June 18, 2013

5 fights every couple should have

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(PhatzNewsRoom / Match.com) — A recent Match.com poll of 11,000 men and women found that dealing with a partner’s family accounts for 45 percent of ’ fights. (Surprisingly, it was not about who should do the chores, pay for something, or where to go.) Family ties run deep — and sometimes they’re deeper than you think. Before you get involved, determine your partner’s connection to his or her family, and whether you can live with it.

When I first met him, George bragged that — even after seven years of marriage — he and his wife never had one fight. I thought that was pretty strange. Then suddenly, his wife served him with divorce papers. She had been having an affair with the gardener, and was now pregnant with his baby. Blindsided George didn’t know what hit him, and had a meltdown that lasted for years. When we started to unravel his story, I found that he had appointed his as his best friends and confidantes, leaving his wife in the cold. The couple went through the of marriage, tending to their kids and chores, and George’s wife never expressed her pain over feeling discarded in the process. Many people prefer peace at any cost.

help establish between partners
Arguments can actually infuse some into a couple’s , and they serve three main functions:

1. defining necessary boundaries,
2. overcoming routine , and
3. demonstrating the stake each person has in the partnership.

Aaron Tippin sings, “You’ve got to stand for ’ or you’ll fall for anything. You’ve got to be your own man, not a puppet on a string.” When someone stands his or her ground, respect reverberates. As my Gilda-Gram says, “Respect ensures a relationship’s longevity.” George had treated his wife as a , and she passively and aggressively responded!

When Cara met Tom, she marveled at how alike they were. “Oh, wow!” she effused, “I’ve met my mirror image.” I cautioned her that Tom might not be such a perfect match. But Cara would not listen; she believed she was in love. Over the next two years, Cara discovered that Tom provided little excitement in their relationship. She hadn’t realized the importance of having a partner who could stimulate her with traits that diverged from her own. Quite a change from her “mirror image” theory!

If fights are unavoidable, why not make them as productive as possible?
Since couples with near-identical traits can make boring partners, it’s not surprising that in a subsequent Match.com poll of 12,000 respondents, 58 percent said that fighting was inevitable — as long as fair techniques are used by both parties. Of course, 19 percent agreed that constantly fighting couples won’t stay together. Most people dislike confrontation, and 9 percent of those surveyed admitted to giving in just to restore peace in their relationship. But make-up sex is exciting, and 14 percent of the poll’s respondents said that any fight’s aftermath was actually the best part.

So, how can partners fight with each other and also grow their love? By fighting for a position, not over it! That distinction can determine your make-it-or-break-it future. The following five fights are important because they push each person to, in Tippin’s words, “stand for somethin’” that will build your togetherness. Of course, it’s prudent to discuss your issues before you share a roof. But you can’t really plan for every disagreement. And it’s that uncertainty that promises exhilaration down the road!

Here are the five things worth fighting for in your relationship:

1. Your personal freedom. Money symbolizes this freedom, yet opposites attract. Sara was frugal and typically saved her pennies, while Ben was an over-spender who oozed reckless abandon. Each found the other’s spending habits intolerable. So before they got married, the couple set up a “you” account, a “me” account, and a “we” account for their funds. Each then felt free, yet also bonded together.

Lesson learned: The more compromise a couple enjoys, the more devoted to each other they feel.

2. A healthy lifestyle. Alan promised to stop smoking if Maggie married him. She did, but he didn’t follow through. Maggie fought for their family to embrace healthy eating habits and exercise routines, but Alan refused to participate. Maggie finally left the marriage when Alan almost died of COPD.

Lesson learned: Share your needs and preferences with each other right from the start so you can test your partner’s buy-in on such matters.

3. Emotional and physical safety. Bonnie seemed like an ideal catch when Fred first met her, but after they dated for four months, her short fuse revealed itself; Bonnie was blowing up at the slightest provocation. At my urging, she enrolled in Anger Management classes, and Fred now appreciates their relationship more than ever before.

