‘sociology’ Tagged Posts

About Dutch Dating

Dutch dating simply means that each man and woman going on a date will have to pay for him or herself. This manner of dating is often the most excel...

 

Dutch dating simply means that each man and woman going on a date will have to pay for him or herself. This manner of dating is often the most excellent when both parties are new to each other, independent, or just friends.

Many people often like to go Dutch because they are not comfortable with someone else paying for them. This is common with women who are liberal or independent in their thinking.

It is common for both man and woman dating to practice Dutch dating when only one of them cannot pay for the joint expenses. They therefore share the cost of the dinner and any other activities chosen to do during the dating activities.

They also might meet at the locations or drive themselves so the other party isn’t responsible for their transportation.

Dutch dating can be extremely casual and creates a comfortable atmosphere many people are happy with when a relationship is new.

It is just natural for some men and women to feel uncomfortable when someone else pays for anything they enjoy until they are familiar with such a person. Also they do not want to feel obliged towards the dating partner.

Dutch dating gives way for a very smooth dating where none of the two parties have any cause to develop feeling of obligation towards the second party. It also reflects that some women understands the expenses associated with dating and don’t believe it is reasonable that the guy should pay for everything. This is more understood when the eatery visited is very expensive and she buys something even more costly after the dating.

You can find Dutch dating among people who are not happy with someone else spending money on them. It is just a natural thing for some people to be more contented when they bear the cost of their own spending rather than someone bearing it for them.

There are a lot of open-minded and independent women who are very proud who prefer to pay their own way also. If you date such you better go Dutch dating. This creates a comfortable atmosphere because no one feels like they owe him or her for anything later.

Abraham presents secrets tips on love, health, success and finance and your divorce family e-book

Double Dating

 

Double dating gives your date the opportunity to meet your friends and it also can provide a comfortable experience for someone who might feel uneasy to go out on a one-on-one date quite yet. Double dating is an entertaining way to go out and have a good time with your significant other.

Double dating will prove to be a very good idea if you want to meet someone new and you aren’t quite comfortable with being alone with him or her yet. You can request the company of your good colleagues or a couple you know to come along too.

Double dating thus allows for you to be around people you are previously comfortable with while you are getting to know your fresh date. Actually there are some people who like to go on a double date first so they are not so worried on the first date.

Your date also gains the opportunity to know you more and better through your friends when you go on a double dating. Naturally he or she will derive some hints about your personality from the way your friends address you.

You should be careful to invite a couple or associates that will say fine things about you, if you really like your date and you want to see them again.

Your date can get a good idea of the type of person you are by whom you are hanging out with and the things they say about you.

Double dating is a really good way if you want your date to know more about you or to get another perspective on the person you are going out with.

Double dating always offer a relaxed experience if you don’t want to go out with your date unaccompanied but you do want to get to know them.

Lastly, double dating provides an exceptional means for you or your date to see how both of you interact with your friends and get a different perspective

Abraham presents secrets tips on love, health, success and finance and your divorce family e-book

Sincerity Is The Greatest Policy In Online Dating

 

This article will deal with honesty in words and intention in online dating. This is a very sensitive factor that is often overlooked or taken for granted. You will not like to be tricked.

When you join an online dating service, you are looking for a girl that you can like…even come to love. That girl is looking for a guy that SHE can like or even love. What you aren’t looking for is a girl who would like your best friend or your idea of what the perfect guy looks like or talks like or thinks like.

You must be completely honest and truthful with yourself about yourself when writing the online profile, during the online dating process and beyond in order to find the right girl for you…and she IS out there

Careful analysis of your past love relationship(s) is the best way to begin writing your profile. What was accurate? What was mistaken? What things really made you cherish the last girl? Which didn’t?

Don’t assume, just because you hated, that your last girl was so totally self-involved that she couldn’t see anything else, you’ll be able to overlook that quality this time. You won’t.

If you aren’t 6′1″ with a six-pack to be proud of, don’t claim to be. If you are a bar tender, don’t claim to be a lawyer with a six figure income. If you are 40 going on 50, don’t pretend to be 30 something.

Remember, the idea here is to find a girl who will like you exactly like you are. If you have lied in your online dating profile, the first face-to-face meeting will remove all her doubt that you are a liar…and probably a cheat, as well.

Lastly, once you have found a girl that you believe can be the one for you, for goodness sakes, cancel your membership to the online dating service. After all, you know and she knows that online dating services are intended for those who are looking…not those who have found or been found.

Abraham Saleh presents secrets tips on love, health, success and finance and your divorce family ebook

Understanding The Chinese Lunar Calendar

 

Previous to their implementation of the Western solar calendar system, the Chinese almost exclusively followed their own lunar calendar for determining the times of planting and harvesting and festival holidays. Although people in China today use the Western calendar for almost all business, governmental and practical matters of daily life, the old system still serves as the basis for working out numerous recurring holidays. This coexistence of two calendar systems has long been accepted by the people of China.

However, this does not only happen in China, it also occurs in most other Eastern countries, like Thailand, and most Arabic countries.

A lunar month is determined by measuring the period of time needed for the moon to finish its full cycle of 29 and a half days, a standard that makes the lunar year a full eleven days shorter than its solar counterpart. This difference is made up every 19 years by the addition of seven lunar months.

The 12 lunar months are further divided into 24 solar divisions characterized by the four seasons and times of heat and cold, all of which bear a close relationship to the annual cycle of agricultural work.

The Chinese calendar – very much like the Hebrew calendar- is a combination of the solar and lunar calendars in that it strives to have its years concur with the tropical year and its months coincide with the synodic months. It is not surprising that a few similarities exist between the Chinese and the Hebrew calendar.

