not bad. video about the rapper’s home town in Canada.


not bad. video about the rapper’s home town in Canada.


love this.

Supporting a partner seems to be the right thing to do, especially when things become rocky.
However, a new study finds that too much support — or the wrong kind of support — may actually do more harm than good.
Couples having problems are often advised to be more supportive of each other, but a series of University of Iowa studies shows that unqualified support may actually do more harm than good.
In recent studies of heterosexual couples in their first few years of marriage, researchers learned that too much support is harder on a marriage than not enough.
When it comes to marital satisfaction, both partners are happier if husbands receive the right type of support, and if wives ask for support when they need it.
The findings illustrate the need for couples to understand the various ways they can be supportive, and the importance of communicating what they need and when, said Erika Lawrence, associate professor of psychology in the UI College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
“The idea that simply being more supportive is better for your marriage is a myth,” Lawrence said.
“Often husbands and wives think, ‘If my partner really knows me and loves me, he or she will know I’m upset and will know how to help me.’ However, that’s not the best way to approach your marriage.
“Your partner shouldn’t have to be a mind reader. Couples will be happier if they learn how to say, ‘This is how I’m feeling, and this is how you can help me.’”
Too much of a good thing
In one study, Lawrence and colleagues discovered that receiving more support than desired is a greater risk factor for marital decline than not being there for a spouse.
“If you don’t get enough support, you can make up for that with family and friends — especially women, who tend to have multiple sources of support,” she said. “When you receive too much support, there’s no way to adjust for that.”
The study involved 103 husbands and wives who completed surveys five times over their first five years of marriage. The questionnaires looked at how support was provided and measured marital satisfaction.
Four kinds of support were identified in the study: physical comfort and emotional support (listening and empathizing, taking your spouse’s hand, giving your spouse a hug), esteem support (expressing confidence in your partner, providing encouragement), informational support (giving advice, gathering information), and tangible support (taking on responsibilities so your spouse can deal with a problem, helping to brainstorm solutions to a problem).
Results showed that too much informational support — usually in the form of unwanted advice-giving — is the most detrimental. In contrast, you can never go wrong providing esteem support, assuming it’s genuine.
Too little support was more common than too much. Receiving less support than desired was a complaint of about two-thirds of men and at least 80 percent of women. Only about one-third of men and women reported receiving more support than they wanted.
The paper, published in the Journal of Family Psychology, was co-authored by Rebecca L. Brock, a UI graduate student in psychology.
Support isn’t one-size-fits-all
A related study showed that for men, it’s important that their wives provide the right kind of support, offering emotional, informational, tangible or esteem support as needed. For wives, it’s more important that their husbands try to be supportive — even if what they do doesn’t quite hit the mark.
“Both parties are more satisfied if the husband gets the right kind of support, and if the wife feels like she’s supported,” Lawrence said. “Husbands shouldn’t throw their hands up if they’re not sure what to do. They need to stay in there and keep trying, because we found that women appreciate the effort.”
Lawrence said dialog is key. If you need support, request it; if you’re providing support, ask how you can help — don’t assume you know what to do. Afterward, talk about what worked and what didn’t, and adjust accordingly.
“The assumption is that men just want to be left alone and women want to be held and listened to,” Lawrence said. “In reality, different men want different kinds of support, and different women want different kinds of support.”
For this study, 275 newlyweds completed questionnaires about marital satisfaction, the type of support they received, and whether it was sufficient. Twice during the study, 235 couples visited the lab to discuss how they would approach a goal such as stress management, a career change, improving family relationships or being more assertive. Researchers shot video of the 10-minute conversations and observed how couples asked for, provided and accepted support.
The paper was published in the journal Personal Relationships.
Clever tea packaging and creative tea bag designs from all over the world.
Cigarette Tea Bags
Cigarettea are creative tea bags that look just like real cigarettes. [link]
Ineeka Tea Bags
Cool tea bags that have paper arms on the sides that fold out in order to make them into a single-use filter. [link]
tPod Tea Bags
Small paper boats attached to tea bags by Elisabeth Soós. [link]
Tea Forté
Tall polyhedral infuser tea packs by Peter Hewitt, each with a disarmingly natural-looking leaf/sprout tag. [link]
Tea Stick
Cool tea bags designed for people who do not make their tea in a kitchen: gardeners, builders and campers. [link]
T Bag
Example of literal design applied to a tea bag by Felix Reinki. [link]
Tea To Go Sticks
Tea bags are attached inside of the tea stick so there is no need to use the spoon for stirring. [link]
Maum Tea Bags
Cool tea bag designs look like people with different personalities. [link]
Tea Stick Stirrer
Designed by Lee Yun Qin, tea sticks can also act as a stirrer, allowing the user to enjoy the tea through stirring it easily. [link]
Lighting Tea Bag
Cool lighting concept by Wonsik Chae imitates the form of a tea bag. [link]
Hanger Tea
Creative tea bags by Soon Mo Kang are shaped like T-shirts with a hanger that hangs on the tea cup. [link]
Herbal Tea Bags
Clever tea bags designed to associate tea with a healthy lifestyle. [link]
Origami Tea Bags
Creative tea bags designed by Natalia Ponomareva from Russia. [link]
This is a little delayed, as the Vikings lost this past weekend. Inevitably, my facebook news feed was littered with people celebrating the demise of Brett Favre and mocking his ambivalence to return to football next year.
Yes, he has changed his mind numerous times and cannot seem to put down that football.
Where is the problem?
That cup of coffee you’re drinking, can you put it down? Can you resist digging into that donut box at your next meeting? Can you forgo the drinking for the weekend? Stop eating fast food? Impossible? Why? Because you love it? How about quit your job? Can you do that for me? Have you ever thought about quitting your job, but then decided against it?
Brett Favre has been playing football since he could say “football” and we’re judging and mocking him for having some hesitancy of giving that up? Has Brett Favre been a bad role model? I don’t like the Vikings, I never liked the Packers. But, we all need to leave Brett Favre alone. It made me cringe that our society makes news out of this. We can’t even turn off our fucking TV’s but we’re asking him to quit football. Ridiculous.
At least he doesn’t sound like an idiot.