Cool How To Find True Love Again images

Some cool how to find true love again images:

Marlene Dietrich – ‘Blonde Venus’ (1932) … Wandering Eyes (March 7, 2013 / 25 Adar 5773) …item 2e.. Marlene Dietrich at Berns 1963 — Sag mir, wo die Blumen sind …
how to find true love again
Image by marsmet547
Women have been given what the Torah calls, binah yesera, an extra dose of intuition, and this is the situation where we need to use this skill to figure out how to respond. Nagging and criticism are not only unlikely to be effective but may push him to act out and engage in this behavior even more (perhaps to assert his independence).
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…..item 1)…. Dear Emuna: Wandering Eyes … aish.com … www.aish.com/ci/de

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My husband thinks it’s normal to notice the prettiest woman in the room.

March 7, 2013 / 25 Adar 5773
by Emuna Braverman

www.aish.com/ci/de/Dear-Emuna-Wandering-Eyes.html

Dear Emuna,

Whenever my husband and I go out, he always comments on or even pays attention to the prettiest woman in the room. I have told him repeatedly that it bothers me but he dismisses my concerns by saying that his reaction is normal and that I should just chill. Is he right? It makes me not want to go out with him. Am I overreacting? What should I do?

Paranoid Wife

Dear Loving Wife,

As they say, “Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they’re not out to get you” Or, to paraphrase, it doesn’t mean it’s not true. I don’t believe that you are overreacting. You are correct that your husband should keep his eyes to himself (or on you!). In fact, on Yom Kippur, men have to specifically repent for their wandering eyes.

But, as with many things in marriage, the question is not who is right but how to handle it. In this case, I understand how you could find this painful and demeaning, even though your husband probably does not mean it that way and is likely more “clueless” than malicious. Your job is to determine the most effective way to achieve your goals.

Women have been given what the Torah calls, binah yesera, an extra dose of intuition, and this is the situation where we need to use this skill to figure out how to respond. Nagging and criticism are not only unlikely to be effective but may push him to act out and engage in this behavior even more (perhaps to assert his independence).

So what should you do? I think you should begin my doing everything you can to keep his attention on you and your relationship. If you are going out together, dress up for him. Talk to him, be interested in him, ask him questions about his thoughts.

You may bristle at this advice. After all, he’s making the mistake, why is it your responsibility? But the answer is that you are in this together and you want to make every effort to enhance your marriage. I do believe that the more attention a man gets from his wife, the less likely his eyes are to wander. Perhaps you’ve stopped trying, perhaps you take the relationship for granted, perhaps you’re too tired to make the effort. We can never stop trying, we can never stop making the effort – not if we want our marriages to stay alive. And that applies to every one, in every marriage, whether their husband has wandering eyes or not.

If, in spite of your best efforts, he continues in this behavior, I recommend that you go for some counseling. Maybe he will be able to hear from a third party what he can’t hear from you – how demeaning and insensitive his behavior feels to you. And maybe he will be able to express in a safe environment that it is certainly not his intention to hurt you and the two of you will be able to work out better communication skills and behaviors.
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— WHERE’S THE LIMELIGHT?

Dear Emuna,

Last night was my daughter’s school production, their big song and dance extravaganza. She has been practicing for weeks and talked of nothing else so I was very excited to go. But the experience wasn’t as pleasant as I had anticipated. I understand that certain talented girls will always get the lead dramatic roles, musical solos and dance parts. But beyond that, it seemed to me that some girls were in every dance or choir number (and front and center no less) while my daughter’s dance group got about 30 seconds of stage time. As my daughter said to me on her way out the door, “Don’t blink or you will miss me.” While I enjoyed many aspects of the production, I was unable to quell my feelings of frustration and resentment. Can you help me?
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— Green-Eyed Monster Mom

Dear Tiger Mom,

You are clearly a mother who is zealous on behalf of her daughter. That is good. It is a mother’s/parent’s job to look out for her children, to be their advocate, to want their best. This is just a variation of that instinct – taken to an extreme. Because it’s certainly not clear that a lead role – with all the accompanying honor and attention – is always what’s best for our children.

