I was sitting around this morning and I realized something that really hit me like a ton of bricks:
I was sitting around this morning and I realized something that really hit me like a ton of bricks: we’re all looking for our soulmates out there. Everyday millions of people are going out on dates hoping and praying that they’ve met “the one” or their soulmate. Everyday people are logging into online dating sites hoping that the new e-mail is from their soulmate.
Culinary and Home Entertaining Expert Zoe Rogers bring you this page-turner!
By Zoe Rogers
Crazy for books and book clubs?
You’re not alone! The popularity of book clubs is soaring.
“The Encyclopedia of Community: From the Village to the Virtual World, notes that in 2003, a Google search for “book club” returned 424,000 hits; now it returns 40 million…”
Rori Raye on "circular dating," how to meet men, and why you should stop looking for Mr. Right.
Single women often ask us how to meet men, so when we started up a partnership with YourTango Expert Rori Raye, author of the blog and newsletter Have The Relationship You Want, we figured that places to meet men was a good topic to start with. Rori had some great ideas, but she also thought that was the wrong question. "It's not about where you go, it's about your mindset when you're there," she said. Rori recommends practicing "Circular Dating." Circular Dating takes the focus off meeting the man and turns it back on yourself, which builds your self-esteem and leads to meeting men. Here are ten things we learned from Rori.
Be honest. Did your New Year’s resolutions for 2012 include “I want to meet my husband"?
Be honest. Do your New Year’s resolutions for 2012 include “I want to meet my husband"?
Then keep reading. It’s time to set the scene so you can purposefully and powerfully manifest Mr. Right.
Hint: He's right under your nose and number one on your speed-dial.
That's right, ladies. The good men you pine for are right there, all up in your grill, listening to your bellyaching, patiently enduring your inability to manage your own flamboyant, capricious romantic expectations and dreary reality. These good guys are co-workers, classmates, and, most importantly, friends.