Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The collection features eight intricate stories exploring themes of love, marriage, aging, and human relationships, including the titular story about an unlikely romance sparked by a teenage prank, and "The Bear Came Over the Mountain," a poignant examination of love and memory in the face of illness.
Meredith, a museum curator, is discussing a prior bad relationship with her psychiatrist. She says she has a date with Bruce. Later, Meredith notices the statue at Bruce's home. He tells her it is a replica. Throughout the evening, Bruce and Meredith both experience seeing figures in the house and outdoors.
The Truth: An Uncomfortable Book About Relationships is an autobiographical book written by investigative reporter Neil Strauss, covering his attempts to form and maintain a long-term relationship following his years in the seduction community.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
The Michelangelo phenomenon describes a three step process where close partners shape each other so as to bring forth one another's ideal selves. [1] This ideal self is conceptualized as a collection of an individual's "dreams and aspirations" or "the constellation of skills, traits, and resources that an individual ideally wishes to acquire."
I Kissed Dating Goodbye is a 1997 book by Joshua Harris.The book focuses on Harris' disenchantment with the contemporary secular dating scene, and offers ideas for improvement, alternative dating/courting practices, and a view that singleness need not be a burden nor characterized by what Harris describes as "selfishness".
Crystallization is a concept, developed in 1822 by the French writer Stendhal, which describes the process, or mental metamorphosis, in which the characteristics of a new love are transformed into perceptual diamonds of shimmering beauty.
The four relational models are as follows: Communal sharing (CS) relationships are the most basic form of relationship where some bounded group of people are conceived as equivalent, undifferentiated and interchangeable such that distinct individual identities are disregarded and commonalities are emphasized, with intimate and kinship relations being prototypical examples of CS relationship. [2]