Fresh new hair!
Jul. 16th, 2022 07:06 pmToday I got my hair cut!

I hadn't got it cut in a couple years, and it definitely needed help haha (all of it wasn't even the same length!). After the past week, I definitely needed to treat myself. :P It's so light and soft now! I shouldn't wait so long to cut it lol
Abby definitely missed sleeping with me..last night she curled up against my head and purred..awwww <3
I recently read a book called The Elements of a Home, and thought it would be fun to put an interesting fact about each item here (I love trivia LOL). Today's item is the bathtub: Unfortunately for public health and personal hygiene, the arrival of the plague in the fourteenth century put an end to the bathtub for the next four hundred years. Bathing was believed to dilate the pores and allow harmful substances to enter the body. [Wtf..I'm sure that made the plague even worse.] It wasn't until Enlightenment [17th-18th centuries] thinking brought about a renewed understanding of the importance of cleanliness that Europeans gradually (read: modestly) began to dip a toe back into the water. And so began the private bath
( 16. If sacrificing your own life would save the lives of a specific number of strangers, how many strangers would need to be saved for you to sacrifice your own life? What if the people were friends? How about family? )

I hadn't got it cut in a couple years, and it definitely needed help haha (all of it wasn't even the same length!). After the past week, I definitely needed to treat myself. :P It's so light and soft now! I shouldn't wait so long to cut it lol
Abby definitely missed sleeping with me..last night she curled up against my head and purred..awwww <3
I recently read a book called The Elements of a Home, and thought it would be fun to put an interesting fact about each item here (I love trivia LOL). Today's item is the bathtub: Unfortunately for public health and personal hygiene, the arrival of the plague in the fourteenth century put an end to the bathtub for the next four hundred years. Bathing was believed to dilate the pores and allow harmful substances to enter the body. [Wtf..I'm sure that made the plague even worse.] It wasn't until Enlightenment [17th-18th centuries] thinking brought about a renewed understanding of the importance of cleanliness that Europeans gradually (read: modestly) began to dip a toe back into the water. And so began the private bath
( 16. If sacrificing your own life would save the lives of a specific number of strangers, how many strangers would need to be saved for you to sacrifice your own life? What if the people were friends? How about family? )