Showing posts with label role model. Show all posts
Showing posts with label role model. Show all posts

Friday, 9 August 2013

WHY YOU SHOULD NEVER FORGIVE A CHEATING HUSBAND: HELEN DID. HERE SHE EXPLAINS WHY IT WAS THE BIGGEST MISTAKE OF HER LIFE

The realisation almost took my breath away. Turning to kiss my husband Brian goodbye, I was floored by the sudden dawning that, after 28 years of electric emotional highs and soul-destroying lows, I felt nothing for him. 
As I pulled the door closed behind me and got into my car to spend a weekend visiting my aunt, I had no idea that I was leaving my marriage, or that I would never again return to our family home in Alton, Hampshire. 
But I did know that something had changed irrevocably — that things would never be the same again.
Three years have passed and I haven’t so much as spoken to Brian. All my belongings — my clothes, my jewellery, family photos and treasured mementos — are still with him. 
Yet I have no desire to collect them. I’ve shed that life like a snake sheds its skin.
If you think me unbearably heartless, you wouldn’t be alone. Some people have judged me for giving up on my marriage, for walking out on my husband that summer day in 2010. 
All I know is that it’s the best thing I have ever done, and that my life has been transformed as a result.


So what was the death knell for a relationship of almost three decades? 
We’d certainly had our troubles; most prominently, Brian’s affair that began six years ago in 2007.
But you might be surprised to know that today I don’t blame his betrayal for breaking us. No, at fault was my foolish decision to forgive him, with little heed to the emotional cost that I would face.
Brian actually left me to live with his mistress for months, and I had to fight to get him to return. When at last I succeeded, I couldn’t have been more relieved and delighted. How naive I was. 
Painful: Helen forgave her husband for his affair, which she noticed when one Christmas he did not get in touch for two days
Painful: Helen forgave her husband for his affair, which she noticed when one Christmas he did not get in touch for two days

