marriages
Liz Tuccillo, Sex and the City writer and co-author of He's Just Not That Into You, concludes that Indian women have the best of all worlds when it comes to looking for love. They can go the traditional route and seek an arranged marriage, they can date and look for a love marriage, or they can opt for total freedom and remain unmarried.
Want to know what happens next? Watch all the India webisodes from Liz Tuccillo's "How To Be Single" series!
VIDEO: Single In India: Arranged Marriage For All?
Read More
What to do before marriage, proof that we still love marriage and a cinematic proposal.
Love Bytes: Five must-click sex, love and relationship links.
86% of those who want to get married will, U.S. stats show. [MSNBC]
More than 20 years ago, a Newsweek magazine article called “The Marriage Crunch” scared the bejesus out of many women by stating that if a white, college-educated woman hadn't married by age 30, she had a slim chance of ever tying the knot. ... The article was wrong then and now, a generation later, it is even more off the mark.
20 things all women should do before they marry. [The Frisky]
This guy went to great lengths … Read More
Liz Tuccillo, writer for Sex and the City and co-author of He's Just Not That Into You, asks men and women in Mumbai, India about arranged marriage. One man interviewed over 60 women before he found his wife!
Want to know what happens next? Watch all the India webisodes from Liz Tuccillo's "How To Be Single" series! VIDEO: Single In India: Arranged Marriage For All? VIDEO: Single in India: First Marriage, Then Love VIDEO: Single in India: Marriage Is A Group Effort VIDEO: … Read More
Can unhappy couples blame a man's genes?
That cheating husband of yours actually may not be heeding the call of his "little brain" and instead heeding the call of his "big" one: Swedish scientists found that heterosexual men with two copies of a gene variant (called an allele) were twice as likely to report marital problems.
Women married to men with one or two copies of the allele also reported being less satisfied in their marriages, especially in regards to the couple's intimacy and ability to connect. The Washington Post calls the study "the first time that science has shown a direct link … Read More