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9/9/2005 Hmmm....a ramble!I wish I had more thoughts running around my head at the moment, but the truth is, I don't. I am sorta at the crossroads in my life, especially with relationships, and it hasn't been the smooth transition I thought it would be from the 'teen years'. Falling in love with someone who not only has similiar values and morals, but an understanding of how mature relationships work, is extremely difficult today. Sometimes I just want to quit the game and live the life of a gigalo. Sure, I find many women who comprehend what it takes to be in a healthy realtionship that will invest 110%, yet it is never the ones I want to be nor can see myself with. How ironic life is. But then again, I really shouldn't complain much because my wisdom stems from my experiences, both good and bad. I should though, start accepting people who want to give me the world more openly; I am only cheating myself out of something wonderful by ignoring them to take on the more "challenging" drama queens. Ugh.
Why are people so selfish today? Do men and women act this way because they believe relationships as we age are the same as when we were younger, say late teens early twenties? Or is it because no one is willing to give much of themselves in fear of being hurt if it ends? A few of my recent experiences have seemingly been one sided as far as emotions were concerned, and that troubles me. I know how unique and special I am in the world of men, yet the women I choose seem to either be too blinded to this fact, too imature on how to act properly in a mature relationship, or are just simply emotionally unavailable (which is the worst). Not to say that I don't have my faults, because I do, just like every other human walking the planet. It's just that I know I usually go above and beyond for anyone I love through action (not simply words) unless I feel like I am the primary giver, being purposely walked on or taken advantage of. I can do a lot, but chasing a one sided person has never been my thing. If there was anything good that has come out of my past, it is knowing that being a doormat and a passive person only invites abuse from certain individuals. Be loving when it is invited and firm when it is threatened.
Why is it that people also want to control their emotions in an unproductive way, llike instead of just going with the flow when sparks fly, they choose to supress them until they're "comfortable" sharing with a significant other? I never got this either. Nothing can progess naturally if there is a limit put of any type of emotion, period. And how can another person handle such an excuse knowing it isn't part of the natural process? I understand people don't rush into relationships or openly share their feelings because of bad things that have happened in their past, but guess what...it has happened to ALL of us in our past! I can never stop myself from feeling butterflies for someone new and different in my life, especially if they're meeting me half way, just because of an unfortunate experience I had in my past. That is just plain childish. I never understood that angle, though luckily it hasn't happened to me more than a couple of times in my lfe. Appreciate what you have in front of you, go with the flow, and don't let anything from the past influence your judgement. Experience gives us situational awareness, not the power to judge or stereotype people.
Also, why do certain women try to be deceptive and change their stories several times within a short amount of time? I don't know what makes them think I have "noobie" written on my forehead(maybe it is my good nature), but the truth of the matter is is that I have more experience than most of them want to know. I have played every single game in the book since I hit puberty, and although when I did it wasn't right, one positive thing has come out of it, and it is knowing when someone is lying to me or trying to cover their tracks. I hate that. I couldn't be anything but honest and upfront with anyone I loved, so why isn't it reciprocated sometimes? I guess it goes back to people just being selfish. Telling me one thing only to change your stance or add new information when questioned is not attractive or productive, and it only makes me suspicious and pushes me away. If you don't want to be loyal with one person, regardless of having a title of boyfriend/girlfriend, then at least be honest. That is an obligation and should be discussed openly, especially when two people are already having sexual relations with each other. Not being upfront and then having someone find out own their own that another is lying paints a skank and whore potrait, regardless of the sexes, and the person caught in the act is deserving of that title in my opinion.
I can go on and on, but I'll stop here. If some of it doesnt make sense, just ignore it. Afterall, it is a rant, and I was typing this in between my flights in World of Warcraft. :-D 9/6/2005 Another great tune on an uneventful dayThe original was done by Stevie Wonder, remade by artists such as Donell Jones and Luther Vandross. Great lyrics, great song.
Song: Knocks me off my feet
Lyrics:
Verse 1 I see us in the park strolling the summer days of imaginings in my head And words from my heart told only to the wind Felt even without being said B-Section I don't wanna bore you with my troubles But there's something 'bout your love That makes me weak and knocks me off my feet There's something 'bout your love That makes me weak and knocks me off my feet Knocks me off my feet Chorus I don't wanna bore you with it Oh but I love you, I love you, I love you I don't wanna bore you with it Oh but I love you, I love you, I love you More and more Verse 2 We lay beneath the stars under a lover's tree That seems through the eyes of my mind I reach out for the part of me that lives in you That only our two hearts can find B-Section But I don't wanna bore you with my troubles, yeah I don't wanna bore you with my troubles But there's something 'bout your love That makes me weak and knocks me off my feet There's something 'bout your love That makes me weak and knocks me off my feet Knocks me off my feet Chorus-out 8/31/2005 Relationship RulesHuman beings crave intimacy, need to love and be loved. Yet people have much trouble doing so.
