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I Stopped Writing 'Sorry for the Delay' in Emails, and It Changed Everything


For a long time, I derived a sense of pride in my ability to organize an email inbox. The little red numbers in the corner of my app were a thorn in my side; I did everything I could to avoid them. I promptly responded to messages and, for a while, even managed to keep my unread emails at zero. Sure, some of these habits had to do with my anxiety, but there was also a part of me that had internalized the idea that immediate responses were not just a professional nicety, but an obligation. When an email slipped through the cracks, I felt compelled to apologize.

Like most women, I have been conditioned to ask for forgiveness since I was a little girl. Recently, I even apologized to a man after he ran into me on the sidewalk. Saying sorry is a force of habit, a way to “make up for” the trouble I’ve caused just for taking up space as a human in the world.

But the tic is more than a product of female socialization. As someone who has been self-employed for most of my career, my livelihood depends on emails. If I don’t stay on top of them, opportunities seem to slip away as quickly as they come. More than once, a handful of hours has meant the difference between securing and losing a client. To cope, I became obsessed with rapid correspondence—and when I didn’t measure up, I tapped out a phrase familiar to millions of conscientious strivers around the world: “So sorry for the delay.”

But last month, my relationship to my inbox completely changed.

In June, I left my staff writer job in preparation for an international move. But while emptying our Brooklyn apartment—donating furniture we had just purchased and books we’d collected over a decade—my partner was suddenly hospitalized and spent days in the intensive care unit. For a scary period, their literal survival was our only concern. That same week, I underwent an urgent, costly surgery that physically wiped me out. And then, while still in recovery, a close family member unexpectedly passed away.

During that time, anything not directly tied to my emotional survival faded into the background; work emails, included. Although I did what I could to keep clients and collaborators informed of what was happening, I eventually found myself staring at a ballooning inbox. Some emails sat unanswered for weeks—I simply didn’t have the energy to respond.

I’ve heard it said that expressing gratitude can be better than apologizing; I once saw a comic by Yao Xiao that beautifully illustrated the concept. Staring at the blinking cursor inside one of hundreds of emails I’ve had to compose over the past few weeks, I’ve reflected a lot on this idea. And so while part of me still wants to ask forgiveness, I’ve started to substitute an alternative: “Thank you for your patience.”

Modern work culture doesn’t make enough space for people’s humanity. Though it’s hard to pinpoint what exactly caused that—late capitalism, social media, lack of boundaries—our relationship to work, and specifically work emails, is resulting in serious psychological consequences.

Whether it’s the expectation of a response at all hours of the day or night, or that haunting feeling after deciding to wait until Monday to respond to a Saturday email, these habits are unhealthy. I still (ironically) have work to do when it comes to developing better boundaries with work, but the past month helped me set a new standard: I’ve stopped apologizing for delayed email responses.



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Taylor Swift Gets Political By Writing a Letter to Sen. Lamar Alexander About LGBTQ+ Rights


A new era of Taylor Swift is upon us—and we’re not just talking about her highly anticipated seventh album, which fans think will be titled Lover. The singer is also showing off a new publicly political side. Criticized by some for not speaking out enough during the 2016 election, Swift has more recently begun using her massive platform to let fans know where she stands on issues that are important to her.

The first signs of this new Swift emerged ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, when she endorsed the Democratic nominees from Tennessee for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. In her Instagram post containing the endorsement, she mentioned her strong belief in LGBTQ+ rights—and now she’s taking that message a step further by posting a letter to Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Republican representing her home state of Tennessee. The letter urges Alexander to support the Equality Act, which would “protect LGBTQ people from discrimination in their workplace, in their homes and in schools.”

“?HAPPY PRIDE MONTH!!!? While we have so much to celebrate, we also have a great distance to go before everyone in this country is truly treated equally. In excellent recent news, the House has passed the Equality Act, which would protect LGBTQ people from discrimination in their places of work, homes, schools, and other public accommodations,” Swift wrote in an Instagram caption for the image of the letter. “The next step is that the bill will go before the Senate. I’ve decided to kick off Pride Month by writing a letter to one of my senators to explain how strongly I feel that the Equality Act should be passed.”

In the letter, Swift first thanked Alexander for co-sponsoring a bill that celebrates the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote before going on to criticize the “Slate of Hate” in Tennessee and warning that discriminatory practices could continue to scare off large companies like Amazon, who won’t want to do business in the state. She also called discrimination against people based on “who they love” or “how they identify” as “un-American and cruel.”

