Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
Taylor Swift's Sexy Cosmo Cover: Singer Talks Love & Relationships (PHOTO)
Huffington Post
Taylor Swift started dating Joe Jonas back in summer 2008, and that relationship fell apart a few months later. Jonas reportedly broke up with Swift in a<a href="http://www.justjared.com/2008/11/06/joe-jonas-taylor-swift-phone-call-dump/"> 27-second ...
See all stories on this topic »
Dating After Divorce: When To Introduce The Children
Huffington Post
The second is what I call the "dating" phase. This is when you've known one another a few months on a more consistent basis and are trying to determine whether this could go further. The final phase is the "relationship" phase, which occurs when the ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use site restrict in your query to search within a site (site:nytimes.com or site:.edu). Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Online dating can work for some: Longer-term success of the relationships ...
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
FAIRBANKS — "Sarah," a friend of mine in her 60s, signed up on e-Harmony, a popular online dating service, to find a romantic relationship. Sarah is just the type of person that on-line dating can help, according to psychologist Eli Finkel and his ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use site restrict in your query to search within a site (site:nytimes.com or site:.edu). Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Love Relationship

Video1 new result for Love Relationship
 
DVTV AGE OLDER AND YOUNGER LOVE ...
2 min
DVTV AGE OLDER AND YOUNGER LOVE RELATIONSHIP ??? wyvon spence. Subscribe ...
youtube.com


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Peter Andre and Emily MacDonagh give us relationship envy
Yahoo! omg! UK
Peter Andre and Emily MacDonagh Peter and Emily were making their first red carpet appearance together. Copyright [WENN]The singer revealed: "Before, I was dating and going out and having fun, but I felt empty. Very early on in our relationship, I felt ...
See all stories on this topic »

Yahoo! omg! UK


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

6 Tips to Keep Becoming Who You’re Meant to Be

6 Tips to Keep Becoming Who You’re Meant to Be:

Editor’s Note: This is a contribution by Wendy Atterberry
“Life is a process of becoming. A combination of states we have to go through. Where people fail is that they wish to elect a state and remain in it. This is a kind of death.” ~Anais Nin
Last October, in a whiplash-fast, three-hour labor, two and half weeks before my due date, I gave birth to my first baby, a boy, named Jackson.
While pregnancy hadn’t been a breeze—I was hospitalized twice with complications, and, you know, no sushi for nine months—the first few weeks of Jackson’s life left me feeling, at times, like a shattered shell of my former self.
His was an ear-piercing scream that seemed endless in those early days, leaving me both physically and mentally exhausted; and save for a few smiles, the hint of who he’d become was so teeny—like a faint, faraway twinkle in the night sky—that I wondered how I’d ever form the bond with my child I so deeply craved.
Around the time Jackson turned five months old, things began to shift. While his ear-piercing screams still made an occasional guest appearance, an infectious laugh had begun filling some of the spaces between them.
And the sleepless nights that so recently left me dragging through each day, dreaming of Egyptian Cotton sheets and a strong sedative, had been replaced with eight-, nine-, sometimes even 12-hour blocks of sleep.
Jackson was becoming a funny, inquisitive, playful little person with a growing personality and a whole host of new tricks: rolling, sitting up, babbling, crawling, clapping. He reacted and responded to me now in a way that felt like communication, using a language of giggles, grunts, and physical cues.
All these changes, as well as the growing bond between us, reminded me of why I’d been so excited to have a child in the first place: It’s super cool to raise and watch a person rapidly evolve through the formative stages of becoming who he’s meant to be.
I am also reminded that those stages—those opportunities for growth—may slow in adulthood, but they’re always there for those interested in pursuing them. One of the best ways to find them is to engage in the world like a baby does, by following these six tips:

1. Make time for play.

My son spends hours every day playing, from swinging at the playground to pulling every single book off the shelf and trying to eat them. There’s no goal other than to have fun (and maybe drive mama nuts, which he often accomplishes). And when he has fun, he’s more engaging, more amusing, and more imaginative. (“Hey, this shoe makes a great pacifier!”)
Being engaging, amusing, and imaginative are traits that serve adults well, opening us to closer connections with our friends and family and inviting new opportunities for personal growth.

