Courtship has always had as its aim the proper selection of one’s partner for life and sufficient time and occasion was given to ensuring a potential spouse’s suitability.
Why Gay Pride is Important in Today’s Society
Over the past decade, there has been tremendous success with equality laws created, same-sex marriage licenses granted, and recently new genders emerging to express one’s identity, hence the newer term LGBTQ+. The expression of one’s self can come in many different forms, this may even change over the course of one’s lifetime, much like changes in one’s self-expression – time and culture can change too, and thus society must adapt.
Dr Georgina Barnett - What does your go-to sofa position say about YOUR relationship?
Dr Georgina Barnett, analysed the UK's seven favourite ways to sit with their partners - including different sofa, legs on lap and sat side-by-side - and uncovered what it might mean for their relationships.
The findings come off the back of new research which suggests the way couples relax together in the living room could say a lot more about their relationships.
Tereza Burki's lies in the Daily Mail
The Daily Mail wrote “For a hugely bright private wealth consultant who has racked up goodness knows how many millions of pounds for her well-heeled clients over the years”. However, Tereza Burki (Bulgarian national) informed us she is unemployed, with 3 children from 3 different men, and when previously checked on Companies House website and her business REGERI LTD, it showed that it had a £884 turnover for the two past consecutive years.
Dr Georgina Barnett - Nurture your sexual self with a sexual totem!
Place your totem somewhere you can easily and frequently see it and “focus on building a strong association between this and your experience as a sexual being”, Georgina says. “Whether or not you are in a relationship it’s important that your symbol is about you rather than yourself in relation to a partner so that you nurture this aspect of yourself for you.”
Love in Literature
One of the most beloved figures in literature is Pride and Prejudice’s Elizabeth Bennet, an intelligent and determined woman of 20 years. Elizabeth is self-educated, witty and quite determined to marry a man of her choosing, if she marries at all. “I am only resolved to act in that manner, which will, in my own opinion, constitute my happiness, without reference to you, or to any person so wholly unconnected with me.” Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice (1813)