Infatuation Rules
Photo: ArtHouse Studio
No one likes to be a rebound. If you date someone freshly separated or just out of a relationship, you put yourself at risk for being a rebound, along with a host of challenges that can be difficult to overcome.
5 ways to tell if someone you've met online likes you They usually respond quickly. If someone is generally interested in you, they won't and don't...
Read More »
The main reasons why relationships fail are loss of trust, poor communication, lack of respect, a difference in priorities, and little intimacy....
Read More »When browsing online dating platforms for a match, in theory, you’re right to assume your match is single. After all, most online dating sites are designed for singles. However, in a dating study from Kaspersky Lab, researchers reported that 31 percent of online dating service users who were surveyed also were married or living with a partner.
Passionate living A woman who is passionate about life, shows compassion, pursues learning, keeps a sense of adventure, refuses to give up, and...
Read More »
If your heart is broken, you might feel symptoms common to depression: Fatigue. Reduced or increased appetite. Sleeping too little or too much....
Read More »Even if you “know for a fact” your match isn’t going back to their ex, divorces emotionally mess people up for a while. The trail of destruction divorce leaves causes many separated and recently divorced people to be emotionally unavailable. In other words, they are too preoccupied with the stress associated with getting a divorce and the recovery after to prioritize you in the way someone who has long since finalized a divorce and has had the proper amount of time to mend their broken heart would be able to. If you date someone freshly separated or just out of a relationship, you put yourself at risk for being a rebound, along with a host of challenges that can be difficult to overcome. Rebound relationships are often too poorly paced, with the emotionally unavailable partner either wanting to get too serious too soon or not wanting to get serious at all. This state of uncertainty will take a large mental toll on you if you’re ultimately looking to find a match who can offer you a stable, healthy relationship. Save yourself the pain and move on to find someone who is available for what you want. After a separation, recent divorce or recent breakup, your match will need time to process and grieve their last relationship. The vast majority of the time, both partners in a relationship play a role in ending it. Part of the breakup process necessitates taking time to reflect on the relationship and figuring out where you might have contributed to its demise (except where there’s abuse, because the abuser is always wrong). When people jump right into a new relationship to distract themselves from a breakup, they haven’t had ample time to reflect, which means they might not have learned from their mistakes and be doomed to repeat them — except this time with you. I would, therefore, strongly recommend holding out for a match who’s gone through the process of contemplating their previous relationship(s) and grieving the end of it.
Play with his nipples, sucking on them then blowing on them for extra stimulation; explore his chest and abdomen with your hands; squeeze his...
Read More »
To avoid commitment, the following pieces of advice are often given to FWBs: Do not have expectations, have a timeframe for the relationship (e.g.,...
Read More »
Research has shown that men tend to rate physical attractiveness as more critical in a potential mate than women do, on average. Some research has...
Read More »
Narcissists lose interest as the expectation of intimacy increases, or when they've won at their game. Many have trouble sustaining a relationship...
Read More »