2. Nurture your curiosity.

My son, at ten months old, is fascinated with how everything works and what everything does. How does the doorbell make that sound? And what do all the buttons on the remote control do? And—oh, hey, what does cat food taste like?
The result, of course, is that he’s constantly learning and figuring things out. His head is a constant swivel and everything represents a question he has to find the answer to.
As adults, if we spent more time nurturing our curiosity like babies do, we’d be more alert, more aware of and engaged with our surroundings, and more knowledgeable about the world around us.

3. Remain unattached.

Sometimes, when Jackson is enjoying a play date with a baby friend, the other baby will “steal” a toy from his hand. This is common in baby land, and it doesn’t faze Jack. He just finds another toy to play with.
If that toy is quickly stolen from him, he crawls to the book shelf and starts pulling all the books down, one by one, because that’s always super fun. Or he looks for a cat he can chase or a remote control he can bang on the coffee table.
As adults, remaining unattached to material possessions gives us freedom to explore, as well as space for better objects, and the motivation to create or find different ways to entertain ourselves.

4. Be present.

Babies don’t worry about tomorrow or next week or next year. They definitely don’t stress about their birthdays or fret about some mistake they made last week that made them feel stupid. They are 100% in the now, thinking about what their immediate needs are—”Must find something to put in mouth! Now!”—and how those needs can be met.
If we spent more time in the present, rather than fretting over the past or worrying about the future, we would be better able to assess our immediate needs, figure out how to meet them, and have lots more energy available to enjoy the right here, right now.

5. Be socially open.

I take my son to a lot of places where there are other babies—the playground, story time at the library, sing-alongs, the pediatrician’s office. (Hey, the fun never stops!)
Without exception, he always makes new friends (if you consider sticking your fingers in a stranger’s mouth or stealing her toy and eating it “making friends”). Most babies are pretty eager to hang out with each other, which is why, in my yuppie neighborhood of roughly two million babies, play dates are very popular.
While it may not be as socially acceptable for us adults to be so orally fixated with strangers, we can take a page from babies and be more open and engaging with new people.
New people can turn into new friends. They can also provide career connections and valuable information about our community. Sometimes, they just give us a much-needed laugh or break from the mundane.

6. Rest.

Babies sleep a lot (if their parents are lucky). They need the sleep so they can be alert to learn all the new things there are to learn and to socialize and play and process the constant stimuli in their worlds.
We adults need rest, too, and not just of the sleeping variety. We need rest from our work and rest from the pressures of our daily lives. We need to get away and re-charge our batteries so we are alert and ready when new opportunities for growth present themselves.
Most important, we need charged batteries so we can be proactive in finding new opportunities to keep becoming who we are meant to be.
Photo by sakanami

5 Tips to Recognize and Honor Your Needs in Relationships

5 Tips to Recognize and Honor Your Needs in Relationships:

Editor’s Note: This is a contribution by Kaylee Rupp
“Don’t worry about what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive and do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” ~Howard Thurman 
In what feels like a previous life, I was a serial dater.
I looked for attention, validation, and identification in relationships. Each guy, however wrong for me, seemed like the perfect fit for my empty hand.
Maybe I hated being around his smoking—but I brushed it off and tried to breathe the other way.
Maybe our conversations were dull—but I thought it’d get better. Maybe I cringed at being dragged to another party—but I went, because he wanted to see his friends.
This pattern continued for years. I stayed in relationships that were clearly wrong for me, dated people I didn’t understand and who didn’t understand me—just to be in one.
It wasn’t until an insightful Zen class that I even became aware of the pattern.
As I cozied up in the gently lit room, hot tea in hand, surrounded by kindred spirits, the Zen master began the day’s lesson: needs.
Huh. I sipped the sweet jasmine tea and listened intently, totally blown away by what he was saying. Needs? What are those? Seriously, they weren’t even on my radar.
But they should’ve been. Needs are personal prerequisites to happiness. 
We don’t learn to pay much attention to our needs, beyond the basics of food, water, and shelter. Television advertisements, popular culture, and the desires of others dictate our “needs.”
But I’ll bet that, on a soul level, you don’t need a cooler car, a bigger ring, whiter teeth, or more parties.
What do you need then? Answering this question can be one of the most powerful transformations of your life.
It was for me. After that class, I started paying attention to my needs; and very slowly, I began attending to them.
I needed to embrace my introverted nature instead of ignoring it or boozing it out at parties every weekend. I needed alone time—space to dream, think, and be. I needed peace and quiet. Deep conversation. The freedom to spend a Friday night in without guilt.
At first, recognizing these needs was rough. I hated myself for having them; why couldn’t I be like the other 21 year-olds? Why did bars overwhelm me? Why couldn’t I socialize with his rowdy friends?
It drove me nuts. So for a while, I continued to ignore my needs. I thought I’d just override them with more wrong relationships and parties I hated.
But eventually, I couldn’t ignore them anymore. I came to terms with them. Being aware of my needs was making room for me to actually start taking care of them.
It took years, but I’m finally at the point where I’m comfortable with my needs—and making them known.
I’m with a guy who not only accepts, but embraces my introverted nature, so I have time to write, be alone, and spend a Friday night with a book without ridicule. It’s allowed me the space to be more authentically myself, making me happier and more available for all of my relationships.
Maybe you can relate. Do you shove your true needs aside to fit in with what you’re “supposed to” want and do? Or to tend to the needs of others?
When was the last time you asked yourself, “What do I need right now?”
If it’s been a while, or if this is as new to you as it was to me, here’s a brief intro on how to work with your needs:

