The Adventures of Don Juan

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Funeral for a friend

The good news is I've been out for 4 runs since the infected foot wound healed up. There's no danger of busting open the skin and I'm cosmetically beautiful again with very pale skin.

Beautiful I might be, but the bad news is when I run, the left foot hurts more than ever before. Over the years I've had more than a few aches, pains and strains, and this condition requires some extended treatment.

In the meantime, I'm likely to finish off this blog.
I should emerge, Boo Radley style, to spectate at a few races in my 70's outfits.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Sex v Clothes

Finally, I hope to be running again next week. Trust me.
In the meantime, I'm off shopping.

Sex vs clothes: women come out of the closet.

NEW YORK, Feb 5 (Reuters Life!) - For most women, the choice between sex and a new wardrobe is simple -- they go for the clothes.

Women on average say they would be willing to give up sex for 15 months for a closet full of new apparel, with 2 percent ready to abstain from sex for three years in exchange for new duds, according to a new survey of about 1,000 women in 10 U.S. cities.

Sixty-one percent of women polled said it would be worse to lose their favorite article of clothing than give up sex for a month.

"Some people say clothes make the man, but the right clothes can even replace him," fashion designer, stylist and TV personality Carson Kressley from the reality TV show "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" said in a statement accompanying the poll.

The study also suggested that clothes often wear better than relationships.

The average woman between 18 and 54 years of age has hung on to her favorite article of clothing for 12 and a half years, a year longer than she's held on to her longest relationship.

Almost three-quarters of respondents, or 70 percent, also said they believed in love at first sight when it came to finding the perfect article of clothing, while only 54 percent of women were as confident in spotting the right man.

Nearly half of the women, or 48 percent, taking part in the survey by consumer products giant Unilever said their favorite article of clothing was more reliable than their man in giving them confidence and making them feel sexy.