Jessica’s Blog

Dedicated to Life In Love- A Bloggers Guide to Relationship 101

Last Feature: Stay Tuned! May 2, 2008

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Hey everyone,

The semester, as all college kids are aware, is coming to a close. For me, and this blog of mine, I am not quite sure what it means. One thing that is for certain, is that I have started the process of writing my last feature. It is one that I hold very close to my heart, because it is based on a relationship that, in many ways, I have tried to copy. My grandparents. Stay tuned. I hope you will read and enjoy it as much as I have loved researching and discovering for it.

-Jess

 

Long Distance: Only The Strong Survive. April 29, 2008

I was watching, “True Life: I’m in A Long Distance Relationship,” on MTV yesterday, and it got me thinking. At what point does distance stop making the heart grow fonder? When does being apart start to take a toll on two people?

It is 2008. We are all so independent. We work, we go to school, we have to socialize to define ourselves, and often it takes away from the one thing we really need at the end of the day. Our relationships.

Can long distance relationships work? I don’t have the answer to that. The longest I go without seeing my other half is Mon-Wed, and let me tell you, it’s horrible. How do people who live months without seeing each other make it work?

I am a college student, like so many of us out there. It has been the best and the hardest time of my life. When I was single, I did what I wanted when I wanted. Now, I still do what I want, but there is always someone else in my head. His feelings and how he would like to be treated. So many of us are away from our relationship while at school. Some much worse than I, and I feel silly complaining about 3 days. However if I feel the separation, how are those who separate for weeks or months dealing with the strain?

According to Simona Kogan, who is the Features Editor for The Daily Targum, which serves the Rutgers community, “Author Thomas Haynes Bayley once said, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder.” Did Bayley know what it meant to be in a long-distance relationship during college? Probably not. However, even if he had, the trials and tribulations of having a relationship when you are not located near the one you love never gets easier. Whether or not absence makes the heart grow fonder, many university students are dealing with the issue. According to The Journal of College Student Development, more than one-in-four of the 9 million college students in the United States are in long-distance relationships during their four years of college - that is, one partner does not go to the same college or live in the same town as their significant other.”

More than one-in-four! It makes me wonder. How many students let their grades suffer, or lose sleep while their paying their way through school, because they are apart from their loved one? How many relationships survive college? How can a relationship last when two people can not see each other?

“Distance can make the heart grow fonder”, but maybe, for those of you out there dealing with extreme distance, “Too much distance can make the heart…wander.” Sorry for the cliche, but is it true?

I hope that those out there in a long distance relationship do what they feel is right for them. Love is a great and powerful thing. If you find it, try your hardest to make it work, because there are some that are never lucky enough to stumble across the real thing.

I believe, even though I have only experienced a tiny degree of separation, that perhaps, it is worth it.  Maybe being with someone is the one thing we all hold on to that keeps us going. Long distance relationships, they’re not for the weak. Only the strong survive.
Good Luck!

 

 

Love Yourself April 29, 2008

Being in a relationship with someone else can be great. Relationships, like the ones I have blogged about, can be filled with roller coasters of emotions, ups, downs and adventures. Relationships. The ones that survive have to contain two people who know themselves and know what they want out of life. What am I getting at? I believe that in order to make your relationship work with that certain someone, that there is one other relationship that has to be in sync. The relationship you have with yourself.

Before I met my current boyfriend, I went on a male hiatus for about three years. Of course during that time, I bitched and complained to my girlfriends, and vice versa, about being single. I complained about the men that I had dated and the ones I wasn’t dating. I can remember going to places and doing things wishing that I had someone to share it with.

Looking back on those three years, I would not have changed a thing. Sure, while I was in it and experiencing it, I might have wanted change. Now that I can stand back and take it all in, my so called “single life,” made me the woman I am today. It made me strong and independent. It made me the person my current boyfriend fell in love with and respected.

To make it in a relationship you have to love yourself. It is amazing what confidence looks like on the outside. No one wants to be in a relationship with someone who has yet to find themselves. Often enough, the reason why some relationships falter is because one or both parties involved have yet to evolve into the people they are meant to be.

My advice: In order to be in a loving relationship you must LOVE yourself. Who cares about what other people have to offer. You are the best you that you can be. When you respect yourself others will respect you. When you love yourself, someone will love you. If not… who is better than you? No one.

