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The Despair of Going Back to Work After Having a Baby

I just had a baby and I’m angry. Let me clarify: I just had a baby six months ago, I’ve been back at work for three of them now, and I’m angry. Maybe my visceral rage is really just sadness and hopelessness because of how overwhelming it feels to make it all work: Being present at work while also being there for my family and my three month old, and trying to override the feeling of heartbreak every time I leave him.

The Financial Influencers Women Actually Want to Listen To

If you’ve spent any time on TikTok in the last eight or so months, you’ve probably come across the concept of “girl math.” Essentially, it’s the idea that spending less money, or buying something on sale, is actually saving money, and that using cash means a purchase is free. It’s a joke, but not everyone finds it funny. “I hated girl math,” says Haley Sacks, better known to her social media followers as Mrs.

The Iron Ladys Ultimate Test

On nov. 13, 71⁄2 months after Ebola first came to Liberia, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf took to the radio to announce what Liberians had been longing to hear: the tide had turned in the battle against the virus. The 90-day state of emergency that Sirleaf put in place in August to counter Ebola would be lifted. Curfews would be relaxed; markets would reopen. Life in Liberia, suspended by the virus, would again approach normality.

The most important 'Game of Thrones' characters, according to how much screen time they get

But this being "Game of Thrones," most characters don't stick around too long, unless their presence is needed to help decide the fate of Westeros. IMDB user ninewheels0 went through all six seasons of the show to find out how much screen time each and every character — from Ned Stark to Ilyn Payne — received on the show. Check it out below: ADVERTISEMENT 30. Daario Naharis — 46 minutes Starting off our list is everyone's favorite sellsword.

The New American Dream and the Myth of Self-Sufficiency

The classic leather boot has had many names over the years—lace-up, cowboy, congress, pale rider. To get your work boots on your feet 200 or so years ago, you would stand up and grab two small leather flaps on the sides, known as bootstraps, and pull the boot up. From this everyday activity, the idiom “to pull yourself up by your bootstraps” was born—and with it, a torturous myth that true success meant getting ahead on only your energy and steam, without help from your family, government, or community.