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Single Mom Inspiration

506 followers, 29 pins

Typeverything.com - The harder you work, the luckier you get by Studio Muti.

1 repin   

Makes me feel a bit better knowing I am not the only one.

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Giving my book away for free. Details are here: mssinglemama.com/...

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love life.

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and workout

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Cowboy...

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millie says, "i want that"

1 like    2 comments    7 repins   

Profile picture of Millie Rossman

Millie Rossman I don't think this was meant for me, but I do!

Profile picture of Millie Rossman

Millie Rossman I don't normally self promote like this but I'm taking this as a bit of a sign for my kickstarter project: http://kck.st/yyA1M5

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Self portrait in tub with chinese food (oil painting by Lee Price)

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Keep calm and...

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;)

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Try not to laugh too hard. "Shake" by Carli Davidson Photography

Target's markdown schedule and other fantastic tips on saving there.

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For all the moms out there!

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then kick it in its balls

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A fellow "single mom" claims this is a must... << I am one of them.

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New Words Feminist Bookstore in Cambridge, MA. 1976

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single mom by choice

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Which is why I taught them to read young!

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The first in a series called Single Mom Friday Zen I used to write. This one: Buy Yourself Something. ; ) mssinglemama.com/2009/03/27/single-mom-friday-zen-ii/

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Every single mama should read print this out and hang it by their mirror.

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Ice pattern on the hood of a car this morning

hanging paper flower installation by Lisa Keophila, Fiona Lim Tung, Kristen Lim Tung & Jon Margono

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Life

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In the summer of 1936, as Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind settled in at the top of the fiction bestseller charts, the top nonfiction slot was occupied by a book that – at first glance – couldn’t have been more different. Marjorie Hillis’s Live Alone and Like It is a brisk and bracing self-help guide for women who, by choice or accident, find themselves “settling down to a solitary existence.” The book is a paean to making your own choices, mixing your own cocktails, and learning to enjoy the company of men while not being afraid of losing it. The advice here is addressed primarily to a savvy urban reader – the kind of woman who is independent enough to scour the streets of New York or London for a smart little apartment she can afford by herself, but wily enough to charm a gentleman friend into installing custom-built bookcases. She might curl up on a rainy evening to read about Scarlett O’Hara, but she’s got no illusions about being a romantic heroine. Still, like Scarlett, she knows the value of home, and in their very different ways, both these books recognize and appeal to that desire for the security and independence it represents. Both tell stories about picking up after cataclysmic historical events that have wiped out livelihoods and lifestyles.

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