The most important issue here is your daughter’s attitude. Did she like participating in the play? Was she as frustrated and resentful as you or did she just have a good time? Was she able to enjoy the sense of unity and fun that rippled through the whole school?

Was her comment meant good-naturedly or was it an expression of pique?

If she is fine (and perhaps even more than fine), don’t allow your frustration to communicate itself to her.

Don’t spoil her experience and, above all, don’t introduce jealousy and resentment where there is none.
Your daughter will take her cues from you so you need to get over it! If she has the ability to take true pleasure in the good of others, then learn from her good character. Sometimes our children are our best teachers.
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— WINNING BY CHEATING

Dear Emuna,

My 5-year-old daughter likes to play games. The problem is that she’s always changing the rules, dare I say cheating, to make sure that she wins. Is this normal or is it a bad quality that I must immediately try to uproot?

Unsure Mom

Dear Uncertain Mom,

Most likely that is just a reflection of the innate desire to win, our inherent self-centeredness and it’s certainly not uncommon in children of her age.

A very positive spin would suggest that she is a very creative person whose talents are inhibited by things like “rules” in games (that’s the excuse my husband makes when we play Scrabble!).

But since life does indeed have rules we need to follow, and since we do want to encourage honesty, I would gently introduce the idea of choosing some rules at the beginning of the game and sticking with them (although I wouldn’t fight about it). This is consistent with the Torah’s dictum “M’dvar sheker tirchak,” “Stay far away from falsehoods.”

I don’t think there’s anything to worry about at this point but I do think you should slowly and carefully try to weed out this behavior, both for her character’s sake and for her social life. Other children will only put up with this type of action for so long before they react negatively to it and then the “winner” needs to do a little bullying to keep getting her way.

Again, I don’t think you are at that point and I don’t think it’s cause for concern at the moment. I just think you should act (slowly, carefully, gently) before it is.

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…..item 2a.1)…. Marlene Dietrich – Hot Voodoo Lyrics …

Artist: Marlene Dietrich

Album: Miscellaneous

Genre: World

… SONGLYRICS – Know the Words … www.songlyrics.com/

www.songlyrics.com/marlene-dietrich/hot-voodoo-lyrics/

Did you ever happen to hear of voodoo?
Hear it and you won’t give a damn what you do
Tom-tom’s put me under a sort of voodoo
And the whole night long
I don’t know the right from wrong

Hot voodoo, black as mud
Hot voodoo, in my blood
That African tempo, has made a slave
Hot voodoo, dance of sin
Hot voodoo, worse than gin

I’d follow a cave man right into his cave
That beat gives me a wicked sensation
My conscious wants to take a vacation
Got voodoo, head to toes
Hot voodoo, burn my clothes

I want to start dancing, just wearing a smile
Hot voodoo, I’m aflame
I’m really not to blame
That African tempo is meaner than mean
Hot voodoo make me brave

I want to misbehave
I’m beginning to feel like an African queen
Those drums bring up the heaven inside me
I need some great big angel to guide me

Hot voodoo, makes me wild
Oh fireman, save this child
I going to blazes
I want to be bad

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…..item 2a.2)…. youtube video … Marlen Dietrich dancing in Gorilla costume … 3:29 minutes

www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzLP_2Wi_nY

iflushed nemo

Uploaded on Jul 7, 2010
Marlene Dietrich in 1932’s Blonde Venus. I make no claims of ownership of this material.

