The Invention of Sex

April 27th, 2006 by elainethegal

S e x was invented by Thomas Alva Edison on July 16, 1876.

At the time, Edison had been working to develop "entertainment devices" for the masses-and during the previous months he had invented the whoopee-cushion, the hand-buzzer, Play-Doh, fake-nose eyeglasses,the first cordless vibrator (a massive steam-powered unit that covered six and a half square city blocks and required 235 men to operate), and the one device he considered to be his greatest gift to mankind at the time: the ball-point pen that turned over to reveal a naked woman.

Upon being introduced to sex, the country was thrown into a turmoil - and in order to maintain order, the government seized all ofTom’s patents and drawings, and locked them away in the federal archives until the year 2186. (The only exception to this were his plans for the steam-powered vibrator, which were released in 1964 and used as the basic design for the nuclear submarine USS Trident.)

Devastated at the havoc he’d created, Edison redoubled his efforts to provide entertainment for the masses and quickly invented movies, the mimeograph, and the phonograph.

In fact, his greatest invention of all, the light bulb, was created as a means of deterring sex. Because as Tom himself put it, "Who inGod’s name would ever want to do it with the lights on?"

  • Was just something f u n n y to share with y o u

Do You Lie?

April 24th, 2006 by elainethegal

Everybody lies. A d m i t  it
- you do as well. There is probably not a single person who has ever
lived who has not once in his life told a falsehood or misrepresented
the truth, regardless of whether it was unintentional or if he told it
so that someone else’s feelings would not be hurt - or if he did it for
more sinister reasons.

Everybody lies.  It may only be “white” lies, but everyone tells lies or “omits the truth” sometimes.

We
start lying at around age 4 to 5 when children gain an awareness of the
use and power of language. This first lying is not malicious, but
rather to find out, or test, what can manipulated in a child’s
environment. Eventually children begin to use lying to get out of
trouble or get something they want.

White
lies, those concocted to protect someone’s feelings, are not a big deal
at all. The person, however, who seems to feel compelled to lie about
both the small and large stuff has a problem.

We
often call these folks pathological liars (which is a description, not
a diagnosis). They lie to protect themselves, look good, gain
financially or socially and avoid punishment. Quite often the person
who has been deceived knows that this type of liar has to a certain
extent deluded him or herself and is therefore to be somewhat pitied.

A
much more troubling group is those who lie a lot — and knowingly — for
personal gain. These people may have a diagnosis called antisocial
personality disorder, also known as being a sociopath, and often get
into scrapes with the law.

Lying often
gets worse with the passage of time. When you get away with a lie it
often impels you to continue your deceptions. Also, liars often find
themselves perpetrating more untruths to cover themselves.

We
hold different people to different standards when it comes to telling
the truth. We expect, for example, less honesty from politicians than
from scientists. We have a vision of purity about those who are doing
research, while we imagine that politicians will at least shade the
truth about themselves in order to get elected.

Why
do we dislike liars, especially sociopaths, so much? It’s a matter of
trust. When a person lies, they have broken a bond – an unspoken
agreement to treat others as we would like to be treated. Serious
deception often makes it impossible for us to trust another person
again.

Because the issue of trust is on
the line, coming clean about the lie as soon as possible is the best
way to mend fences. If the truth only comes out once it is forced,
repair of trust is far less likely.

As a
parent, the most important message you can send your children about
lying is that you always — always — want them to come clean with you.
No matter how big a whopper they have told, remind them that you would
always rather hear the truth, no matter how bad it is, than be
deceived. Tell them there is really nothing more sacred in your
relationship than your trust of each other.

Of
course, all this presupposes that we have discovered an untruth — some
people are so expert at deception that it often takes a long time to
find out that we have been lied to.

If
you lie all the time, even about unimportant things, you are likely to
have a problem that will eventually — if it hasn’t already — cause
you real relationship, financial or legal troubles. Figuring out what
is driving you to lie in the first place will help heal this
self-destructive behavior. This may mean going into treatment with a
therapist to discover why you feel the need to deceive.

Love & Hate

April 20th, 2006 by elainethegal

The loving, critical mom. The fun, undependable friend. The     supportive, cantankerous boss. Relationships that evoke conflicting     feelings may cause more stress than those characterized by outright     dislike…

The
last few months have brought a high tide of letters about love. I wish
I could answer them all. Rather, this article addresses the general
subject of most of them finding and keeping love in our lives, in the
form of intimate relationships.

Mature love, some insist, is a
broadening, deepening experience. But the claim that love promotes
maturity is unpersuasive without some indication that the individual
would not have matured just as readily in the absence of love. Indeed,
to the extent that love fosters dependency, it may be viewed as a
deterrent to maturity.