Baily Landon, a relationship writer from Associated Content Online writes, “When you feel you are ready for a relationship again, don’t go for someone who wants to change you. Don’t go for someone who makes you feel that you aren’t good enough as you are. Don’t get involved with a person that won’t allow you to be yourself. Don’t go for someone whose idea of love is for you to lose your identity in order to make them happy. Go for the person that accepts you for you, all of you, as you are. Go for the one that makes you feel like you can be yourself, that isn’t out to change you, that loves you exactly as you are, that listens to you, that understands you, that wants you for you, not some fantasy they want to fulfill. “

Could not have said it better.

 

Feature #3 comming Monday April 9, 2008

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I will be interviewing the famous Dr. Diana! She has been on TV shows giving her expert advice such as OPRAH ( hey name dropper), Montel, Good Morning America and was the relationship coach for Paris and Nicole on “The Simple Life.” Pretty awesome huh? I have been emailing her asking her some questions I think we will all be able to benefit from! Stay tuned… DO NOT WANT TO MISS THIS!

Jessica Hope- Extreme Relationship Blogger ;)

 

Feature #2: The Art of Living Together- Renee and Wayne April 1, 2008

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A lot has been said concerning couples who take the plunge and decide to move in together. Some argue that it’s not the right thing to do, when some believe that the only way to truly get to know someone before marriage is by living with them.

According to statistics researched by AOL on cohabiting between 1960 and 2004, the number of unmarried couples living together, increased by 1200%. While 1 in 3 single women choose to live with their partners before marriage, compared to 1 in 10 in the 1950’s (Whitman 1997).These are amazing statistics that undeniably show a trend that is on the rise.

Part of this feature includes an interview with two New Jersey natives, Wayne Cummings, 25 of Toms River and Renee Tornabene 22, also of Toms River. The two who started dating in July of 2007 recently decided that it was time to take their relationship to the next level, when Wayne, who just purchased his first home, invited Renee to be a permanent fixture in his house.

Before I get to that fun interview I would like to share some more statistics I found while researching. I was very surprised to come across as much information as I did. As I mentioned opinions and beliefs vary on this subject. I believe that one should do what they feel is right in terms of this subject.

If you are in a position right now where you are trying to figure out what to do, here are some more statistics that could help.

Most unmarried partners who live together are 25 to 34 years old.
Slightly more than 8% of coupled households in the USA are cohabiting heterosexuals.
Women’s median age at first marriage rose from 20.8 in 1970 to 26 in 2004; men’s rose
from 23.2 to 27.
In 1960, there were 90 married couples for every cohabiting couple.
There is one cohabiting couple for every 12 married couples.
By the year 2010, if the present trend continues, there will be 7 married couples
for every cohabiting couple.
1 in 3 single women choose to live with their partners before
marriage, compared to 1 in 10 in the 1950’s (Whitman 1997).
Living together unmarried is more prevalent on the West Coast than anywhere else in the country. About
half of married couples living in the West of all ages lived together before married. By contrast,
for example, only 25% of the couples in the South lived together (Gallup Poll, Dec. 1997)
Democrats and liberals are significantly more likely to have lived together before they got married than
Republicans and conservatives (Gallup Poll, Dec. 1997).
Cohabitation is far more common in other countries such as Sweden, Denmark, Canada and some
Latin American countries (Seltzer, 2000, Hall & Zhao, 1995).
In England, 70% of single women choose to live with their partners
before marriage, compared to just 5% in the mid-1960s.(Ciavola 1997).
In Sweden there are a little over two married couples for every cohabiting couple.
50% to 60% of couples coming for marriage in first world countries are
living together before marriage (Cherlin, 2002, Seltzer, 2000; Teachman, 2003).
More men and women are moving in together, sharing an apartment and a bed without
getting married first and doing it more openly today (Waite & Gallagher 2000:36).
Nearly 50% of those in their 20’s and 30’s cohabit (Bumpass & Lu 1998;
Bumpass & Sweet 1995; Sweet 1989). Cohabitation has become the normative experience today.
The median duration of cohabitation is 1.3 years (Bumpass & Lu 1998; Wu 1995).
Long-term cohabiting relationships in America are far rarer than successful marriages
Couples who are less educated, have a low religious orientation, and less economic resources
are more likely to cohabit (Seltzer, 2000; Amato, Johnson, Booth, & Rogers, 2003).
Low levels of religious importance/participation are related to higher levels of
cohabitation and lower rates of subsequent marriage
Cohabitation rates are 8.2% for Mormons, 20 to 24% for Protestants, 23.1% for
Catholics, 32.5% for Jews, and 44.8% for nonreligious Americans (Mims 1999).
The probability that the first union takes the form of a cohabiting arrangement is highest
for Jews and lowest for Mormons. Although a Jewish upbringing is associated with
marrying at a later age, the probability of early formation of a union, broadly, defined,
is the same for Jews and Catholics, and is only .3 points below the estimate for
mainline Protestants (Lehrer 2000).
Cohabitation rates are 4.1% for those aged 15-19, 11.2% for 20-24, 9.8%
for 25-29, 7.5% for 30-34, 5.2% for 35-39, and 4.4% for 40-44 years of age
(Natl. Center for Health Statistics, 1995). The Census Bureau finds that
cohabiting is most popular in the 24-35 age group, with 1.6 million couples.
The next highest number of couples — 931,000 — are in the under-25 age group.
41% of women without a high school diploma cohabit whereas, 26%
of women with college degrees cohabit. Marriage for cohabitors is positively related
to higher levels of education and economics. (Qian 1998; Bumpass & Lu 1998;
Johnson 1996; Thornton, Axinn, Teachman 1995; Willis & Michael, 1994).
If a couple abstains from sex before marriage, they are 29 to 47% more likely to
enjoy sex afterward than those who cohabit . Sexual satisfaction rises considerably
more after marriage (Hering 1994:4). More women cohabit than men, but men are
more likely to cohabit serially (Bumpass & Sweet 1989; Teachman & Polanko
1990).
The average length of a cohabiting relationship that does not lead to marriage is
12 to 18 months (VanGoethem 2005:183).
Half of cohabiting relationships end within one year due to the couple either becoming
married or separating (Seltzer 2000).
Within the first two years approximately twenty-nine percent of cohabiting couples separate
compared to only 9% of married couples. (Bumpass 1994).
Within five years from the beginning of a cohabitation relationship more than half of these
relationships will end even if the couple had married during that time (Seltzer 2000).
Long-term cohabitation is rare: most couples either break up or marry within five years.
57% of cohabiting couples dissolve within ten years when compared with 30% of all first marriages

