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Monday 17 February 2014

'I feel more feminine with my beard': Teaching assistant who suffered taunts because of her excessive hair decides to stop trimming it after being baptised a Sikh

  • Harnaam Kaur, of Slough, Berkshire, has polycystic ovary syndrome
  • Beard started to appear on her face aged just 11 and spread to chest
  • She's decided to stop cutting her hair after being baptised as a Sikh

  •  
    A 23-year-old woman with a condition causing excessive hair development has revealed that growing a beard makes her feel more feminine.
     
    Harnaam Kaur, of Slough, Berkshire, suffers from polycystic ovary syndrome - and a beard first started to appear on her face aged just 11.
     
    The hair quickly spread to her chest and arms, and the condition made her the victim of taunts at school and on the street. She even received death threats from strangers over the internet.
     
    But Miss Kaur has now decided to stop cutting her hair after being baptised as a Sikh - a religion in which cutting body hair is forbidden.
     
    She said: ‘I would never ever go back now and remove my facial hair because it's the way God made me and I'm happy with the way I am.

    'I feel more feminine, more sexy and I think I look it too. I've learned to love myself for who I am nothing can shake me now.’
     
    During her early teens, Miss Kaur was so ashamed of her beard that she waxed twice a week, and also tried bleaching and shaving.
     
     But the hair became thicker and spread - with Miss Kaur feeling so self-conscious that she refused to leave her house. She even began self-harming and she considered suicide.

    She said: ‘I got bullied badly - at school I was called a “beardo” and things like “shemale” and “sheman”. I can laugh about it now, but back then it affected me so badly that I began to self-harm because it felt better than all the abuse I was getting.
     
    ‘I'd talk to people with a hand over my face and I wore baggy, tomboy clothes to cover up the hair on my chest and arms.
     
    ‘I didn't want to go outside my house because I couldn't take the stares from strangers so I'd lock myself in my room. It got so bad that I just didn't want to live anymore.’
     
    Since then Miss Kaur has been employed at a local Sikh primary school as a teaching assistant and her confidence has soared.
     
    She said: ‘I still get shop assistants calling me “sir” and strange looks from people - they see my beard first and realise I've actually got breasts too. It must be confusing for a lot of people.

    'The funniest reactions I get are from the children at my school. Some ask me what my beard is and I joke it's a Halloween costume. Some even ask me where I buy it and I just say “Asda”.
     
    ‘I can laugh about it now - sometimes I say I'm a man and I put on a deep voice to scare other people because it's quite funny to see their reaction.’
     
    Despite often being mistaken for a man, Miss Kaur says she feels more feminine than ever - choosing girly tops over baggy, high-necked jumpers.

    She said: ‘I'm able to go out and shop in the women's section without feeling I shouldn't be there. I wear skirts, dresses and jewellery and I like to get my nails done like every other girl.’
     
    Today Miss Kaur hopes her story will help other women find self-confidence. She has decided to share her story on YouTube - and continues to upload videos despite receiving death threats.
     
    She said: ‘I've had people telling me they're going to burn me and throw a brick at me - all sorts of things like that.
     
    ‘But I've also had a lot of positive messages from women in the same situation as me. I've also had loads of nice comments from men all over the world. One even asked me to marry him.
     
    ‘I haven't found a potential husband yet. I still get some grief from the men in my community and it does still seem to be a barrier to marriage. But I'm young and there's still plenty of time for that.
     
    ‘All that matters to me at the moment is that I love myself. I love my beard and all my other little quirks - my tattoos, my scars, stretch marks and blemishes.
     
    ‘I want other women to find the strength that I have. If I had any message it would be to live the way you want - it's your journey and it's your life.’

    Source: Dailymail.co.uk

    Sunday 9 February 2014

    The Number One Reason Men Cheat

    A honest (my opinion) article on why men cheat!
     
    A self-professed "ordinary" man takes on the impact and implications of cheating culture.
     
    I was 29 when I got married, and I did not expect to be happy in my marriage. Now, 11 years later, my wife and I are one of the happiest couples I know of. A lot of this has to do with witnessing friends commit adultery. Although the outward details of my life are bound to differ from every other life, my emotional life is probably not so unusual. I am ordinary in most ways. I am ordinary in my fears and ordinary in my lusts. Although I could have made other decisions, my decisions, too, are ordinary.
     
