Don't withdraw from life. Socialising can improve your mood. Keeping in touch with friends and family means you have someone to talk to when you feel low.
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No affection Also known as being touch starved or having skin hunger, touch deprivation is a real condition people experience when they receive little to no touch from others. Lack of affection is a disturbance in your relationship where physical affection is not as strong anymore or as desired as before
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A loveless marriage is a relationship where one or both partners do not feel in love. Instead of being romantic lovers, they often feel more like roommates or siblings. Being in a loveless marriage often breeds isolation, resentment, and hopelessness
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There's no rule or timeline when it comes to getting remarried following the death of your spouse. Like grief, the “right time” for everyone is different. For some, it may be a few weeks, and for others, it can be several years. You don't have to stop loving your deceased spouse in order to find love again.
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The purpose of this is to inform gay and lesbian young adults about the process most parents go through when their child's homosexual orientation is disclosed. The stages to be explained are: shock, denial, guilt, expression of feelings, personal decision-making, true acceptance. The process assumes that you have wrestled with the issue of whether or not to come out to your parents and that your decision is affirmative. The approach and suggestions offered in the following are based on the assumption that you suspect one or both of your parents will be understanding, if not supportive, given adequate time. This pamphlet may not be helpful if you have serious reservations about their ability to cope and you suspect they could sever their relationship with you.
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Pathological lying, also known as mythomania and pseudologia fantastica, is the chronic behaviour of compulsive or habitual lying. Unlike telling the occasional white lie to avoid hurting someone's feelings or getting in trouble, a pathological liar seems to lie for no apparent reason
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Are you a victim of the 'chameleon effect'? Looking at your phone makes other people do the same, study finds Scientists find looking at your phone is enough to trigger someone to copy you The study authors from Italy liken this to the 'contagious yawning' phenomenon Known as the chameleon effect, this may have evolved to assist group bonding
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