Lesson learned: Openly communicate your concerns about physical safety. Discover how far you’ll be willing to go for what your partner may call “love.”

4. Your own bathroom comfort. Jim had been dating Violet for several months. He was fastidious, and she was messy. He couldn’t stand her hair in the bathroom sink; she couldn’t fathom falling into the toilet another time after he left the seat up. She put the toilet paper facing one way, which compelled Jim to replace it going in the other direction. Each partner’s bathroom habits annoyed the other, but I advised them to find some humor in their disagreements. When they recognized these arguments were hardly earth-shattering, they chose to change their routines in order to sustain their love for each other.

Lesson learned: Air your complaints with humor, because laughter accelerates and maintains the romance!

5. Togetherness. Unifying as a team bonds you against the big, ugly world. Fight for your mate’s success, self-esteem, and career goals while your honey fights for yours. Crissy supported her new beau when he ran for public office. The pair endured the stress of living in a fishbowl and the unfounded subsequent attacks on both of them as individuals. But together, they kept their eye on their shared goal. When Cliff won the election, he proposed to Crissy. He gushed, “I can’t imagine life without this strong team we’ve formed.”

Lesson learned: Relationships thrive when mates cheer each other on. With each new plan of togetherness, you strengthen your personal bond.

Fight for what you believe in, stand your ground, and express your feelings from the heart. Even if your mate gets peeved, the respect that ensues will sustain your love — even during your disagreements.

Relationship expert Dr. Gilda Carle, Ph.D., gives Instant Advice throughout the world via Skype, email and phone. She is the 30-Second Therapist for Today.com. Her best-selling books include Don’t Bet on the Prince!, 99 Prescriptions for Fidelity and How to Win When Your Mate . Please visit her website at (DrGilda.com).

Girl Talk: The Case Against Cyberstalking Your Ex’s New Love

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(PhatzNewsRoom / The Frisky) — While reading Katie J.M. Baker’s recent Jezebel piece, “A Tale of Mutual Cyberstalking,” I found myself on board with everything she was saying. I was practically fist pumping by the end of her story. A testament to the quality of her writing. But at the same time, I don’t agree with her. It’s not normal to obsessively cyberstalk — either your ex or your ex’s –which is what her piece is about. She writes:

“I was immediately hooked. At first, my stalking was synonymous with shit-talking her to my friends; I was the one who broke up with my ex, but I wasn’t over our relationship, and I was hurt that he was with someone else so quickly. As time passed and I moved on myself, I stopped criticizing her but continued to keep tabs on her life. My with Googling her and monitoring her various social media feeds felt almost compulsive; I didn’t know why I was doing it anymore, or what I was getting out of the experience exactly, only that I didn’t want to stop.”

The twist in this tale is that Baker discovers that her ex’s new partner is stalking her back. And even when the new lover and Baker’s ex break up, they continue to keep tabs on each other via social media. They end up meeting and genuinely like one another. All ends well for Baker and the now ex-lover:

“I’m embarrassed by the hours I’ve wasted tracking meaningless social media . But my former /stalkee convinced me that I shouldn’t be. ‘Life would be so much more relaxing if we could all just admit the things we do and we’d realize we have them in common and then we wouldn’t feel so guilty about them,’ she wrote to me. She’s right.”

I the idea of admitting the fucked up things we do and realizing we are not alone. But I think this story is the exception to the rule when it comes to cyberstalking. Things usually don’t end this way, with and . They usually end with someone feeling like shit — whether be it stalker or stalkee. I’ve found myself on both ends.

When one of my ex’s got engaged, I dipped a toe into the pool of discovering who this woman was. Actually, I have my best friend to thank (or not thank) for that. A mutual friend of my ex, she sent me a link to his fiancee’s LinkedIn page along with a fake backstory that she thought would make me feel better. “She’s a society bitch without a soul! They deserve each other.” It did not make me feel better.

