Essentially Dee And Juli Too Full -
Description: Develop a feature within a household management or health tracking application that allows users to monitor and manage their food intake or consumption levels. This feature, dubbed "Full Alert," aims to help users like Dee and Juli avoid overeating or overconsumption of substances.
Key Components:
I realized I couldn’t listen to Dee or Juli anymore. I had to fire them both from the board of directors.
The solution is what I call The Empty Chair. essentially dee and juli too full
For one week, I stopped trying to be "productive" (sorry, Dee) and stopped trying to be "mindful" (sorry, Juli). Instead, I asked one simple question every morning:
“What is the single, most obvious, boring thing I actually want to do today?”
Not the ambitious thing. Not the poetic thing. Just the real thing. Description: Develop a feature within a household management
When you stop trying to be Essentially Dee and Juli, you realize you are just You. And You doesn't need to be full. You just needs to be functional.
Juli Baker is the co-protagonist of Wendelin Van Draanen’s “Flipped” (2001), a young adult novel (and later a Rob Reiner film). Juli is the opposite of Dee in many ways—she is earnest, tree-climbing, egg-hatching, and vulnerably open-hearted. Yet she, too, becomes “too full.”
Juli is essentially too full of:
Where Dee’s fullness repels others, Juli’s fullness sometimes repels herself. She learns that being too full of another person (Bryce) leaves no space for self-respect. The phrase “Juli too full” often appears in discussion forums about the scene where she stops speaking to Bryce entirely—a pivotal moment of emotional boundary-setting.
Dee and Juli belong to a long tradition of female characters deemed “too much” by their worlds. Consider:
Society often punishes the “too full” woman. Dee is rejected by her family. Juli is mocked as “weird.” But contemporary readers celebrate them because fullness—even painful fullness—is a sign of life not yet flattened by conformity. When you stop trying to be Essentially Dee