So sure was I that our marriage had not only been saved but strengthened that I did an interview for this paper, insistent that my husband’s affair had been the wake-up call we needed to breathe new life into our relationship.
I partly blamed myself. I’d grown complacent, I told myself, and my husband had been squeezed out. I’d been more focused on my busy job as a probation officer and my role as a mother. I have two grown-up children, Sammy, 37, and Fredd, 31.
I admit I had neglected Brian. We spent too little time together as a couple and, perhaps inevitably, our sex life had suffered.
But for 24 years of our marriage the chemistry between us had been heart-flippingly electric — right up until the moment I discovered he was cheating on me. 
We met in 1982, when I was 23 and working in a bar. My first husband had left me when the children were young, and I’d taken the job so I could work when they were in bed in the care of a babysitter.
Brian came in for a drink one night and we started chatting. He was 22, funny, with a lovely sense of mischief, and we quickly became firm friends. 
Eventually, our friendship sparked into romance, and within a few months we were inseparable. We moved in together in Headley, Hampshire, and got married three years later. 
We were happy. Our love was based on a rock-solid friendship, our physical relationship was passionate and we both had good jobs. Brian was a building contractor and I became a social worker.
Brian was always spontaneous and often romantic — there was never a dull moment. He’d come home from work and say ‘Let’s pack a bag and go away’, or ‘Let’s buy a campervan and go travelling’.
Painful memories: Looking back, Helen says that she allowed herself to be 'a doormat'
Painful memories: Looking back, Helen says that she allowed herself to be 'a doormat'
To begin with it was exciting, but in time it became exhausting. I wanted to concentrate on our domestic routine and my burgeoning career. 
But, despite my doubts, my adoration for Brian was so overwhelmingly that I followed his lead. Looking back, I can see I allowed myself to become a bit of a door-mat.
Ruptures emerged in the previously smooth surface of our marriage. We got to the stage where Brian would go out for a drink one evening and return the next morning without any explanation as to where he’d been.
In the winter of 2007, my daughter, Sammy, then 32, was confined to bed with rheumatoid arthritis and I spent a great deal of my time nursing her. I should have noticed our marriage was in dangerous waters, but somehow Brian always managed to charm his way back into my good books.
On December 24, as I was leaving home to go to Sammy’s house, Brian gave me some flowers for her. We were spending Christmas Day there, and I was rather distracted by the impending festivities. 
At lunchtime, Brian rang to see how Sammy was. I reminded him that we were going to Midnight Mass, but he said he couldn’t make it because he had other things to do.
I was desperately disappointed, but I tried to brush it off. He was just in one of his moods, I thought to myself. Surely he’d be there for Christmas. 
In the event, we didn’t see him for two days. His mobile was switched off and I was frantic with worry, afraid he’d had an accident. 
He eventually surfaced on Boxing Day, calling me late that evening. Rather than being apologetic, he was unforthcoming about where he’d been and refused to answer my questions. 
I was angry, but I was so besotted with him that I didn’t make a scene. Instead, I swallowed my rage. 
Of course, by now I was wondering if he was having an affair, but still I didn’t confront him. Even if he had been cheating, he’d have just denied it and got cross. What was the point, I thought. 
But his absence stretched into weeks, then months, and I was at the end of my tether. I texted him to ask if he wanted a divorce. He texted back just one word: ‘No.’
I was humiliated and told only a few close friends what had happened. When the children asked, I said we weren’t getting on — and just hoped they wouldn’t probe too hard.
There was still only the occasional word from Brian, but I was desperate to sustain my hope, however small, that we could somehow work it out. I missed him terribly and felt so confused. He wouldn’t admit to having another woman, and I had absolutely no proof that he was having an affair.
His sporadic messages slowly became more common, and after 18 months he was sending me regular texts — asking if we could talk and even saying that he missed me.
After so long being on tenterhooks, it was an enormous relief. We were so close, I felt, to getting our marriage back. When he asked if I wanted to meet up, I didn’t hesitate.
We met in a Hampshire pub. I felt  nauseous with nerves but the old chemistry was still there. He’d hurt me badly but, God, I wanted him back.
Over the next few weeks, we met for lunch a few times. Eventually, he admitted he’d been living with another woman. 
Even then, my feelings of disgust at his behaviour were outweighed by my love for him. 
Conflicted: Despite the fact that Brian had hurt Helen badly she still wanted him back
Conflicted: Despite the fact that Brian had hurt Helen badly she still wanted him back

She was a divorcee ten years his senior, someone he had known many years before. They ran into each other by chance, apparently, and by the Christmas, when he disappeared, they’d been seeing each other for several months. 
Brian loved the attention she gave him — attention I had been too busy to offer him, he reminded me. 
He said that he was desperate to break it off, but felt obliged to stay with her and look after her because she’d fallen and hurt herself. 
You might be amazed, but I was still hopelessly in love with him. I didn’t want to scare him off by forcing him to choose between the two of us. I decided I’d let him work things out for himself.
So I found myself in the bizarre situation of seeing my own husband discreetly while he was still living with his mistress. Three months later, I gently asked Brian if he wanted to come home — and was overjoyed when he said he did. 
Friends and family were stunned that I was willing to try to save my marriage. My son couldn’t forgive him, though my daughter tried to.
I realised we had to make big changes if our marriage was to stand any chance, so I made more time for us as a couple. In response, Brian seemed more appreciative of me — at least to begin with.
He made me lovely meals and was attentive and loving. Maybe it was a guilty conscience, but he seemed much more respectful of me.
While I was truly prepared to try to forgive his betrayal, the reality was that I couldn’t forget what he’d done. It plagued me. The thought of his affair just wouldn’t go away. 
I had spent so long insisting to myself that I wanted to forgive him, so long trying to win him back, that I hadn’t allowed myself to properly accept his betrayal — or think about what life would be like when we were back together. 
Growing apart: Often after an affair, as Helen experienced, it is hard to truly accept what has happened and move on
Growing apart: Often after an affair, as Helen experienced, it is hard to truly accept what has happened and move on

