Monday, March 18, 2013

Womanizers

Written By: Christian Lawrence, 03/18/2013
Question being presented: How people can't change? The reason some boys/girls become cheaters or liars. What in their past made them that way? And how one little instance can make them relapse into their cheating ways?

Can people change? Can you turn a bad person into a good person, or can you transform a good person into a bad person? What shapes the characteristics that underlies the issue for these transformations? Many people have heard of the Nature vs. Nurture argument. Nature, being that individual's personalities are shaped by external factors. These can be friends, where you live, what school you went to, and anything that can be changed at their disposal. Nurture, on the other hand, is the opposite. With nurture, it is more of one's culture and upbringing. Maybe someone grew up in a good or bad environment where they were adapted to abide by that of which was accepted in the household.


In regards of how someone changes? What makes someone vulnerable to not wanting to change? In simple terms, it's a defense mechanism that we have as humans. It we get shot, we will naturally be weary of guns. If we get bit by a dog, we won't want to be around dogs for a period of time. Our brains remember more than we think. That may sound odd, but it's true. When we go through bad experiences, and eventually heal, our minds attain every detail and turns it into a defense. In the case of love, relationships, or just plain lust, the relationship is just the same. A really bad heartbreak can turn someone very deceptive. While someone may appear to be nice and gentle on the outside, deep down they are subconsciously dwelling of it. The opposite is true as well. Someone that may appear to be hard, tough, and not easy to get along with, actually can be perfectly at ease on the inside. They never went through a bad heartbreak, thus, many people find "hard" people attractive because of their fierce independence. Even after knowing someone for years, it's nearly impossible to fully figure someone out. Emotions are forever changing within us. One day we feel a certain way, then may feel the opposite the next.



But what happens when someone can be changed? It's tricky. The main evidence that may seem very likely is the trigger mechanism. What happens when you quit smoking for a month, and smoke one with a friend one day? More than likely, you will pick back up the bad habit. The same thing is true with people. From a permanent perspective, no one can really be changed. While it may work for a month, year, 2 years, 10 years, you never know when something will mentally be triggered to cause that emotional relapse. We have all been told the "once a cheater, always a cheater" saying. Some people will argue the statement by saying that everyone is different. But while there may be a few people out there than can ultimately change their ways, on a macro level, it's not possible. In the mindset of a cheater, once you get away with it, you learn to sharpen your expertise. Eventually, someone can become such an exceptional cheater, that you may never know the truth from a relationship.

You really can't trust anyone. You should never put all your trust into someone, either. Trust has to be earned If you need help with this, use a credit rating system. Would you lend a $4,000 loan to someone with a 500 credit score, or one with an 800 score? 800 right? We need to learn how to look at someone's past, in an educated way, without being biased, and make a generalization about what we expect to get out it. High risk? Low risk? What will be our return on our investment with that person?



It's worth pondering...

Emotional Intervention on Sex



Emotional Intervention on Sex  
Written By: Christian Lawrence, 03/18/2013
It is candidly the best experience two people that are emotionally attached can undergo. What genuinely interests me, though, is the study of before and after that first, second, and third sexual experience. Will things, emotionally or mentally ever be the same as it was before? Scientific studies have been produced to show that when people reach an orgasm with their partner for the first time, the chemical, oxytocin, is released all over. This chemical is the main ingredient found in many anti-depressants. My argument is that if people just quit having sex, can things ever be the same between them? Imagine being sexually active with just one person for a year. Now consider the alternative of taking an anti-depressant for a year. If the first person quit having sex with their partner, and the other person quit taking the happy pill, what would happen? I've seen many cases where people get overly angry and irritated when they are turned down from sex after previously being sexual with them. Who is to blame for the all the break ups, arguments, and harassment following sexual abuse? Is it the girl for no longer wanting to have sex? Is it the chemical imbalance and lack of oxytocin in the brain from the guy? Or is either males or females to blame? It can be argued that sex does indeed change people's emotion over someone they are interested in. That's not to say this is the excuse for sexual abuse, but it can definitely be broken down into many parts that can be looked at in more detail.