Swift also called out the Trump administration directly. “I personally reject the President’s stance that his administration ‘supports equal treatment of all’ but that the Equality Act ‘in its current form is filled with poison pills that threaten to undermine parental and conscience rights.’ No,” she wrote. “One cannot take the position that one supports a community while condemning it in the next breath as going against ‘conscience’ or ‘parental rights.’ That statement implies that there is something wrong with being anything other than heterosexual and cisgender, which is an incredibly harmful message to send to a nation full of healthy and loving families with same-sex, non binary or transgender parents, sons or daughters.”

Along with urging her followers to write letters to their own senators, Swift also created a petition with Change.org for people to express their support of the Equality Act. “While there’s no information yet as to when the Equality Act will go before the Senate for a vote, we do know this: Politicians need votes to stay in office,” she wrote. “Votes come from the people. Pressure from massive amounts of people is a major way to push politicians towards positive change.”

The petition (which you can sign here) is already nearing 50,000 signatures, and fans are expressing their gratitude to Swift for speaking out. “Thank you, Taylor, for speaking up for families like mine, and all other members of the LGBTQ family. Love from Mississippi,” one commenter wrote. Another said, “So proud that someone I’ve admired for so long is taking such a strong stance to protect the rights of LGBTQ individuals. Thank you Taylor and everyone else for fighting for the LGBTQ community!”



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Demi Lovato Shut Down a Reporter for Writing a Headline About Her ‘Fuller Figure’


Listen up, haters, Demi Lovato and her “fuller figure” are speaking. After seeing a story in the Inquisitr with a headline about her “fuller figure,” Lovato took to her Instagram Story to call out the outlet for finding her body shape newsworthy: “I AM MORE THAN MY WEIGHT,” she wrote.

In her post Lovato—who has been open about her history with eating disorders—explained that “unlike the past,” the headline about her body didn’t necessarily trigger her. Instead, her issue with the article was that this publication, and the reporter behind the story, thought it was OK to be writing about her size at all. “I’m angry that people think it’s OK to write headlines about people’s body shapes,” she wrote. “Especially about a woman who has been so open about being in recovery from an eating disorder. I am not upset for myself but for anyone easily influenced by this diet culture.”

She goes on to call out “toxic” stories like this. “Too many people today base their ideal body weight off of what OTHERS tell us we should look like or weigh. Articles like this only contribute to that toxic way of thinking,” she wrote. “If you’re reading this: Don’t listen to negative diet culture talk. You are more than a number on a scale. And I am more than a headline about my body shape.”

But here’s where this story gets really awesome. The writer actually responded to Lovato and apologized to her personally, according to a screenshot of their conversation that she posted on Instagram. “You’re an incredible talent and you’re right, your body is not all you are,” the writer said. “This is a lesson learnt.”

The Inquisitr left the post—and the problematic headline—live in the interest of “transparency,” but added an author’s note. “Firstly, a sincere ‘Thank you’ to Demi Lovato for her grace and patience in our exchange,” it reads. “While I wrote this story with the best of intentions, I totally appreciate and understand her perspective on the matter and culture in general, and I truly appreciate her taking the time to have a dialogue with me about it. As Demi said to me, ‘Our voices are all we have to create the biggest change on this planet.'”

Lovato lives that message. The singer has an impressive history of using her voice to speak out about weight shaming, whether it has to do with her body or not. Earlier this year the artist responded to a horrifying fat-shaming ad on Instagram promoting a game involving “obese” vs. “pretty” princesses. “This is absolutely harmful to anyone who is easily influenced by societal pressures put on us by diet culture to constantly be losing weight in a world that teaches us to equate our value and worth with the way we look and especially anyone in recovery from an eating disorder,” she wrote in January. “So please Instagram, keep this bullsh*t off mine and others’ feeds who could easily be affected by this disgusting advertisement. With how aware people are becoming of mental health and mental illnesses, I expect you guys to know better by allowing this advertisement to be allowed on your app. And shame on the game.”

As Lovato put it in her post, “Change is made by raising your voice, speaking your truth, and spreading love and compassion, not hate.”



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Margaret Atwood Is Writing a Sequel to 'The Handmaid's Tale'


It’s been more than 30 years since Canadian author Margaret Atwood published her revolutionary sci-fi novel The Handmaid’s Tale. Since its release, the book has become a symbol of female resistance, thanks in part to its wildly popular Hulu adaptation—and now Atwood has revealed that she’s going to take the story further by writing a sequel called The Testaments.

In a press release, Atwood shared that The Testaments will be out in September 2019. It will pick up 15 years after the final scene in the original book and will be told from the perspective of three women. Like the television series, The Handmaid’s Tale novel is set in Gilead, a dystopian world in which fertile women (called handmaids) are forced to bear children for wealthier families. Both the show and the book follow Offred, a handmaid who is assigned to a rich couple, and her story in the novel ends ambiguously. Atwood’s sequel could finally offer a glimpse into what became of the character.