For instance, an ordinary year has 12 months, a leap year has 13 months. An ordinary year has 353, 354, or 355 days, a leap year has 383, 384, or 385 days. When determining what a Chinese year will be like, one needs to make a couple of astronomical calculations.

First of all, you have to determine the dates for the new moons. In these cases, a new Moon is the completely black Moon (that is to say, when the Moon is in conjunction with the Sun), not the first visible crescent, as is used by the Islamic and Hebrew calendars. The date of a new moon is then the first day of a new month.

The reason why the majority of countries which had their own calendars had to drop them in favour of the Western, Julian calendar that we use today, is business. First the British and then the Americans ran international business and they used the Gregorian calendar. Anyone who sought to work with them had to follow suit. This is why national policy often differs from local custom in Third World countries.

The government desires to trade on the International markets, but the ordinary family in the country can not. So, the government adopted the Gregorian calendar but the people only pay lip service to it. I live in Thailand and people here do not even use the 24 hour day divided into two halves. Their day has four sections of six hours each and the first part starts at 6AM, not midnight. Therefore, they have four 4 o’clocks a day, for example but no 7 o’clocks. They are also 543 years ahead of us, although this is more common, for instance in Muslim countries.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with researching Franklin planner pages. If you have an interest in calendars, organizers or promotional calendars, please go over to our website now at Promotional Desk Calendars

History of the Religious use of Mushrooms

 

Since at least 5,000 B.C., people have used “spiritual mushrooms” in their religious rituals. The San Peoples of Tassili in southeast Algeria left behind cave paintings illustrating dancing, masked medicine men with mushrooms in their hands. It’s believed the mushrooms were of the consciousness-altering variety.

The area of Tassili is today an arid and desolate mountainous region of the Sahara desert but in the day of the cave painters, it had a habitable savannah-like climate with cattle, crocodiles and other large animals. Cultural ties of the San Peoples are evidenced across the Sahara region from Chad to Egypt, and perhaps in extension all the way to Greece.

Jumping forward 3,400 years in time to Greece, 1,600 B.C., we find the Eleusinian Mysteries. Continuous for an astounding two millennia, the Eleusinian Mystery initiation was the most important spiritual ceremony of ancient Europe. Scholars believe the Mysteries involved use of consciousness-altering mushrooms. With well-known participants like Plato and Aristotle, its influence on western civilization cannot be denied.

Later Vikings are known to have consumed limited amounts of the today much feared poisonous species Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria). Ironically, they appear to have used it to overcome fear through religious rituals in which they danced and ate mushrooms before fearlessly going into battle.

It may not have been an admirable type of spirituality practiced by this warrior culture but it was none-the-less part of their religious practices whatever we may think of them. Siberian shamans are also said to have used Fly agaric in their spiritual practices to help them talk to their gods.

Fly agaric is even put forth as the source of “soma,” a juice described in ancient Vedic texts as bestowing divine qualities on the consumer, including immortality. Convincing arguments linking Fly agaric to Soma are presented by R. Gordon Wasser in his book Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality. His theory, although not proven, hasnt been disproven either.

(Please note: Fly agaric is poisonous. It can also be easily confused with other more deadly species. Consumption is strongly discouraged.)

On the other side of the ocean from Europe, the Mixtec culture likewise employed mind-altering mushrooms in their spiritual ceremonies, as recorded in the Mixtec Codex (13th-15th century). Their Gods were frequently engraved with mushrooms in hand.

Although Mixtecs themselves told white anthropologists they used spiritual mushrooms in their religious rituals, western scientists still doubted them in characteristic condescending manner.

William Safford, an American botanist, believed the supposed mushrooms were actually nothing but peyote buttons. Other western scholars, meanwhile, insisted that the “spiritual mushrooms” of the Mixtec people really were mind-altering mushrooms.

This debate carried on until amateur anthropologist Robert Weitlaner was invited to observe a Mixtec religious ceremony in the early 1930’s and witnessed the use of mushrooms firsthand.

Then in 1953, mycologist R. Gordon Wasson and his wife Valentina Povlovna as the first westerners became honored participants in a mushroom ceremony – Velada – performed by shaman Don Aurelio. Wasson published his account of the Velada in Life Magazine, 1957. His article initiated the broader public awareness of spiritual mushrooms.

Out of 60 Psilocybe species, 25 are known to contain the mind-altering compounds psilocin (unstable) and psilocybin (stable). The two species Psilocybin caerulescens and Psilocybin mexicana are believed to be the ones used by the Mixtec. Although Psilocybin cubensis is now more common even in America, it is believed to have arrived with the Europeans.

Spiritual mushrooms have been illegal in most of the world since the 1970’s because of their potential misuse as recreational drugs. Only in The Netherlands were fresh Psilocybe allowed to be sold until less than a year ago.

But after a 17-year old French tourist killed herself by jumping off a bridge after consuming Psilocybe mushrooms, the Dutch parliament voted to ban all sale of so called “magic mushrooms.” The ban took effect on December 1, 2008. The use of consciousness-altering mushrooms in spiritual practices is now officially history.

Dr. Markho Rafael has worked with natural health products since 1996, today specializing in medicinal mushrooms. He does not support the use of consciousness-altering mushrooms. The article on this page is for entertainment only. Click reishi to visit site for more free mushroom articles, or reishi cordyceps for medicinal mushroom products. Note: Absolutely no magic mushroom products, please do not inquire.

categories: history,philosophy,psychology,self improvement,recreation,culture,society,sociology,humanities,herbal,herbs,biology,nature,self help