It's clear from the many letters I get that lots of folks have no idea what a healthy relationship even looks like. So I'm using this space as an attempt to remedy the problem. From many sources and many experts, I have culled some basic rules of relationships. This is by no means an exhaustive list. But it's a start. Print them out and pin them up on your refrigerator door. 1. Choose a partner wisely and well. We are attracted to people for all kinds of reasons. They remind us of someone from our past. They shower us with gifts and make us feel important. Evaluate a potential partner as you would a friend; look at their character, personality, values, their generosity of spirit, the relationship between their words and actions, their relationships with others. 2. Know your partner's beliefs about relationships. Different people have different and often conflicting beliefs about relationships. You don't want to fall in love with someone who expects lots of dishonesty in relationships; they'll create it where it doesn't exist. 3. Don't confuse sex with love. Especially in the beginning of a relationship, attraction and pleasure in sex are often mistaken for love. 4. Know your needs and speak up for them clearly. A relationship is not a guessing game. Many people, men as well as women, fear stating their needs and, as a result, camouflage them. The result is disappointment at not getting what they want and anger at a partner for not having met their (unstated) needs. Closeness cannot occur without honesty. Your partner is not a mind reader. 5. View yourselves as a team, which means you are two unique individuals bringing different perspectives and strengths. That, according to relationship expert Diane Sollee, M.S.W., director of SmartMarriages, an international effort to teach relationship skills to couples, is the value of a team -- your differences. 6. Know how to respect and manage differences; it's the key to success in a relationship. Disagreements don't sink relationships. Name-calling does. Learn how to handle the negative feelings that are the unavoidable byproduct of the differences between two people. Stonewalling or avoiding conflicts is NOT managing them. 7. If you don't understand or like something your partner is doing, ask about it and why he or she is doing it. Talk and explore, don't assume. 8. Solve problems as they arise. Don't let resentments simmer. Most of what goes wrong in relationships can be traced to hurt feelings, leading partners to erect defenses against one another and to become strangers. Or enemies. 9. Learn to negotiate. Modern relationships no longer rely on roles cast by the culture. Couples create their own roles, so that virtually every act requires negotiation. It works best when good will prevails. Because people's needs are fluid and change over time, and life's demands change too, good relationships are negotiated and renegotiated all the time. 10. Listen, truly listen, to your partner's concerns and complaints without judgment. Much of the time, just having someone listen is all we need. It opens the door to confiding. And empathy is crucial. Look at things from your partner's perspective as well as your own. 11. Work hard at maintaining closeness. Closeness doesn't happen by itself. In its absence, people drift apart and are susceptible to affairs. A good relationship isn't an end goal; it's a lifelong process maintained through regular attention. 12. Take a long-range view. A marriage is an agreement to spend a future together. Check out your dreams with each other regularly to make sure you're both on the same path. Update your dreams regularly. 13. Never underestimate the power of good grooming. 14. Sex is good. Pillow talk is better. Sex is easy, intimacy is difficult. It requires honesty, openness, self-disclosure, confiding concerns, fears, sadnesses as well as hopes and dreams. 15. Never go to sleep angry. Try a little tenderness. 16. Apologize, apologize, apologize. Anyone can make a mistake. Repair attempts are crucial -- highly predictive of marital happiness. They can be clumsy or funny, even sarcastic -- but willingness to make up after an argument is central to every happy marriage. 17. Some dependency is good, but complete dependency on a partner for all one's needs is an invitation to unhappiness for both partners. We're all dependent to a degree -- on friends, mentors, spouses -- and men have just as many dependency needs as women. 18. Maintain self-respect and self-esteem. It's easier for someone to like you and to be around you when you like yourself. Research has shown that the more roles people fill, the more sources of self-esteem they have. Meaningful work -- paid or volunteer -- has long been one of the most important ways to exercise and fortify a sense of self. 19. Enrich your relationship by bringing into it new interests from outside the relationship. The more passions in life that you have and share, the richer your relationship will be. It is unrealistic to expect one person to meet all of your needs in life. 20. Cooperate, cooperate, cooperate. Share responsibilities. Relationships work ONLY when they are two-way streets, with much give and take. 21. Stay open to spontaneity. 22. Maintain your energy. Stay healthy. 23. Recognize that all relationships have their ups and downs and do not ride at a continuous high all the time. No relationship is perfect all the time. Working together through the hard times will make the relationship stronger. 24. Make good sense of a bad relationship by examining it as a reflection of your beliefs about yourself. Don't just run away from a bad relationship; you'll only repeat it with the next partner. Use it as a mirror to look at yourself, to understand what part of you is creating this relationship. Change yourself before you change your relationship. 25. Understand that love is not an absolute, not a limited commodity that you're in of or out of. Says Sollee: It's a feeling that ebbs and flows depending on how you treat each other. If you learn new ways to interact, the feelings can come flowing back, often stronger than before.
