T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1026.1 | | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Mon Jun 25 1990 15:08 | 20 |
| My estranged husband and I definitely fall into that catagory.
He was in a wheelchair when we met, and, for some reason, most people
don't think people who are physically challenged have any sort of
love life, so when we kissed in public there were always stares.
There were stares when I sat on his lap, or when we carried on a
conversation when no one else could understand what he said, and
I could. At first I felt a bit defensive, but after while, we both
found it rather amusing and would boldly stare back or do something
a bit outrageous to embarass the other parties.
People are people and naturally curious. If they should act shocked
because a couple is different, it may be because they are wondering
if they are lacking somewhere to *not* have that type of person
with them, or even trying to determine the attraction factors.
Learn to either ignore it, laugh at it or both. After awhile it's easy
to shrug off such behavior.
Barb
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1026.2 | Strike a pose?????? | AYOV16::GMCPHEATOR | | Mon Jun 25 1990 21:28 | 6 |
|
It doesn't matter what shape or size you are .......
The only thing you need is love and a little bit of understanding!!
Gordon.
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1026.3 | | DUGGAN::RON | | Mon Jun 25 1990 23:13 | 15 |
|
One of the first things they teach you in Psychology 101, is that
people are attracted to attractive people, but stick with similar
people.
For that reason, it strikes us as strange to see couples where the
two people are very dissimilar. We may be at a loss as to exactly
**why** we feel that way, yet we do.
While it is very possible for dissimilar couples to fall in love,
have a relationship and maybe get married, they do have this one
little strike against them.
-- Ron
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1026.4 | No pictures please, for this odd couple | AISG::CONNOR | | Tue Jun 26 1990 12:41 | 6 |
| re:.2
That is what we all say, or like to believe. But when it comes right
down to it....Does it really matter to YOU?
C.
|
1026.5 | | ARRODS::CARTER | Pyurdedbrilyant! | Tue Jun 26 1990 12:48 | 27 |
| It matters to me...
I used to pretend it didn't but it did...
I'm 5'9:" and my ex was about 1" shorter than me, but what with heels and the
fact that mens legs are shorter and bodies longer it just felt (and looked?)
wrong.
Him being smaller, and slimmer than me made me feel like some kind of giantess..
especially as I had the "stronger" personality...
Since splitting up with him I had gone out with men over 6' and what a
difference... I feel so much more feminine...
I was dancing with someone about the same height as me at a disco last week
and was acutely aware of it...
Guess it cuts my options down looking for men over 5'10" but you can't help the
way you feel...
Guess I'm just not as confident to carry it off as Christie Brinkley!
Xtine
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1026.6 | Stop Press !!!!!!!!!! | AYOV11::GMCPHEATOR | | Tue Jun 26 1990 16:00 | 8 |
|
re .4
I'm sure it must matter to a certain degree ....but when it comes right
down to it ....it depends how much love you have in your heart!!!
Gordon.
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1026.7 | Here's my 2 cents! | NATASH::ANDERSON | | Tue Jun 26 1990 18:05 | 14 |
| I have met some people that to the 'eye' are very attractive. Then
they open their mouth and NOTHING comes out...or they are rude,
arrogant and egotistical. They quickly become ugly in my eyes.
On the other hand, I have met some people who are not - by society's
standard's physically attractive. But they are warm, loving, giving
and sensitive and are truly beautiful.
Personally I try to take the time to find beauty within.
Just my .02 cents.
Marilyn
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1026.8 | all good and well... but in reality... | ARRODS::CARTER | Pyurdedbrilyant! | Wed Jun 27 1990 09:50 | 22 |
| I think that everyone would like to beleive that they would look beyond
the outside shell... but in reality we are all subconciously affected
by opions on things such as height, weight, colour...
There have been psychological experiments to prove how quickly opinions
and predjudices can affect a persons view of another...
Over time, you can get to know the real person, but in my experience
that only happens when something else is there to keep you "together"
over the initail period.
eg. If you work with someone, or are in a club with someone then you
get time to get past the exterior shell, but if you meet someone for
the first time in a one-off situation (ie pub or party or something)
then unless they meet your sub-concious criteria you probably wouldn't
get past that first encounter, and being a sub-concious thing you are
probably not even aware that anything has (or in this case hasn't)
happened.
Xtine
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1026.9 | | NATASH::ANDERSON | | Wed Jun 27 1990 16:13 | 16 |
| RE: 8
I guess I interpreted the basenote to say that some COUPLES appear to
be mismatched - not that people, in general, are affected by the
curse/blessing of a 'pretty face'. :-)
That paragraph doesn't make a bit of sense...I know what I want to say
but it isn't coming out right.
I agree that we all have subconcious/subliminal feelings that attract
us to other people...however my response was with regards to chosing a
mate (for life). I would hope that I would take the time to get past
the outer attractiveness and eventually find their beauty within.
Marilyn
|
1026.10 | | HUGS::KRISTY | Rock-n-roll Woobie | Wed Jun 27 1990 23:11 | 15 |
| .8: Hate to disagree with you, Xtine, but ALL people aren't as you
say.
Neither my husband (of almost 8 years) nor I took off for the high
hills when we met face-to-face for the first time and neither of us fit
each other's subconscious criterion. I had always like the semi-tall
(5'10"-6'2"), dark, and clean-shaven type of guy... my husband is 5'7
1/2", blonde, blue-eyed and sports a rather nice beard and mustache.
While my husband says I fit his subconscious criterion with the
exception that I was (and still am) overweight), he could have blown me
off, and vice-versa, at our first meeting.
Perhaps Daryl and I are the exception, but I have a little more faith
in the human race to believe that there are more than two people on
this planet who view other people the way we do.
|
1026.11 | Who cares? | FSHQA2::LSIGEL | My dog ate my briefcase | Thu Jul 05 1990 09:20 | 5 |
| I am 5'2" and my husband is 6'4"...... yes we get an occasional
stare....but I say...who cares what others think? ;-) ;-).
Lynne
|
1026.12 | I truly believe... | AKOV13::LAVALLEY | | Thu Jul 05 1990 17:26 | 34 |
| I believe there is somebody for everybody.
I once new a very odd older couple. She was a very big woman, with a
masculine physique, a lot of facial hair, would have to shave daily,
balding severly and would wear the most outrageous wigs and hats, God
love her, and to top if off, when she opened her mouth, she spoke with
the most femine gentle voice I've ever heard.
He was a rather large man, carried his weight right around his
mid-section and had very skinny legs to hold him up. He smoked a pipe
all the time and would cough terribly.
How they found each other, we never knew, but my family took them in as
friends because they were always left to sit alone at church, or left
behind all the time. They latched onto us like leeches, and even though
at times they were suffocating, we could never turn our backs on them.
We included them in the family activities..... then, one awful day, we
got news second hand that this couple died one evening driving home in
their station wagon.... he was driving, somehow, they hit a tree and
both were killed instantly...
It was the saddest day of our lives. Mostly because we had heard the
news weeks after the funeral.... they had no family, no friends but us,
and we weren't even there to pay our last respects... They lived a
very lonely life, and died a very lonely death. So sad...
But, the comfort came from knowing that as odd as they were, as terribly
as they were treated by other people, they loved each other deeply, and
thank God he took them together, because they never would have survived
one without the other....
SO, I truly believe, that there is somebody for everybody.
Judy
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