Oscar Wilde
The way your partner feels about you and your relationship during this week, is where her positive feelings about you stem from, as well as any doubts, insecurities or frustrations that she may have about your day to day life together.
Love week sets the emotional scene for the rest of the month.
In this week women are firing on all cylinders. Their head is clear, their emotions are stable and you can have logical conversations. She wants to cuddle up on the lounge, look into your eyes and talk about the important stuff. When you’re out and about, she wants you to hold her hand.
In Love week women are into romance and… intimacy. If you are romantically attentive to your partners needs during this week, she’ll carry these feelings of satisfaction about your relationship through the more challenging – Restless week and Volcano week.
She will remember how you pursued her and found her desirable. She’ll look back at the romantic dinner you shared and smile contentedly.
However, if you neglect her needs in Love week. If you don’t communicate with her, if you don’t make an effort and you’re tired, stressed and unapproachable, then look out. Feeling abandoned or ignored during this phase, will get under her skin and fester in Restless week and you may experience an EXPLOSION in Volcano week.
So, do the right thing for your woman and your relationship. Suck it up and put in some effort, like you did when you first started dating. If your tired and stressed, then DEAL with it because you can guarantee that you will feel even more tired and stressed in 2 weeks time when Volcano week arrives.
To your happy life with a happy wife,
Gary P. Simmons
Researchers note that women perceive men with beards as having “the biological and social qualities that would enhance their value as husbands” and also consider them “more potent and more active, suggesting virility as well as physical attractiveness.” Additionally, female managers considered bearded men to be more competent. Male bosses, however, did not.
Source:Patzer, Gordon L., Ph.D. 2008. Looks: Why They Matter More Than You Ever Imagined. New York, NY: Amacom
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