Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Dating Services


Anyone may be able to find sex in the city, but what if you're looking for a serious long-lasting relationship that might lead to commitment —no, not in a mental institution, but in front of an altar?
Most of us find ourselves looking for love in all the wrong places —the local bar, the office place and even the long line-up at Social Services.

We meet people who can't take care of themselves, are already attached, are scared of intimacy, are just killing time waiting around until they fall in love with the real thing, have to much emotional baggage, are alcoholics, drug addicts, or more interested in repeating some tragic, self-destructive emotional pattern.

Even if we "get lucky" at one of these places, we often end up optimistically mistaking sex for love, and place unrealistic expectations on a partner who is not willing to go forward with us into the future.

Then there's the matter of our busy schedules. Not too many single people have the time or energy to hang out at the libraries, laundromats or clubs where the old fashioned etiquette books have always advised us to go to meet someone nice.

Perhaps that's why more people than ever are using dating and introduction services. Using one of these services eliminates the fuss and muss of dealing with the modern inconvenience of recovering from a hangover after a long night of waiting around all night in a smoky bar hoping to meet Mr. or Mrs. Right.

Also, using an introduction service is much safer for women. Your best bet is to find a hands-on matchmaking service that screens their male candidates and checks their background for such things as marital status, financial solvency and a criminality. Using an introduction service is also much safer than meeting someone through a free dating service on the internet.

Your chances of meeting a jerk there are just as high as if you had gone into a sleazy bar, as anyone can lie about their history when they submit their personality profiles on-line. The bottom line, according to the dating service owners I spoke to, is: "You get what you pay for..."

According to a study called Dating and the Internet by Ian Nethercott, more and more of us are becoming disillusioned with such societal ills as alcoholism and infidelity and during the nineties turned to more and more to our computers to find a mate.

The failure of the internet to produce anything but even more illusions about love, has renewed singles' interest in old fashioned match-making services.

Friday, July 23, 2010

The wonderful world that is dating


Ahh, dating. It inspires such passion... and heartbreak. It's the subject none of us like to talk about. It's ugly, it's horrible and it's got a big face with a twisted look on it. It scares people off. No one ever likes to go through with it, yet we need the results. We need the results to help us get into solid and trusting relationships and eventually find love with decent people who we want to spend the rest of our lives with. The good news is that there is a ray of hope in internet dating.

With dating, you can take it all in different approaches. Whether it be online dating or the old fashioned way of being set up on a blind date, we've got our preferences to what way of finding love we chose and prefer. But for those wanting a head start in the dating world and are in need of some quick dating tips, we've got them for you right here. Here are some of our favorite tips for those wanting to tread water and meet new people in the dating world:

Join a comedy class. If he makes you laugh, then that means he's a keeper. Your average stand up class is a festival of testosterone. Those with the true talent to make people laugh tend to usually be emotional and self-centered, but if he makes you laugh anyway then you may be willing to put up with the occasional episodes of insecurity.
Car shows. Sure, you'd rather be out shopping, but just close your eyes and pretend that you're at the mall. Guys who are really into cars tend to be very capable and good with their hands, even if they sometimes provide you with more information about your car rather than about himself. A good and easy one-liner such as "Hey, nice car!" usually does the trick.
The good old bar. Skip the trendy bars with icy women with mile high heels and snarky men with neon-colored shirts and fake bottled tans. If you want to find a nice, laid back kind of guy that is a natural conversation starter, then your local firefighter pub is the place to be. Plus, those guys who weren't popular during high school make excellent boyfriends now. That is the best piece of dating wisdom we can bestow upon you.
Business conferences. Here you can meet good, ambitious men who not only look good in suites but are smart too. (What a combination!) Strike up a conversation around your mutual business interests then ask how they got to where they are today. You'll learn about his path of life so far, including education and goals. But before you jump into anything big, make sure you check his left hand so you don't end up getting yourself in a sticky situation with a man who is already in a relationship.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Feelings involved in attraction or relationship addiction


Many people confuse the feelings involved in attraction or relationship addiction, with the feelings involved in love. Attraction is the first part of growing toward a love relationship. I use the phrase "growing toward love" because the idea that any one "falls in love" is a fallacy. While attraction is an important part of a relationship it is only the beginning and cannot carry a relationship for a long time. We all change with time. Part of attraction is the adrenaline rush many confuse with love. That adrenaline rush can be addictive. A lasting relationship cannot be based on physical attraction or addiction to an adrenaline rush.

Our highly commercialized, capitalistic society has romanticized attraction to an extreme. When we buy into "their" music, TV, movies etc., "their" income increases. "They" are opportunistically trying to make money, while many (naively, sadly), believe "them". Yes, we know that, but are we always aware of how much we really buy into their psychological sales pitches and how deeply it affects us? Self awareness grows with practice.

Relationship addiction can easily be confused with love. A person can be addicted to another one without the awareness of being addicted. A lack of self awareness and self understanding leads a person into denial of his/her thoughts, feeling and behaviors. This can be misleading and confusing for the recipient of the addictive relationship behaviors. A few warning signs include;

*When a person seems to idolize the individual he/she claims they "love".

