Not exact matches
But along with the
relationship experts and married couples the authors interviewed, the economists themselves are
often a source of valuable insight into
making romance
work.
This competition between the personal and the professional is
often labeled, generally, as «
work - life balance,» but it's clear from these survey results that flexible jobs have the ability to
make specific impacts in areas like self - care,
relationships, physical and mental health, and overall happiness.
With this framework, you will sometimes
make love several times a week, many times less
often depending on
work, life and health patterns, but all the time we are intentionally
making our energies flow towards an intimate and supportive
relationship that will see us both through the joys and demands of real life.
«I'm not sure they go out to dinner together all that
often, but I think they have a good
working relationship, certainly when it comes to issues that are important to New York, the governor calls the senator and he
makes sure Washington helps.
All
work — which is what growth
often feels like — with no play can
make for an exhausting
relationship.
Emotional Stress: This one can obviously have many causes, but can
often be addressed by
working through tough
relationships,
making time for prayer and meditation, keeping a gratitude journal to focus on the positive, and
making time to unwind.
Whether we know it or not, we
often avoid
making changes because we're afraid: afraid of searching for a new job because it might be worse than the misery we know; afraid of starting a weight - loss program because it might not
work; afraid of putting ourselves first because it might upset the dynamic of our
relationships.
Professional singles, such as CEOs, entrepreneurs, and investors,
often have busy lives full of
work commitments,
making it hard to find someone for a
relationship, especially if you're attracted to international women.
These criteria are
often derived from societal norms and influences from friends and family, and may have little to do with what really
makes a
relationship work.
Still, you should be honest about your hobbies, interests, and expectations in the appropriate profile sections because a solid
relationship is
often based on a mutually shared system of values and ideas that
make it
work and develop.
In my
relationship coaching practice, I
often work with my single clients on 10 different commitments that
make them the kind of partner the opposite sex dreams of being with.
Professional singles, such as CEOs, entrepreneurs, and investors,
often have busy lives full of
work commitments,
making it hard to find someone for a
relationship Our Experts Say Elite Singles is the premier site for professionals.
In this interview she discusses commitment - phobia in depth, how to spot commitment - phobics before they break your heart, why bad boys attract women while nice guys
often go home alone, and how to
make relationships work.
Often Russian women will put allot more commitment into a
relationship to
make it
work, regardless of age difference or looks.
1st base is when you first
make out with your companion or (boy / girl) it is dry lips, then grdualy put your tounge into the others mouth and play with it foer a little bit which is 2nd you feel a higher level of sexual conection and start to get into 3rd base when you start feeling on each other slowwly and intamately while stile french he is done touching and stroaking your upper parts (breasts) you start to feel more intamate and both of you
work your way Among American adolescents, baseball metaphors for sex are
often used as euphemisms for the degree of physical intimacy achieved in sexual encounters or
relationships.
The contradictory
relationship between Kitano the celebrity and Kitano the serious artist
makes him oddly reminiscent of both Jerry Lewis and Clint Eastwood, other iconic actors whose directorial
work often questions what their iconography represents.
As a vast body of research now
makes clear, young people's success in school, college, the workplace, and the rest of life depends not just on their mastery of core academic content and skills but also — and
often to a greater degree — on their beliefs and attitudes, personal dispositions,
relationships, emotional intelligence, creativity, nutrition, mental health, knowledge about college and
work opportunities, financial resources, willingness to engage with new people and cultures, openness to new experiences, and more.
Often through our industry
relationships and always through the hard
work of our authors, several have
made the leap from self - publishing to traditional publishing or film optioning.
The questions they asked
often concerned decisions that needed to be
made about relocation,
relationship conflicts, business dilemmas, or the challenge of balancing
work and family.
Where this perspective does
work, however, is in its
relationship with the camera - a voyeuristic, slightly shaky jobby that's
often a little bit askew,
making you feel particularly vulnerable when the twiggy heroine is climbing a precarious pile of books or vertiginous filing cabinet.
Printmaking was an integral part of Finlay's career as a philosopher, sculptor and poet, and his lifelong creative
relationship with language, politics, philosophy and mythology is highlighted in his printed
works, which were
often made in collaboration with other artists.
Idris Khan's
works — which draw on a wide range of sources, from literature and philosophy to theology and music —
often overlay multiple texts or images as they investigate the
relationship between memory and mark -
making.
Her
work often makes reference to religious communities, drawing attention to the
relationship between religion and art, and between religious communities and the art world.
Her
work often makes reference to religious communities, drawing attention to the
relationship between religion and art, and between religious communities and the...
Working in very diverse mediums, including 16 mm film and slide projection, painting, assemblage sculpture and vintage photography, the artists share an approach to
making that allows them to navigate their
relationship with the world and its substances in a way that is tactile and therefore
often quite instinctive.
Her diverse oeuvre — comprising drawing, collage, engraving, textiles, and photography, as well as experimental film, video, and performance — mines themes of identity, gender, and dematerialization,
often drawing from the stories of literary figures and addressing the symbiotic
relationship between art
making and
working environments.