It compelled me to scroll through my ex’s pictures on Facebook. I was sorry I did. Very sorry. There were so many of them — zip lining in South America, riding bikes in Thailand and eating at a Michelin-rated restaurant in the South of France. His fiancee looked effortlessly chic in every picture. I imagined that she was an easygoing, natural beauty with silky straight blonde hair to boot! The engagement photos were even more gut wrenching. His family was there, looking enthralled with the girl in a way they never did with me. I only got through a few photos before I made myself stop. I thought I was going to marry this person at one point in my life. And he was marrying someone else who seemed about as different from me as a woman could possibly be. My self-worth deflated like one of those Shrinky Dinks I used to be so fond of when I was a kid. Just put it in the oven and watch it shrivel!

That dark day, I made a strict policy for myself: No cyberstalking anyone. Ever. You can’t ever get an accurate perception of a person by tracking their web footprint. It’s just not possible, humans are too complex. When I break up with someone, I either hide or unfriend them on Facebook, unfollow them on Twitter, hide them on GChat and banish them from my social media universe. I don’t want to know what happens to them or who they date next. If we are meant to cross paths again, we will. Of course, I’m curious sometimes. It’s human to be curious. But I’ve come to understand that social media is like a funhouse. It warps everything, makes it giant or small or headless, unrecognizable, most notably, your sense of self and of reality. It takes your imagination on a wild tilt-a-whirl of imagined scenarios and possibilities. It’s a warped mirror, reflecting your worst and deepest insecurities. I refuse to step, even one foot, inside that funhouse. Because once you’re in, you’re in.

I almost broke this policy with a boyfriend’s (he’s now an ex) long-time ex-girlfriend. I was curious about her. Desperately curious. I briefly entertained the idea of opening the door and talking a cyber peek. Just a tiny one. One or two pictures. But something stopped me. One morning, while spending the night at my then-boyfriend’s place, I found a roll of old Photo Booth pictures of the two of them, by accident, in a dingy corner of his kitchen. I never said anything about it to him. I studied the pictures in secret while he was taking a shower, a happy couple still together. The way he wrapped his arms around her from behind, in a bear hug made me bitter. Not jealous, just bitter. Bitter, because in the pictures I could tell that she was the great love of his life. Not me. I don’t even want to imagine how I would have felt clicking through her Facebook photos.

Eventually, when he revealed that she was stalking me on Facebook (they were still in touch), I felt equal parts violation and compassion. I wanted to tell her to stop. Because I felt seen in an uncomfortable way, like someone accidentally opening the door on you while you’re in the bathroom. Exposed. I wanted to tell her that there was no point. She had gotten his heart, would always have it. What did she want from me? Just let me like my stupid videos on Facebook in peace. Something changed in our relationship after that. I’m not going to say that my boyfriend and I broke up because of his ex’s cyberstalking, but the knowledge that she was stalking me changed something. Something was lost.

So, to bring me back to my point. Katie J.M. Baker’s tale excluded, I don’t think there’s any good that comes out of cyberstalking, whether it be an ex or their new love. It’s human to be curious. But more often than not, that curiosity will kill your self-esteem. Best to keep the door to the funhouse shut.

The 8 Best Things About Being in a Committed Relationship

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(Phatforums News / The Stir) — Monogamy gets a pretty from a lot of different corners – people who’ve divorced, those who are single, people who just like to hook up. They’re not huge fans of being exclusive.

And they have a point (to some degree or another) because monogamy, if it’s not with the right kind of person, isn’t worth it. In fact, dating someone you don’t want to be monogamous with (or who doesn’t want to be monogamous with you) is a waste of time.

But monogamy comes with a lot of too, providing you have the right partner. Here are some of the best parts of being in a .

1) Hand-holding. If your relationship is monogamous, it means that there’s no about a during a movie or hand-holding while walking along the river. It comes naturally and it can bring even the most jaded of us some happiness.