* If someone holds the person they claim to "love" responsible for their own life changing decisions. An example would be if someone quit college and then said it was because of the person they "love". This type of behavior is an abdication of personal responsibility. Its blame.

*When someone tries to fix or change the person they "love" physically or psychologically. They want the other to have plastic surgery to "perfect" their appearance or tell you, "I never want to see you without makeup on.", or insist they pick out the other person's clothes or tell them how to wear their hair.

*If the person believes that the other will change to be as they wish.

* When the relationship is very intense, dramatic.

* A person who defines ( and confuses), his/her wants with needs saying things such as "I can't live without you".

*When a person is unable to recognize the relationship has problems and that he/she is part of the problem. Often telling the other, "It's all in your mind."

*When a person is unable to be without a relationship at all, jumps from one relationship to another within a few months.

Dependency can also be confused with the love. When an individual feels that he/she cannot make it in the world without another person to help them, that is dependency. A dependent person usually has extremely low self-esteem and is very insecure. Indeed there is a mental health diagnosis called Dependent Personality Disorder. Any person with that disorder needs good therapy to help them recover from it.

Genuine love involves two relatively healthy people who are able to appreciate the attraction they have for one another, are aware that the attraction will fade and are able to do the personal work they need to do to nurture their attraction into love. This takes reasonable psychological health, self-awareness, and the ability make personal changes. Love is a choice and involves work that we choose to do daily.

Life often puts us in a position of having to make difficult choices. For instance, if two people who have been developing a love relationship, which began due to physical attraction, are in an accident and one person becomes maimed or disabled, the other person will have to make a difficult choice. A couple I knew were in an accident. The woman's face was badly disfigured. Although plastic surgery was helpful, she remained disfigured for the rest of her life. She and her husband were faced with the huge problem of whether or not they could live with this together. In the movie "Days of Wine and Roses" the man finally realizes that his wife is an alcoholic. He is faced with a painful choice and makes the decision to take their child and leave. Sometimes people need to choose to leave a relationship in order to protect themselves and others. Love cannot conquer all.

It is the healthy love of self that can help an individual choose to make the changes they need to make for themselves, in order to have a better life. When an individual is self-aware and working on their own personal growth they are more likely to attract others who are also working on themselves. Two people who are working on self-awareness and maturing as individuals, will be able to make a healthy decision about whether or not they can develop and continue a relationship.

Monday, July 12, 2010

What Do Women Want?


In the various lines of research described by Daniel Bergner in his account of investigations into female desire (Jan. 25), it is interesting that almost all of the stimuli presented to female subjects come in the form of photographs or film and video. Theorists of art and visual culture have long recognized that vision is not simply a neutral, physiological act, and that the act of filming or photographing encodes gendered forms of looking.

It may be, in fact, that the “narcissistic” form of desire described by Marta Meana is a response to the ways in which the female viewer is often made to identify with the object of desire (the object of the desiring gaze) rather than the subject of that gaze (the protagonist); this is an argument that has been made by Laura Mulvey in relation to classic Hollywood cinema, but holds true in a variety of other visual modes as well. Women may not, in fact, have an innately narcissistic form of desire, but may be offered only the position of narcissism by the visual culture that is called upon to evoke desire.

ARUNA D’SOUZA
Visiting Associate Professor
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, Calif.

I would never deny that being desirable is a turn-on for many women, but what one has to do to be “hot” in our culture fosters a double consciousness that might well confuse scientists about women’s sexual desires. For many women, it’s occasionally hard to know the difference between sexual agency and male-driven definitions of sexiness, which have the effect of regulating or reshaping women’s subjectivity. Twenty years ago the American feminist Catharine MacKinnon wrote, “All women live in sexual objectification the way fish live in water.” Despite the subtitle of Daniel Bergner’s article, we are not “postfeminist” yet.

Friday, July 9, 2010

The Sex Appeal of Spies


Are spies like us? Just watch this. And then, well ensconced in romance and nostalgia, consider that Ian Fleming said—or did he write?—that “men want a woman whom they can turn on and off like a light switch.” This essential, and fierce, masculinity—or is it chauvinism?—has defined the literary history of spy-craft right up until Lisbeth Salander (and, n.b., Salander doesn’t work for her government). Is this is something we want in the genre, something we expect in spy storylines, even today? When spy-craft is coupled with “romance” it seems there is to end to our appetite for it. Now, as the U.S. government prepares for the latest round of well-intentioned realpolitik, it is worth considering why artful espionage, and the presence of seduction, romance and narrative within in, still seduces us.

Witness Bond. Witness Anna Chapman. The Russians who lived here under pseudonyms lived “normal” lives. It is the disconnect between what we think we know and what may otherwise be true that forms the crux of seduction; in the end we might want to believe we know less than we know. Rather than feeling deceived, as a government might feel/behave, individuals with an ear for story will always want to think that this neighbor, or that colleague, might be living a more sensational life than what appears to be the case. This suburban lie is the comedic heart of current cultural sensations, like Big Love. For the extraordinary among us, the cliché goes, things are rather ordinary. For the ordinary, the belief holds that there is something more than what we see.

