Steven F.X. Lee

What's understood ain't gotta be explained ... but It'd be cruel to not let you witness my greatness

College Park been good to me… but in 3-4 years this has to the new home http://www.hbs.edu/mba/

Dress for the job you want … Dress like the man you want to be:

Reblogged from jnaemorrae

*dies*

Numbers

Find it interesting how males always have to exaggerate numbers in an effort to stay “competitive.  If they’ve been with 5 women they round up to 10.  If they know they bench press 215 it suddenly becomes 250 in front of male counterparts.  Drank 3 drinks at the bar last night but the next day “Son I took like 10 shots.”  Job pays $7.50 an hour but somehow you ballin’ and your cash flow is thousands a week.

Recently I’ve basically been predisposed to taking any number a dude gives me and depending on the type of person I perceive them as … dividing it in half or reducing it by 25%.

You’re only cheating yourself

2nd place to me just means that I’m the first loser

Intellectual Conversation

“There’s no business like show business …………. and there’s no job like a blowjob”

Before you get that Ink …

READ THIS —> Writer might be a little harsh, but he has some valid points http://www.dba-oracle.com/dress_code_tattoos.htm

I was influenced to post something about this because I just seen a retweet of some dude babbling about how he wants to “run Wall Street” by the time he’s 30 … but in his twitcon I see him with nearly full arm sleeves and a couple tattoos that reach his neck. 

I have absolutely nothing against tattoos — but before you get that Ink think hard about where you’re placing it on your body … It all depends by industry, some are more lenient than others — but to the fellow business majors out there … that article is for you.

Personally I would say chest, upper shouldersback are acceptable locations for tattoos if you’re working in corporate America … but neck??? You’ll be lucky to get an entry-level position, good luck ever making it to any kind of management.  If you really want that ink get it in parts of your body that you know will never be exposed at your job, even accidentally.

If you have tattoos and can go to work everyday with them concealed then it’s really no problem … but I know there are going to be times in the future when I want to be able to rock a short-sleeve to work when it’s hot … tattoos down my arms ain’t gonna fly.

Keep in mind I’m only talking about my particular career field — reaching upper-level positions and making partner involve networking at corporate events … you’re not always going to be in a 3-piece suit covering every part of your body.

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(quote from article)

Hiding tattoos is important in corporate America

Many tattooed people think that they are protected by their First Amendment rights to freedom of expression.  Unfortunately, this is not true in the workplace. 

Corporations have every right to discriminate against “optional” appearance-related traits, and many large corporations ban long hair, beards and visible tattoos.

As a corporate manager myself, I’ve seen that hiding a tattoo is not enough.  I’ve seen cases where an employee reveals a tattoo at a company softball game to the horror and disgust of their manager, who, in turn, find other reasons to terminate the employee.  If you live in an employment “at will” state, remember that you can be fired for no reason at all.

Intellectual Conversation

“I don’t look for one-nighters. A one night stand only means I didn’t enjoy it enough to repeat it.”

The Refined Look

Another wrist piece I would without a doubt add to the future collection once I have the means …… Slap this on with a white button down and some khakis? Too much swag

They be like Zay . what . Can you teach me how to dougie? no. Why? - Cuz all you bitches ugly