Category
Comedy

License
Standard YouTube License
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…..item 2b)…. youtube video … Marlene Dietrich – Black Market ! … 4:30 minutes

www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VbeKstCPKg

Serch Dietrich

Uploaded on Sep 18, 2011
[serchdietrich.blogspot.com]

Category
Film & Animation

License
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…..item 2c)…. youtube video … Marlene Dietrich – Somethin’ I dreamed last night … 3:40 minutes

www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd-n-CBijxM

annpham

Uploaded on Mar 27, 2008

Marlene Dietrich sings the song "Somethin’ I dreamed last night". I love to listen to this song at night, when I’m alone studying:)

Category
Music

License
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…..item 2d)…. youtube video … Marlene Dietrich "Awake In A Dream" (Desire, 1936). … 2:22 minutes …

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAcgtwb9N1g

LilyMarleneDietrich·

Uploaded on May 10, 2010

Marlene Dietrich 1901-1992. Chanson et photos tirées du film "Desire" de Frank Borzage sorti en 1936.

Category
Music

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…..item 2e)…. youtube video … Marlene Dietrich at Berns 1963 … 37:06 minutes …

www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXiOdgz_2WE

BernsSalonger

Published on Jul 10, 2012

The singer, actress and mega star Marlene Dietrich visited Berns in 1963 for a sold out concert in Stockholm. The show was a success and Marlene Dietrich, although over her sixties, made an amazing impression on the swedish audience. She sang the following:

– I Can’t Give You Anything But Love, Baby ……. — time line 03:25
– La vie en rose ……………………………………………… — time line 05:59
– The Boys in the Backroom ………………………….. — time line 09:15

– Jonny, wenn du Geburtstag hast ………………. — time line 11:29
– The Laziest Gal in Town ……………………………. — time line 15:20
– Lola ……………………………………………………………. — time line 18:20
– Honeysuckle Rose ……………………………………. — time line 20:35

– Lili Marlene ………………………………………. — time line 23:40
– Sag’ mir wo die Blumen sind …………… — time line 27:14
– Falling in Love Again ………………………… — time line 31.52

Category
Music

License
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Lili Marleen

English lyrics (David)

Mack David is credited for the American version (published in 1943 as "Lili Marlene") made famous by Marlene Dietrich, though there is speculation that Dietrich actually may have written some or all of those English lyrics herself.

Outside the barracks, by the corner light
I’ll always stand and wait for you at night
We will create a world for two
I’ll wait for you the whole night through
For you, Lili Marlene
For you, Lili Marlene

Bugler, tonight, don’t play the call to arms
I want another evening with her charms
Then we will say good-bye and part
I’ll always keep you in my heart
With me, Lili Marlene
With me, Lili Marlene

Give me a rose to show how much you care
Tied to the stem, a lock of golden hair
Surely, tomorrow, you’ll feel blue
But then will come a love that’s new
For you, Lili Marlene
For you, Lili Marlene

When we are marching in the mud and cold
And when my pack seems more than I can hold
My love for you renews my might
I’m warm again, my pack is light
It’s you, Lili Marlene
It’s you, Lili Marlene

My love for you renews my might
I’m warm again, my pack is light
It’s you, Lili Marlene
It’s you, Lili Marlene

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Quiet Village …item 3.. Breathing Space – How to tell your spouse you need some private time, alone (July 11, 2012 / 21 Tammuz 5772) …
how to find true love again
Image by marsmet541
The need for privacy, for breathing space, is deep and primal. It’s not something you can be talked out of or learn to live without – without a psychic toll. It isn’t that private people don’t enjoy conversation, socializing, working and playing with others.

Those who enjoy privacy are not necessarily reclusive hermits or serial killers, not loners on the outer edges of society.

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……..***** All images are copyrighted by their respective authors ……..

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As soon as the flight attendant left, she told her husband that for 32 years she heard the same stupid joke and she’s sick and tired of it. “Why don’t you just shut your mouth for once?” she asked.
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…..item 1)…. aish.com …. www.aish.com/f/m … HOME FAMILY MARRIAGE …

How to Stop Fighting …

Four ways for couples to create an atmosphere of peace.
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July 31, 2011 / 29 Tammuz 5771
by Slovie Jungreis-Wolff

www.aish.com/f/m/How_to_Stop_Fighting.html

I settled into my window seat on the Jetblue flight and noticed that the two seats beside me remained vacant. The doors were ready to be closed and I welcomed the quiet time alone for the next few hours.