2) You don’t have to worry about . That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t insist that you and your partner get tested for STDs, only that you’re less likely to pick up something from someone who’s been with just you for a .

3) You don’t have to worry about defining your relationship. It’s been defined already and you can feel both safe and secure in your partnership.

4) You both have someone you can tell your secrets to. Even the ugly ones. True partners share the good and the bad about their lives, and it’s wonderful to have a safe place like your relationship where you can discuss your innermost secrets and desires.

5) You truly each other. There’s no better reason to be in a monogamous relationship than the . If you’re really in with your partner, you can’t imagine sharing your bed or your life without each other.

6) You don’t have to worry about your partner . If you’re both monogamous, you don’t have to deal with the , the rampant texting from the “other” girls. It’s just the two of you!

7) In a good monogamous relationship, there is . You respect your partner and he or she respects you just as much. That’s a vital part of romantic (and other kinds of) relationships.

8) You have someone out there you can truly trust not to hurt you, screw you over, or do you wrong. You’re allowed to be vulnerable and open up to your partner without the fear that he or she will reject you for your confessions.

Why do people stay in unhappy relationships?

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(Phatforums News / Voxxi) — It’s amazing how some relationships last forever, lovingly, and others simply , way past their expiration date.

Why do people stay in unhappy relationships when they want to leave?

Why don’t people make up their minds and relinquish their fears, and move on when they know it’s over? Why settle? Why not be honest and leave?

The answer is: Because it’s just not that easy to walk away, even when you know you should.
What is a healthy relationship?

A healthy relationship should be based on love and trust, be nurturing, caring and committed. The couple should have similar goals and enjoy their companionship. They choose to be together because they feel rewarded by the union, emotionally and physically. This doesn’t mean they’re in a -free relationship, but that they seek to resolve their issues amicably. They work out problems together, as a team. They communicate openly, and both hope for and expect the best from the other person. There is .

When does a relationship come to a dead end?

There are no two alike, and both halves of the couple might not agree that a relationship has passed its expiration date. But for one or both partners, some of the of spoiled milk are as follows:

: For whatever reason, one or both of you no longer trusts the other.

Negativity: You can only focus on everything that’s wrong with your partner, instead of his or her positive traits.

Different goals: You want to get married and have kids, he wants to sail solo around the globe.

Different interests: You both constantly seek activities and company outside of the relationship in order to stay away from each other.

Bickering without resolution: You spend most of your time quarreling, but nothing ever gets resolved.

without : One or both parties and doesn’t feel remorse.

No sex: Your (with each other) has dwindled to nothing or feels like a chore or an obligation.

Insults: You insult each another with hurtful words that are hard to take back once uttered.

So why stay?

People choose to stay in unhappy relationships for many reasons. Why some may seem like better reasons than others, at the end of the day, you are trading your happiness to stay in a relationship that is really over.

You stay together for the children: Couples often stay together for their kids’ sake, but their kids suffer anyway. If a separation is healthy, amicable and the children’s interests come first, as they should, kids won’t suffer the blow of the separation quite so hard. It is up to the parents to make the transition smooth. Staying for the sake of the kids may be worse in the end. Kids are smart enough to pick up on the tension and the absence of love, and they absorb the negativity, and may feel betrayed, too. Parents are role models and children learn firsthand about relationships from them. Plus, children grow up, and an empty nest feels all the emptier when you’re stuck with a spouse you no longer love.

You can’t afford to break up: Financial reasons can make it hard to walk away. You may have to give up a comfortable lifestyle you’ve become accustomed to, or you may have to give up real necessities, like a car, a house or medical insurance. However, living a sad, but comfortable life comes with its own costs. As hard as it is to start from scratch, to move, to sleep alone, to dare to date again, to have less purchasing power, you can make it if you focus on what you gain: a second chance at love, a second chance at life.

Why do people stay in unhappy relationships?

Being in a dead-end relationship may feel lonelier than being single.

