Re: [asianamericanromance] a question for male on here



Hi sharon :)

I think you should also ask for the female opinion :)

When there is a will there will be a way !
That's what I believe but if after w tried our best and still can not then ...

Actually the answers of your question will help me a lot coz I am in the middle of that kind of situation and made me stuck between happiness and sadness :)

Cheers
~Rose~
6/7/2010|08:16


~Watch your habits, for they become your character. Develop your character, for it becomes your destiny~


From: "Sharon" <lin.sharon123@yahoo.com>
Sender: asianamericanromance@yahoogroups.com
Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2010 13:08:01 -0000
To: <asianamericanromance@yahoogroups.com>
ReplyTo: asianamericanromance@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [asianamericanromance] a question for male on here

 

Hi all,

I got one question for male on here. If you care something or someone a lot but encounter some difficult in relationship. Will you be able to jump out of the whole situation to think like an outsider to make sure you deal with it cool. If you are the person who think you could do that well in 80% of circumstance like this. Could you share a clip of life experience as an example and then advice what you think to make you could succeed in doing that? And if you don't feel like to do that, what's the reasons if you may list them all on here.

Thanks,
Sharon



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Re: [asianamericanromance] New Member looking DC area



Go to plenty of fish.com,it is a free site and is as good as any pay site.Also their is a singles mixer at a fillipino place in Falls church called  karoke Idol I think the 14 of july.

--- On Wed, 6/30/10, MARK <lknit6969@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: MARK <lknit6969@yahoo.com>
Subject: [asianamericanromance] New Member looking DC area
To: asianamericanromance@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, June 30, 2010, 3:37 PM

 
I am a New Member of group looking for mainly Thai woman or other asian for dating and possibly more if we click. My marriage is failing and it's time to move on. I am in the Dulles Virginia area. Please let me know if this is not the right group for asking questions like this. Maybe someone can let me know where to go from here. Thank you.




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Re: [asianamericanromance] Re: Yellow Fevor



I certainly have it, and I wouldn't take the cure if you paid me a million yuan!

On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 1:48 AM, Sheik Rahmani <shk_rah19@yahoo.com> wrote:
 



I have YELLOW FEVER!

Is that a bad thing?

Looking for the cure!




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Re: [asianamericanromance] a question for male on here



I think I have learned to over time, Sharon.  Largely from the painful results of failing to do so.
 
John S.
 
In a message dated 7/5/2010 12:59:45 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, lin.sharon123@yahoo.com writes:
 

Hi all,

I got one question for male on here. If you care something or someone a lot but encounter some difficult in relationship. Will you be able to jump out of the whole situation to think like an outsider to make sure you deal with it cool. If you are the person who think you could do that well in 80% of circumstance like this. Could you share a clip of life experience as an example and then advice what you think to make you could succeed in doing that? And if you don't feel like to do that, what's the reasons if you may list them all on here.

Thanks,
Sharon



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Re: [asianamericanromance] Re: Yellow Fevor



Now, WHY on earth would anyone want to cure it?
 
John S.
 
In a message dated 7/5/2010 1:00:25 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, shk_rah19@yahoo.com writes:
 



I have YELLOW FEVER!

Is that a bad thing?

Looking for the cure!



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[asianamericanromance] a question for male on here

Hi all,

I got one question for male on here. If you care something or someone a lot but encounter some difficult in relationship. Will you be able to jump out of the whole situation to think like an outsider to make sure you deal with it cool. If you are the person who think you could do that well in 80% of circumstance like this. Could you share a clip of life experience as an example and then advice what you think to make you could succeed in doing that? And if you don't feel like to do that, what's the reasons if you may list them all on here.

Thanks,
Sharon

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[asianamericanromance] Re: 5 key skills to preserving a healthy relationship

Hi Khwan and all,

That's a long article to me. Could anyone kindly list those five keys into five key sentence on here for me to read first to help me read that article.

