Question:

Hairrr????

I know I ask a lot of questions about hair. But, how do you get celebrity hair? The shiny, usually straight, pretty, healthy, not dried out? What products? Please and thankyou.

Answer:

bugs will do it every time goodluck
certain one among my earliest thoughts (about 26 years in the past) develop into putting off the fireplace alarm in Tesco! My mum advised me now to not bypass everywhere close to it when I requested her what it develop into. of route at the same time as she became her again, i made a bee-line to it and pushed open the fireplace doorways and ran outside. All hell broke loose interior the keep and my undesirable bottom has yet to get over the leathering it received presently after. Lol
Women tend to be more linguistic. They tend to want to rely on the written policy to ensure their safety. Guys are more likely to rely on their understanding, adaptability, situational awareness and common sense. Men and women also tend to focus on risk differently. Women tend to worry about the odds of anything going wrong, even if minor, whereas men tend to not worry so much about minor things, but worry more about the risk of life-altering risks. Consider a mom and dad when it comes to their kid learning to ride a back. Dad is probably worried about the kid getting hit by a car, where mom's tend to worry about more likely, but much less severe skinned knees. This type of thing has nothing to do with life longevity. It's about how how men vs. women view more minor risks and different approaches taken to larger risks. A glove wouldn't have prevented the damage seen in the photo madluv posted.
that's strange.. i don't think there's anything to be afraid of. well, if you're living in the bush (esp. here in australia) during summer then, that's something to be afraid of because when bush fire comes that's a big OH–NO!! but i think there's nothing to worry about don't stress yourself you'll be ok
It depends upon many factors. If it is a light transmission detector, the detector interprets anything that blocks the light beam (e.g. smoke, bugs, dust cloud) as a fire and it sounds an alarm. I specifically recall an incident over 25 years ago when my light transmission dector went off in early morning thanks to a spider that blocked the light beam. The spider crawled out and I, without any reluctance then or remorse since then, proceeded to put him out of my misery by smashing him. If it is another type of detector it can be another contamination. If it is a heat rise measurement, it may be improperly positioned.

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