Easy dating: meet a girl online

I will teach you how to meet girls online.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Easy Dating after divorce

Easy dating can seem like a strange world, especially if you've been divorced not long ago. The rules have changed, the players can seem more complex and winning might appear hopeless if you aren't prepared.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 19.3 million Americans get divorced each year. But all is not lost. It is possible to date after divorce if you follow some basic pointers.
HEAL BEFORE DATING AGAIN
"You don't want to meet someone and the slightest behavior pattern that is similar to the ex, you pull away and not give that person a chance," says Cornish, author of The Sacred Bond. "When someone gets divorced, sometimes they build a protective coat around their heart. You want to make sure you are completely over that before dating again."
THINK BEFORE INVOLVING CHILDREN
Striking the right balance when dating after divorce can be especially sensitive when children are involved.
"Do not get children involved in dating unless you are going to spend a lot of time with that person," says Cornish. "If it doesn't work, you are bringing all kinds of people in their life and you can send mixed messages. If the children are older, you can tell them that you are dating and that you'd like for them to meet the person. When the children are younger, leave them out of it because resentment can set up. Get to know the person first."
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LEARN TO BE HAPPY AND HAVE FUN
Dating after divorce also means giving yourself permission to be happy again. This means learning how to have fun, she says, as you date. "The old relationship is gone. Realize you are worthwhile and others want you. Realize you are attractive and you are supposed to have fun."
Carla Fox of Joliet, IL, was married for 15 years before she divorced in 1998. When she was ready to start dating again, she used God as her guide and details those experiences in the book A Miracle Made In Heaven.
"God does not use divorce as a life sentence of loneliness," Fox recalls in the book, as she realized that she could still be blessed in a relationship in spite of her divorce.
BE CAUTIOUS
Also a registered nurse, Fox learned that you must keep both eyes open when trudging dating waters once more.
"Don't be sidetracked by what you see, such as their attractive appearance or the many gifts they bring. It's so easy to get caught up looking at an individual in the natural. Pray and ask God to help you see them through spiritual eyes, so you can begin to examine their fruits of the spirit."
She practiced what she preached. It led to a trip down the aisle in 2002 when she wed Pastor Robert Fox.
"You have to divorce yourself from the individual and not the institution of marriage," she says. "The marriage did not hurt you, the individual did. Then you start with a clean slate."
ACCEPT PERSON WHERE HE IS
Dating after divorce, says Fox, also means you must accept that this new person might not be empty-handed.
"They may come with children, a house note, car note and bad credit from a previous marriage. You can't want this person without any baggage, but inspect each other's baggage. It's not so much on the physical."
LEARN TO COMMUNICATE
Robert LeCruise Johnson has been divorced for nearly five years. Since dating, he has learned that it is essential to communicate.
"When you're not looking to get back into a relationship right away, you have to let a person know that," says Johnson, an account manager at FedEx Freight in Memphis. "One thing I've noticed as I get older is feeling pressured to get into a relationship. You want to be a person's friend and get to know that person first so that you know what the person wants. You have to know who you are dealing with. Talk first to see what the person's motivation is."
BE A PERSON'S FRIEND FIRST
He has found that dating after divorce means taking the time to be a friend first and foremost.
"Be a person's friend. That way you know what a person wants," says Johnson. "Sometimes there are hidden agendas when you don't discuss it. When you are a person's friend, you get to know that person and what he or she wants."
BE SELECTIVE
Clinical psychologist Dr. Darlene Powell-Garlington says you must be selective when dating after divorce.
"People are anxious about stepping out again and getting to know someone again," explains Powell-Garlington, who authored Love Affairs: How To Get The Relationship You've Always Wanted And God Wants You To Have. "There is a certain sense of shame and sense of failure. It's a matter of being discreet and clear about your boundaries. Be assertive and clear about what pace you want to take a new friendship and how you define it."
BE AWARE OF WHAT YOU WANT
She also believes a person must be aware of what he wants before dating after divorce.

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Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Meet Your Love In a Public Place

It can be very intimidating for some people to approach someone they see in public and ask them on a date. But if you’re not even trying, the likelihood of finding that special someone is slim to none.
I’ve had friends that said they saw a gorgeous girl in a store or a public place and thought she might have been into them but they hesitated and she left so they lost the opportunity to find out. But don’t worry, you can approach them and find out, and more often than not, even get a date!
This how to video shows you how to properly approach someone when on public transportation but the same exact tips can and should be applied to any public situation. You might be waiting in a dentist’s office or Supercuts, standing in line at Quiznos, or sitting in a Starbucks. It doesn’t matter, the same advice holds true.
Remember, if you don’t even try, it’s so much more difficult to meet someone. Even if you’re turned down, who will know? Chances are you’ll never see her or anyone else that’s around again. So you really have nothing to lose but you have everything to gain! She could be the one and if not, “there are many other fish in the sea.”
Most of my friends that didn’t “make a move” eventually met someone but it took a lot longer for them than it should have and in most of those cases it was people they already knew well. Don’t hesitate, try chatting up the next attractive person you see. Believe me it works, I know from experience; it’s how I met my wife.