Just when I thought I had the entire row to myself, in walked a distinguished looking couple. Of course their seats were the ones I had happily thought of as my in-flight office space. They settled in and put their bags in order.

This won’t be too bad, I thought to myself.

I was wrong.

As the flight attendants were giving their instructions the couple called everyone they knew with news of their departure.

“We’ll be staying in our vacation home for a month!” they said over and over.
We were told that all phones must be turned off but the husband just kept on making his calls as his wife put away her cell.

“You need to turn that off,” she said.

He ignored her and just kept on making his calls.

Finally, she grabbed the phone out of his hand.

“What did you do that for?” he hissed angrily.

And then the fighting began.

We forget all that we have to be grateful for and focus instead on what drives us crazy.

The next few hours all I heard was constant bickering. It didn’t matter what it was about – everything sparked a fight: the flight attendant offering drinks, the wife’s sandwiches, what they were reading.
As he was being served snacks, he turned to me and made a joke. "I’ve been married for 32 years and never won an argument. You know why? She never lets me get a word in.” He laughed at his clever words.

As soon as the flight attendant left, she told her husband that for 32 years she heard the same stupid joke and she’s sick and tired of it. “Why don’t you just shut your mouth for once?” she asked.

I wondered how on earth this couple would manage spending a month together in a vacation home and how their children must feel when they have family time.

I was reminded of a young mother who once confided to me that whenever she and her husband got into the car, their discussions often became heated. Their child was just an infant so they did not think much of it. The baby grew into a toddler but still, their car rides were often filled with arguments carried over from home. One day, their toddler put his hands over his ears and gave a shriek.

“Stop fighting!” he cried out. “Mommy, Daddy, stop!”

Husband and wife looked at each other, ashamed.

Related Article: Hooray for Fighting!

—— Creating an Atmosphere of Peace

Marriage is hard. We have dreams of living happily ever after as we stand beneath the chuppah, but life is filled with unknown challenges. We neglect to appreciate each other. We lose the sense of newness as days become months and months become years. As time passes, we fall into habits of squabbling and arguing; we undercut the love that we have for each other. Half the time we don’t even know what we were fighting about, we just know that we are not talking….again. We forget all that we have to be grateful for and focus instead on what drives us crazy.

Our children pick up on the constant undercurrent of conflict. Their sense of security and belonging is threatened.

Part of being a family is feeling loved and appreciated. When we spend time together, we want to know that we are part of a strong family unit; we enjoy each other’s company. Sure there are ups and downs, but bottom line is we are family. We want our children to treat each other with respect and live with loyalty to one another. Which parent does not feel aggravated when siblings constantly argue and put each other down?

One of the best ways for us to teach our children to cherish each other is by being a living example ourselves. There will be times that spouses disagree, have conflicts and differences of opinion. But then we must ask ourselves how we go about resolving our discord.

Do we put each other down? Are we sarcastic? Do we yell and scream? Are we open to listening and hearing the opinion of another? Do we disagree respectfully?

You may be thinking that this is impossible, part of an old idealized sitcom but not real for today’s family.
Not true. Peace is in our hands. Creating an atmosphere of shalom should be the goal of every couple. (Of course I am not speaking about an abusive or unhealthy relationship).

——– What can we do to build an atmosphere of dignity and respect in our homes?

1) ……Resolve never to yell and scream at each other, especially in front of the children.

Children often blame themselves for parent’s conflict. They also try to fix the situation and feel responsible for the fighting. Hostilities erode a child’s self-confidence and make him feel that he belongs to a ‘loser’ family.

2)…….Disagree with respect.

If we do have a conflict of opinion, why must we put each other down? We have an opportunity to teach our children that we can love each other despite our differences. A child can learn that we can express our opinions without breaking up our family. Eliminate patterns of anger and sarcasm. If you feel that you are losing control, stop! Say that you need to take a breather. Go into another room or take a walk if you must. We do not have to turn each conflict into a major war zone.

3)……Find your inner strength.