1. Realize that having needs is not selfish, weak, or dependent. 

For some reason, there’s this idea that having needs makes someone selfish or needy. Please, let that go.
Sometimes we feel this way because we think the needs of others should come first. But how can you be available as your best self for others if you’re not taking care of you? When you’re happy and taken care of, it’s more of a joy than a burden to take care of the needs of others.
It will take some time to get over the negative ideas about having needs, so be gentle and patient with yourself through this process. Just remind yourself that we all have needs, and there’s nothing wrong or greedy about having them.
On the contrary, it’s oh-so-right to take care of them! Recognizing and attending to your needs is part of self-love and care. Be good to yourself—honor your needs.

2. Ask yourself: What are my needs?       

For many of us, our needs aren’t even on the radar. Simply taking a moment to ask yourself what they are can give you answers you never knew were there.
So ask yourself: What are my needs? What are my personal prerequisites for happiness? Not what the commercials or your friends are telling you. What is your soul telling you?
Do you need more creativity, passion, fun? More time in nature? Less stress?
Once you’ve started discovering what your needs are, check in with yourself often. Are your needs being met right now? It not, how can you make that happen?

3. Accept them for what they are. 

It’s tempting to beat yourself up about them, like I did. But you can’t change it. So why fight them?
You might not like what you find at first—that’s okay. You don’t have to like something to accept it. Just remember that everyone’s needs are different. Let go of expectations and embrace whatever comes up for you.
This is really a part of accepting you for who you are. Your needs are highly personal—a reflection of your authentic self.
Being real with your needs means being real with yourself. It means being authentic and honoring you and your whole human experience.

4. Communicate them.

It can be tough to start letting others know what we need. We’re afraid of looking selfish or placing burdens on others.
Let go of this.
By communicating your needs to other, you’re creating a mutually respectful environment, one where they’ll feel free to express their needs too. So really, telling people what you need is pretty selfless! Just be ready to hear and honor theirs as well.
Communicating our needs requires and creates a great deal of respect and authenticity in our relationships. When you’re honoring one another’s needs, you’re creating the opportunity for greater authenticity, respect, accountability, and love.

5. Tend to them.

This, of course, is the most important part—taking care of those needs! This step also takes time.
Start small. If you’re a closet introvert like I was, try saying no to one party invite and enjoy that quiet time—guilt free.
You don’t need a radical overhaul. Baby steps will build you up to the point where your needs become priorities. Before you start feeling selfish, remember: When you’re practicing stellar self-care, you’re becoming more authentic and available for your relationships.
I won’t pretend that these steps are easy. They’re not. It took me a long time to get to the point where I’m aware and taking care of mine, and sometimes I still screw up. It’s always a journey.
But it’s a journey that’s so worth it. They always are, aren’t they?
So embrace the challenge, honor yourself, and attend to your needs for greater authenticity, self-love, and presence on this beautiful journey.
Photo by Damian Gadal

How To Overcome Self-Doubt: 8 Tips to Boost Your Confidence

How To Overcome Self-Doubt: 8 Tips to Boost Your Confidence:

