Tuesday, 28 February 2012

7 surprises about dating after 50



Surprise #2: You see old friends in new ways
Sarah and Matthew grew up three blocks from each other in a suburb of Atlanta. They were buddies in high school, but then went their separate ways. Sarah moved to New York and launched a career as a news producer; Matthew went to law school. He married, she didn’t, and over the years, they stayed friendly. When they were in their early 50s, his marriage ended. The next time Sarah and Matthew got together — just a casual dinner with an old friend — Cupid sat in. Suddenly they saw each other with new eyes. “I always thought he was a really nice guy, but at the dinner — wham!” Sarah says. Matthew felt it too. Within six months, they were living together. The moral of the story: Love can happen anywhere, anytime… and with anyone. And the longer you’re on this earth, the bigger the pool of friends and acquaintances who may suddenly catch your fancy. 

Surprise #3: Sparks may fly with someone you already dated
Judy, an accountant in Des Moines, IA, never married; she never even lived with a guy. She adopted a baby girl from China when she was in her 40s. It was only after becoming a mother that she got the urge to merge. “I adored my daughter but I thought to myself, ‘There’s got to be more,’” she told me. So she started dating — and reconnected with someone she’d met years earlier on a rowing team. “When I met him the first time, I wasn’t thinking about a relationship,” she recalls. “Now, here he was again. I was in a different place. I was looking. We started training together, one thing led to another, and now we’re buying a house.” What Judy learned (and you can,too): don’t discount people you’ve already dated. Times change, tastes change, and a rematch could be in the stars. 

Surprise #4: You can feel puppy love all over again
Think way, way back to how you felt about your very first crush. Giddy? Crazy? Wonderful? The works? Now, get ready for major-league déjà vu. I saw this first-hand when my friends Carol and Joe met. Joe, a doctor in Portland, OR, widowed after a long, happy marriage, never imagined he’d fall in love again: “That part of my life was over, I told myself,” he says. But when he met Carol, he was a love-sick teenager. “She’s all I can think about,” he confessed. “Either I’m with her or she’s on my mind.” 

Surprise #5: We’re comfortable with our sexuality
Gail Sheehy, author of Sex and the Seasoned Woman, told a story on the Today show recently about speaking before a Richmond, VA women’s club — as she put it, a more conservative group you could not find. Sheehy was a little nervous about the subject of her talk — sex at midlife and beyond. How graphic could she be without offending anyone? But she soon learned that men and women this age are often beyond having sexual hangups and are living it up! 

Surprise #6: Nobody sweats the small stuff
“It doesn’t cost you anything to compromise, because your ego is much stronger than it was at 20,” says Brooks, a 58-year-old psychotherapist in Amarillo, TX. “At 20, every compromise felt like giving up a part of yourself. Now, you just let your date choose the restaurant. It’s no big deal. In a good relationship, there aren’t that many imbalances, and anyway, you’re old enough to say, well, gee, nothing is 100 percent.” 

Surprise #7: You don’t have to change each other
We all know the old saw: Marry him now, remodel him later. By midlife, we’ve smartened up. Caroline and Robert, who live in Chicago, married in their 50s. “Dating was a lot less arduous than when I was a kid,” Caroline says. “At 52, you’re a secure person, you’re not struggling with your own identity, there’s no fierce striving at your career. The person you choose — you know he’s not going to change. You’re more accepting.” Robert adds, “The biggest difference in marrying at midlife is having thought it out much better. I have no idea why I married my first wife, other than that she was beautiful.” With Caroline, he shares a passion for travel and books as well, which is a much better recipe for long-term compatibility. And their situation represents exactly the way more and more 50-somethings daters are finding happiness these days. 


Susan Crandell is the founding editor of More magazine and author of Thinking About Tomorrow: Reinventing Yourself at Midlife.


Satiereal and Saffron Safety Information


Saffron is a very safe spice. Annually, over 200 tons are produced worldwide, primarily in the Mediterannean region.  According European Food Science Agency experts, saffron is not a source of any safety concerns.  So the source of Safranal is well-tested and verified for human safety.  Moreover, an analysis of over 500 allergy studies against various spices found that saffron allergy is extremely rare.  In an evaluation of saffron stigma tablets, testing up to 400mg daily of an aqueous extract saffron crocus stigma over 7 days in healthy volunteers, no clinically significant changes occurred in blood or biological markers.  This result is confirmed by a current publication-pending 8-week human clinical study.

