Marriage Revolution, by More Magazine


MORE MAGAZINE is the leading voice of today’s sophisticated, affluent and accomplished woman, who is enjoying the richest years of her life, sharing news and advice on beauty, fashion, health, career, travel, money and relationships from her distinct perspective.

I had the pleasure of interviewing Beth Thompson, the Beauty Editor at MORE MAGAZINE at a Fabulous, Fit & Fantastic media event with E Women. Beth really got me interested in what is happening with the magazine and what amazing stories you can find in both fashion and in love. This particular story deffinitely had to be shared… I love it!!

Anthropologist Helen Fisher knows a thing or two about relationships. Her expertise in the field has led to numerous books on the biology of love and sex. Helen E. Fisher, PhD biological anthropologist, is a Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Rutgers University. She is also the Chief Scientific Advisor for chemistry.com. Here, Dr. Fisher explains the science behind May-December romances and why they’re here to stay. By Helen Fisher, PhD, as told to Daniela Jelaska

The human brain was built to reproduce. Our minds are naturally inclined to believe an older man, younger woman pairing is the best reproductive match. (She’s got the fresh young eggs and he has the money to support them.) But in today’s world there are many cultural aspects that override that biological need. We want fewer children (they’re expensive) and we’re maturing a great deal later because of education. A high divorce rate means relationships have a lot of turnover, and a man in his 30s may very well already have a child. This gives him the option to seek a woman solely for companionship, rather than a mother for his child. From a Darwinian perspective, this older woman cannot reproduce. So when we see that young man, who’s in the height of his reproductive years, with a woman who is a reproductive dead end we can’t help but think, what’s the point?

Well, the point is love. And romantic love is not an emotion. As I said in during my 2006 TEDTalk seminar, I had always thought it was a series of emotions, from very high to very low. But through the years I’ve found that love comes from the motor of the mind, the wanting part of the mind, the craving part of the mind. It’s the part of the mind that reaches for that piece of chocolate, that wants to win that promotion at work. It’s a drive.

The most important relationship right now in America is the relationship with your significant other. Not with your kin, your community or even your parents. Modern relationships are changing in ways that give both sexes more freedom. But it wasn’t always this way.

For almost 10,000 years we lived in an agrarian society. In these hunting and gathering societies women worked— they picked fruits and vegetables that contributed to 60-70% of the evening meal. The double income family was the rule. When societies moved onto the farm, women lost power and their jobs were reduced to having children and working around the home. The Industrial Revolution opened the door for women to move off the farm and into factories. Their roles were expanding and with that they began marrying later, having fewer children and divorcing more regularly— all because they could economically afford it. The need to seek a reproductive partner was lifted—giving both men and women a larger range of partners to choose from. Women no longer had to marry up and men no longer needed a childbearing vessel.

I’ve always admired the men who date older, interesting women in lieu of arm candy. Women become more fascinating with age— they know more people, they’ve been more places and they’ve read more books. To call them cougars, a word that carries such a predatory connotation, would be inaccurate. The younger man is just as eager to find the older women as the older woman is to find the younger man. A recent study showed that 69% of men have dated an older woman, with 27% of those relationships having an age gap of 10-20 years.

When you think about it, so much of our body is built to display our age, particularly on the head. A man or woman who exercises a lot won’t have much physical change– but their hair color and skin are just a few signals of age, and of course those signals mean a woman is not longer of reproductive age. It’s interesting that the brain circuitry for romantic love is so powerful it can overlook this ancient biological strategy.

This is only the beginning of a huge global trend. It’s been called the marriage revolution—and this older woman-younger man pairing is part of that revolution. We’ll continue to see more of it around the world.

Luv Wendy
“Bella”

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Step out…

Sometimes, you have to step outside of the person you’ve been

and remember the person you were meant to be.

The person you want to be.

The person you are.”

~ H.G. Wells
By: Inner Guide Empowerment

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Be Thankful…

Happy Thanksgiving to all my Canadian friends!!! I wish you a weekend full of family, love, fun, joy, abundance and blessings… :)

My friend Paula sent me this story and I thought it was perfect timing for the Thanksgiving holiday, however also for each and every day. Always be thankful and grateful for all that happens to you, no matter what it is, for it all comes with a reason and a lesson. Give, and give, to all that you can, whenever you can, just because you can. Be blessed and be a blessing :)

Here is the story:

There was a blind girl who hated herself because she was blind. She hated everyone, except her loving boyfriend. He was always there for her. She told her boyfriend, ‘If I could only see the world, I will marry you.’ One day, someone donated a pair of eyes to her. When the bandages came off, she was able to see everything, including her boyfriend. He asked her,’Now that you can… see the world, w…ill you marry me?’ The girl looked at her boyfriend and saw that he was blind. The sight of his closed eyelids shocked her. She hadn’t expected that. The thought of looking at them the rest of her life led her to refuse to marry him. Her boyfriend left her in tears and days later wrote a note to her saying: ‘Take good care of your eyes, my dear, for before they were yours, they were mine.’ This is how the human brain often works when our status changes. Only a very few remember what life was like before, and who was always by their side in the most painful situations. Today before you say an unkind word – Think of someone who can’t speak. Before you complain about the taste of your food – Think of someone who has nothing to eat. Before you complain about your husband or wife – Think of someone who’s crying out to GOD for a companion. Today before you complain about life – Think of someone who went too early to heaven. Before you complain about your children -Think of someone who desires children but they’re barren. Before you argue about your dirty house someone didn’t clean or sweep – Think of the people who are living in the streets. Before whining about the distance you drive Think of someone who walks the same distance with their feet. And when you are tired and complain about your job – Think of the unemployed , the disabled, and those who wish they had your job. But before you think of pointing the finger or condemning another – Remember that not one of us is without sin and we all answer to one MAKER.

After reading this I hope it opened your eyes a bit, and I wish you day is full of gratitude , joy and abundance.

Luv Wendy
“Bella”

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