You’re afraid to be alone. The idea of being single again, especially after a long relationship, is frightening. What if you never fall in love again? But the freedom of choosing what to do, where to go and how to live your life is well worth the risk. Time spent alone will help you figure out what you actually want from life, and what you need. It will also help you see yourself as an individual, not half of a partnership that you no longer felt a part of anyway. Some people choose what they think is the easy path, by staying in an unhappy relationship because they fear being alone. But unhappy relationships can be pretty lonely.

You’re in a codependent relationship: Some relationships feed on love-hate patterns, much like the way addicts experience incredible highs and lows with drugs. You bicker, you belittle and insult the other person, and you say “that’s it!” and leave. But then you come back, and the “honeymoon” (as well as the make-up sex) is fantastic. And then it starts all over again. Once a relationship falls prey to the codependent dance, the chances of recovery are almost nil.

Ultimately, most of us stay in unhappy relationships because we fear change. Fear of change can keep us stuck in dead-end jobs, keep us from starting a fitness regime or at worst, keep us in unhappy relationships. Change is scary and a bit like jumping into the unknown. Ultimately, we fear doing the wrong thing, making a mistake. But there are no mistakes in reality, just results. And if you see life as an adventure with its ups and downs, the perspective of change is not so daunting.

Bad Sexual Chemisty Is A Relationship Dealbreaker

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(Phatforums News / The Frisky) — Many women (and some men, too) fall in and think they can “fix” the person they’re with. He may have bad hair, she may smoke, he could snore at night or wear the wrong clothing. Most of these problems can be dealt with, but there some that cannot and sexual chemistry is the biggest.

A recent letter to The Daily Mail asks this very question: Can a survive when you have everything in place but the good sex? The answer, sadly, is a resounding no. If the sex is bad, the must end.

Oh I know. I can hear the groaning from here. But the answer holds firm. Try as you might to believe otherwise, sexual chemistry is an absolute deal-breaker in a relationship. It may seem shallow, but it really isn’t.

The fact is, in any relationship with the opposite sex that is more than platonic, it’s the sex itself that distinguishes it. Sex is the mortar that holds the together. It can keep you stable when all else is failing and it’s what the two of you share that makes it intimate and just between you.

This is obviously not the only thing that makes a relationship stick. Humor also matters as do similar values. There also has to be mutual respect and the sense that you both get one another as well. But there is no denying the fact that any of these latter qualities can be shared with a whether of the same gender or the opposite. What sets a apart is the sex.

Good sex doesn’t always have to mean the same thing. Everyone’s idea of good sex is different. The whole point is that you have sexual chemistry and . The woman who wants sex every day isn’t going to go well with the man who wants it once a month. The man who likes to experiment with and isn’t going to like the woman who is only comfortable with missionary style sex in the bedroom.

This isn’t to say that can’t go outside their comfort zone, but the general compatibility ought to be there. The relationships I have seen most often end because of sexual reasons. We can convince ourselves otherwise and for good reason. Loving someone does force a person to try to make it work. But circles can’t be squares, people. Let’s try to keep some perspective and understand that chemistry comes from within.

Back in my dating days, there were more than a couple men who were perfect on paper and with whom I now have good with whom there was zero sexual chemistry. With the man who became my husband, it was explosive from day one. Dating someone with whom the sex is only bad to mediocre is asking for a heartbreak. Beware, ladies (and gents), it’s the truth.

Pakistan’s prime minister issues a warning to U.S.

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No ‘business as usual’ with U.S.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: A top Afghan official warns of possible conflict with Pakistan
Pakistan denies firing first at NATO aircraft that killed two dozen
The Pakistani Taliban say Pakistan must respond in kind to the attack
Pakistan’s prime minister warns about violations including the raid

Islamabad, Pakistan () — Tensions among Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United States jumped a notch Monday, with Pakistan’s prime minister warning there would be “no more business as usual” with Washington after NATO aircraft killed two dozen Pakistan troops.