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Easy Dating Advice

Internet Dating Advice And Dating Tips To Meet New People For Dating And Possibly More. Most of the Internet dating advice available is for the person who has never participated in Internet dating before. Standard dating advice about how to begin Internet dating, what precautions to take when dating online, and how to move relationships from the Internet to the real world are all widely available. However, what about those people who need dating advice because Internet dating is something they enjoy but something just isn’t quite working for them. Thousands upon thousands of people have been using the Internet as a means of dating for years now, and those people need a different type of Internet dating advice than the Internet dating advice available for the novice Internet dater.

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How can a girl show that she loves

Sometimes it’s hard for a woman to tell if a man is interested in them or just being polite. This is especially the case when he is shy or maybe is inexperienced in social situations with women. But there are some instinctual behaviors that can give you clues as to their true intentions.

Keep in mind that many men will be interested in any women that will talk to them so you might want to gauge their behavior before you make an approach. If a nice smile from across the room doesn’t peak their interest and bring them to you, maybe you should keep scanning the room for someone else.
What do you look for? Know of any other signs?

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That's my dating advice to you

Mark has recently started asking me for dating advice. Sunday night he spent two hours in my room talking to me in detail about how he could go about asking this girl for a date. I mean, he wanted to know how to phrase his phone call when he asked her out, right down to how he would know if it was okay to hold her hand, and at what point you can consider someone your girlfriend (that last one, I didn't really have a good answer for, although I did say that at his age, if you were holding hands, you probably could say it then).We went over fairly detailed scenarios, including the possibility that her parents don't allow her to date yet. And how they might not like the idea of a total stranger showing up to pick up their daughter and cart her away for a few hours. (possible solution: asking if she would like to meet him at the movie theater) He wanted to know what to say to her when he was going out to get a refill on the popcorn they're sharing. (hint: tell her what you're doing and ask her if she wants anything) Today he came home with the very happy news (to him) that there is another Y dance on Friday. This was where he met the girl, and also the only place he has ever seen her (at two dances). Now, if she is there, he is plotting (again, with my help) on how to get her phone number. (my helpful hint: ask if he can call her sometime....then ask for her number) (he said, "What if she says no?" answer: say "OK." "ohhhhhhhh," he replied. My gosh.)This has been interesting to me on a bunch of different levels. One is that holy cow! My boy is old enough that he's thinking about dating! How the hell did I get this old? Another is just how interesting it is to see the inner workings of my son's brains, and his worries. And noticing how much he's like me, in trying to see all the different angles of something before he gets into it. Another thing that I like is that this gives me yet another teachable moment for him; actually, a whole lot of them. There's the whole "girls are really people, not scary aliens" lesson, along with letting him see that many of other people's decisions that affect him are not necessarily going to have anything to *do* with him (she might say no to a date for a whole bunch of reasons that aren't a rejection of Mark personally...other scheduled plans, her parents won't let her date, etc). There's letting him see that there are sides to every relationship, and the need for consideration of "her side" (i.e. If you get her phone number, you then have to follow through and CALL HER, otherwise she will think it's a personal rejection of her, and how would you like that if it was you? So don't get her number if you aren't ready to call.) And, to remember to just be himself, and not pretend to be something he's not, because you want someone to like you for yourself. Then there's just the practical advice of dating. Like, when you call her for a date, already have a specific plan in mind. Instead of saying "wanna go out sometime?", ask her "Would you like to go to a movie on Saturday and then get an ice cream?" (which is actually the planned activity we worked out for when he does get to the 'date' stage) There's, make sure you have enough money to pay for everything, plus a little extra, 'cause it's super embarrassing to run out of money. There's, you need to walk her to her door after the date is over, not just say "see ya" from the car. And, don't hog the armrest at the movie. You know, the basics.What's really funny about all this (besides, hello, this is my KID asking me!), is that I'm not actually good at dating, myself. I haven't had a lot of experience in formal dating. Most of my past dating involved a lot of "what do you want to do?" "I dunno. What do *you* want to do?" for a couple of hours while we drove aimlessly around the rotary. (or making out somewhere. Which I am not going to tell him about. And he can't anyway 'cause he needs rides everywhere and that means an automatic chaperone. Although I did tell him that I'm not going to be staring at him while he walks her to the door. I also promised him I wouldn't sit near him during the movie. I'm not quite at the stage of just dropping them off at the movie alone for a couple of hours, though.)Oh my. He obviously still needs help. He is now overplanning. I had recommended that he maybe have a scrap of paper in his pocket so he could write down her number. He just came downstairs and said that he has the paper ready, that on the other side of it he has written fake homework assignments so it doesn't look like he's *planned* to have a scrap of paper with him. He has crumpled this paper up and smoothed it back out so it looks used. He was asking me if he should ask Eddie to have a pencil in *his* pocket that Mark could then borrow. I said no. I said he could actually just go ask one of the chaperones for a pen. (and then he all obsessed about "what if they don't have one?" at which point I assured him that if they didn't, they would help him find one.)I am now wondering if my son is going to grow up to be a stalker. Or a player. He has never been this prepared for anything in his LIFE. I must now go put my head down on my desk. mk

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Is it possible to happy if your are single?