I am not asserting that the effects of love
always border on the pathological. I am saying that the person who
seeks love in order to obtain security will become, like the alcoholic,
increasingly dependent on this source of illusory well-being. The
secure person who seeks love would probably not trap himself in this
way.

But would the secure person     seek love at all?

Love isn’t blind at all

April 19th, 2006 by elainethegal

"Do you love me more than yesterday?"     and a positive answer just might keep our relationship going–if I     believe him.

Couples     who think that love, satisfaction and commitment in their relationships     have improved with age, even if they haven’t, tend to have the most     stable partnerships.

I think people can still feel love for an ex-partner while     acknowledging that the relationship has become dissatisfying.
Indeed, in couples who called it quits, satisfaction with the
relationship dipped significantly in the period before the breakup.

Love has remarkably little to do with whether your     relationship is destined to last or headed for the hills, though     believing that your affection is growing may help strengthen the bond.     But if your partner starts singing "I Can’t Get No Satisfaction" in the     shower, begin to worry…

Of all the decisions people make in their life, few are as important as who they choose to marry or live with. Make a bad choice and they can spend their days and nights mired in unhappiness or consumed by anxiety or depression,
conditions that not only rob their mental health but undermine their
physical health as well. One might be consigned to economic instability
or subjected to physical or verbal abuse. Or they might find themselves
struggling as a single parent. The consequences of a poor choice, and
of marital dissatisfaction or even disruption, are far-reaching,
extending even to the next generation.

  • Love isn’t blind at all. Healthy relationships are in fact built on love, trust, commitment, intimacy and attachment.

Do things happen for a reason?

April 18th, 2006 by elainethegal

Do things happen for a r e a s o n? Yes, yes, and yes!

I have heard the saying, "things happen for a reason" often
enough. It’s a good saying, one I often try to take heart. Sometimes it
is tough to see the good when the bad punches you in the face.

Sometimes
people come into my life and I know right away that they were meant to
be there…To serve some sort of purpose, teach me a lesson or help
figure out who I’m or who I want to become. I never know who these
people may be but I lock eyes with them, I know that very moment that
they will affect my life in some profound way.

And sometimes
things happen to me at the time that may seem horrible, painful and
unfair, but in reflection I realize that without overcoming those
obstacles I would never realize my potential, strength, will power or
heart.

Everything happens for a reason.
Nothing happens by chance or by means of luck. Illness, love, lost
moments of true greatness and sheer stupidity all occur to test limits
of our soul.

Without these small tests, life would be like a
smoothly paved, straight, flat road to nowhere safe and comfortable but
dull and utterly pointless.

The people I meet affect my life.
The successes and downfalls that I experience can create whom I’m, and
the bad experiences can be learned from. In fact they are probably the
most poignant and important ones. If someone hurts me, betrays me or
breaks my heart, I forgive them because they have helped me learn about
trust and the importance of being cautious to whom I open my heart.

If
someone loves me, I love them back unconditionally, not only because
they love me, but also because they are teaching me to love and open my
heart and eyes to little things. Make every day count. Appreciate
everything that I possibly can, for I may never experience it again.

Talk
to people whom I have never talked to before, and actually listen. Let
myself fall in love, break free and set my sights high. Hold my head up
because I have every right to.

Tell myself I’m a great
individual and believe in myself, for if I don’t believe in myself, no
one else will believe in me. Create my own life and then go out and
live it.


Share this with anyone whom you believe has made a difference in your life!

Two Wishes…

April 16th, 2006 by elainethegal

If I were given two wishes by someone who had the power to give them, these would be three of the things I would wish for.

The first thing I would wish for is h e a l t h.
Life is not worth living if ones does not have health. One cannot enjoy
life if one has to go through it with all sorts of aches and
complaints. So, if I were given three wishes, health would be the first
thing I would wish for. For instance, if one had everything else in
life but if one had cancer which is incurable, the other things which
one possesses would not be able to enjoy them.

The second thing I would wish for would be w i s d o m.
Without wisdom to guide one life is like trying to sail a ship which
has no rudder. We would not know where we are heading in life and would
make all sorts of mistakes. Wisdom would tell us what is worthwhile and
what is unimportant. Wisdom would also tell me how to use my wealth in
the best possible way, It would tell me not to squander it but to
invest it well so that its value would be multiplied many times.

Ever wish of anything valuable is life itself?

In love with Net Friend?

April 15th, 2006 by elainethegal
Ever get yourself involved?

I know this is a long shot, but the relationship just might work
out. I know of some online meetings that have blossomed into happy,
committed relationships. And in matters of the heart, passions run deep
and opinions are often inflexible.

I couldn’t have put it better. 



I believe, and it’s my humble opinion, that you have been captured
by the allure and the idea of hearing things that your heart wants to
hear. Pictures, long talks on the phone, email …. They all feed the
fantasy.

Far too often, and in many different scenarios, the anticipation is more rewarding than the event.

