Posts Tagged ‘shapes’

Can’t attest to the durability of this product yet, but so far I am EXPTREMELY happy with it.

We have gross old carpetsa nd it cleans them PERFECTLY!! It has alot of power, has several settings, and was a GREAT price!

Materials do seem somewhat cheap… vacuum seems to be made of cheaper quality plastic…. but we only vacuum once a week, and frankly, I did not want to spend too much…. we are hoping not to have carpet for too long.

Bought at recommendation of Consumer Reports and otehr Amazon reviewers… saw that some people said its made more cheaply than it used to be… not sure, but the power and functioning so far are excellent. Will have to find where I can buy the right bags for it. It does come with one bag to start you off.

Cord is decent length. So is the pipe thing that you use for cleaning in hard-to-reach areas (like under beds). Comes with a few good attachments.

Great buy for the money.

The Shapes We Eat

My dog has a thinner coat and it did alright but when I used it on my neighbors dog I was amazed at the hair it pulled off of him. Impressive product.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Stretchy Shapes

Twilight centers on the developing romance between star-crossed flirters Bella Swan and Edward Cullen. Problem is, Bella and Edward have no chemistry. He’s a 100 year-old vampire. She’s a helpless, self-conscious klutz. They don’t do anything together except look at each other. They have nothing in common–except they’re both virgins–and so they talk about nothing.

Oh, sure, they talk about the weather, music, and their favorite color, but nothing important like what they believe in or their values. These conversations about nothing are fraught with artificial tension and abused facial expressions. There’s a glower, a simper, a chuckle, a smirk, a sigh, a blush after EVERY laborious exchange. It’s meant to be engrossing and edgy, but it’s distracting and silly. Edward the Emo shifts moods from cocky to lustful to angry to protective in the blink of an eye. Bella’s range of emotions exists between expressing embarassment for her clumsiness and awe of Edward’s smooth skin, his sculpted chest, his fiery eyes, etc.

The story is told from Bella’s perspective. She’s your typical upper-middle-class teenager: spoiled, snobbish, and uninteresting. After moving to Forks, Washington, she looks down on her high school classmates because they are nice and emotionally engaged. She acquires friends effortlessly and for no other reason than to have someone to sit with at lunch. Invitations extended to her to go shopping, to go to the beach, and to go to the high school dance she treats with ambivalence if not distaste.

She placates these little people by pretending to enjoy their company, but she is really just biding her time, waiting for love. When Edward enters her life, she drops all pretense.

Edward, as described through the eyes of Bella, is just as one-dimensional and unlikable. He’s brooding, intelligent, good-looking…basically a fantasy realized. Stephenie Meyer spares an editor to overwhelm us with descriptions of Edward with SAT words like “sinuous” and “transluce
Silly Bandz Basic Shapes