thefashionmagpie posted: " My Latest Snag: Oribe Shampoo and Conditioner. I've written elsewhere that I exclusively buy either prestige or budget hair care products for myself, and I've been on a Pantene kick for nearly a year now. After getting my hair cut and colored at the " The Fashion Magpie
I've written elsewhere that I exclusively buy either prestige or budget hair care products for myself, and I've been on a Pantene kick for nearly a year now. After getting my hair cut and colored at the George Salon at the Four Seasons DC a week or two ago, I decided it was time to refresh. My stylist told me that after you've been using a product for awhile, your hair grows accustomed to it, and needs a kick-start. I am toggling back to my tried-and-true favorite luxury haircare line: Oribe. I've tried nearly all of their variations (e.g., for blondes, for color-treated hair, etc) and they are all excellent. This time, I went with their signature. It is peak luxury shower experience. The smell, the lather, the results! Heaven. A lovely little upgrade.
SET OF SIX FOLDING QUILTED ZIP-UP ORGANIZATION BINS — HOW I'M STORING MY OFF-SEASON CLOTHES
Weekend Musings: Slowly Is the Fastest Way to Get to Where You Want to Be.
In 2019, actor Andre De Shields won his first Tony at the age of 73. On the dais, he said:
"Slowly is the fastest way to get to where you want to be. The top of one mountain is the bottom of the next, so keep climbing."
Is there anything worthwhile in life that comes quickly? Besides, perhaps, the first blush -- the first hunch -- of love? Everything else requires time, dedication, recursions, frustrations, highs and lows. I was thinking about this the other day while running. Running offers an obvious metaphor for persistence towards a goal. Most of running is boring and repetitive -- at least for me. I know some runners find the act thoroughly meditative, but most of the time, I'm just out there, hoping to finish. I find this particularly true when I have a lot going on and am chomping at the bit to just get home and get my day started. But running in this mode is good practice for the stamina required of most worthy pursuits in life, where we spend a lot of time "in the middle," just putting one foot in front of the other.
One of my chief grievances with start-up culture is the romanticization of the entrepreneur. In reality, starting a business is a long slog "through the middle." It takes years and years of thoroughly unglamorous work. Think about the most monotonous and unpleasant part of any business -- whether cleaning toilets, packing boxes, coordinating transportation, etc. At one point (often for a sustained period), any entrepreneur has given days -- even weeks, months, years! -- of her life fulfilling that role. The gritty few know that "slowly is the fastest way to get to where you want to be."
The same is true of countless other pursuits, too. Even pregnancy! Ten long months! Often preceded by a journey to conception! And any degree or specialization in a field -- years of work, late nights, jobs at the bottom of the totem pole.
Throwing these thoughts out there if you're feeling stuck in the middle of whatever you're engaged in at the moment. Slowly is the fastest way to get where you want to be.
Shopping Break.
+This Saloni dress has been released in variations the past several years but I think I might have to pounce on the hot pink!
+Great Thanksgiving option. Sorry, I can't help myself - always thinking ahead. This dress reminds me of La Ligne!
+Another great "desk sweater." I should also mention that I often use this inexpensive sherpa fleece as my desk sweater in the winter -- it's like snuggling with a teddy bear! I bought my daughter one to match.
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