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- Sep 21, 2012
Still haven't learned your lesson, so you keep repeating the class. I remember looking right past the easy layup back in high school. Shorty was a little darker than I preferred, however she would wait outside class for me, walk with me to class. Walk up to me and start talking to me while we chillin during class. It didn't come across stalkerish so didn't mind but definitely didn't pick up the signs she was giving me. Lived close to the high school so sessions after school would have been no problem. That mistake is long in the past for me me, take the layup and forget pulling out and shooting the three.I've been making the same mistake since my college days.
The yamb thats all over me, I pass (doesn't matter if she's ), and I always go for the very slightly better looking friend. I'd bag the slightly better looking friend maybeeee 1/4th of the time. I even ask the yamb that's all over me to hook it up with the slightly better friend and I can tell their whole demeanor changes
Sometimes we decide to play this game on hard mode for no reason.
Don't forget also in "soft girl mode" or "soft girl era" in full effect. Saw this on a couple FB stories, I was like what is this nonsense.nobody knows their actual value anymore, they´re all a ¨princess¨
I’m in My Soft Girl Era. Here Are 5 Ways I Achieve The Look & Lifestyle
There’s a soft girl in all of us. This era has taught me that I can be open and vulnerable, and that beauty is not just a physical attribute — it is also about being kind, prioritizing self-love, and taking life seriously, but softly. While you can make the soft girl aesthetic your own, here is...
www.refinery29.com
"I wake up in the morning engulfed in a white fluffy duvet and dressed in a pink, lace-trim nightgown. Looking across my room, I see my dresser lined with Chanel books, a statue of Aphrodite, my headband rack, a vase of pink roses, and my bows. Moments like this affirm that I am in my soft girl era."
'Soft Girl': The radical trend millennials love
The "Soft Girl" aesthetic began life among Nigerian social media influencers, and has since gone mainstream. Evie Muir explores why it has found resonance among young black women.
www.bbc.com
Love how we bash millennials for everything they do unless it is something that benefits us.