DummyVariable Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 2 minutes ago, MagaMaharaju said: đ Donât believe them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagaMaharaju Posted September 14, 2019 Author Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 2 minutes ago, DummyVariable said: Donât believe them. Okie 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JollyBoy Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 42 minutes ago, DummyVariable said: Donât believe them. ninnu nammacha kaka Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DummyVariable Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 1 hour ago, JollyBoy said: ninnu nammacha kaka I live in truth conundrums and liarâs paradoxes. Only the true believers know. Let us move on to an aptly themed song I am listening to this Saturday evening.  Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Somedude Posted September 14, 2019 Report Share Posted September 14, 2019 https://ideas.ted.com/is-it-lust-or-is-it-love-how-to-tell-and-how-you-can-have-both-at-once/ Â Researcher and therapist Terri Orbuch shares what sheâs learned from studying couples for three decades. Iâve studied the romances and relationship patterns of thousands of people for three decades, and Iâve heard many of them talk about that wild, out-of-control feeling at the beginning of a new relationship â you know, when you canât eat, you canât sleep and you canât get anything done because youâre constantly thinking about this person. Itâs like an obsession. I bet if I asked you to close your eyes, no matter your age, you could remember that powerful and amazing feeling. I can, and Iâve been married for 25 years. But when weâre in that heightened arousal state at the beginning of a romance, many of us wonder: âWhat am I feeling? Am I in lust or am I in love?â After talking to hundreds of couples, Iâve come to believe there are four signs that differentiate love from lust. The first sign that itâs love rather than lust is connection. When youâre in love, you want your partner to connect with all the people in your life. You want them to spend time together and to like each other. You want to show them off to your friends and family, and you want your friends and family to be impressed by them. Instead of wanting to keep them to yourself, you bring them out and introduce them to the people who are most important to you. The second sign is using âweâ language rather than âIâ language. When two people are in love, their lives become intertwined and they begin to think of themselves not as separate individuals but as a couple. The more intertwined their lives are, the more mutuality. Mutuality is when you refer to the two of you as an âusâ or âwe.â For example, if I asked you what you were doing last weekend, a person in love would tell me, âWe went out to the moviesâ or âWe went up north for the weekend,â instead of âI went to the movies with Sandyâ or âI went up north for the weekend and Sandy came along.â The third sign is self-disclosure. Love can motivate us to reveal a lot about ourselves to the other person. When weâre in love, we want to share our dreams, our fears, our goals, our past, our future. We might tell them secrets that weâve never told anyone before. When weâre in lust, you only peel away a few layers of our personalities. We tell the other person about our hobbies, our movie or music preferences, but thatâs about it. We donât go to the deep core of ourselves. When youâre in love, you go straight to the core. Not only are you sharing about more topics, but what you say about each topic is deeper, more personal in nature. So, if you want to distinguish between lust and love, look at what youâre talking about with the other person. The fourth sign is influence. When two people are in love, what one person does â or wants to do â influences the other person in meaningful and strong ways. For example, if youâre thinking about moving to another state because of your job, youâd go to the other person before you made a decision. Likewise, if something upsetting happens to you â a medical diagnosis, job loss, the death of a family member â youâd go to this person for support and assistance. Or, if something good happens to you â you got a promotion, you receive a surprise inheritance â youâd go to this person because youâd want them to share your good news and celebrate with you. As you can see, lust and love are very different from one another. Yet we want that lustful desire in a loving long-term relationship too. Can you re-create that urgent longing? Absolutely! From my work with couples, Iâve learned there are three behaviors you can add to your relationship to reignite that desire. Those three behaviors are actually the same ones that fueled your lust when you first met that person. The first strategy to bring back lust is to engage in new activities with your partner. Think about it â when you first got together, everything was new for the two of you. Every date you went on, every restaurant you ate at, every activity you did, was a novel experience for the two of you. Of course, as time went on, the newness wore off. To re-create lust, you need to find new things to do with your partner. It can be as simple as going to a different part of the city that youâve never been to, or doing something for the first time â like ice skating, bike riding, fishing â with your partner. My husband and I signed up for a cooking class. Neither of us had ever taken that kind of class and when we did it together, it fueled the lust. Anything new can inspire those feelings of freshness and excitement. The second strategy is to add surprise or mystery. Again, think back. At the beginning, everything you learned about your partner was so interesting and exciting. She told you she had a pet snake when she was a kid, or that he was closest to his grandmother growing up, and you went, âWhat? Wow!