Thanks,
Sharon

--- In asianamericanromance@yahoogroups.com, "Khwan" <khwan@...> wrote:
>
> OK. For Group Members who have relationship for long time. What do you think of this list? Anything missing or can add? Anything you disagree with?
>
>
> KHWAN
>
>
>
> 5 key skills to preserving a healthy relationship
> I've been married for seven and a half years. Not a record by any means, but not bad, either. Most marriages never get this far. I'd like to say I'm an uncharacteristically awesome husband, impervious to boredom, endlessly romantic and able to discuss feelings without the faintest wisp of frustration or embarrassment.
>
> My wife might read this, though, so I'll be honest: I owe my good marriage to a few skills I've learned over the years. They're not all easy, but you can start to hone them while you're dating and make the transition to marriage much easier.
>
> Be willing to forfeit: the win-win strategy
> Disagreements are inevitable ?as unavoidable as Tuesdays or the common cold. They don't have to be acrimonious, though. And I've learned that in marriage the choice is often to win or to be happy. Being harsh and critical in an argument is only going to hurt feelings and alienate your partner. That's fine if you want to rule the roost, but if you want to love and be loved, you've got to care for your partner's feelings, especially when you're fighting.
>
> "When there's a lot of goodwill, it's amazing what you can say and still feel good about each other," says Catherine Hastings, Ph.D., a licensed marriage and family therapist in Lancaster, PA.
>
> Hastings sees couples become polarized in their disagreements, with neither person willing to yield. The problem, she says, "is the idea that there has to be right and wrong in an argument. And there really doesn't."
>
> Get to the point, nicely
> I can be a little sensitive sometimes, and not in the sweet and caring way. Usually in the don't-talk-to-me-about-my-shortcomings way. Lots of couples struggle to discuss the big issues that can rend a marriage in two. Who wants to talk about money management, family relationships and child rearing (to name just a few) while you're falling in love? These don't come up easily when you're sipping coffee and eating molten chocolate cake.
>
> "People are not direct enough," says Jane Barton, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist in Knoxville, TN. "Indirect communication can be really damaging."
>
> She says that couples need to find ways to discuss the touchy subjects before they get married instead of hoping that marriage will fix any conflicts. It won't. You may find yourself legally and emotionally bound to someone with a wicked online gambling habit or who thinks children respond best to pain.
>
> Take money habits, for instance. "With the economy the way it is and things in the news, it would be an easy thing to bring up on a date," she says. You can also learn a lot by watching your partner. "Is she shopping at Barneys and really shouldn't be?"
>
> The point is not to criticize your partner and attempt to rein in his or her habits. You want to know if his or her decisions are in line with your values. If you're honest with yourself about your needs, you'll know if conflicts are on the horizon.
>
> "Don't take on the task of teaching a person or being anyone's personal therapist," says Barton. "Identify what you feel and share it."
>
> Recognize that there is an "I" in marriage
> My wife and I are a team, talking, sharing and negotiating most decisions together. We're individuals, too, though, and we don't lose sight of that. We encourage each other's goals and ambitions because we don't feel threatened by them.
>
> "Healthy relationships have room for that ?his interests, her interests," says Hastings. After all, she points out, "if you're not able to address your own needs, no one else is going to do it for you."
>
> Be a copycat
> Finding that mix of individuality and teamwork isn't necessarily easy, but it's essential. We simultaneously let each other be who we are while being influenced by each other. I had to learn to argue kindly, for instance, giving up the notion of the win. My wife somehow already knew that when we met.
>
> John Gottman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist who has studied relationships for more than 30 years, written several leading books about marriage and is the executive director of the Relationship Research Institute in Seattle, WA. According to Gottman, one of the key components of a successful marriage is that the husband allows the wife to influence him. While women in general tend to be influenced by men without much emotional difficulty, men are often resistant. A man who allows a woman's ideas and attitudes to impact his own is creating an equal exchange within the marriage.
>
> And, as Hastings points out, you should learn to appreciate the difference. Each of you has strengths and weaknesses. Learning to let the strengths come through, no matter whose they are, makes for a better team.
>
> Be positive ?it's not just a blood type
> One of my wife's greatest strengths is a generally positive outlook. Allowing her to shape the spin on a situation isn't always easy, with my undeniable knowledge that the world is ending. But slowly, over the course of our marriage, I've become willing to see through her eyes.
>
> "People need to learn early on," says Barton, "that there are always going to be problems. There's always going to be stress, somebody gets sick or somebody dies, and that's part of life." Successful couples, she says, dwell on the good times and not on the bad.
>


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[asianamericanromance] Re: Yellow Fevor

I have YELLOW FEVER!

Is that a bad thing?

Looking for the cure!


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