It’s easy to say “I can’t control my temper; my parents never controlled themselves either.” That’s just a cop-out. There have been times that you have controlled yourself because you knew that you could not lose it in public or in front of your boss. Find that inner voice and use it. Ethics of the Father’s teaches: “Who is strong? He who subdues his personal inclinations.”

4)…….Allow your children to see resolution.

Often our children know about our conflicts but we neglect to show them our feelings of love for each other. Even if it’s just a warm smile or “I’m so happy you’re home”; we’ve made an impact. Children learn how to love from our example. Try to express gratitude to your spouse. Appreciate the little things that often go overlooked.

Our homes can become the greatest source of joy for us and for our children. We do not have to battle each other even if we disagree. The choice is ours.
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…..item 2)…. youtube video … Martin Denny "Quiet Village" from Hawaii Calls … 4:15 minutes

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJK2LwD_nEY

Here’s a rare clip of Martin Denny and his group playing their most popular tune, "Quiet Village", on Webley Edwards "Hawaii Calls".

Category:
Music

Tags:
exotica hawaii martin denny lounge music space age pop piano

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…..item 3)….. aish.com … www.aish.com/f … HOME FAMILY MOM WITH A VIEW

Breathing Space

How to tell your spouse you need some private time, alone.
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July 11, 2012 / 21 Tammuz 5772
by Emuna Braverman

www.aish.com/f/mom/Breathing_Space.html

Apparently, having enough space, or privacy, in a relationship is even more important to a couple’s happiness than a good intimate life (Wall Street Journal 06/19/12). It doesn’t get as much attention as the latter but it is actually a very strong need that, if unattended to, can wreak havoc with a couple’s marital bliss.

In a story cited in the article, a married woman discovered a receipt for a late lunch at a waterfront restaurant during a time her husband said he was working. Alarm bells went off and she imagined the worst. But it wasn’t what she expected. Her husband just needed some time alone.

You’d think that telling her directly would have been the simpler route. Why cause that needless worry and anxiety? But it’s not that easy to tell our partners that we need space. It can sound hurtful. It can seem rejecting.

It takes confidence and strength to recognize your spouse’s need and allow him or her to satisfy it – without you.

Some people crave privacy more than others. For those who do, being around people, even family that they love, can seem suffocating. It makes them feel like they can’t breathe (like I said, suffocating). But how do you tell that to a beloved wife or husband? How can they understand that it’s about you and not them?

The need for privacy, for breathing space, is deep and primal. It’s not something you can be talked out of or learn to live without – without a psychic toll. It isn’t that private people don’t enjoy conversation, socializing, working and playing with others. Those who enjoy privacy are not necessarily reclusive hermits or serial killers, not loners on the outer edges of society.

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They are you and me, people who get rejuvenated and replenished by a little alone time.

And that is, of course, the way to explain it to our spouses. “I will be a better wife to you after this time alone.” “I will be a more attentive husband if you give me a little break,” “This isn’t about time away from you; this is about enjoying our time together more.” It requires tact, thoughtfulness and sincerity. We must choose our words carefully. But we can’t ignore this basic need. If we do, we will end up suffering – and so will everyone around us!

Don’t feel guilty. You’re not harming your spouse; you’re improving your marriage.

When my friend built a new home, she created that room for herself that we all dream of, her retreat away from the chaos and demands of her family. It’s a small space with a comfy flowered sofa and a cozy pink lamp, a feminine oasis. I want one too!

But while we can’t all literally have that room, many of us do need to create that space. We shouldn’t feel guilty. We are not harming our spouses; we are improving our marriages. We shouldn’t be embarrassed by our need for privacy. We shouldn’t sneak around and foster unwarranted suspicion. Sometimes my husband just needs to go walk on the beach by himself and clear his head. I’m glad that when his cell phone is turned off I know where he is and why. We need to be straightforward and specific about our needs. “I need an hour to wind down before dinner.” “Would you mind if I went out for a few hours by myself after I put the kids to bed?”

And, with all that said, we still need to remember to devote most of our time and energy to our marriages and our time with our spouses, not apart from them.
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