    I believed I wouldn’t have a happy marriage because I didn’t think I would have a happy life. My mother is mentally ill, and growing up with her had left me with shame and fear and anxiety. I remember once, when I was a child, my mother slapping me repeatedly during a family wedding. As her hand landed on my ear, my nose, my lips, I was conscious of all the people watching, and I felt embarrassed for her. I felt literally like two people, one feeling my own torment and one feeling pain for her.
     
    One result of growing up in a family like mine is you lose hope; you don’t think good things will happen to you. I proposed to my wife because I thought she wanted me to. I was going away for business, and she said she wanted a ring. Several years later, she told me that I had misinterpreted her, that when she had asked me to buy her a ring, she had meant only that the city I was visiting was famous for garnet jewelry and she would’ve liked to have some. This part of my story is just a variation of the cliché of a man proposing because he has been given an ultimatum.
     
    When you have a marriage that begins this way and you have a personality like mine, there are bound to be problems. Often, in the early years of my marriage, I felt indifferent toward my wife. I once told her, “I sometimes think I don’t love you.” We were sitting at our glass-topped dinner table. My wife looked at me over the rim of her eyeglasses. After a moment, she said, “I know you do.”
     
    “How do you know?” I asked.
     
    “I see how you light up when I come into a room.” Until she told me this, I hadn’t known I smiled when I saw her.
     
    Around this time, the first of my friends confessed his adultery. We were standing in the back of a darkened hall, watching someone give a speech. Tom* had a glass of wine in his hand, and he had come from another reception and appeared pretty buzzed. As we chatted, Tom offhandedly mentioned that he was seeing a woman on the side. She was younger than he was and engaged. I asked him where exactly they had sex. He said she worked in the hotel business and so had access to rooms.
     
    For several weeks afterward, whenever Tom and I met, we would talk about this woman. I began building a fantasy of her in which she looked like a movie star. I googled her to try to find a picture. Imagining this woman, I started to find my own wife less attractive. My wife has very light hair on her legs. She usually shaves her legs to just above her knees. Suddenly, I started being annoyed that she didn’t shave all the way up her thighs.
     
    It was a while before I saw Tom’s wife, Lauren, after he disclosed his affair to me. Lauren has pale skin that she makes even whiter with makeup. It gives her a Kabuki appearance. Lauren, Tom, my wife, Christine, and I sat in a booth at a restaurant, and all through the meal Lauren was unpleasant. Among other things, she scolded Tom for going to the bathroom too many times. Usually I find Lauren annoying. That night, though, every time I looked at her, I felt sad. She was wearing a shawl, and this made her appear shrunken. She did not know that her husband was cheating, yet to me she looked like someone who was ill and suffering. When my wife and I left and were walking down a sidewalk, I put my arm around her. It is hard after you have known someone for a while to see her afresh. Sometimes when I have done something that hurts my wife so much she cries, I can suddenly see her with new eyes, suddenly see her without preconceptions. That night, having seen Lauren being harmed, I was able to look at Christine as if she were a stranger. I could see her as someone who could be hurt, someone wanting to be happy. I lifted my wife’s hand to my lips and kissed it. “I love you,” I said.
     
    The image of Lauren in the booth that night, wrapped in a shawl, her face ashen, has become a touchstone. I think of her, and a rush of protective love for my wife floods into me. What happened that night was not just that the door into adultery got heavier, but that I began to understand how much I loved my wife.
     
    One of the things women don’t realize is that most married men live in a culture of adultery. We see it all around us. We have friends who have cheated on their wives. We have been on business trips where we went to strip clubs and our colleagues went into the back for hand jobs or more. We don’t tell our wives, of course. A lot of husbands still operate with the idea that what gets revealed among men stays among men. Part of this is based on boyhood ideas of not snitching. Part of it, however, is based on a more cynical motive: If we were to tell our wives, they would begin watching us more closely, and as most of us married men keep in mind the possibility that one day we too will have an affair, to tell our wives would be to diminish this chance.
     
    You might believe that your husband or your father or your boyfriend doesn’t think this way. Researchers say that one of the strongest predictors of men who cheat and men who don’t is opportunity. This suggests that most men at least toy with committing adultery. Social scientists estimate that about 30 percent of married men cheat on their wives. To get a feel for what this number means, imagine that 30 percent of married men shoplift. A world in which this were true would feel crazy.
     