Pierce uses a range of media,
often making work with other artists, actors, teachers and students in collaborations that draw upon historical
relationships to the political: the potential for dissent and self - determination, slippages between individual
work and institution, and the proximity of past artworks.
When I'm out surfing, I
often jump off my board and just hang out underwater watching the reef, and this will certainly give me more things to think about when I'm doing that... or for that matter when I've
made one little tiny mistake and I'm being dragged, tumbling, getting
worked in the white - water, clawing for the surface and hoping against hope that I can avoid being scraped bloody over that same reef... like I said, my
relationship with the reef is up close and personal.
But with Social Media participation (I include blogger - to - blogger
relationships here), and creating new
relationships with the associated links, firms are
often able to
make their publishing
work harder & longer.
We
make no confusion between simple and simplistic: to us, each employee is unique, and we are confident that managing a
work relationship often requires a customized strategy, including from a legal & tax point of view.
The Role: • Contacting employers, sometimes in person but, more likely, by telephone and
often cold - calling, to establish their precise recruitment requirements for vacancies • Negotiating and agreeing the terms and conditions relating to the assignment • Searching database and temp contractor & # 34hot lists & # 34 with a view to finding and placing available and suitable candidates with clients in the shortest timeframe possible • Reviewing applications, interviewing and assessing candidates and short - listing for interview according to the employer's expressed criteria within tight timeframes and to strict deadlines •
Making arrangements for candidates to be interviewed and preparing the candidates for interview if this is required by client You'll have: • A strong understanding of the healthcare / medical sector, particularly within temporary, contract, and locums • A proven track record of
working as a 360 Recruiter • Proven ability to build & develop client
relationships • Accomplished in sourcing passive candidates who are not on the open market • Ambitious, hardworking & self - motivated to succeed in sales where you are measured on results • What we give you in return: Are you the right person for the job?
When you
make mistakes — and we all will
make mistakes sometimes — the
relationships you have with the people you
work with
often change the consequences of those mistakes.
People
often think there is something wrong with them for needing professional help to
make their
relationships work.
In my
work with couples I
often find that the same differences, which
make someone irresistible in the courtship phase of dating,
often make them annoying and unbearable in
relationship.
We
often failed to realize that falling in love isn't everything to
make the
relationship work.
Commitment refers to a person's long - term orientation toward her or his
relationship and sense of determination to
make the
relationship succeed.1 People who feel committed to their partners
work very hard to keep their
relationships intact,
often without realizing it.
As John Gottman reminds us in his
work, it's the small things done
often that
make the biggest difference in
relationships.
Collaborative Law is worth considering if some or all of the following are true for you: (a) you want a civilized, rational resolution of the issues, (b) you would like to keep open the possibility of a viable
working relationship with your partner down the road, (c) you and your partner will be raising children together and you want the best
working relationship possible, (d) you want to protect your children from the harm associated with litigation between parents, (e) you have ethical or spiritual beliefs that place high value on taking personal responsibility for handling conflicts with integrity, (f) you value control and autonomous decision
making and do not want to hand over decisions about restructuring your financial and parenting arrangements to a stranger (a judge), (g) you recognize the restricted and
often unpredictable range of outcomes and «rough justice» generally available in the public court system and want a more creative and individualized range of choices available to you and your spouse or partner for resolving the issues.
Children understand more about what
makes relationships work than adults
often give them credit for.
As a mental health therapist, I
often work with people who have difficulty
making and keeping healthy friendships, as well as other
relationships (coworkers, family members, partners, and... Read More
Letting them know you are hurting and want to
make the
relationship better
often works.
Often the first session will give both of you hope that you can
work on the
relationship and
make a difference.
But the
work of being in a
relationship is
often to do the opposite, to see the others» point of view, even if it doesn't
make sense to us, and to validate the other's perception even if it doesn't feel justified.
And the truth is there are no secrets to romance — you need to know what
works for your partner; what
makes them happy and apply them as
often as you can to sweeten your
relationship.
And needlessly because all too
often, partners have never learned the essential skills which
make the marriage or
relationship work.
I
often recommend Dr. John Gottman's most famous book, Seven Principles of
Making Marriage
Work, to any of my clients interested in improving their
relationship, whether they're single, partnered, married, or divorced.
I
often recommend Dr. John Gottman's most famous book, Seven Principles of
Making Marriage
Work, to any of my clients interested in improving their
relationship, married or not.
At first, the teachers diligently try to
work with Amy, both to establish a
relationship with her and to assist her with her academics, but Amy's lack of communication skills, distrust of love's possibilities, and resistance to forming
relationships makes working with Amy tiring and time consuming, and
often the teachers can not put the effort into
working with her that is required.
Years of experience
working with couples have shown that the depth of discussion needed to
make significant change in a
relationship is
often difficult to achieve in the standard 50 - minute therapist hour.
The pressures of
work, family, technology, and life stressors,
often make it difficult to relax and pay attention to our most precious resource: Our loving
relationship.