Not exact matches
While boys (and men) can feel
uncomfortable with you sitting and
looking at them straight on while they talk to you, girls prefer this when they are talking (unless it is an intimidating topic — then doing
something like washing dishes while talking can be a good idea).
When you see your son
looking uncomfortable, holding his groin etc. and giving all the signs, gently let him know by saying
something like «
looks like someone needs to go potty!».
«This person shared
something big, and avoiding the topic makes it
look like you're
uncomfortable with it.»
I
look at her hair every day and it's just
something that's so funny to me because it's so wild — it's like perfectly straight in the back, crazy - curly on the sides, and then just wavy on top, and it's just all over the place... I mean, you don't want to make them
uncomfortable, but I love how crazy it is.
I am not saying put on
something uncomfortable in order to
look nice, but wear
something which will make you feel and
look good.
I'd also like to remind you that brocade is rather stiff and doesn't drape well (petites should skip it), satin shows every little flaw (hello,
uncomfortable Spanx), and lace... well, if it
looks like
something Madonna may have worn, put it down, back away slowly, and run screaming from the store.
I never want to feel
uncomfortable at the park or running errands just because
something looks good.
Stiller merely has to
look uncomfortable,
something he's made a career out of, while his wife
looks and sounds stupid via extreme sunburn, deviated septum - spawned nose spills, and unprintable sex - clamations.
They sense
something is changing and that makes people instinctively
uncomfortable, and that makes them much more receptive to
looking at the causes.