Just Peggy ✨

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Just Peggy ✨

Just Peggy ✨

@phatcher25

I am just me. Some things I do well, others not so much. I am flawed, but Jesus loves me anyway. I am a creative and will share. My heart’s taken. 🫖🌹

Small Town, Texas Inscrit le Mart 2013
989 Abonnements3K Abonnés
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Just Peggy ✨
Just Peggy ✨@phatcher25·
My heart noticed this morning that I follow those who post great photos, great prose, make me laugh, motivate me, and those whose soul I identify with. Thank you for being you!
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Grammar Sheriff 👮🏼‍♂️🚔
🔠Grammar Sheriff's Bottlecap Madness🧠 Can you solve this puzzle? Reply with your answer. Don't cheat! Share this with your communities.
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Grammar Sheriff 👮🏼‍♂️🚔
🔤Grammar Sheriff's Crossword Challenge🧩 27. Down: Apple tool. Reply with your answer. Don't cheat! Share this post with your communities.
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Just Peggy ✨ retweeté
Larry Alex Taunton
Larry Alex Taunton@LarryTaunton·
INTERVIEW TIPS TO GEN Z (& EVERYONE ELSE):🧵 I’ve been conducting interviews to fill positions with my company. I keep seeing the same mistakes being made. A series of interviews of CEOs revealed that my experience wasn’t unique. So, I’ve compiled a list of Do’s & Don’ts: 1. Show up on time. A failure to arrive at the designated time not only gets the interview off to a bad start, it indicates a lack of respect for others and signals your potential employer that you’re not a serious candidate. I’d sooner hire an alcoholic than someone who cannot keep time. 2. Arrive well-dressed and polished. Shakespeare’s Polonius declared, “Apparel oft proclaims the man.” Indeed, it does. I’ve noted that some Gen Zers and a few Millennials seem to think that showing up to an interview looking like they’re headed to a Grateful Dead concert is somehow a mark in their favor. It isn’t. Like timeliness, how you dress is a mark of respect and professionalism. 3. Your degree(s) and GPA matter less than you think. With the exception of those professions that require a degree and completion of a state examination — physicians, lawyers, CPAs, etc. — these things are good for a first impression only. They may say something about your intelligence and work ethic, but at the end of the day an employer is asking himself: Can he do the job? More to the point, he’s asking himself if this is someone with whom he wants to work. One of my sons is a litigator. He was telling me that they were interviewing candidates at an Ivy League law school. One of the candidates looked great on paper. He was the top of his class. He arrived at the interview late, no shirt, wearing a wet bathing suit, and a towel around his neck. He had assumed his credentials were all that mattered and the interview was a formality. Rightly detecting arrogance, they dismissed him. What you achieved in college frequently does not translate to the professional world and employers know it. 4. You don’t get the corner office on Day One. I increasingly see candidates with the unrealistic expectation that they be given a status that has not been earned. Never think yourself above any work that’s honorable. I’ve unloaded trucks in extreme heat, changed tires in extreme cold, waited tables, cleaned up vomit and baby poop, etc. because it was work that had to be done. Scripture says to be faithful with little that you might be entrusted with a lot. 5. The interview isn’t about you. It’s about the employer. Many are the times that interviewees approach the interview as if the company representative is the one being interviewed. They ask numerous questions, not about the work they would be doing, but about everything other than the work: salary, time off, paid leave, weekends, and things they don’t want to do. This is the kiss of death to any interview because it says you really don’t want to work. All of these are legitimate lines of inquiry, but the time to ask them is after you’ve been offered employment. Your potential employer needs to see that you are keenly interested in the job and that you are eager to work. When applying for my first job, my mother gave me this golden advice: “Your job is to make your employer look good.” The job in question? Sacking groceries at a local supermarket. An employer should feel that your work reflects well on him no matter if it’s sacking groceries or serving as president of his company. 6. Look your interviewer in the eye! This is my pet peeve. Failure to do so makes a person seem dishonest or timid or uninterested. Oh, and give a proper firm handshake. CONCLUSION: I am amazed at how little high schools and universities do to prepare students for these practical aspects of the job market. Do the above things and you will set yourself apart from the majority of applicants. FINAL NOTE: These are mistakes mostly made by young men. Why isn’t entirely clear to me. But twentysomething males who are ready to really work are increasingly rare. THE END
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Carol Grondin🇺🇸
Good night Twitterville 💤 😴 I hope you all enjoyed your Sunday. It's going to rain here off and on all week. So let me apologize early, just in case I'm cranky. 😅 Sleep well.
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Grammar Sheriff 👮🏼‍♂️🚔
🔤Grammar Sheriff's Crossword Challenge🧩 36. Across: Naval base builder. Reply with your answer. Don't cheat! Share this post with your communities.
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Croxxed Out
Croxxed Out@FLCons·
Let's talk mispronounced words. So what word is it for you?
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MileHigh79
MileHigh79@High79Mile·
Ladies. This colour🖤🔥🖤🔥🖤
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Just Peggy ✨
Just Peggy ✨@phatcher25·
🎶 I’m not lived because I’m worthy, I’m loved because You’re good! 🎶
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Carol Grondin🇺🇸
Good morning,Twitterville ☕️ Its a rainy Sunday 47°. ☔️☔️ Thata okay. I have nowhere to be. You all have a great day, wherever you are, and whatever you're doing.
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Just Peggy ✨ retweeté
Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
"Bacon contains nitrites and nitrites cause cancer." A 100g portion of bacon contains roughly 5.5 mg of nitrate. A 100g portion of spinach contains roughly 741 mg. Spinach has approximately 130 times more of the substance bacon is being prosecuted for. Around 80 percent of dietary nitrate in the human diet comes from vegetables. The leafy salad your dietitian recommends is, by mass, a nitrate delivery system that makes a rasher look like a rounding error. The standard rebuttal is that vegetable nitrates are different. They are not. The exact same molecule, absorbed in the exact same gut, recirculates through the exact same salivary glands, gets reduced to nitrite by the exact same bacteria on the back of the tongue, and ends up in the exact same stomach. The pathway is called the enterosalivary circulation. It is how your body makes nitric oxide. It is the basis of every beetroot pre-workout product on the shelf. The absolute increase in colorectal cancer risk from 50g of processed meat per day is roughly 0.7 percentage points over a lifetime. One in twenty-five becomes one in twenty-one. Only if you eat that much, every day, for the rest of your life. The molecule isn't the problem. The framing is. Eat the bacon.
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Liz
Liz@LCItalianHoney·
Good morning Have a fantastic day♥️
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DJ
DJ@Span063·
Good Sunday morning 🟡
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Grammar Sheriff 👮🏼‍♂️🚔
🔠Grammar Sheriff's Bottlecap Madness🧠 Can you solve this puzzle? Reply with your answer. Don't cheat! Share this with your communities.
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S.A.W.
S.A.W.@S_A_Warrior_AK·
I was about to take my first day off in two weeks.. then duty called… 😩 I think I’m going to quickly go in and do what I gotta do and then head for the hills and chill. 🏔️
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