Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 11:32 PM
And send me a message also hehe

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 11:11 PM
You can love someone and cheat but you cannot be inlove with someone and cheat. Yes they are to diffrent things loving and being in love are not the same.

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 11:06 PM
In this services aim to help you meet someone. ... More than half of young adults (18-24 years old) see dating sites and apps as platforms for casual hookups. Older adults are more likely to see them as a means to helping them develop short and long-term relationships. In fact, people who meet their partners online are not more likely to break up — they don't have more transitory relationships. ... What's more, many people who meet in the online sites that cater to hookups end up in long-term relationships. This environment, mind you, is just like the one we see in the offline world.

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 10:57 PM
why people single?
- Clearly, some people are single because they choose to be. They are simply not interested in being in a serious relationship at this time in their life. ... They may have just gotten out of a meaningful relationship or have dated relentlessly and just haven't found someone with whom they're truly compatible. Single people have the opportunity to focus on their own happiness without balancing that of a partner's. Being happy in your own right, without a relationship, is so important, Rives said. ... "There are happy people who are partnered and there are unhappy people who are partnered," Rives said. "Same with single people.

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 10:28 PM
Everybody loves music and most people feel very strong emotions towards it—especially when it comes to the music that they love (or hate) most.

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 10:25 PM
Domestic violence remains a relatively new field of study among social scientists but it is already a popular research paper subject within college and university students. Only within the past 4 decades have scholars recognized domestic violence as a social problem. Initially, domestic violence research focused on child abuse. Thereafter, researchers focused on wife abuse and used this concept interchangeably with domestic violence. Within the past 20 years, researchers have acknowledged that other forms of violent relationships exist, including dating violence, battered males, and gay domestic violence. Moreover, academicians have recognized a subcategory within the field of criminal justice: victimology (the scientific study of victims). Throughout the United States, colleges and universities have been creating victimology courses, and even more specifically, family violence and interpersonal violence courses.

The media have informed us that domestic violence is so commonplace that the public has unfortunately grown accustomed to reading and hearing about husbands killing their wives, mothers killing their children, or parents neglecting their children. While it is understood that these offenses take place, the explanations as to what factors contributed to them remain unclear. In order to prevent future violence, it is imperative to understand its roots. There is no one causal explanation for domestic violence; however, there are numerous factors which may help explain these unjustified acts of violence. Highly publicized cases such as the O.J. Simpson and Scott Peterson trials have shown the world that alleged murderers may not resemble the deranged sociopath depicted in horror films. Rather, they can be handsome, charming, and well-liked by society. In addition, court-centered programming on television continuously publicizes cases of violence within the home informing the public that we are potentially at risk by our caregivers and other loved ones. There is the case of the au pair Elizabeth Woodward convicted of shaking and killing Matthew Eappen, the child entrusted to her care. Some of the most highly publicized cases have also focused on mothers who kill. America was stunned as it heard the cases of Susan Smith and Andrea Yates. Both women were convicted of brutally killing their own children. Many asked how loving mothers could turn into cold-blooded killers.

Samantha Kyeongki's photo
Tue 06/30/20 10:04 PM
To me, home means not one, but many things. Most importantly, I believe that home means a secure, cheerful place where you are respected and loved. ... Home means an enjoyable, happy place where you can live, laugh and learn. It's somewhere where you are loved, respected, and cared for.