It was only after I had ‘won’ Brian back, after months of tip-toeing around, that I finally realised I’d never be able to get past his infidelity. Looking back, I’d been deceiving myself on a grand scale that things could be normal again. 
It soon became clear that his betrayal had changed me irrevocably. Where once I’d enjoyed the rollercoaster nature of life with Brian, I’d come to crave a quiet life. 
The chemistry between us was as electric as ever, but I just didn’t have the energy to deal with the intense emotions he provoked in me.
Then came that weekend in 2010 when I was to visit my aunt in Devon. By that time, Brian had been back for just under a year. As I got ready, we’d had a squabble, then he snapped at me for picking up his car keys instead of my own.
Suddenly I looked at him and realised in a blinding flash that I no longer had feelings for him. I didn’t love him, I didn’t dislike him, I didn’t hate him: I just felt nothing.
I think, subconsciously, my feelings for him had long changed — and suddenly, in that one moment, it all came to the surface. For the first time in nearly 30 years, there was nothing there. It was as if a switch had been flipped.
When I left our house, all I had with me was an overnight bag with three pairs of knickers, a bra, two changes of clothes, some make-up and toiletries, and my pyjamas.
I brooded for that weekend at my aunt’s house, then drove to a friend’s house — where I stayed for the next six months.
I didn’t phone or text Brian to tell him I was leaving him: I just assumed he’d work it out for himself. I didn’t think he deserved to be told. It wasn’t revenge. I just didn’t want ever to see him again.
As it was, he didn’t try to contact me. I think he was arrogant enough to believe that I’d come back. Maybe he thought it was a tantrum and I’d come home eventually.
A year and a half later, he got in touch by text message, asking if I was all right and saying that he missed me. I didn’t respond. 
Anxiety: Helen finally realised that she could never get past the affair
Anxiety: Helen finally realised that she could never get past the affair

You might think it’s extraordinary that a marriage born in such great passion ended in such a cold, bloodless manner. But after such a long battle of attrition, I simply didn’t have the stomach for anything else. The effort it took to forgive him left me emotionally spent. 
According to mutual friends, Brian is still interested in a reconciliation, but I have started my life afresh.
I stayed with friends for about eight months, and by then I was sure in my heart that my marriage was over. About two and a half years ago, I moved into a rented flat about 40 miles from where I lived with Brian, and furnished it with second-hand stuff.
Some of my most treasured possessions — including my first edition volumes of Ted Hughes’s poetry and the engraved clock Sammy gave me when she got married — are still with Brian, but I have no interest in reclaiming them.
We haven’t got divorced. I’ve had a few dates in the past three years, but nothing serious. After the tumult of my marriage, I’m just glad to be in control of my own life. 
I don’t regret expending so much emotion forgiving Brian, and winning him back. If our relationship hadn’t come to that horrible crescendo, there’s every chance I could still be hankering after him. 
The battle to win Brian back ended our marriage — but in the end it was the best thing that could have happened

Monday, 22 April 2013

I WANT MY CHILD TO DO SOMETHING IMPORTANT WITH LIFE PART 1........TIPS


Children are born entitled. They are surrounded by adults who cater to their every need.

