5 Signs You’re Dating The Wrong Woman


Signs you are dating the wrong woman will help you find the right partner you truly deserve. To know the signs you are dating the wrong woman can help you get out of a bad relationship. Below are the signs Please share After Reading.

1. She Flirts With Any Man she knows.

Flirting in a relationship we all know is another away of cheating and some way it makes your other feels jealous, bad and pissed off. So If this woman you’re claiming to date flirts with other guys, put an end to that relationship Now.

2. Always Jealous.

Being jealous isn’t a bad thing but If your woman turns away her face when you talk to other women, sometimes isn’t a good thing, she should learn to trust you cause doubts and too much jealousy in a relationship is so dangerous.

3. She wants to dominate you.

Being Controlled can Be the toughest thing, giving limits on what to do and not to do can piss you off, so IF your woman wants to command you on things you may love or like then its a sign your dating the wrong woman, partners should come to an equal agreement not one controlling the other.

4. She isn’t Not interested in your family.

Some women will give excuses just to exclude herself from knowing your family, If your woman doesn’t show any interest in knowing your family members, consider it as one of the signs you are dating the wrong woman, a good woman will love to know you and your family.


5. She Is Selfish.

Selfish women can be so dangerous, this is one of the signs that your dating the wrong woman, being selfish to your man and other things is a total turn off to your man. You consider his feelings not just yourself.

Today I close the door to my past,


Today I close the door to my past, open the door to my future, take a deep breath and step through to a new life.

Do not let your past rob your future. Each new day is a chance to make a new beginning. Count your blessings, live with gratitude and love with all your heart!

Sometimes its just best to accept what's done is done, let it go and move on, tomorrow is a new day what you thought was the end might just be your new beginning.

It is an art to be where you are, and see happiness in life's ever changing landscape. Today look with new eyes, and treasure all you can.

Laughter is The Best Medicine


Many years ago, Norman Cousins was diagnosed as “terminally ill”. He was given six months to live. His chance for recovery was 1 in 500.

He could see the worry, depression and anger in his life contributed to, and perhaps helped cause, his disease. He wondered, “If illness can be caused by negativity, can wellness be created by positivity?”


He decided to make an experiment of himself. Laughter was one of the most positive activities he knew. He rented all the funny movies he could find – Keaton, Chaplin, Fields, the Marx Brothers. (This was before VCRs, so he had to rent the actual films.) He read funny stories. He asked his friends to call him whenever they said, heard or did something funny.

His pain was so great he could not sleep. Laughing for 10 solid minutes, he found, relieved the pain for several hours so he could sleep.

He fully recovered from his illness and lived another 20 happy, healthy and productive years. (His journey is detailed in his book, Anatomy of an Illness.) He credits visualization, the love of his family and friends, and laughter for his recovery.

Some people think laughter is a waste of time. It is a luxury, they say, a frivolity, something to indulge in only every so often.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Laughter is essential to our equilibrium, to our well-being, to our aliveness. If we’re not well, laughter helps us get well; if we are well, laughter helps us stay that way.

Since Cousins’ ground-breaking subjective work, scientific studies have shown that laughter has a curative effect on the body, the mind and the emotions.

So, if you like laughter, consider it sound medical advice to indulge in it as often as you can. If you don’t like laughter, then take your medicine – laugh anyway.

Use whatever makes you laugh –movies, sitcoms, Monty Python, records, books, New Yorker cartoons, jokes, friends.

Give yourself permission to laugh – long and loud and out loud – whenever anything strikes you as funny. The people around you may think you’re strange, but sooner or later they’ll join in even if they don’t know what you’re laughing about.

Some diseases may be contagious, but none is as contagious as the cure. . . laughter.