I LOVE MY WOMAN
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from Brazil
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Croatia
seen from Canada

seen from Italy

seen from Brazil
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Saudi Arabia
I LOVE MY WOMAN
Sex, drugs and sausage rolls: London life, love and other random stuff
Kristian Johns is an awesome HIV positive activist, author and all around awesome human (who just so happens to be handsome). Check out his blog “Sex, drugs and sausage rolls: London life, love and other random stuff” also feel free to check out his Instagram ;) https://www.instagram.com/kristianj79/
Yes Please, a memoir written by Amy Poehler, allows readers to follow her success through several personal and quite humerous memories. Throughout the memoir, by using her personal experiences as an example, Poehler shares extremely sincere, earnest, and hilarious advice- almost as if you (the reader) are inside her mind, watching as she reminisces about her experiences growing up in Boston, attending her first improv classes, sitting in Bono’s lap while winning a Golden Globe award; essentially following her career and learning to understand her decisions and opinions.
As I am now reflecting, one of the many parts of Yes Please that stood out to me and has stuck with me is Poehler’s discussion on one’s inner voice- referring to it as an “inner demon”. She describes the “inner demon” as the voice inside (your) head that tells you that you are not as good, skinny, good-looking (whatever your inner demon may be saying). She normalizes this and explains that silencing your inner demon can be extremely difficult and although it never truly goes away, you can eventually learn to silence the demon… “even demons need to sleep”. Through sharing her personal memories, obstacles, and vulnerabilities, Poehler also gives great advice and allows readers to truly “get to know” her as a human being rather than a public figure. Poehler is in a sense, changing the perspective that the general public may have on celebrities as arrogant and pompous.
Yes Please is an extremely pleasing, hilarious, and insightful read. Poehler's memoir is most definitely a product of her fame, as the stories told and memories reflected upon solely focus on the build up of her career and her fame and success. She owns up to her flaws and her mistakes and takes note of and recognizes her privilege. By sharing these personal memories and insight into “Hollywood”, she comes across very down to earth, grounded, and genuine- aware that her fame does not make her better than any other individual, just more publicly recognized.
U can kill a man, but u can’t kill an idea.- Medgar Evers