The Pakistani Taliban urged Pakistan to respond in kind to the , which NATO called a “tragic unintended” event.

The Pakistani military insisted Monday it had not fired first in the incident, and it said it had told NATO its aircraft were firing on friendly troops.

Meanwhile, a top adviser to Afghan President Hamid Karzai warned that Afghanistan and Pakistan could be on a path to conflict.
Anger in Islamabad
U.S.- strained
NATO admits fault in Pakistan attack

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yousuf Raza said in an exclusive interview with CNN Monday that Pakistan was re-evaluating its with the United States.

He said the South Asian nation wanted to maintain its relationship with the United States as long as there was mutual respect and respect for Pakistani sovereignty.

But Gilani highlighted incidents such as the killing of the and a U.S. raid into Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden as violations of his country’s sovereignty.

The prime minister also said Pakistan had not yet decided whether to boycott next month’s on the future of Afghanistan.

Pakistan turned back 300 trucks carrying NATO supplies and fuel into Afghanistan Monday, Syed Jan and Mutahir Zeb told CNN.

Pakistan is a vital land supply route into Afghanistan for the United States and its allies.

Separately, Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas denied the reports that Pakistani troops opened fire first on the NATO helicopters.

Speaking by phone to Pakistan’s Geo TV News, Abbas said NATO helicopters opened fired first on the Pakistani military checkpoints.

Abbas said the soldiers notified Pakistan military headquarters, which informed the NATO authorities immediately.

The spokesman said Pakistani soldiers fired at the NATO aircraft in retaliation.

NATO’s secretary-general earlier said it was a “tragic unintended” incident, and pledged to ensure such attacks don’t reoccur.

“NATO remains strongly committed to work with Pakistan to improve cooperation to avoid such tragedies in the future,” Anders Fogh Rasmussen said in a statement.

The Pakistani Taliban appeared Monday to try to widen the rift between Pakistan and the United States.

Pakistan Taliban spokesman Ihsanullah Ihsan said in a phone call to CNN that America will infringe on Pakistan’s sovereignty and continue operations on Pakistani soil in the coming days.

Ihsan said Pakistan must respond in kind to the NATO attacks, and he warned that the Pakistani Taliban will continue their jihad as long as Pakistan remains an ally of the United States.

In Kabul, meanwhile, a senior adviser to Afghan president Hamid Karzai said Afghanistan and Pakistan may be on a course toward military conflict.

Ashraf Ghani said the link between Pakistan and the assassination of a former Afghan president had united his country “against interference.”

Ghani accused Pakistan of harboring and assisting the insurgency in Afghanistan, and said his country’s neighbor probably helped the suicide bomber who killed Burhanudin Rabbani in September.

“You need to talk to Pakistan and Pakistan needs to choose,” Ghani said. “Does it want to slide down a path of three generations of conflict with Afghans?”

“The assassination of President Rabbani has gelled the nation together against interference. And one or two more actions could put us in an irreversible course [towards] conflict. And we’ve shown through our history that we are a match for any invader,” he said.

The two nations have been trading accusations in the border regions in the past few months, with Pakistan accusing the Afghans of harboring militants and Afghanistan claiming Pakistani shells have hit their territory.

U.S. has another golden day in pool at Pan Am Games

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GUADALAJARA, Mexico (AP) – The United States was again on the golden end of the swimming against Brazil on Wednesday at the .

The Americans won three events to Brazil’s one, increasing their lead in in the swimming medals table to 15-7.

But Kristel Kobrich of Chile broke the ’s hold on the top of the podium, winning the 800-meter freestyle. The women from the United States have won the other 11 races at this year’.

“We have had a really good team energy in Team USA in the past week,” said Kimberly Vandenberg, who won the 200 butterfly. “We have a lot of experience and also a lot of . We’ve come together as a team and we all learned from each other.”

Kobrich’s win was also only the second gold medal in the pool won by a country other than the United States or Brazil.

