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Showing posts from June, 2019

LAST SUPPER WITH EDDYFLAMES

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Not again. I promise not again No more care, No more concerns No more affections No more, It hurts, but it has to be, Guess it’s for the best, The magic, exist no more, The flare, burns no more, No matter how hard we try, We keep failing. Searching for memories, While it fades as dust. Tried holding our trust, But it melts like ice in water. I look deep in your eyes, I see our future shredding, Like a puzzle pieces that can’t be fixed. It hurts cause the next time we see, It would all be gone, Like a ship stock on sand, Unable to sail and definitely no tail to tell. #PurpleButterfly                         Imasuen Edward A. also known as EddyFlames with the signature - #PurpleButterfly is a banker whose passion for writing started at a very young age. He writes directly from his heart and He hopes to mak...

FACTS WITH PENDUSKY

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      I.         The first to apologize is always the bravest. The first to forgive is the strongest. The first to forget is the happiest.      II.         Music is just as addictive as cocaine.     III.         You're not afraid to fall in love, you're just afraid of falling for the wrong person.    IV.         5-10% of Internet users are actually unable to control how much time they spend online because of psychological addiction.     V.         People are not mirrors. They see you completely differently than the way you see yourself.    VI.         You can "rewire" your brain to be happy by simply recalling 3 things you're grateful for every day for 21 days.  ...

How To Rock “All Black Everything”

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Stand out in this all-black outfit Written by Kiran Goraya Want to know how to kick an all-black outfit up a notch? Throw in a blazer with leather sleeves. Here’s a look that can that can easily translate from day to night – as long as you don’t mind turning a few heads in that “business casual” in that office of yours. Kiran Goraya SOURCE: THE GENTLEMANUAL

Progesterone and bisexuality: Is there a link?

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Adapted Media Release Giving progesterone to prevent miscarriage could influence baby's sexual orientation in later life. Bisexuality is quite common among men and women whose mothers received additional doses of the sex hormone progesterone while pregnant. This is one of the findings of a study led by June Reinisch, Director Emerita of The Kinsey Institute in the US, published in Springer's journal Archives of Sexual Behavior. The study tracked the sexual development of 34 Danes whose mothers were treated with the hormone to prevent miscarriage. According to the research team, progesterone appears to be an underappreciated factor influencing the normal development of variations in human sexuality and psychosexuality. The findings warrant further investigation given that little is known about the effects on offspring of natural variations in levels of maternal progesterone and that progesterone is widely used to treat pregnancy complications. Men and women all...