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Have any of the "hers" around here ever seen anything in the "For Her" section of a Christmas gift catalogue that they would actually want for Christmas? Am I totally out of synch with British womanhood in not longing for moisturiser or bubble bath or curling tongs? At least the men are allowed gadgets and toys, as well as aftershave. I saw one place that was advertising a gift of a magazine subscriptions, and the "for her" selection was entirely women's magazines, while the men were allowed computer games, films, cameras etc. Men are allowed to be interested in things and to do things. Women are only allowed to be interested in beauty and celebrity gossip. It is most annoying. Does it reflect reality, I wonder? I doubt it.
Though speaking of hims, a certain him I know has given me his Christmas list. It includes a full set of fourteenth century armour, an anvil (small), a halberd, a spear things, longsword wasters, and a gambeson. Aftershave would be easier to obtain.
Though speaking of hims, a certain him I know has given me his Christmas list. It includes a full set of fourteenth century armour, an anvil (small), a halberd, a spear things, longsword wasters, and a gambeson. Aftershave would be easier to obtain.
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Date: 2006-12-15 04:27 pm (UTC)Why is it, by the way, that cooking is still seen as a female thing, when most chefs are men - or so it seems to me, from my position of extreme ignorance about such things.
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Date: 2006-12-15 04:53 pm (UTC)for one!
It is silly about the cooking thing. I was often told, when I was in the trade, women are cooks, men are chefs - implying that while women cook adequate everyday food, only men are capable of producing really great food. This annoys me a great deal and I have come very close to punching the people that said this.