Editor’s Note: This is a contribution by Sirena Bernal
“Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself.” ~Cicero
At one point or another, we all questions whether or not we are doing enough, making enough money, or if we are going to be “successful” enough. I know this firsthand, as I’ve spent long periods of my young adult life in a persistent state of fear and self-doubt.
When I graduated from college, I worked 60, 70, even 80 hours a week in a corporate setting climbing the proverbial ladder. In my mind, I thought that was success—even though it wasn’t what I truly wanted for myself.
I held onto dead-end jobs, toxic relationships, and draining friendships because I thought that if I left them, I’d be a quitter.
I doubted myself to the point that I was making my decisions based on what others wanted of me, and not what I wanted for myself. I was constantly struggling with confidence and always second-guessing myself.
What I’ve learned from my experiences is that if I don’t nip the self-limiting thoughts in the bud right away, this “woe is me” mindset can become debilitating.
I’ve discovered a few things in my work to help with self-doubt and boost my confidence that may help you too:

1. Stop comparing your accomplishments to your friends’ and colleagues’ accomplishments.

I find that I doubt myself the most when I’m comparing what I’m doing with what other people are doing.  When I compare my accomplishments to a colleague’s, I start feeling inadequate. Your colleague’s accomplishments are not a litmus test to grade your own success.
One key thing to remember when you find yourself in this mental pattern is that everyone is on his or her own journey.
I find that I am most successful in my personal and professional life when I am following what works for me, and what makes me feel good, even if it is different from what someone I look up to is doing.

2. Forget about what everyone else is thinking of you.

When you care about what everyone else is thinking of you, you inhibit yourself. You’d rather do nothing and not get judged, than do something and risk criticism.
Worrying about what other people think of you will continue to hold you back from doing something potentially huge for yourself.
If you hold dreams for your future—which you probably do if you’re reading Tiny Buddha—then at some point you have to let go of everyone else’s opinion, otherwise, you’ll find yourself in a constant state of self-doubt.

3. Just make a decision, and then correct your course as you go along.

Getting caught up in a decision is another surefire way to water the seeds of self-doubt. It’s very easy to get stuck in trying to make decisions. This back-and-forth thought process—questioning if you should go with option A or option B—can exacerbate self-doubt.
What is the cure for this? Just make a decision already! Usually your first reaction is going to be your best since it typically comes from a place of intuition rather from the ego, and before outside opinions get in the way.
Rainer Maria Rilke says, “no feeling is final” and I feel the same could be said about your decisions. Just make a decision, and then fine-tune your course along the way.

4. Write yourself a hand-written letter.

Sometimes a kind word or compliment from someone can totally bring me out of a slump, and I’m sure you’ve experienced a situation where someone made your day.
But what if you’re feeling low and unconfident, and no one is around to pick you up? Well, there will always be one person left to uplift you and that’s you. A great exercise that I’ve come up with is writing myself a hand-written letter.
This negative, doubtful, scared part of ourselves is our shadow side, and we all have one. And just as we have a shadow, we also have a light side, the positive, optimistic and productive self.
What I do is actually write a hand-written letter from my light side to my shadow side basically saying that everything will be okay, and I even list all of the things I have accomplished recently to help me feel better. (It really does work!)

5. Listen and/or read positive material on a daily basis.

One of my quick go-to ways to boost my confidence in a jiffy is to listen to some of my favorite self-development books.  My favorite sources are:
I’ll put the audio books on my iPod and listen to them when I’m walking to work, taking the subway, or just strolling out and about in the city. I find it gives me a nice reminder of my potential. It’s an instant pick-me up

6. Write in a gratitude journal at the end of each day.

It’s far too easy to wallow in pity and focus on what we don’t have rather than what we do have. Giving those feelings energy will only create more situations in which we come up empty handed.
Instead of focusing on what you are lacking, focus on what you do have, and what you have accomplished. This fosters a feeling of gratitude, and when you invest energy into gratitude now, you’ll start to find that you’ll be rewarded in the future.
Feelings of gratitude put you in a positive frame of mind. When you’re feeling positive, you’re feeling good. And when you’re feeling good, good things happen.

7. Identify your biggest fans, and then nurture those relationships.

No (wo)man is an island—meaning, you can’t do it all on your own. Sometimes all you need is a little reassurance, and your biggest fans are the people who do just that for you.
You first need to identify your biggest fans—the friends, family members, and peers who think you’re the cat’s meow, and who have always been there for you. Friend’s who tell you that you’re awesome, just because.
Then, put your energy into fostering deeper and lasting relationships with these people. We all have them, so nurture those relationships and draw strength and confidence from them.

