
She told me Love happens in unexpected ways and often doesn’t look like what we imagined, and on a Saturday, amidst the busy, I paused, took a breath and understood you - for that brief infinity when your eyes whispered, “stay”, my universe expanded. My mother told me once it’s rare to find a man who will work with you to achieve dreams.
I ve got bills to pay and mouths to feed torrent#
Your eyes drift shut against the torrent of information pouring fourth because complacency breeds a whole new set of problems, like falling behind, you tell me to stop worrying because love doesn’t have to mean the end and I believe you, on Saturday, in your arms when you place tender kiss upon my forehead, cradling me as I cradle my work. We got bills to pay and lives to keep and dreams to worry about
I ve got bills to pay and mouths to feed how to#
Last Saturday, you sat haloed in sunshine on my window seat, watching as I pushed shirt after suit into suitcases, packing for another meeting, another headache, another way I don’t know how to stop, and as I darted by, arms cradling files, you stood up, arms barricading me in to an embrace, so much needed. Definitions, breed expectations and expectations induce worries. I laugh because you know how to pull me out of fugue statesĪnd I think this could be love but you tell me it doesn’t have to have definitions. Your pen pauses, mid-scratch lining blue against white, teeth biting against bottom lip - a glance, a glance! our eyes meet across artless panels, your lips quirk into a bunny-like smirk, eyes crossing. to up your fees as well as letting go of the lowest paying clients you have. I push on the pull door that holds us prisoner, taxing imagination, in happy deficit. Youve got bills to pay and mouths to feed so you dont want to risk losing. Heaviness lies in your eyes that used to sparkle brighter than the fluorescent lights hanging overhead stripping remaining romance. But it does play a part.We got bills to pay and mouths to feed and thoughts to worry about. Money is not the be-all and end-all of an attractive job. And I’ll borrow from Cage the Elephant here: they’ve got bills to pay, they’ve got mouths to feed and ain’t nothing in this world for free. I’ve got bills to pay, mouths to feed, responsibilities at home and work to attend to, problems that need addressing, relationships that need fixing, etc., etc., etc. They know what their bottom-line is to maintain a certain lifestyle.

Money dont grow on trees, I got bills to pay, I got mouths to feed. They’re also looking for a really great corporate culture and a place where they can feel fulfilled in their day-to-day work. If you could pay the right price, Your evening will be nice, And you can go and.

He said, Give me all youve got, I want your money, not your life. There aint nothin in this world for free. Was she wrong to ask about salary at this stage? Was it wrong of SkipTheDishes to cancel her interview? Could this all have been avoided? Absolutely. I got bills to pay, I got mouths to feed. In short, they cancelled her interview, citing corporate culture and fit as the reason, she took to social media and now they’ve offered to put the interview back on the table. By now you may have heard about the Winnipeg woman who asked SkipTheDishes about salary expectations before her second interview.