â It was all fascinating to you. Of course, as time goes on in a relationship, you feel like you know your partner almost too well. You know what they like to do on Sundays, you know that they snore when they sleep, and they chew with their mouth open. But no, adding surprise to a relationship isnât just about lingerie and roleplaying. Show up at your partnerâs workplace unexpectedly and take them out to lunch or dinner. Send a flirty text in the middle of the afternoon. One of the wives in my long-term study on couples said she made a treasure hunt for her husband. He went around the city without her, following little notes she left for him, and he found the experience full of adventure. The third and final strategy is to do arousal-producing activities together. But itâs not what you think; this is about doing things that give you an adrenaline rush, things that are novel and interesting. What relationship scientists have learned is if you do an arousal-producing activity with your partner â like exercising side by side, watching a comedy show or a scary movie, or going surfing â your adrenaline rush can actually get transferred to your partner and your relationship. Now I realize this may sound like a lot of work. But I can assure you that itâs worth it. The good news is that lust and love, as different as they are, can exist together in a relationship. Just remember: moments of passion are some of the highlights of our lives, and you can never have too many. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meri_zindagi Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 2 hours ago, Somedude said: https://ideas.ted.com/is-it-lust-or-is-it-love-how-to-tell-and-how-you-can-have-both-at-once/  Researcher and therapist Terri Orbuch shares what sheâs learned from studying couples for three decades. Iâve studied the romances and relationship patterns of thousands of people for three decades, and Iâve heard many of them talk about that wild, out-of-control feeling at the beginning of a new relationship â you know, when you canât eat, you canât sleep and you canât get anything done because youâre constantly thinking about this person. Itâs like an obsession. I bet if I asked you to close your eyes, no matter your age, you could remember that powerful and amazing feeling. I can, and Iâve been married for 25 years. But when weâre in that heightened arousal state at the beginning of a romance, many of us wonder: âWhat am I feeling? Am I in lust or am I in love?â After talking to hundreds of couples, Iâve come to believe there are four signs that differentiate love from lust. The first sign that itâs love rather than lust is connection. When youâre in love, you want your partner to connect with all the people in your life. You want them to spend time together and to like each other. You want to show them off to your friends and family, and you want your friends and family to be impressed by them. Instead of wanting to keep them to yourself, you bring them out and introduce them to the people who are most important to you. The second sign is using âweâ language rather than âIâ language. When two people are in love, their lives become intertwined and they begin to think of themselves not as separate individuals but as a couple. The more intertwined their lives are, the more mutuality. Mutuality is when you refer to the two of you as an âusâ or âwe.â For example, if I asked you what you were doing last weekend, a person in love would tell me, âWe went out to the moviesâ or âWe went up north for the weekend,â instead of âI went to the movies with Sandyâ or âI went up north for the weekend and Sandy came along.â The third sign is self-disclosure. Love can motivate us to reveal a lot about ourselves to the other person. When weâre in love, we want to share our dreams, our fears, our goals, our past, our future. We might tell them secrets that weâve never told anyone before. When weâre in lust, you only peel away a few layers of our personalities. We tell the other person about our hobbies, our movie or music preferences, but thatâs about it. We donât go to the deep core of ourselves. When youâre in love, you go straight to the core. Not only are you sharing about more topics, but what you say about each topic is deeper, more personal in nature. So, if you want to distinguish between lust and love, look at what youâre talking about with the other person. The fourth sign is influence. When two people are in love, what one person does â or wants to do â influences the other person in meaningful and strong ways. For example, if youâre thinking about moving to another state because of your job, youâd go to the other person before you made a decision. Likewise, if something upsetting happens to you â a medical diagnosis, job loss, the death of a family member â youâd go to this person for support and assistance. Or, if