The levels of saffron constituents in Satiereal are safe for human consumption, and the Satiereal Formulation has been tested in the laboratory and in human studies to confirm its safety.   Results of a recent human clinical and laboratory safety study over 8 weeks of supplementation showed it to be well-tolerated with no safety concerns.   This study measured blood sugar and blood fat levels, markers of normal liver and kidney functions, as well as urine laboratory checks.  There were no significant differences between volunteers taking Satiereal and placebo.
Vital signs (blood pressure and heart rate) remained unchanged in both groups at the end of study as compared to baseline. Moreover, there were no changes in clinical biology parameters assessed at baseline and after the study.  Additionally, no significant adverse effect has been reported during the complementary clinical study that is currently in process.
While saffron is a very safe spice, and can easily be identified, sometimes the inexperienced mistake the autumn crocuses of the genus Colchicum for saffron crocuses.  The autumn crocus is extremely poisonous, so never try to prepare saffron from your garden crocuses!  Stick with saffron from culinary suppliers, and to obtain the weight loss benefits of saffron, choose Satiereal, which is standardized to the medicinally relevant  levelof safranal .

Moms Confess: I Regret My Baby's Name


By Charlotte Hilton Andersen, REDBOOK

The first time it happened, we giggled. But this weekend when yet another little girl tittered and asked my 8-year-old son Jonas if he was named after the Jonas Brothers, the only sound was my son's sigh. "Couldn't you have named me Bob?" For the record, we named our son after his dad and it also happens to be a Bible name-no boy bands were invoked in the birth of our baby. And while I still love his name, I can understand why he gets tired of the jokes. At this age the girls are mostly reverential but if Nick, Joe and That Other One I Can Never Remember stick around the scene, by high school my son might have a legitimate complaint.
It turns out we're not the only ones having second thoughts about a child's name. In a recent surveydone by Gurgle.com, 54 percent of British parents had some regrets about their chosen moniker. Wondering if the same held true for my American friends, I did a quick poll.
"Everyone called my daughter Montana ' Hannah Montana' for years. Thankfully it's wearing off now." - Camille
"I wish I had named my son Jack. Now he's decided he wants to go by Jackson (which is his name, but it was only a compromise with my Mister in the first place). I guess you have to let kids be who they are though, not who you think they ought to be." - Alice
"I tried to name my children ordinary, yet not common names. But my plan didn't really work, each of my children's names ended up being in the top 20 names for the year they were born. Sorry, Noah, Ethan, and Ava." - Melissa*
"My daughter's name is Tiffany, she was born a few years after the 80s mall pop star Tiffany was popular. She got the same question all the time and her friends even played "Tiffany" songs at her 21st birthday party. Yep, she hates me." - Melissa*
"I named my child Riley because I thought it was an old name and it was also the name of my great uncle. Afterwards I realized that everyone was using the name for both sexes and coming up with all of these odd spellings. I still love his name, but wish it weren't so popular." - Shannon
"It took forever to choose my firstborn's name but we finally settled on a name we loved. Then, the day she was born and we were calling friends, a friend made us aware that her initials spelled 'A.S.S.'! I said tough, I like the names and whoever writes all 3 initials anyway! I love my little A.S.S.!" - Krista
"When Teal was younger, she always said that she couldn't wait until she was grown up to change her name. Now that she is grown up, she realizes that it is, in fact, the perfect name for an art student." - Melissa*
Do you have any regrets about your child's name? If you had it to do over would you choose a different one?
*I think it's particularly hilarious that three of the moms who answered my question are named Melissa. And yes, they're all different people!

Satiereal Saffron Extract: Miracle Appetite Suppressant?

By Sarah B. Weir, Yahoo! blogger | Healthy Living

What if there was a safe supplement that would banish hunger and boost metabolism? That's exactly what Dr. Oz touted in a recent episode of his show called Belly Blasting Supplements. America's favorite TV doctor says that Satiereal saffon extract, will "annihilate your urge to overeat."
Saffron is a culinary spice derived from the dried stigmas of crocuses. Each flower contains only three stigmas and they are usually harvested by hand. This makes saffron the most expensive spice in the world by weight. It has been cultivated for over three thousand years.
Satiereal saffron extract is believed to diminish "emotional eating." It may have the effect of increasing serotonin levels in the brain, which improves mood and makes people less likely to snack. Dr. Oz explains, "You crave carbohydrates…when you take carbohydrates and put them up in the mouth you are actually turning on chemicals in the brain... They turn on this pleasure sensation, this craving you have, and they give you the satisfaction from doing this and relief."
2010 study of 60 women did show that participants taking a Satiereal saffron supplement did lose more weight and experienced fewer cravings than others given a placebo. The dosage is 88-90 mg, twice a day, and the cost is about $30 per month. 

Monday, 27 February 2012

10 Best Movie Kisses

10 Best Movie Kisses

From Here To Eternity
Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr
Set against the backdrop of Hawaii in the days prior to Pearl Harbor, this multi-Oscar winning movie had an all star cast that included Cliff Robertson, Frank Sinatra, Donna Reed and Ernest Borgnine. But it's best remembered for the beach scene, when waves crash over a prone Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr as they engage is one of the most passionate and famous movie kisses of all time.