Infatuation Rules
Photo: Mikhail Nilov
'Toxic' people feel an unconscious need to bring others down to boost their own feelings of self-worth. They're usually completely unaware of their unconscious need to hurt others and ignorant of the fact that they do that because they don't feel good about themselves.
Signs of mature love include acceptance, emotional support, commitment, calmness, respect, caring, kindness, friendship, and consideration....
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At the core of a typical love bomber is hidden crippling low self-esteem. Some form of childhood trauma, emotional neglect or emotional abuse from...
Read More »If you do a quick Google search on ‘toxic people’, the overwhelming advice you’ll find is to cut these people out of your life. But that’s easier said than done in most cases, especially if these so-called ‘toxic’ people are family, colleagues or other people we live or work closely with. We’ve all been around those people who can leave us feeling drained or a bit ‘off’ after an encounter with them. Some people can leave us feeling agitated or annoyed or even just feeling really bad about ourselves. The first thing to realise if you’re dealing with someone like this is:
They don't resort to personal attacks. True friends aren't in the business of making you feel bad about yourself. They communicate with words of...
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How to Spot a Player (Online and Off) He comes on strong. ... He says he's “open” to a relationship. ... He makes sex jokes early. ... He only...
Read More »Somehow in our childhood we’re all made to feel ashamed of something. I felt ashamed of my strawberry blonde hair as a child after someone called me a ‘carrot tops’ in school. I was ashamed of the fact that I didn’t grow breasts until many years after my girlfriends did; and later I was ashamed of many of the reckless things I did in my teens when I was trying so hard to be cool and accepted. Many of us harbour shame but we don’t really know it. When I first started seeing a therapist during a very difficult phase of my life many years ago, the first thing she said was “I can see you feel shame around many things”. My first reaction was “Shame? I don’t feel any shame”. But as she probed deeper, I started to cry as I realised just how much shame I had been holding onto. This was the first critical step in my own healing, to acknowledge my shame and to love and forgive myself for all these things I felt shame around – I’m only human after all. If you don’t recognise and release your own shame, it can unconsciously leak out onto others in the form of ‘toxic behaviours’.
If your man passes comments on your looks, plays with your emotions, or makes you follow unrealistic rules, he may be playing mind games with you....
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Being under heavy stress shortens their life expectancy by 2.8 years. These results are based on a study in which researchers from the Finnish...
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God allows struggle and difficult times because we are sinners and we all come short of the glory of God. God loves us, but because of our sinful...
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It is the moment where it feels too early to make a commitment, while at the same time it feels wrong to flirt with other girls. One thing you know...
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Apart from being dissatisfied in his marriage, physical attraction may be one of the reasons a married man feels gravitated towards another woman....
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8 Ways to Strengthen Your Relationship Be Friends. Any healthy relationship must be based on a solid underlying friendship. ... Stay Connected....
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