The Cold War provided a certain geo-political stability, a storyline that everyone accepted. White hats, black hats, Wise Men and Dominos. In post-Cold-War times we are constantly racing to re-possess the glamour of those days, a glamour that came not from knowing what was next, but from not knowing.

The prospect of A Spy Next Door is less a threat than a seduction. Ann Chapman and her colleagues are a reminder that we can let go our narrow condescension for things we think we know are true. All spies (alas) do not look and act like Bond, providing further rationale for everyone to hew to the Golden Rule.

It is worth watching this, if for no other reason than as an antidote to Anna Chapman. Simon’s lyrics alongside the classic Bond titles are ageless. They capture what we all want to feel all the time: challenged, protected, and in awe:

Nobody does it better

Makes me feel sad for the rest

Nobody does it half as good as you

Baby, you're the best

I wasn't looking but somehow you found me

It tried to hide from your love light

But like Heaven above me

The spy who loved me

Is keeping all my secrets safe tonight

And nobody does it better

Though sometimes I wish someone could

Nobody does it quite the way you do

Why'd you have to be so good?

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

How to fix a bad first date


Make them laugh
If you really must draw attention to what went wrong on your first date, do it with humour and brevity.
For example, if you accidentally sprayed a mouthful of curry across the table into their face, ask them if they fancy a vindaloo sometime – and let that be the last you say about it.
Get it right next time
A second chance doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll get a third chance. So when you’ve fixed up another date, resolve not to make the same mistakes again.
Use your first-date mishaps as a lesson. If you talked too much, focus on being a better listener. Habits are hard to break, but practice makes perfect.
Do some non-date socialising
Is every weekend turning into a first-date disaster? Then take a break from dating. If you’re seeing new people every week, it’s no wonder you’ve worked yourself into a nervous, prat-falling stupor.
Go out with friends, release some pressure and turn those first-date mistakes into winning anecdotes.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Flirting Tips


Flirting has always remained essentially a man's territory for ages. But off late, we see women taking the lead too and for the better! The art of flirting does not come flawlessly to everyone, though it is not very difficult to master it. However, there are certain things that are to be kept in mind while treading on this unfamiliar territory. One of the most important aspects of flirting is a smiling face. A smile not only breaks the ice and makes the atmosphere easy going, but also improves your face value. Eye contact is very essential at the time of flirting. It shows that you are confident about yourself.

While the two tips mentioned above are most important, some of the other aspects that you should think over is being smartly dressed, showing genuine interest and respecting the other person. Make sure that that you do not force anyone to mingle with you and be aggressive. Remember, no one is obliged to you. In the following section, we bring to you flirting ideas that are sure to get you started with flirting if not on the top!. You can check out our more specific sections of flirting that are given below for mastering the art. So get out there and thrill them with your flirtatious side!!

Friday, July 2, 2010

Love over the years


Do you believe that dating, love, romance, and intimacy become passe at a certain age? I know that some people think so. They believe that they'll never love again, or that no one would love them, strictly based on their age.

But I can assure you that all of those things are alive and well, whatever your age.

Those who are single, divorced or widowed sometimes enjoy living alone, but have outside activities and a circle of friends who comprise their social life. Others seek out friendship and dating only. The rest of us want the whole package.

Older and Bolder Love and Dating

By a certain age, most of us have acquired a healthy amount of confidence and self-esteem. We content with our bodies. We don't fret endlessly over every choice we make. We know what we like, and we know what we don't like. We're more adept at reading character than when younger and more naive.

Most of the time, we stumble onto dates, friends, and mates simply by going about our lives and doing the things we love. We meet potential romantic interests who love doing many of the things we do. Common interests--a plus in any relationship.
For those who seek friendship of a romantic or intimate nature and just haven't acquired it yet, read below for some tips.

Where To Look

1. If you haven't found what you seek by carrying on with your normal every-day living, perhaps it is time to broaden your interests, try some new things.

2. Travel. Cruises, tour groups, and solo vacations can open doors of opportunity.

3. Explore community activities to find a new hobby or interest.

4. Take a class you've always wanted to try

5. Think about doing some volunteer work for a cause dear to your heart.

Inter Racial Dating Issues


Inter racial dating issues for couple needs to be handled with the proper mechanisms that will make their relationship stronger. Many angry momments and sad moments but there will be happy and victory moments as they decided to stand against the challenges and survive through the hard work.

They need to fully believe that they are doing the right thing. They need to ignore all the false and not important things people think or say about them and focus on their relationship instead.

They need to learn to accept and understand their family differences as well as their language, culture, religion or maybe they are having the same faith like inter racial Christian dating. Even if they are in the same religion, some still will face even harder whispers from the neighbors.

In the conservative families, they will face more challenges especially from their parents as they need to talk about the issue with cold head and address the issue with the best outcome and understanding. Lucky are those who have a more open minded parents and families. They are wise enough to understand and they will support the inter racial couple because they know it is not about the difference, but it is about the couple.

Some couple just do not care about what others are thinking and they think those inter racial dating issues are other people issues and not theirs.
All they need to think about is where they are going to live, where do they gonna send their kids to school and the rest.