That’s fine when those things really are necessities: food, clothing, diapers and a place to get some sleep. Children grow up, though, and as they age, many come to define “needs” as an iPhone or a pair of expensive shoes. So how can parents teach their 21st century kids to be more grateful and truly appreciate things?
    AFFIRMATION:  Sometimes one simple word of affirmation can change an entire life. So make sure your children know how much you appreciate them. And then, remind them every chance you get.
    ART. With the advent of the Internet, everyone who wants to create… can. The world just needs more people who want to…
    CHALLENGE:  Encourage your child to dream big dreams. In turn, they will accomplish more than they thought possible… and probably even more than you thought possible.
    COMPASSION/JUSTICE: Life isn’t fair. It never will be – there are just too many variables. But when a wrong has been committed or a playing field can be leveled, I want my child to be active in helping to level it.
    CONTENTMENT: The need for more is contagious. Therefore, one of the greatest gifts you can give your children is an appreciation for being content with what they have… but not with whom they are.
    CURIOSITY: Teach your children to ask questions about who, what, where, how, why, and why not. “Stop asking so many questions” are words that should never leave a parents’ mouth.
    DETERMINATION: One of the greatest determining factors in one’s success is the size of their will. How can you help grow your child’s today?
    DISCIPLINE: Children need to learn everything from the ground-up including appropriate behaviors, how to get along with others, how to get results, and how to achieve their dreams. Discipline should not be avoided or withheld. Instead, it should be consistent and positive.
    ENCOURAGEMENT:  Words are powerful. They can create or they can destroy. The simple words that you choose to speak today can offer encouragement and positive thoughts to another child. Or your words can send them further into despair. So choose them carefully.
    FAITHFULNESS TO YOUR SPOUSE. Faithfulness in marriage includes more than just our bodies. It also includes our eyes, mind, heart, and soul. Guard your sexuality daily and devote it entirely to your spouse. Your children will absolutely take notice.
    FINDING BEAUTY: Help your children find beauty in everything they see and in everyone they meet.
    GENEROSITY: Teach your children to be generous with your stuff so that they will become generous with theirs.
    HONESTY/INTEGRITY: Children who learn the value and importance of honesty at a young age have a far greater opportunity to become honest adults. And honest adults who deal truthfully with others tend to feel better about themselves, enjoy their lives more, and sleep better at night.
    HOPE: Hope is knowing and believing that things will get better and improve. It creates strength, endurance, and resolve. And in the desperately difficult times of life, it calls us to press onward.
    HUGS AND KISSES: I once heard the story of a man who told his 7-year old son that he had grown too old for kisses. I tear up every time I think of it. Know that your children are never too old to receive physical affirmation of your love for them.
    IMAGINATION. If we’ve learned anything over the past 20 years, it’s that life is changing faster and faster with every passing day. The world tomorrow looks nothing like the world today. And the people with imagination are the ones not just living it, they are creating it.
    INTENTIONALITY: I believe strongly in intentional living and intentional parenting. Slow down; consider who you are, where you are going, and how to get there. And do the same for each of your children.
    YOUR LAP: It’s the best place in the entire world for a book, story, or conversation. And it’s been right in front of you the whole time.
    LIFELONG LEARNING: A passion for learning is different from just studying to earn a grade or please teachers. It begins in the home. So read, ask questions, analyze, and expose. In other words, learn to love learning yourself.
     LOVE: but the greatest of these is love.


Tuesday, 16 April 2013

KIDS AND THE RESPECT CULLTURE




An old woman is on the floor with a bag next to her. She asks the passing school girls for any amount of cash, but the girl refuses with a middle finger. Her friends clearly don’t notice the situation, let alone care about it. The helpless woman just looks at her in desperate pain and shock as the little girl just smirks at her.

This picture breaks my heart. The senile woman is on the floor in beautiful, cultural garments, but asks for a mere donation. The girl in modern school clothing gives her a thoughtless and ignorant “f### you.”

I don’t know where this picture was taken, but it depicts what our future has become: children disrespecting elders like they were vermin killed flat on the road. I’ve seen this in many places. Little kids on their cell phones undermining what their parents have to say, little kids cussing like there’s no tomorrow, little kids worrying about their looks rather than their family. It’s everywhere; culture and respect are both dying. It’s because of the influences that these kids can easily access: media, drugs, adultery. Our world is losing grasp of the future, and we can only watch as the next generation become total monsters.
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Thursday, 4 April 2013

SAUDI PREACHER WHO 'RAPED & TORTURED' HIS FIVE -YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER TO DEATH IS RELEASED AFTER PAYING 'BLOOD MONEY'