    Even if a man is committed to remaining faithful, he is affected by the adultery he sees around him. In his head, adultery becomes a secret passage out of the marriage. Promiscuity takes on the allure of adventure, of a life not lived. When we are fighting with our wives, the prospect of adultery can come to us. When there are sexual problems, the fact that we know men who are having lots of sex outside their marriage makes these problems bother us more. The knowledge of other people’s unfaithfulness is one reason fights with our spouses can sometimes spiral out of control. As we fight, we become unhappy, and we think about the options that we are not exercising. So we blame our wives not just for what we are fighting about but also for our choice to not cheat.
     
    Although my love for my wife had become more real to me, as had my recognition that I didn’t want to be without her, I still felt not just envy when I heard of friends’ affairs but like a wimp for not making passes.
     
    My friend Will, who married young, had been with his wife for 17 years when we got to know each other. Will’s wife has emotional problems. She has tried to commit suicide in front of her children by drinking bleach and by climbing out the window of their apartment. Because Will was so unhappy in his marriage, he went out every night, and when he would tell me about his secret life, it sounded glamorous. The many women he slept with, the world that can open up when a woman tells you her story—all this appeared part of a richer life than the one I was leading. But then Will’s wife learned of his affairs and threw him out.
     
    Suddenly, he went from living in a large, beautiful apartment to living in two rooms with bedbugs and having a neighbor who fed her cats in the building’s communal hallway. Most of Will’s money vanished. The first time I met him after he was forced to leave home, I took him to a grocery store to buy him food. He was in his mid-forties, and his furniture included a futon and milk crates. He said that he couldn’t sleep, worrying that his children would hate him. He said that his wife had told his parents what he had done. My friend’s misery was my great good fortune. I talked to him every day, and I heard his problems, heard how lonely he now got on Friday and Saturday nights. While I still envied Will for his many sexual partners, I could see that there were real consequences to cheating.
     
    But what made me realize most poignantly that promiscuity is not some grand adventure came from seeing friends enter the world of commercial sex. My experience has been that commercial sex becomes more common as men get older and their lives get busy and disposable income is greater. Its appeal is that by sleeping with different women, men can delude themselves into thinking they are as charismatic as James Bond. One of my friends is a Greek Orthodox priest, another installs telephones, one works in the city morgue, one works in advertising, several are in construction, several others are editors, investment bankers, real-estate agents, actors, musicians. Only four haven’t gone to brothels or massage parlors that offer a little something extra at some point while married. Recently a friend told me about how one night, as he was going in for a massage, he saw an incoming call from his wife on his cell phone and sent it to voice mail. Later, when he left the establishment, he listened to the message. It was his little boy, calling to say good night.
     
    Another friend told me about going into a brothel he had been to before and being asked by a new security guard to take out his penis. The guard didn’t recognize my friend, and undercover cops posing as clients supposedly aren’t willing to do this. My friend unzipped.
     
    I was once traveling for work and a sales representative took my boss and me to a brothel. My boss is a good guy, friendly, cheerful. He has a son with Down syndrome with whom he is madly in love, and he is also very respectful of how important his wife is in taking care of their child. And yet, there we were: in a room with a row of swimsuit-clad Russian women lined up on a sofa. All of them were watching a television that was bolted to the ceiling. The sales rep and my boss went into rooms in back. I stayed in front. I had come along because I hadn’t known exactly where we were going, and the main reason I didn’t participate was because I was scared of letting anyone at work have something over me. The other two men, who were drunk, their pupils dilated, didn’t notice that I remained up front.
     
    There was a rawness to being in the brothel that somehow separated lust from all the other illusions that had clothed it—if only I were with this woman, I’d be different; the problem is my wife and not me. Seeing the drunk men and the women in swimsuits was like seeing these illusions as a sort of insanity. When sad or worried, I still periodically find myself thinking that if I were with someone else, my life would be better. This lie can come in a sly way. I see a young woman walking down the sidewalk and then I think about being young and then I fantasize about being with the young woman, and then I’m suddenly a young man. I confuse the fantasy of being young with being with this woman.
     
    But I am getting better at catching myself. I can see my mind moving into delusions, and I am able to reel it back. Also, I find that the years of being married have made me happier. Sometimes when I’m waiting for my wife in a restaurant and I mistake a woman for her, I get excited and realize I’m smiling.
     
    Originally published in November 2012.