“Everything you’ve ever asked me about Gilead and its inner workings is the inspiration for this book. Well, almost everything!” Atwood writes in the release. “The other inspiration is the world we’ve been living in.”

Atwood has previously shared that she wrote The Handmaid’s Tale while living in West Berlin and that she drew inspiration from examples of women’s struggles throughout history.

“It may look like only a year, but the real answer is 4,000 years because that’s how much of women’s history I was drawing on,” she said in a speech last year.

Although the Hulu adaptation has boosted The Handmaid’s Tale popularity, Atwood’s publisher has said the show will not be connected to the new book. Still, the series starring Elisabeth Moss has brought the world of Gilead to new audiences and has inspired women amid the #MeToo era and the Trump administration. Many women have taken to wearing the red robes from the series during reproductive rights demonstrations, and some even wore the costume to protest the confirmation of controversial Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.



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Ariana Grande Reveals How Writing "Get Well Soon" Helped With Her Healing Process


Ariana Grande is opening up about her mental health, this time in song form.

In a new interview for Paper magazine’s new issue, the singer revealed that the song “Get Well Soon,” a collaboration with Pharrell Williams on her new Sweetener album, is about her struggles with anxiety.

During the interview, Sivan comments that the song “shook [him] to [his] core,” and asked Grande how she was able to be so vulnerable on the track.

“[Pharrell] kind of forced it out of me, because I was in a really bad place mentally,” she revealed. “I’ve always had anxiety, I’ve had anxiety for years. But when I got home from tour it reached a very different, intense peak. It became physical and I was not going out at all, and I felt like I was outside my body.”

“I’d have these spells every now and then where I felt like I was having déjà vu, but like 24/7 for three months at a time. It was really weird, and all that was on my mind. [Pharrell] was like, ‘You have to write about it. You need to make this into music and get this shit out, and I promise it will heal you.'”

It turns out, he was right. “It definitely helped,” Grande told Sivan. “It still took me a few weeks to feel better, but looking back at it now from a healthier place, it’s probably one of the most important songs I’ll ever write.”

The lyrics to the song are incredibly powerful, and it’s no wonder that Sivan felt like he was “punched in the gut” the first time he heard it: “Want you to get better/My life is so controlled by the what-if’s…/ Is there anybody else whose mind does this, mmm?…/ Is there such a ladder to get above this?” they read.

In an emotional interview earlier this week, she explained why it was so important to her to put a song like “Get Well Soon” into the world. “It’s just about just being there for each and helping each other through scary times and anxiety,” she said on Beats 1 radio. “There’s some dark shit out there, man, and we just have to be there for each other as much as we can because you never fucking know. I just wanted to do something to make people feel good and less alone.”

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All the Lyrics on Ariana Grande’s New Album That Are (Probably) About Pete Davidson

Ariana Grande’s ‘God Is a Woman’ Video Gorgeously Melds Sensuality and Divinity

Pete Davidson Made a Hidden Romantic Tribute to Ariana Grande at VMAs



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Celebrities Are Writing Touching Tributes to Aretha Franklin on Social Media


On Thursday morning Aretha Franklin‘s publicist confirmed that she passed away in her Detroit home at the age of 76. “Franklin’s official cause of death was due to advanced pancreatic cancer of the neuroendocrine type, which was confirmed by Franklin’s oncologist, Dr. Philip Phillips of Karmanos Cancer Institute,” reads a statement from her family, according to the Associated Press. “In one of the darkest moments of our lives, we are not able to find the appropriate words to express the pain in our heart. We have lost the matriarch and rock of our family. The love she had for her children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, and cousins knew no bounds.”

The Franklin family’s statement continued, “We have been deeply touched by the incredible outpouring of love and support we have received from close friends, supporters, and fans all around the world. Thank you for your compassion and prayers. We have felt your love for Aretha, and it brings us comfort to know that her legacy will live on. As we grieve, we ask that you respect our privacy during this difficult time.”

Immediately after the news broke, countless celebrities took to social media to pay their respects to the singer and 18-time Grammy winner. Among these mourning fans are plenty of Franklin’s fellow musicians, from a wide variety of genres: John Legend, Barbra Streisand, Ricky Martin, and several others. Along with messages encouraging Franklin to “rest in power,” many of these musicians and other celebrities shared links to her most popular songs, as well as memories of meeting Franklin in person or seeing her perform. “I’m sitting in prayer for the wonderful golden spirit Aretha Franklin,” Diana Ross wrote, while Streisand posted a photo of herself and Franklin in 2012, captioned, “It’s difficult to conceive of a world without her. Not only was she a uniquely brilliant singer, but her commitment to civil rights made an indelible impact on the world.”

Below, read more tributes to the Queen of Soul:





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