Singleness, like grief, goes through stages. After decades of serial dating, okay, just years of being associated with a significant other, singleness was this new phenomena in my life, not all together unpleasant, just strangely revealing, like the time in 4th grade when a peer revealed the truth that eating with your mouth open was uncouth. Between bites of corn and mashed potatoes, a girl across the round table subjected me to my most vivid account of public humiliation in my childhood years. Before that point, I never even realized that I did eat with my mouth open, but the sudden realization made total sense once it quickly processed through my fourth grade mind, and I secretly cursed my parents for working so much in order to put food on our table, but forgetting to teach me that that food need not be displayed as it was being masticated.
Having boyfriends was normal, and normal was a nice security blanket. It never occurred to me that I could stop the cycle of perpetual coupledom by choice. Everyone seemed to be in the season of singleness because of lack of options, limbo between boyfriends, or well, just because they were constant ladies in waiting - waiting for the next prince charming to prove himself authentically sweet. Why would anyone choose to be single? Don’t be fooled. I am not of the man-hating variety. I don’t burn bras or read Ms. Magazine. I happen to adore men deeply. My two best friends are men, my brothers actually, and I’ve never actually been blatantly heartbroken. So for the record, choosing singleness had nothing to do with bitterness toward the stubble-faced species.
Like suddenly understanding a social faux pas involving food at the tender age of 10, at 21 I suddenly understood my social codependency involving men. It dawned on me that despite the lure of having banquet dates secured, and the security of feeling needed and desired, there was this subtle aching in me to be unattached. I wanted to find who I was apart from the identity of so and so’s girlfriend. Was it possible to be happy and single? Happy and single? In the same sentence? It sounded like an oxymoron, but it fit the way Plush Rapper oddly fits together in this age where Pink is the new Blue for men. There was an unexplored path of singleness off the beaten road that was waiting my footprints.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

What is easy online dating?

easy internet datingOnline dating is very popular these days. But while dating online has the advantages in its own, over the period of time this has been misused and is corrupted by many disadvantages. Online Dating is fun and convenient but still one has to be very careful while dating with someone they hardly know. The following are some online dating tip: .

Start slow.

In this online dating tip you are advised to be on the lookout for odd behavior or inconsistencies. If anything makes you uncomfortable, walk away for your own safety and protection.

Guard your anonymity.
Another online dating tip is to never include your last name, real email address, personal Web site URL, home address, phone number, place of work, or any other identifying information in your profile or initial emails you exchange with other members.

Exercise caution and common sense.

A good online dating tip where any suitor must earn your trust gradually, through consistently honorable, forthright behavior.

Request a photo.

Another routine dating tip is to ask for a photo. Photo will give you a good idea of the person's appearance, which may prove helpful in achieving a gut feeling about your correspondent.

Talk via telephone.

A valuable online dating tip is talking over the phone. It can reveal much about a person's communication and social skills.

Meet when you are ready.

A good online dating tip is to never obligate to meet anyone, regardless of your level of online intimacy.

Watch for red flags.

Pay attention to any displays of anger, intense frustration or attempts at pressuring or controlling you as a part of online dating tip. Be concerned if your date exhibits any of the following conduct without providing an acceptable explanation:

• Provides inconsistent information about age, interests, appearance, marital status, profession, employment, etc.
• Refuses to speak to you over the phone after establishing ongoing, online intimacy.
• Fails to provide direct answers to direct questions.
• Appears in person to be significantly different from his or her online persona.
• Never introduces you to friends, professional associates or family members.

Select the Safest Possible Environment.

When you make the choice to meet offline, as an added online dating tip, always tell someone where you are going and when you will return. Leave your date's name and telephone number with that person.

Take Extra Caution Outside Your Area.

If you are flying in from another area, an important online dating tip is to arrange for your own car and a hotel room. Do not disclose the name of your hotel and never allow your date to make the arrangements for you.

Get yourself out of a jam.

As a final online dating tip, never do anything you feel unsure about. If you are in any way afraid of your date, use your best judgment to diffuse the situation and get out of there. Your safety is much more important than one person's opinion of you.

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