    Source: www.elle.com

    10 Things that Drive Men Completely Insane About Being Married

     
    1. "Why does my wife feel the need to tell me every single detail about her friends' lives? I love my wife, and I'm interested in what she says--unless it's about her coworker Jill's decision to get Botox. I haven't met Jill, and have no opinion on the matter. And I'm sure Jill doesn't care what I think, either." - Charles, 39, married five years
     
    Expert Rx: In general, guys want to know the point of a story before they hear it, says Jeremy Nicholson, Ph.D., a relationship psychologist. When you start talking about acquaintances they don't know, their minds scramble to figure out the "so, what?" factor. If you're looking for a gossip buddy, you're better off chatting with your BFFs. But if you're bringing up Jill's plastic surgery because you want to gauge what your guy thinks of Botox, then start the conversation with that so he knows where things are headed.
     
    2. "We're not always a package. Sometimes, I don't know where my wife is for the afternoon. That's not weird--we're individuals! But whenever I tell my buddies that, they look at me like I'm nuts." - Nick, 40, married 10 years
     
    Expert Rx: Alone time is a healthy and natural, but if you or your guy express that you're starting to feel like two ships passing in the night, maybe it is time to peek into the ever-mighty schedule and shore up some time for just you two. Even if date night's a given, there are other opportunities, like asking him to come grocery shopping, or waiting with you while you stand in line at the DMV. It's actually the kind of stuff you used to do when you were dating, and it can still be surprisingly fun--the trick is asking your man (which sends the signal that he can get hero points) rather than expecting him to (which, as you guessed, does the total opposite).
     
    3. "Date nights. Don't get me wrong--I love them--but the phrase sounds so forced." - Brian, 31, married three years
     
    Expert Rx: Nothing, including the name, about date night should feel obligatory. If you and your guy are a bit eh about the term, retire it in favor of Sunday Funday, Martini Monday… you get the point, suggests Laurie Puhn, a couples mediator and author of Fight Less, Love More. And switch it up. Instead of the same dinner and a movie combo, head to a local ice hockey game or spend the evening on a scavenger hunt around town in search of the best slice of pizza.
     
    4. "I hate when my wife puts photos of me on Facebook without asking. They're never bad and she always writes something nice, but it's sort of embarrassing for the guys to know I sometimes play princesses with my daughters." - John, 42, married 15 years
     
    Expert Rx: You may think his Ariel impression is adorable, but unless he gives you the okay, it's best to save those shots for the private photo album, says Judi Cinéas, a therapist in Palm Beach, FL. "At the end of the day, it's about respect. If he feels uncomfortable with the photos, then posting them behind his back is undermining his wishes."

    5. "As soon as we got married, my mother-in-law started giving me unsolicited advice. I know she's coming from a good place, but I already have a mother!" - Dylan, 27, married two years
     
    Expert Rx: Your mom may know best, but experts agree it's even better if she keeps her opinions to herself--unless she's asked. Gently tell your mother that you know she wants what's best for both of you, but that you and your guy are working out issues on your own. She'll likely still offer advice, but the more you stick to that line, the more she'll learn to back off, says Puhn. Even if Mom's insight is smart, letting your guy figure it out naturally makes him more likely to actually listen to it.
     
    6. "I feel like before we got married, weekends were for lounging around, meeting up with friends, or having sex. We still do those things, but more and more, weekends are times to do errands. It just doesn't feel as romantic as it did back when we were dating." - Steve, 37, married one year
    Expert Rx:
    Limited free time plus a long to-do list can make weekends feel like a slog. But remember: You're both grown-ups with the power to decide what goes on the list. So jot down some fun activities already! If you feel isolated on the weekends, it may be time to shake up your social lives, either by inviting some friends over or by joining a running club or other activity that'll give you both chances to connect with new people.

    7. "People always ask when we're planning to have kids. My wife gets this question far more than I do, but even when people ask me, it sounds so invasive. Why is it their business?" - Dave, 29, married three years
     
    Expert Rx: Rude? Absolutely. And while it's easy to let an acquaintance know that the question is completely out of line with a chilly, 'When we have news, we'll let you know,' the conversation can stay under your skin--especially if you and your guy haven't recently had a conversation about kid timelines. Regularly checking about where you're headed as a family can help you maintain a united front so that these comments don't eat at you as much, says Lisa Bahar, a marriage and family therapist in Newport Beach, CA.
     
