| WILL HE OR WON'T HE |
Jun 25, 2008 9:25 pm 596 Views |  | Well June is almost over the most popular month for weddings, and he still hasn't proposed. Have you ever wondered why some times it seems to take ages to get a man to pop the question?
Well I just read an article by Dr Laura Berman who states there are 3 main reasons men are slow to propose. One men don't here the clock ticking like we women do. Second men dread the wedding day. Third men fear having to propose.
Let's face it ladies men don't have to fear the biological clock like we women do. They stay fertile usually till the day the die, even if the rest of the equipment doesn't work.
Men unlike most women do not have the wedding fantasy's most women do. We as small children have our heads filled with story's of Princesses in beautiful gowns and our weddings are as close as most will ever get to wearing that princess grown and being queen for a day.
Let's face it ladies, think how terrifying it must be for men to not only have to come up with something spectacular for a proposal I mean the ring in the baked potato, sky writing and having it put up on the big screen at a sporting event has been done. Then there is the fear you might say no.
In a resent national survey it was found that 80% of unmarried heterosexual men do want to marry.
So what do you think ladies, and you also guy's. All comments appreciated but please keep it civil, Thanks |
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| WHO IS INCHARGE |
Jun 25, 2008 9:21 pm 448 Views |  | I found this article in the news
OTTAWA (AFP) — A Canadian court has lifted a 12-year-old girl's grounding, overturning her father's punishment for disobeying his orders to stay off the Internet, his lawyer said Wednesday.
The girl had taken her father to Quebec Superior Court after he refused to allow her to go on a school trip for chatting on websites he tried to block, and then posting "inappropriate" pictures of herself online using a friend's computer.
According to court documents, the girl's Internet transgression was just the latest in a string of broken house rules. Even so, Justice Suzanne Tessier found her punishment too severe. |
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