Sentences with phrase «woman than happiness»

Not exact matches

Evangelical women feel more appreciated and report more happiness with their marriages than mainline women do.
and yes after 50 we are ambivalent to the brainwashing that happiness comes in the form of a male or a soulmate... to the superficial men who claim they settled because a woman has more curves than they prefer...... I assure you it is s h e who settled and you do nt deserve a mother Goddess... what you need is a blow up doll or an escort service to fulfill your fantasy woman ideals.
And as Johnson and Loscocco note, married black couples are at greater risk of divorce; they have lower marital happiness and satisfaction than white spouses; they disagree more than white spouses about such things as sex, kids and money; and black women get less benefits from marriage than white women and even black men do.
All this cult of family and propaganda of traditional values and happiness in children - rearing, and the «career - orientated» western women have more kids than «family - loving» Russian women!
Older women are experienced and much more mature than the young lad and will take men down the path of incessant love, happiness and excitement.
These girls and women are well educated, with high moral values, who are aware that there are much more women than men in Russia and who have decided to look for their happiness outside their homeland.
i am Clinton Joseph i am good and always will be, i have a good sense of humor i have my own life style my life is so simple than others, i recharge happiness to my self every seconds and minute i love good things i also love to flex around the world and meet unknown ones i love woman who is out spo...
It's not an assertion that being a woman is better than being a man, it's that finding your own self is better than a life of being taken for granted and shut out from a pursuit of potential happiness and fulfillment.
He no sooner saw the woman than he saw the aftermath of her — his marriage proposal and her acceptance, the home they would set up together, the drawn rich silk curtains leaking purple light, the bed sheets billowing like clouds, the wisp of aromatic smoke winding from the chimney — only for every wrack of it — its lattice of crimson roof tiles, its gables and dormer windows, his happiness, his future — to come crashing down on him in the moment of her walking past.
Researcher Grace Wong Bucchianeri conducted a study about the effects of homeownership on women's happiness and personal life, and found that homeowners aren't any happier than renters and actually derive more pain from owning a home.
As a father of two young girls, the best way to ensure their happiness, rather than shielding them from the phantom threats of sexual deviants hiding in the bushes, might be to refrain from exposing them to such fears, and to foster a tolerance for and comfort with people perceived to be transwomen in women's washrooms.
A recent study, one that has garnered attention for presenting information that contradicts gender stereotypes, found that physical affection (a.k.a. cuddling) was more important for men's happiness in long - term relationships than it was for women's happiness.
The picture is less clear for women; parenthood has been linked to greater happiness in some studies and to less happiness in other studies, likely because women tend to engage in child rearing tasks that center upon both routine and play, while men tend to spend a greater proportion of their caregiving time on play.2 In addition, married parents tend to have relatively greater happiness than their non-married counterparts given the increased social support available to married adults, lower financial strain, and greater help with chores and housework.
Women who are in relationships with egalitarian men report greater happiness, health, more stability, and greater sexual satisfaction than those in relationships with men who endorse traditional gender roles (Rudman & Phelan, 2007).
Married men and women tend to face lower risks of mortality and report better physical and mental health and greater overall happiness than those otherwise like them who are not married or partnered (Waite & Gallagher, 2001).
For example, one analysis of nationally representative survey data showed that older women report lower levels of marital happiness and power than do their male counterparts (Bulanda, 2011).
In addition to these potential age differences in the effects of concordance, several other studies on discordant drinking and marital happiness found that (a) these effects may be stronger among women and (b) women's use of alcohol may have stronger effects than men's.
The study found that happiness among more than 350,000 Australian, British and German men and women tended to follow a U-shaped curve, with levels higher towards the start and end of life and unhappiness often gripping people in midlife.
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