A "celebrity" Saudi preacher accused of raping, torturing and killing his five-year-old daughter has reportedly been released from custody after agreeing to pay "blood money".
Fayhan al-Ghamdi had been accused of killing his daughter Lama, who suffered multiple injuries including a crushed skull, broken back, broken ribs, a broken left arm and extensive bruising and burns. Social workers say she had also been repeatedly raped and burnt.
Fayhan al-Ghamdi admitted using a cane and cables to inflict the injuries after doubting his five-year-old daughter’s virginity and taking her to a doctor, according to the campaign group Women to Drive.

Rather than getting the death penalty or receiving a long prison sentence for the crime, Fayhan al-Ghamdi served only a few months in jail before a judge ruled the prosecution could only seek "blood money".

Albawaba News reported the judge as saying: "Blood money and the time the defendant had served in prison since Lama's death suffices as punishment."

Fayhan al-Ghamdi, who regularly appears on television in Saudi Arabia, is said to have agreed to pay  $46,934 to Lama’s mother.

The money is considered compensation under Islamic law, although it is only half the amount that would have been paid had Lama been a boy.

Despite Saudi Arabia’s famously strict legal system, Women to Drive say fathers cannot be executed for murdering their children in the country.

Equally, husbands cannot be executed for murdering their wives.
Formal objections to the ruling have been raised by three Saudi activists, and the twitter hashtag #AnaLama (which translates as I Am Lama) has been set up.
Local reports say public anger over the settlement is growing across Saudi Arabia, with authorities planning to set up a 24-hour hotline to take calls about child abuse.

Source: www.independent.co.uk

WHERE IN THE WORLD IS IT SAFE TO TRAVEL?


Reports of brutal rapes of foreign tourists in India and Brazil in recent months have rocked the international travel industry.
According to data cited by The Atlantic, visitors to India have dropped 25 percent since December's fatal gang-rape of a young woman on a bus in the capital of New Delhi, and 35 percent among female travelers. And that data was compiled before March 16, when a Swiss woman who was touring the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh by bicycle with her husband was gang-raped by a group of eight men.

In Madhya Pradesh, there are nine reported rapes every day, according to the Washington Post.

In Brazil, where an American tourist was raped by three men over the course of six hours on Monday, reports of rapes there have risen 150 percent since 2009, The Atlantic reported.

Not surprisingly, Brazil and India are among the most dangerous places to travel, according to an interactive map produced by Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs.

But they're not the most dangerous: North Korea, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Mali, Niger, Sudan, South Sudan, Central African Republic and Somalia are where would-be tourists are warned to "avoid all travel."

For other countries, like Libya, visitors are cautioned to "avoid non-essential travel."
The color-coded danger map also includes region- and time-specific warnings. In Pakistan, tourists are told to avoid:

- areas reporting military or militant activity;

 - all border areas, except the Wagha official border crossing point;

 - Kashmir region, including Azad Kashmir;

 - the province of Baluchistan, including the city of Quetta;

 - the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, including Swat, the city of Peshawar and the Khyber Pass;

 - and the Federally Administered Tribal Area
In Mexico, those "required to travel to Monterrey, in the state of Nuevo León, should avoid movement after dark and stay within the suburb of San Pedro Garza García."
So where, exactly, is it safe to travel? Australia, Botswana, Canada, Chile, most of Europe, Greenland, Iceland, New Zealand, Malaysia, South Korea, the United States and Uruguay, according to the agency.
"No matter where in the world you intend to travel," the department's website advises, "make sure you check the travel advice and advisories page twice: once when you are planning your trip, and again shortly before you leave. ... The decision to travel is the sole responsibility of the individual."

