Tuesday, February 15, 2011

New ways to say "I love you"

If you're waiting for him to reveal His love, no need to check the mailbox, hoping it gets an envelope with your name written by hand. Better keep an eye on the phone and the computer: two out of three people prefer to say "I love you" with a text message, or even through Facebook messaging. He says a poll published in the Daily Express, which analyzed responses from 3,000 volunteers.

Only 9 percent of them (and almost all were more than fifty years) admitted to having already written a love letter. 24 out of 100 prefer to express their feelings with an e-mail, and 14 have made their declaration of love on the board of Facebook partners. Even the erotic has become computerized: 21 out of 100 respondents say they have done phone sex.

It seems that the horse has the same fate of love letters: only four percent of men said they would send flowers to his girlfriend on the job. And only twelve have booked her a surprise, a weekend out of town. But the relationship expert Jo Barnett warns: "Many people think they need to woo partners in the traditional way, and they want a more immediate.

They think they do not have enough time to focus on romance. But they underestimate the importance of courtship make some effort to demonstrate to partners that it is loved is a very important element in a relationship. "Among those who have decided to follow the advice, and take a pen and paper to write a letter 's love, on a fourth said, however, would not have written something original and that he consulted the Internet for inspiration.

The most popular phrases from the "scripts" sentimental? the first place, the sentence of Wuthering Heights (the Emily Bronte) with whom Catherine says her love for Heathcliff: "Whatever our souls are made, mine and hers are the same thing." Second, that of Alan Alexander Milne: "If you live a hundred years, I want to live a hundred years minus one day, not ever having to be without you.

"In third place, the words of William Shakespeare, from Romeo and Juliet:" Oh, but as the light breaks through that window up there? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun. "

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