You’ve got to wonder at this point what is going to overshadow her on Wednesday morning at the Anzac Day memorial service, aside from her terrible fashion choices and unkempt hair.
Will it be just the baby’s name announcement or something else also? (I probably won’t find out until Thursday since I’m traveling that day.)
Yeah, I agree with you. I think other people have noted the similarity between them. I don’t think Charles had the most/best supportive parenting growing up. Last I recall, his grandmother, the Queen Mum did a lot of parenting/mothering for him.
While Princess Charlotte waved proudly, Prince George was a bit shy in front of the cameras. But as the Lindo Wing doors close, we get a glimpse of big brother George putting a comforting arm around the young princess (thanks to @catherineandmeghans for pointing out this sweet moment) ♡♡
Prince William escorting Prince George and Princess Charlotte into the Lindo Wing to meet their new little brother ♡♡
George is going to be a tall kid. Just look at how tall he is given he’s not even five yet. William is 6′3″ and little George is already up to his waist.
Patricia Hampl, you had me at your title: The Art of the Wasted Day.
Imagine a book that celebrates daydreaming, that sees it not as a moral failing, but as an activity to be valued as an end in itself. To be clear, this is not a self-help book; nor is Hampl talking about meditation, yogic breathing or mindfulness — those worthy New Age practices that, well, have to be practiced.
Instead, Hampl’s intrigued by the kind of instinctual, floaty, aimless daydreaming that many of us, if we were lucky, indulged in for hours and hours as children. As adults, of course, we feel like we need to have something to show for our time: achievements, chores, to-do list items crossed off.
Kill the idea that naivety is an unforgivable flaw but cynicism is just wisdom, murder it, chop it up and serve it for dinner, I don’t care, just end this bullshit idea that it’s better to hate than to love and better to rot in miserable bitter resignation than to hope for the best.
Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, pose for photographers with their newborn baby boy outside the Lindo Wing of St Mary’s Hospital on April 23, 2018 in London, England. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s third child was born this morning at 11:01, weighing 8lbs 7oz.
The Duke of Cambridge bring George to see his new baby sister in 2015 and now bringing both George and Charlotte to see their new baby brother in 2018.
The Duke of Cambridge arrives with Prince George and Princess Charlotte at the Lindo Wing after Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge gave birth to their son at St Mary’s Hospital on April 23, 2018 in London, England.
“What I was trying to do was make it impressionistic of what it would feel like to live there at that time, so I wanted it to be a style of acting and setting as natural as possible. Then we take artistic license in altering things, to convey more what it would feel like at that time, using music that gives the emotional quality that I wanted the scene to have, as opposed to what actually might be a song [from the era]. A combination to create the impression of what it might have been like.” — Sofia Coppola
Proud Papa Wills exits the Lindo Wing after his wife safely delivered their new little prince. It’s expected that William is on his way to pick up George and Charlotte to meet their new little brother ♡♡
Working off of the labor of others, only there because of being born into capital and pre-existing familial or business relations? Yep
And people still try to defend this shit with ‘Well they MUST work REALLY HARD to earn THAT kind of money!!!’
I assure you they don’t. I assure you the people earning the least money are working the most. I don’t see CEO’s doing 60 hour weeks just to keep food on the table. They don’t do that, because they don’t have to, because they get paid so much they aren’t desperate enough to have to.
If you follow me, reblog this. It is an important piece of data. I would love to see one for the annual tax expenditure of minimum wage versus CEO’s as a proportion of their annual income.
This is the aggregation of labor. This is what it looks like. It has happened before. It will likely happen again unless it is changed.