8. Go to your mantras for support.

I have a set of mantras that I’ve come up with over the years that I basically repeat whenever I doubt myself. The mantras remind me of how far I’ve come, and that I’m doing great things for myself.
They also remind me to slow down, be easy on myself, and always listen to my heart.
One of my favorite mantras I use is, “You are loved.” Doubtful feelings can arise when we feel we’re not good enough, and that can stem from feeling like we are not loved. By repeating this mantra, I remind myself, that yes, people in my life do love me, that I am good enough, and that I need not doubt myself.
At one point or another, we will all find ourselves experiencing some sort of self-doubt; it’s part of being human. What I’ve learned as I continue on my own journey is that feelings of self-doubt usually arise when we aren’t fully feeling loved.
I’ve learned that by surrounding myself with my biggest fans, by focusing on my own goals, and by practicing gratitude I can experience love more deeply, minimizing feelings of self-doubt.
Photo by Arman Dz.

5 Empowering Lessons from Being Fired

5 Empowering Lessons from Being Fired:

Editor’s Note: This is a contribution by Laura Simms
“Sometimes the wrong choices bring us to the right places.” ~Unknown
I was fired via email as my plane touched down at LAX.
I am not the kind of person who gets fired, who gets dismissed, who is asked to leave and is not welcomed back.
This was not my track record, no. What was happening?
I had seen the ad on Craigslist, and it looked perfect. An educational theater program for kids was seeking instructors and administrators to help revitalize the company. They needed someone with current experience in the entertainment industry who was an educator, and also had the business vision to help them grow.
Application. Interview. Second interview! This was looking good. The company would soon be expanding into a beautiful big new building. They were interested in new ideas. I knew I could bring a lot to the table. 
They wanted to hire me part-time, as a contractor. I was okay with that. I asked if there was any kind of contract or written agreement. In my past experience, contractors had, you know, contracts.
They said that they didn’t do contracts because they trust the people they hire, but if I wanted one, I could write it up and then we could go from there.
So I did. I based it off a contract an employer had provided to me in the past, and of course asked my attorney father if there was anything else I was missing. I made a couple adjustments and fired it off to them. Nothing overly litigious, just making sure we had in writing what our agreement was.
Days passed. I started to worry. Things had been moving so quickly and so well. Finally, I got an email. Could I come in and talk about the contract?
So I went in for a third meeting. This time, they had me sit in one of the classrooms. With a faux-paternal furrow in his brow, the owner asked me why I didn’t trust them. Why I had written up such a formal document? 
Then came the PowerPoint presentation, highlighting each dagger I had thrown at them with my contract, line by line.
This, ladies and gents, is when I should have picked up my purse, politely exited, and never looked back. 
But that was not my choice.
I sat, berated, confused, and tried to defend myself without being defensive—tried to support the common practice of the contract, open to their suggestions and amendments, but wanting to take care of myself.
Such things were not understood or appreciated there. And so I began my stint, with my boss not trusting me, and me not trusting my boss. 
Over the weeks, the systemic failures of the organization blanched what had once seemed promising.
Questionable marketing practices. Employees manipulating management. Damning reviews with the Better Business Bureau.
And yet I stayed. I believed that there was good work to be done there, and that I could really make a difference. The drive to contribute and develop something blinded my judgment. 
I frequently complained to another co-worker about the choices the company was making. Not a flattering trait, or a healthy one.
I was not rude or out of line, but I was not quiet. I voiced concerns. I spoke out against policies. I strived for us to do things with more integrity.
And in the telling of this story, it seems very clear that this was not a place that I belonged. 
But when I got that email on the tarmac, anger outweighed my relief.
My background was “too aristocratic,” they said. I had asked for things like contracts and mission statements and getting paid the same rate as the other teachers—all things one commonly associates with aristocracy.
Bitter, jobless, I started to find gratitude in my situation.
Here are the 5 blessings that I found in being fired: 

1. I learned to take responsibility for my part. 

As much as I wanted to be right and make them wrong, the truth is that I co-created the dynamic that lead to this point. My hands were dirty, and it wasn’t as simple as getting dumped by the bad guys.
No matter why you’ve been fired, odds are you played some role. Once you take responsibility, it’s easier to get past the anger and onto the next thing.