Source: Psychology Today 8/29/2005 Something to make you all think of what is truly important in life.Just simply, wow. I am so much like Kenny, the man who wrote this blog. Please take the time to visit his MSN page, listed in the source below. The man has more heart, insight and knowledge than most people you come across daily. I wish him all the best, and will be visiting and commenting on his page regularly going forward. It's good to know that hopeless romantics, as well as people with huge hearts wanting to love still exist, even when faced with extreme adveristy in their own lives. And how truly sad it is when people and society treat you differently if you no longer fit the mold of what is considered "normal", "appealing" or "dateable". I thank the Lord for my differences, for seeing beyond physical beauty; which never really matters at all, and seeing people for who they truly are inside. And that is more important than anything else anyone tries to make excuses for. Anyone who tells you differently is living in a world void of self worth and emotion...love comes with no baggage, no hangups, no facades, no limitations, no requirements, no rules, and no boundaries. Believe it.
Source: Smalls149 Louisiana evacuees urged to stay away![]() 'Total structural failure' reported in New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- Louisiana evacuees should stay away for at least a week to avoid "a wilderness" without power or drinking water that will be infested with poisonous snakes and fire ants, state officials warned Monday. Looting was reported in some areas of New Orleans late Monday. Elsewhere along the Gulf Coast and northern Mississippi, Hurricane Katrina continued to wreak havoc. As of 5 p.m. ET Monday, Katrina was barely a Category 1 storm with 75 mph winds. It was centered about 30 miles northwest of Laurel, Mississippi, and hurricane-force winds extended for 60 miles, said the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida. "We would really encourage people not to come back [to New Orleans] for at least a week," said Ivor van Heerden, director of the Center for the Study of Public Health Impacts of Hurricanes in Baton Rouge. "If you came back, you would be coming literally to a wilderness," he said. "If your house is gone, it's gone. If you come back in a day or a week,it's not going to make any difference." Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco said she had ordered state police to block re-entry routes to all but emergency workers. After topping levees in New Orleans, Katrina inundated the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts with a 20-foot storm surge. Streets of Biloxi, Mississippi, became flowing rivers up to 12 feet deep. In Mobile, Alabama, the storm pushed Mobile Bay into downtown, submerging large sections of the city, and officials imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew. An oil drilling platform broke away from its moorings and lodged under a bridge that carries U.S. Highway 98 over the Mobile River. The Alabama National Guard activated 450 troops to secure Mobile. Two other Alabama battalions, or about 800 troops, were activated to assist in Mississippi. At least 500,000 people were without power from Louisiana to Florida's Panhandle, including 370,000 in southeastern Louisiana and well over 100,000 each in Alabama and Mississippi. Hurricane-force winds are likely to continue into the night as Katrina slowly diminishes and carries its wind and rain into central and north Mississippi, Tennessee and eventually Ohio, the National Hurricane Center said. The storm came ashore Monday morning just east of New Orleans. Winds topping 140 mph transformed street signs, tree branches and roof debris into projectiles. Rising water strained the system of levees and pumping stations that protect the low-lying city. About 70 percent of the city sits below sea level. Water poured over levees in Orleans and St. Bernard parishes, and pats of the city's east side were under 9 feet of standing water. Police in New Orleans and surrounding parishes received more than 100 calls from residents trapped on top of their roofs. "Tell someone to come get me please. I want to live," resident Chris Robinson told The Associated Press via cell phone from his home east of downtown. As the storm passed, Col. Terry Ebbert, director of homeland security for New Orleans, said officials hope to take advantage of the remaining daylight hours to rescue the people they can. But high winds and flood waters were hampering the effort. Report: 'Total structural failure'The National Weather Service said it had received many reports of "total structural failure" in the New Orleans metro area. It did not elaborate, but video from the city showed crumbled walls in one neighborhood. About 10,000 people, who were unable to evacuate the city, took shelter in the Louisiana Superdome -- the cavernous football stadium that is home to the New Orleans Saints. Reporter Ed Reams from affiliate WDSU told CNN that Katrina ripped away a large section of the building's roof. Other developments
A hurricane warning remains in effect for the north-central gulf coast from Morgan City, Louisiana, to the Alabama-Florida border. Tropical storm warning is in effect from east of the Alabama/Florida border to Indian Pass, Florida, and west from Morgan City to Cameron, Louisiana.
CNN's Miles O'Brien, Anderson Cooper and Kathleen Koch contributed to this report.
Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.
Source: CNN.com |
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