I’m going to sound like I’m fence sitting here, but yes and no. 



You can develop very strong feelings for somebody without meeting
them, particularly if you have spoken on the phone, and had
communication via webcam. And yes you can believe yourself in love.

But it’s not until you meet them that those feelings of love will be confirmed or denied.

You are in love, a b s o l u t e l y.

With a man?  No.

With text, possibly an image, possibly a voice?  Yes.

If you need to clear this up even more - list (and I mean write it down on paper) - just what it is you love about this "man".

Now, put that all aside, and write out your dream life together with a perfect "man."

Lay the two lists side by side, you’ll see clearly the two worlds are separate.

You are not in love with a "man", but in love with the idea of the "real" 3D man being the equal to the ideas you’ve cooked up.

And I’ll guarantee you, when the two worlds meet up, they are NOT going to be the same; not even close.

The net is a nice way to make contact, say h e l l o, but that’s pretty much it until you bring it into 24/7, right in front of your face!!!

What Is Love?

April 13th, 2006 by elainethegal

Simple Definitions of love:

  • A strong positive emotion of regard and affection.
  • Any object of warm affection or devotion.
  • Having a great affection or liking for.
  • A deep feeling of sexual desire and attraction.
  • To be enamored with.

We all know that love cannot be explained with a few simple words.

What’s your opinion?

Irresponsible Actions of The Public

April 8th, 2006 by elainethegal

I have seen many irresponsible actions
of the public. They are usually carried out by people who lack civic
consciousness. They do not respect public places, public property and
the rights of the public. They will never act the same way in their own
home!

As a motorcycle rider, what I dislike seeing is
motorist parking their cars in the parking lots reserved for
motorcycles. They are enough parking lots for cars but seldom enough
for motocycles. So, by parking their cars in motorcycle parking lots,
these selfish people deprive motorcyclists of a place to park.

Another
irresponsible act of the public which I have seem is motorist stopping
their cars in the middle of the road to wait for someone. They are not
at all bothered even when other motorists and motorcyclist, who are
blocked by them, honk at him. He expects them to move around his car
and confront oncoming traffic at their own risk.

On a visit to
the seaside recently, I saw something which turned my blood cold. I saw
a group of young people throwing bottles and empty cans into the sea.
They did not just throw the bottles directly into the water but onto
some rocks first so that they were broken into sharp pieces. The rising
tide would later cover the broken glass. The cans they threw into the
sea were not soft-drink cans with smooth edges. They had to be open
with a can-opener and still had their sharp, jaggegly-cut covers. How
normal human beings could do such an unfeeling thing is beyond me. I
still remember sometime ago when my friend came out of the sea at
another beach with a deep gash in his instep. He had stepped on a
broken bottle and his wound required six stiches.

I had another
shock after making a call at a public phone booth not so long ago. In
the booth were a group of boys. One of them banged the receiver very
hard on the coin box many times. Then he started tugging the wires
connecting the receiver to the coin box. Eventually, the wires all came
out. All this while, his companions laughed as though the whole thing
was a big joke. Their action not only deprives the public of using that
phone but it would also be impossible to call for help using that phone
during an emergency.

I witnessed another irresponsible act when
I ate hawkers’ square. After enjoying a delicious plate of noodles in
gravy, I went to the washroom. Imagine my disgust when I saw the basin
filled with chicken bones, half eaten fish and curry-stained rice. I
almost threw up what I just eaten. The person who threw the remains of
his meal into the basin did not have the slightest bit of civic
consciousness! In fact, she is hardly fit to be a member of c i v i l i z e d society.

Things I value most in my life…

April 5th, 2006 by elainethegal

Untitled15_1
There are many things which I value in my life. However, if you ask me
which are the ones which I value most, I would unhesitatingly say my family, my health and my laptop!

Among
three, the most important thing to me is, of course, my family. Among
the members of my family, I naturally value my aunt the most. She
bought me up, she protected me and she educated me. All these actions
show her love for me and, in return, I love her very much. I also value
my bf, I consider him part of my family. Although we sometimes quarrel
and fight, this does not lessen our love for each other. However, when
we are fighting a common cause, such as teasing the bully next door a
lesson, or when we are carrying out a common project, such as cleaning
the house, we are united and supportive. I do not mind losing all my
other possessions but not my family. They are too v a l u a b l e to me.

The
next thing I value is my health. Life has no meaning if you are
unhealthy. You may be the richest man in the world but if you are sick,
you are not going to enjoy your wealth.

Among the objects I
posses, nothing is more valuable to me then my laptop. It is the best
teacher I have. I have learnt a lot from it. Besides teaching me so
many things in a very interesting way, it also entertains me in many
ways. The
three things above are the things which I value most in my life. Their
value cannot be measured in terms of money but only in terms of the
happiness they give me.

How About You? Mind to share it with me?