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

MOM GIVES HER SON CIGARETTE TO SMOKE ON EASTER SUNDAY


A mom gave her son cigarette on Easter Sunday,According to Shanghai Style File, the toddler’s parents thought it was pretty funny. The Chinese toddler and his mum were spotted on Easter Sunday in a Shanghai park where she handed her tot a cigarette and then lit it for him. She smiled on as he smoked it… then laughed as he rolled on the ground when he felt sick...... Pictures below.
In my opinion she doesnt deserve the child much less being a mother!!!
 
 
 

 

 

Thursday, 28 March 2013

Soldiers beat Police corporal to coma in Bauchi

Bauchi—A police Corporal was, yesterday, beaten to coma by four soldiers in Bauchi State following a minor misunderstanding between the army and the police in the state. The policeman, Abbas Haladu was said to have met the soldiers who barricaded the entrance leading to the Emir’s palace near the Roundabout at about 7am when they descended on him, beating him mercilessly. Vanguard gathered that Haladu’s left hand was reportedly broken by the soldiers allegedly led by a Sergeant. According to sources,the soldiers had barricaded the road at about 8pm on Tuesday as a security measure to forestall any breakdown of law and order. It was learnt that Cpl Haladu who was in mufti was stopped from going to the Emir’s palace where he was posted to commence duty for the day. Trouble started for the corporal when he was asked by the soldiers to identify himself which he did, but the soldiers on duty who were already reportedly angry insisted that he would not pass through the barricade to the Emir’s palace

Soldiers beat Police corporal to coma in Bauchi

Bauchi—A police Corporal was, yesterday, beaten to coma by four soldiers in Bauchi State following a minor misunderstanding between the army and the police in the state. The policeman, Abbas Haladu was said to have met the soldiers who barricaded the entrance leading to the Emir’s palace near the Roundabout at about 7am when they descended on him, beating him mercilessly. Vanguard gathered that Haladu’s left hand was reportedly broken by the soldiers allegedly led by a Sergeant. According to sources,the soldiers had barricaded the road at about 8pm on Tuesday as a security measure to forestall any breakdown of law and order. It was learnt that Cpl Haladu who was in mufti was stopped from going to the Emir’s palace where he was posted to commence duty for the day. Trouble started for the corporal when he was asked by the soldiers to identify himself which he did, but the soldiers on duty who were already reportedly angry insisted that he would not pass through the barricade to the Emir’s palace
rench designer goods label, Hermès is selling the world’s most expensive T-shirt at the bargain price of $91,500 or a cool 14 Million Naira and some small change (when you can afford a 14 Million Naira T-shirt N640,000 is small change). According to a report report on Yahoo: “The black crew-neck men’s T-shirt, made of crocodile skin, was sniffed out. on the racks by a blogger at the Awl Monday, who wrote, “Yes. It finally happened. Congratulations to us, and to t he Hermès men’s store on Madison Avenue for just hanging it quietly on a shelf with some rather more normal. clothes. (I mean, expensive clothes! But everything looks cheap next to this price tag.) The Awl posted a sneakily-snapped image of said price tag but not the shirt itself, explaining that Hermes prohibits. the taking of photographs inside its store. But the item walked the runway in Paris as part of the Hermés men’s. spring collection in June of 2012. Yahoo! Shine confirmed the price with an Hermés sales associate, who said. that, while it was company policy to not give out exact prices, the cost was, “just under $100,000.” It’s a fact that could. make any sane shopper faint—though the typical Hermés customer may not be as fazed (and is most likely not browsing through the racks as one. would do at, say, the Gap). This is certainly not the first time the French fashion house has caused sticker shock. Last year, a solid-gold Birkin bag made to look like crocodile skin was priced at $1,980,034. In 2011, a rare Birkin bag, also made of crocodile skin and featuring an 18-karat white gold and diamond clasp, sold at an auction to an anonymous bidder to what Women’s Wear Daily called a “record” $203,150. Three other crocodile Birkins at that auction sold for $113,525; $95,000; and just over $80,000.” If you have a spare $100,000 laying around you could buy a nice sports car, land in Lekki Phase 1, or you could always just buy a stupid crocodile skin T-shirt.

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