it for two decades. These past few years seeing it on zoom have really really bothered me because it’s just not a cute nose or profile.
I mentioned to my husband I’d like to get my nose fixed when I get whatever age related lift fixes my lower face and he was pretty crestfallen saying he likes my nose. Again, it’s not like a Streisand nose. It’s objectively silly to say it adds character. It’s just ugly in that its bridge is not shaped nicely.
He kind of rolls his eyes at the Botox and the facelift talk. He was actually upset about the nose job. Should I care? I feel like he just defaults to hating change.
I would care. It would also hurt me if my loved one disliked a face that I dearly loved.
My nose bridge is a bit wonky too, but as far as I know, no one has ever judged me negatively for it.
How does he feel about the expense of cosmetic surgery? I would really like to do Sofwave, but my husband is dead set against the expense and honestly I can’t really blame him because it is a selfish expenditure.
Oh no. He will swear up and down that he doesn’t think it’s necessary but he’s never call it selfish. He fundamentally understands that I want to like the way I look and it’s important to me. His hang up isn’t the money it’s the difference between restoring and changing my face I think. Obviously I wouldn’t consider it if we couldn’t pay our mortgage or something but we hare have the money.
I mean, your face is a face he loves. It’s not surprising that he has an emotional attachment to it. Whether you should care about it is a question for you and your relationship, but it’s something that I personally would consider.
I feel like this is a form of control and it’s generally not a good thing assuming what you want is within the realm of ‘normal’.
Maybe, but I’ve known couples to divorce post cosmetic surgery because they lost the visual link of the person they knew and loved and the new face/body.
This is hard for me to understand. Does this mean they would have divorced over scarring from an accident or a disfiguring medical condition? Or is it because it was elective that they can’t get over it?
I really don’t think that (as OP described it) having emotions about your partner’s proposal to change their face is “a form of control.” Can we not assume the absolute worst of all people all the time please.
Yes, I think you should care about your husband’s feelings. That doesn’t mean your own feelings are not valid, but I think a conversation about the whole thing is the healthy approach. If he’s not aware of your internal thoughts, that matters. If you aren’t aware of his, that also matters. If he’s struggling to fit such a cost into your budget, that matters. If you have the money saved up and can pay for it with no impact on your household, that matters.
I would honestly feel the same way as your husband here. A facelift is restoring your appearance. A nose job is changing your appearance so you look more like someone else entirely. There just is not an objective standard for what a cute nose bridge is, and “the one you were born with” does have some advantages. It’s obviously still something you can do, but I think his reaction is understandable when you’re already this far into a relationship with someone who is attracted to you the way you are. It also sounds like it didn’t bother you until Zoom, so another solution is to turn off your self-view on Zoom and forget about it again.
Maybe the officially correct answer was “whatever makes you happy, honey,” but since it’s permanent and not something like a hair cut or color, I feel like it’s better to express that it’s hard to wrap his head around than to just go along with it.
Completely agree with this. I would also be a little worried about body dysmorphic disorder and psychological health if my spouse of many years who had never mentioned this before suddenly started talking about needing multiple cosmetic procedures. Are they just going to find one thing after another to fixate on and have a never ending list of things they need to change, when I already love them the way are?
Op here. I don’t know. I’m 44. I’m no great beauty but I was always pretty. I don’t ask permission for lasers or Botox or injections or hair extensions. He always says they’re unnecessary but then admits he thinks I look better with them. Ok he does look at me crazy when my face is bright red but then he comes around. He’s extremely supportive of my glp-1 use after being skeptical at first.
I don’t feel as bad as I look and it’s time to remedy that so I can be pretty going forward. We’re talking some pretty subtle tweaks here, not a whole new face. Will there be more to tweak in the coming decades? Most likely, yes. But I’m half convinced he’ll come around once he sees the results.
I feel like there are a lot of Dallas-area people here. I’ll be there for work this week, leaving Thursday from DFW at 4:20 p.m.
I have tickets to the Sixth Floor museum at 10 a.m. that morning. Giving myself around 2 hours there – what should I do after before heading to the airport? I will have a carryon with me. I know I can store it at the museum while I am there, but otherwise stuck with it unless I use bounce.
I’d like to grab lunch and then maybe browse some local shops. Should I use the bounce luggage storage, Uber to Bishop arts for a little bit, come back to get my bag and then head to the airport? Or will that be cutting it close and wasting a lot of time? FWIW – carryon + pre-check.
If you’re suddenly really tired during the day, do you nap? How long, where, etc?
Very rarely, but I have never been much of a nap person. Usually when that urge hits it is a sign I am coming down with something.
We have wellbeing rooms in my office that can be reserved by nursing mothers, diabetics, people who need to change a dressing, etc. I have a colleague with a new puppy who keeps her up all night, so she will book one for a short nap in the midafternoon.
In my car in the parking lot, I put the seat down and set an alarm.
A caffeine nap works best. Drink a coffee, then take a 20 minute nap while it starts to kicks in. If your office has conference rooms without windows, those. If not I’ve honestly closed my eyes in the bathroom for <10 minutes. Doesn't work as well but it helps.
Never. It’s so disorienting to me. I don’t know how anyone naps. I wake up feeling confused and sick and all my limbs feel too heavy. It’s just the worst feeling.
If I’m feeling crummy enough to fall asleep midday it’s a sick day because I’m toast anyway. I just go home.
Can anyone recommend a decent-looking solution for an outdoor chaise lounge cushion storage box? We have a new-to-us pool this summer, and just ordered 6 chaise lounge chairs with cushions. We want to be able to store them somewhere out of the rain / sun but don’t want to have to bring them indoors or into the garage every time, so it would need to be some kind of storage chest/box that can sit on the pool deck. I’m struggling to find something relatively attractive that is waterproof (or nearly waterproof) and can also fit larger cushions.
Also welcome any recs for pool floats for both kids and adults. TIA!
Waterproof seems the wrong way to go here unless you want moldy cushions. Protected from precipitation, sure, but something that allows air movement seems vital.
The blog Design Darling wrote a post about that – don’t have it handy but if you google her blog plus outdoor toy storage or something like that, I think you’ll find it!
waterproof is not necessarily good here – the cushions will have some moisture in them and they’ll mold on their own without a breeze.
FWIW we just donated all of our cushion-requiring outdoor furniture and replaced it with mesh, if it’s not too late to choose something else. We use the furniture so much more often already without the obstacle of Cushion Management.