    8. "People seem so impressed that I'm usually the one who cooks. I'll take the compliment, but what irks me is the implication that my wife isn't pulling her weight." - Aaron, 32, married one year
     
    Expert Rx: It's 2014, and it shouldn't raise eyebrows that you spend time in the kitchen. But what you should keep tabs on is how happy both of you are with your roles around the house. Relatively small schedule changes--like a new gym habit or a busy streak at the office-can wreak havoc on routine, warns Charles J. Orlando, a relationship expert and author of The Trouble With Women… Is Men. Keep each other abreast of how you're feeling, as it may help you both avoid becoming overwhelmed or resentful.
     
    9. "There are so many family obligations! I don't know if it's my imagination, but I feel like they've tripled since we actually got hitched. And if I don't go, not only does my wife get upset, but I feel like it makes us look like we don't have a good bond." - Steve, 33, married three years
    Expert Rx:
    If you two feel friction about family obligations, then it's time to sit down and figure out where each of you is coming from, says Bahar. Fights about family can fester, so getting on the same page now is key to preventing future arguments. It might be as simple as articulating what gets under your skin about the gatherings--maybe you feel backed into a corner by your wife's blowhard brother or you believe that her mom makes belittling comments toward you. Understanding the why can help you both figure out how to move forward.
     
    10. "There's this sense of, well, now what? The wedding was such a big project, and we know we won't have kids for at least a few years, so it sort of feels like we're in this anti-climactic slump." - Brandon, 32, married one year
     
    Expert Rx: There's so much pressure (not to mention expense) involved in putting on a wedding that it's only natural to feel a bit let down when the celebration is over. The good news is, you've accepted that, which means you're ready to think of ways to move beyond it. Maybe it's saving for a fabulous vacation, training for a triathlon together, or taking a sex challenge and doing it every night for a month. Whatever works!
     
    Culled from:  shine.yahoo.com

    Sunday 2 February 2014

    Struggling waitress left $1,075 tip on $29.30 bill by generous family who told her 'Jesus blessed us and we were led to give it to you'


    Khadijah Muhammad turned up to work at Cheddar's cafe-restaurant in Knoxville, Tennessee on Wednesday knowing that she needed a miracle.
     
    As she left her house there was a disconnection notice on the door that her electricity was about to be shut off - one of many bills that amounted this month after the 26-year-old wife was forced to give up her shifts and rush to Ohio to be with her mom, who had suffered a heart attack.
     
    'All I wanted was to see my mother one more time,' a teary Muhammad told WBIR.
     
    'With God's help, I managed to make it up there driving in the middle of the big snow storm that hit earlier this month.
     
    'I was able to see her and she pulled through, thankfully.'
     
    But when she returned home, her financial woes awaited.
     
    'It started to sink in how much work I missed and that I was not going to be able to pay all of my bills,' she said. 
     
    'I've been trying to pick up any extra shifts that I can. I was thinking I'm really going to need a miracle to pay my bills this month.'
     
    Her shift started normally and, being mid-week, business was fairly slow.
     
    Among the customers were a husband and a wife and their small child.
     
    'They really did not stand out,' Muhammad recalled. They were just nice folks. I remember talking to them and having a friendly conversation like you would with a neighbor.'
     
    'The father ordered a country steak. The mother and son split a fish taco. They split it. They were really humble people.'
     
    The bill was $29.30 after tax, but the receipt was turned upside down when Muhammad went to clear the table, which is usually a bad sign.
     
    'Normally, as a server, when a receipt is turned upside down it means you did not get a good tip or any tip,' she said.
     
    'Or people will leave a nasty note about how you messed something up with their service. I remember thinking, ''I wonder what I did wrong''.
     
    However the receipt turned Muhammad's life upside down.
     
    'I just remember seeing a comma after the one and knew it wasn't $10. And I was like, ''Oh, my God!'' And I just lost my balance and I was like, 'Does this say a thousand dollars?' I could not believe it.'
     
    The tip was for $1,075 - representing a tithe the family would have normally given to their church.

    While the couple wish to stay anonymous, they told WBIR they had recently moved to Knoxville from Ohio and had not decided where to send their tithe money.
     
    They had recently received a work bonus and, after being impressed with Muhammad's service, decided their donation this month should go to her.
    The note they left Muhammad partially explained the decision, saying: 'Jesus Blessed us and we were led to give it to you. God Bless!'
     
    What makes the story all the more surprising is that the family were completely unaware of Muhammad's circumstances and just how much they have helped her.
     
    'I just want to thank them,' she said.

    'Thank them so much, because I'm humbled. I'm grateful. I do believe that God led you to me at this time in my life. I hope and pray that someday I'm able to do this for somebody. And at the first opportunity I will do it.'