2. Acceptance replaced resentment. 

I wasn’t a good fit there. As much as I didn’t want that to be true, it was. Getting fired helped me see beyond what I wanted to see, and accept the situation as it truly was. When you accept fact over fiction, you can begin healing from the experience.

3. I detached my worth from my work. 

Who was I if I wasn’t going to work, making money, and contributing in that way? I had to answer that question, and learn to love the Laura that just is, not the Laura that does. It’s that saying of “you’re not a human doing, you’re a human being.”
Learning to value the being part of yourself not only puts you in deeper relationship with yourself, it also helps you appreciate the other “beings” in your life.

4. I got a fresh start. 

Sounds cliche, but it’s true. Having to leave the familiar stretched me to reevaluate what I really wanted and gave me the freedom to go for it.
Do-overs can reenergize you and give a much-needed shake up to other areas of your life.

5. I learned to trust my gut. 

I had the impulse to abandon ship, or rather, not to board ship, early on. I learned that my intuition is right, and that I don’t have to fully understand or verbalize it to let it guide me. That quiet voice we all have knows so, so much, and when we listen, we can act in alignment with our most sacred intelligence.
Getting fired hurts, regardless of the circumstances. But as with most everything in life, it can be an opportunity. You can’t un-fire yourself, but you can choose your experience of being fired. You can find the blessings in the beast.
Photo by Ed Yourdon

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Cheryl Cole Vows Never To Talk About Her Romantic Relationships Again
Entertainmentwise
The 'Call My Name' singer has so far stayed true to her word, remaining tight-lipped over her new relationship with her dishy backing dancer beau, who she has been dating since September. However, we're giving Chezza until the end of the month before ...
See all stories on this topic »

Entertainmentwise


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
One Direction's Niall Horan Is Still Single! Denies Relationship With Drama ...
PerezHilton.com
Yesterday, fans of One Direction's resident blondie, Niall Horan, were crushed to hear the reports about a new girl in his life! However, now it seems as though Niall is STILL single, even after supposedly getting caught kissing a drama student by the ...
See all stories on this topic »

PerezHilton.com


Tip: Use site restrict in your query to search within a site (site:nytimes.com or site:.edu). Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating Video

Video1 new result for Relationships and Dating Video
 
FAQs! On Interracial Relationship Tips and Advice ...
14 min
You need Adobe Flash Player to watch this video. ... podcast we love our wedding video ...
youtube.com


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Love Relationship

Video1 new result for Love Relationship
 
Love Dont Change: A Relationship Story Chapter 5 ...
8 sec
Hello Ladies. Soo Today I worked at the Middles Schools Festival and the whole upstairs was a ...
youtube.com


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
Signs You Are Dating A Sociopath, From Dr. Pepper Schwartz (WATCH)
Huffington Post
... Dr. Schwartz cautions every woman to never enter into a serious relationship -- especially not one that is legally binding -- in a short amount of time! And for more fantastic advice from Dr. Pepper Schwartz, see her tips on sex, dating and ...
See all stories on this topic »
Study reveals what Halloween costumes say about an individual's love life
Examiner.com
WhatsYourPrice.com, the same dating website where Nadya "Octomom" Suleman auctioned herself off to potential suitors for a cool $5,000 in August, has released the results from a study on what different Halloween costumes mean for an individual's love ...
See all stories on this topic »


This as-it-happens Google Alert is brought to you by Google.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
How To Make A Long Distance Relationship Work, From Dr. Pepper Schwartz ...
Huffington Post
When Dr. Schwartz visited me on Mondays With Marlo, she spoke about how Skype will allow you to have "virtual dates" and see your partner every day. And for more fantastic advice from Dr. Pepper Schwartz, see her tips on sex, dating and relationships: ...
See all stories on this topic »
Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson latest news: Separate sightings and trust
Examiner.com
Stewart engaged in a fling with her "Snow White and the Huntsman" director Rupert Sanders that resulted in a swift end to the couple's four-year relationship. ... Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson latest news: Dating, Google and sex therapy (Video) ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Love Relationship