Overall at the games, the Americans increased their lead in the medals standings with eight golds on Day 5. The United States has won 32 gold medals and 82 overall, while Brazil has 12 gold and 36 overall.

Amanda Kendall started the night by winning the 100 freestyle, with American teammate Erika Erndl in second.

“I put my head down and hoped to touch the wall first,” Kendall said. “When I saw that Erica was beside me I was beyond excited. It was awesome.”

Vandenberg soon added another win in the 200 fly, and the 4×200 relay completed the action with the third title of the evening — ahead of second-place Brazil.

“Obviously great to win gold here against a great team like Brazil,” said Scot Robison, a member of the relay winning team. “We’ve had great races so far. A lot of between both sides.

“We came out on top tonight and on Friday we will be battling again.”

Although the have been falling behind the last two days, Thiago Pereira still was able to win his fourth gold of the competition in the 200 individual medley. He then won silver with his in the relay.

At the games four years ago in , Pereira won six gold medals to break the great Mark Spitz’s record for most golds in one Pan Am Games.

Before Kobrich’s gold, Brett Fraser of the Cayman Islands was the only other swimmer to break up the Brazilian-American domination. He won the 200 freestyle on Tuesday.

Outside the pool, the Americans won two more rowing golds, another in shooting, a second in dressage and the men’s doubles in badminton.

Cuba also won two gold medals in rowing, taking the titles in the men’s single sculls and the men’s lightweight coxless fours, while Argentina won the women’s quadruple sculls.

Brazil and Argentina drew 1-1 in men’s football. Henrique Nascentes scored in the 63rd minute, but Sergio Araujo equalized in the 74th.

In cycling, Colombia and Venezuela continued their rivalry, with the Colombians winning the men’s omnium and the Venezuelans taking the men’s sprint.

“I’m proud my country has another medal,” men’s sprint winner Hersony Canelon said. “We were all tired at the end, but my strategy worked perfectly and allowed me to win the medal.”

U.S. has another golden day in pool at Pan Am Games is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 U.S. has another golden day in pool at Pan Am Games

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Seeing Green: All About Jealousy

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(Phatforums Blog/ WebMD) – So your best friend wears a size 0 — and complains that it’s too big on her! Your next-door neighbor is driving a Mercedes and your car can barely make it to the end of the driveway. Your sister’s headed for a week-long vacation in the Caribbean and you can’t get farther than the state park. Jealous? Who wouldn’t be?

Sure, there are times when everyone else seems to have more, do more, look better. But is that really the case?

may reflect a person’s view of him or herself,” says Jo Anne White, PhD, professor of education at Temple University. “It’s more about how people feel about themselves and whether they’re confident about who they are.”

For many, jealousy has to do with . You might become jealous, for example, if you feel your partner is not paying enough attention to you. Jealousy might also be provoked if your partner or spouse consistently makes you feel uncomfortable through both their words and their actions. “In any , trust and are essential to keep the relationship flourishing and communication strong,” White says.

“A person who has a poor self-image may feel threatened and believe that she has nothing to offer to keep someone else interested,” White adds.
Flattery or Jealousy?

Jealousy might seem flattering at first, if your mate wants all your time and attention, but it can also be a sign of , warns Tina B. Tessina, PhD, psychotherapist and author of How to Be a Couple and Still Be Free.

“That flattering interest in your attentions can turn into a chronic and suspicion,” says Tessina. “A husband who is jealous of your innocent with other women, and who tries to control you and separate you from your friends, can become a big problem.”

Most jealousy arises when someone feels insecure and threatened, Tessina adds — either of losing the relationship, or that someone else will get the attention she is craving.

