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More info... my feng shui brain. it's never gone anywhere... and i swear it's just the way i see things now...lol
Observations From a Loo. I work in a building that has a few different floors on it, and presumingly only one block of toilets. I say presumingly, because I work on the ground floor and have never actually ventured up the stairs to check out the other floors - and because random women always seem to pop out of the elevators and into the bathroom nearest my work. Dont ask me why I felt the need to share all of that with you, as it really doesnt play a part in todays anecdote what-so-ever, but when it comes to sharin The milk of humanist kindness AC Grayling November 21, 2006 The current quarrel between religious and non-religious outlooks is another chapter in a story whose previous main incidents are to be found in the mid-nineteenth century and the early seventeenth century, in connection respectively with Darwin's discoveries in biology and the rise of natural science. Both are moments in the slow but bloody retreat of religion; so too is what is happening now. For, despite all appearances, w
A Real Office I dont believe whole-heartedly in Feng Shui but I agree with their philosophies on clutter, if only by coincidence. After spending a long time with my computer in my bedroom I was spending a lot of time in there, it felt unhealthy and I was getting sick of it. Our house has a real office, occupied by my Mums business but it also has a recently vacated study nook the business side of my bedroom moved in. My job involves me working from home entirely from the computer, my university degree Brooke Astor's Apartment to Go on Market Brooke Astor's Apartment to Go on Market Photo: Chester Higgins Jr./The New York Times/ReduxYou've probably heard about Brooke Astor's apartment: a prewar spread occupying two floors of 778 Park Avenue, with a terrace, fireplaces, an additional apartment for guests, and a famous library with red laquered bookcases and trimmed with brass detailing. Back in the day, Mrs. Astor entertained actors, Wall Street barons, politicians, foreign royalty, and New York society between its pastel-colored w Share Your Opinion. (0 posts)
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