Video3 new results for Love Relationship
 
Hate love relationship: Courtney and Jeremiah's ...
5 min
Sign in to add channels to your guide and for great recommendations! Sign In. Alert icon. You ...
youtube.com
A Love & Hate Relationship (Justmine love story ...
6 sec
Hey guys..im so so soooo sorry i Haven't posted in so long :/ I I've been going through ALOT ...
youtube.com
Love Dont Change A Relationship Story: Chapter 5 ...
15 sec
Love Dont Change A Relationship Story: Chapter 5. Tarese Rodgers. Subscribe Subscribed ...
youtube.com


Tip: Use site restrict in your query to search within a site (site:nytimes.com or site:.edu). Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Pippa Middleton dating new man
Zee News
The 28-year-old party planner has enjoyed a string of dates with 37-year-old Matthews in recent weeks and friends say their relationship is going "from strength to strength". "Pippa and James sat in a secluded booth in the upstairs area, where it was ...
See all stories on this topic »

Zee News


This as-it-happens Google Alert is brought to you by Google.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Cheryl Cole on love, relationships and motherhood
The Sun
Even after the worst of her heartache was over, the singer says she found it difficult to get used to the idea of dating again. She said: "The weirdest thing is, it takes a long time after you've been with someone as long as I was not to feel like you ...
See all stories on this topic »

The Sun


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating Video

Video1 new result for Relationships and Dating Video
 
Book of Love: Relationships and Dating (review ...
2 min
Advice on dating women and dating men (you think its different, but it's actually very similar ...
youtube.com


This as-it-happens Google Alert is brought to you by Google.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
Is dating outdated?
Worcester Telegram
She acknowledges that many young women lament the lack of traditional dating, but says that many are still looking for "fulfilling relationships that exist outside the path of marriage." "Nobody says, 'I love the hookup culture,' and nobody says, 'I ...
See all stories on this topic »
Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson latest news: Relationship changed forever
Examiner.com
While their relationship appears to be headed in the right direction, there is no question that Stewart's summer scandal with Rupert Sanders has changed their relationship forever. ... Taylor Kinney latest news: Weight gain, sickness and pregnancy ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
Jennifer Lopez-Casper Smart celebrate 1-yr dating anniversary on Twitter
Zee News
Jennifer Lopez-Casper Smart celebrate 1-yr dating anniversary on Twitter Washington: Jennifer Lopez and Casper Smart, who have been dating since her split from husband Marc Antony, celebrated their one-year anniversary on Thursday and put on the ...
See all stories on this topic »

Zee News
Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson latest news: Relationship strengthens
Examiner.com
According to latest reports, the couple is enjoying a strong relationship while Pattinson continues to address issues of trust from Stewart's summer fling with an older man. .... Robert Pattinson latest news: Katy Perry, Kristen Stewart, John Mayer and ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News2 new results for Relationships and Dating
 
Dating: Investing in relationships
Hometownlife.com
Dating, at its base, is an extension of friendship. Successful relationships will possess mutual respect for another, that is, not at the expense of another. Children ought to remember that there is a person on the other end of the relationship and not ...
See all stories on this topic »
Taylor Swift and Connor Kennedy End Relationship
Empowered News
Taylor Swift and Connor Kennedy End Relationship. After just a few months of dating, the sweet and loving couple, Taylor Swift and Conor Kennedy has officially ended their romantic relationship, as confirmed by the US Weekly. "They quietly parted ways ...
See all stories on this topic »

Empowered News


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Google Alert - Love Relationship

Video3 new results for Love Relationship
 
Secrets Of Love Relationships: Find Love, Keep ...
42 min
http://www.PillaiCenter.com Take the Shreem Brzee Challenge: http://www. pillaicenter.com ...
youtube.com
A Love & Hate Relationship ( Justmine love story ...
6 sec
Jasmine and Jazzy are both in Jazzy's room talking about random stuff. They're there alone ...
youtube.com
A Journey to Love with Misha of Love Grows: The ...
6 min
A Journey to Love is an intimate look into the life of Misha Granado, Founder| Principal ...
vimeo.com


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Google Alert - Relationships and Dating

News1 new result for Relationships and Dating
 
Deeper Dating: The Wiser Path to Love
Atlanta Black Star
Best of all, I've found that this approach, which I call "Deeper Dating," actually favors people in their late 40s, 50s and older because at this stage of life, we are much less willing to waste our time in the pursuit of unhealthy relationships. I've ...
See all stories on this topic »


Tip: Use quotes ("like this") around a set of words in your query to match them exactly. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Giving a 100% - Keeping it 100