Cracking The Love Code

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Eps 1: Cracking The Love Code

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Janet O'Neal-"The Love Coach"--has helped thousands of peopl Learn how to crack the love code and enjoy an honest, open, and fulfilling relationship with the right partner.
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Eugene Daniels

Eugene Daniels

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Whether you want to walk down the aisle or just stroll along a moonlit beach, everyone will benefit from a realistic dating approach that consists of face-to-face advice and eye-opening information. Janet O'Neal, Love Coach, cracks the Love Code and gives practical advice for creating a mutually satisfying and committed relationship. She has helped thousands of people to find this special person, and she shares her personal experiences in helping them find him.
The way to get there can be as simple as finding a piece of code, or as complex and complex as a deep understanding of your character. Learn more about her character, how she takes responsibility and makes sense of her challenging characters, and how important love is.
Each story brings you closer to the decisions you make and how those decisions affect others in the world around you, as well as your own life.
At the end of the book you are left with seven words - code words that help make your life great so that children and adults can shape the life you want to live. Cracking the code for an epic life is great reading - loud, and now I invite you to read code 7 to your children and take up its challenge.
I received a copy of Code 7 and was asked to write a review, and I am happy to share it with all of you.
Janet O'Neal, Love Coach, cracks the Love Code and gives practical advice for creating a mutually satisfying and committed relationship. She has helped thousands of people find that special person, and her realistic dating approach, consisting of direct advice and eye-opening information, will benefit everyone, whether you want to walk down the aisle or just walk along a moonlit beach.
Having sex with an unresponsive partner is like dancing alone, it's just not very satisfying and it makes the man stupid. He wants an active partner who enjoys sex with him and lets him know that he is giving him pleasure. Getting there can be as easy as a quick kiss, a kiss on the lips or even a hug, but it's about the right balance.
If you are a woman, you probably understand this distinction very well and think of the man who lets you know that he wants what you want. And he expects you to have sex with him because he knows you expect sex from him. The bottom line is you destroy through sex if you are not really willing to have the opportunity to build a wonderful relationship, and cheat your partner with a truly remarkable sexual partner. If a man feels unwanted and desired, he will not stick around, and if the woman never initiates sex, it is just as likely to result in him not feeling needed, desired or desired.
If you find it difficult to feel attracted to someone at first on a physical level, rein in your hormones and ask yourself where you stand on the other two levels of attraction. Men hate having sex with women who don't behave as if they enjoy having it with a man. The days when you were expected not to have sex, when Queen Victoria advised her daughter to just sit back and think of England, are long gone.
What we always try to tell our children is that you can be attracted to a lot of people in a very superficial way. So experiment with relationships, get to know the dance and make no mistake. You're more likely to be caught up in what a guy should look like and what the girl should "look like" than in what she should "supposedly" look like.
Over the years, films and novels have told us the story of two virtual strangers who fall in love in bed together, have perfect sex, fall in love and live happily ever after in a moment when they have "perfect sex" and fall in love and live "happily ever after." Sex can be the glue that keeps a relationship alive, but if the timing isn't right, then sex is the death of a good relationship. What you really need to do is listen to the good things: when you feel good, when dancing with someone is easy for you, when you feel safe and when you can be vulnerable at the moment and the person cares about your vulnerability.
There are red flags that shoot you in the head that the person has a crucial mistake and that having sex with that person would be a terrible mistake. In Sex in America, "writes Laumann (U of Chicago), the most common and satisfying sex we have is associated with the report, not sex itself.
It turns out that chemistry is the elusive trait that separates romantic from platonic relationships. You can love more than one person, but attachment tends to be hierarchical, and when you are vulnerable, you are always with the other person, so you can feel their emotions without offering solutions.