something good happens to you â you got a promotion, you receive a surprise inheritance â youâd go to this person because youâd want them to share your good news and celebrate with you. As you can see, lust and love are very different from one another. Yet we want that lustful desire in a loving long-term relationship too. Can you re-create that urgent longing? Absolutely! From my work with couples, Iâve learned there are three behaviors you can add to your relationship to reignite that desire. Those three behaviors are actually the same ones that fueled your lust when you first met that person. The first strategy to bring back lust is to engage in new activities with your partner. Think about it â when you first got together, everything was new for the two of you. Every date you went on, every restaurant you ate at, every activity you did, was a novel experience for the two of you. Of course, as time went on, the newness wore off. To re-create lust, you need to find new things to do with your partner. It can be as simple as going to a different part of the city that youâve never been to, or doing something for the first time â like ice skating, bike riding, fishing â with your partner. My husband and I signed up for a cooking class. Neither of us had ever taken that kind of class and when we did it together, it fueled the lust. Anything new can inspire those feelings of freshness and excitement. The second strategy is to add surprise or mystery. Again, think back. At the beginning, everything you learned about your partner was so interesting and exciting. She told you she had a pet snake when she was a kid, or that he was closest to his grandmother growing up, and you went, âWhat? Wow!â It was all fascinating to you. Of course, as time goes on in a relationship, you feel like you know your partner almost too well. You know what they like to do on Sundays, you know that they snore when they sleep, and they chew with their mouth open. But no, adding surprise to a relationship isnât just about lingerie and roleplaying. Show up at your partnerâs workplace unexpectedly and take them out to lunch or dinner. Send a flirty text in the middle of the afternoon. One of the wives in my long-term study on couples said she made a treasure hunt for her husband. He went around the city without her, following little notes she left for him, and he found the experience full of adventure. The third and final strategy is to do arousal-producing activities together. But itâs not what you think; this is about doing things that give you an adrenaline rush, things that are novel and interesting. What relationship scientists have learned is if you do an arousal-producing activity with your partner â like exercising side by side, watching a comedy show or a scary movie, or going surfing â your adrenaline rush can actually get transferred to your partner and your relationship. Now I realize this may sound like a lot of work. But I can assure you that itâs worth it. The good news is that lust and love, as different as they are, can exist together in a relationship. Just remember: moments of passion are some of the highlights of our lives, and you can never have too many. I want poetry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagaMaharaju Posted September 15, 2019 Author Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 6 minutes ago, meri_zindagi said: I want poetry Check your pm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meri_zindagi Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 Just now, MagaMaharaju said: Check your pm Nothing no Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagaMaharaju Posted September 15, 2019 Author Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 1 minute ago, meri_zindagi said: Nothing no Check now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meri_zindagi Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 7 minutes ago, MagaMaharaju said: Check now Yo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meri_zindagi Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 3 hours ago, DummyVariable said: I live in truth conundrums and liarâs paradoxes. Only the true believers know. Let us move on to an aptly themed song I am listening to this Saturday evening.  I answered your question Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DummyVariable Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 4 minutes ago, meri_zindagi said: I answered your question Will answer it a little later. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Somedude Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 9 hours ago, meri_zindagi said: I want poetry what sort of peorty? Ballad, sonnet, acrostic, ode..? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DummyVariable Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 5 hours ago, Somedude said: what sort of peorty? Ballad, sonnet, acrostic, ode..? Ode and more specifically âOde to a Grecian urnâ and it's famous words, â Beauty is truth, truth beautyâ. Maybe đ¤ 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Somedude Posted September 15, 2019 Report Share Posted September 15, 2019 15 hours ago, MagaMaharaju said: Check your pm Ok. I saw the msg. I have access to see PMs. 15 hours ago, meri_zindagi said: Yo Dno't believe that msg. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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