“When you handle jealousy properly though, it doesn’t have to be a disaster,” says Tessina, who offers these suggestions for coping with jealousy within relationships:

* Make sure you both feel comfortable with your agreements about spending time with other people. Make some agreements about how you’ll behave, and make sure you’re willing to keep them. Don’t frighten yourself or your partner by testing too hard, demanding the impossible, or risking too much. Keep in mind that jealousy breaks down trust. If you begin to be upset, talk about it and encourage your partner to do the same.
* Keep each other informed. Lying to your partner about whether you have broken an agreement does more damage than breaking the agreement. If you slip up, tell the truth. If your partner has slipped, be open to listening to him or her without blaming or getting upset, so the two of you can negotiate a solution to the problem. If you or your partner continually create situations that aggravate jealousy, you may need to find a marriage counselor to help you solve the problem.
* Give yourselves time. Learning to balance and control outside friendships, and still feel good about your primary relationship, takes practice, experience, and lots of discussion.
* Because most of us are very vulnerable and at our most insecure with regard to sexual issues, sexual trust is among the most difficult type of trust to build. Our feelings of attractiveness, lovableness, and self-esteem are exposed and challenged, so we must remember to be gentle with ourselves and with each other.

Jealousy is not limited solely to relationships. You can become jealous of your friends’ or associates’ good fortune. This also ties in to feelings of self-worth, says White. A person who doesn’t have a strong self-image may feel that he’s not getting his “fair share” and that others always “get the breaks.”

Debbie Mandel, MA, author of Turn On Your Inner Light: Fitness for Body, Mind and Soul, finds that men are more jealous about material accomplishments — better job, more prestige, fancier house and car, while women are more jealous about appearance, children, and friendships.

To overcome — or at least dilute — jealousy, Mandel offers these suggestions:

* Know your own strengths. What do you specifically bring to the table?
* Don’t compare yourself to anyone else because then you’re only sabotaging your own uniqueness.
* Affirm the other person. Today it is his or her turn to shine; tomorrow it will be yours.
* Use jealousy to emulate the object of your jealousy and fuel you to accomplish and grow. If he or she can do it, so can you!
* If someone else is “toxic” to you because he or she is constantly bragging just to make you jealous, then change the subject, or if need be, simply remove yourself from their presence — if necessary, permanently!

The Purpose of Jealousy

It’s important to remember that jealousy has a purpose, says Erik Fisher, PhD, author of The Art of Managing Everyday . “All emotions, even jealousy, are trying to tell us something about ourselves,” says Fisher, who explains that jealousy is a fear of losing power.

“When we find out what we’re missing in ourselves, that fear goes away,” he says.

Acknowledging our jealousy is the first step in overcoming it, Fisher adds. If we’re ashamed of feeling jealous, we may try to mask it with “protective emotions” such as anger, frustration, or resentment. Instead, he suggests, ask yourself, “Why am I choosing to feel jealous?”

“Typically we’re jealous of things we ‘want,’” Fisher says, “not of things we ‘need.’” If that’s the case, then ask yourself how you can work toward what you want, and make a list of all that you do have that you feel good about.

Confront your jealousy head on, agrees advice columnist April Masini. If your sister has a solid marriage and your husband just left you, tell her flat out, “You’re so lucky to be married to such a great guy. I wish I were.”

“It sounds silly,” says Masini, “but the energy we use to keep the parts of what we wish were different from showing are immense. Once you let go of any standards you are using to psychologically imprison yourself, you are free to appreciate other people’s good fortune without feeling like you’re not enough.”

If you’re the one everyone’s jealous of at the moment, well, congratulations! And don’t worry. It’s not necessary to diminish your pleasure in your own good fortune, says Fisher. “Sure, you don’t want to rub it in anyone’s face, but handle your successes with grace and with class.”

“Not everything is equal or fair, but to be dishonest about your own feelings is wrong,” adds April Masini. If a friend is going through a hard time, ask her how her job hunt is going, or how life is in general.

“Express interest in what is important to other people,” says Masini, “Then you can share, honestly, what is important to you.”

Finally, says Jo Anne White, “Remember, there will always be someone out there who is more beautiful, more talented, and more successful. But so what?”