Many of those statistics put down the idea of cohabiting, while others encourage it. I strongly believe that if a couple has what it takes to make it then statistics would not matter.

In an interview conducted recently Renee and Wayne opened their “new” doors to me and answered a lot of questions that couples young and old wonder when it comes to moving in together:

Q. What were your initial thoughts Renee, on moving in with Wayne?
A. I was so nervous. I didn’t know how my Dad would react because I was only 21 when I decided to do it. After a while the idea settled in because they grew to love Wayne, and knew it was best for me. I thought honestly that it would be fun to move in and play house and decorate, but life hits you shortly after and the bills, and as fun as it has been there have been hard times.

Q. Could you name some of those hard times. Examples maybe?
A.(Renee) Sure. Finding a way to make sure he and I agreed on decorating was horrible. I wanted things to be comfy, while all he wanted was a plasma TV to play video games on. One of our biggest ordeals came from moving a couch that his mother had put a certain way. I figured it was my home and I could change it. It raised all hell. I love his mother but she was having a hard time letting go. Everything is better now, but in-laws are another issue that I didn’t expect. Also he works in New York and I work here in Toms River, so he leaves at 4 A.M. comes home at 7 P.M. and I don’t leave to go to work till 5 P.M. I get lonely sometimes. I miss the chaos that comes along with living at home with my parents, but I wouldn’t trade moving in with Wayne for anything.

Q. What have you learned about each-other that you didn’t know before moving in?
A. (Wayne) She leaves her clothes everywhere (laughs). She eats pudding every time of the day.She is probably one of the hardest working people I know. I knew that when we started dating, but seeing someone everyday and witnessing it, is another story. What else? She falls asleep in clothes, can not get up before noon and doesn’t like when I walk on the carpet after she vacuums. Something about the lines? I love living with her though, it just made me love her more if anything. We fight, well we pick at each-other over things that we wouldn’t if we didn’t live together, like money and who made the bed last, but if we want to make it work and last, we try not to harp on it. (Renee breaking in) I always make the bed.

Q.) If you could give advice to a couple who was thinking about living together what would it be?
A.) Renee- I think I really was certain that he was for me. I knew that I would be able to deal with the little things, because, and this sounds horribly cliche, but because they were his “little things.” I think that before people move in together they really have to sit down and talk about things that people don’t like to talk about. Money, tasks, and what each-other expect. We did it right off the bat so there weren’t any surprises as far as what he and I expected each-other to bring to the table
Wayne- Everything she said. I think its good for couples to know that not everyday is going to be a good day. Not everything will be perfect. Just make the best out of it, it has been really great because we work hard at it everyday.

Q. Last question, I promise. Do you think that couples should wait till marriage before living together?
A. (Renee) Well, obviously not. I think people should do what they want to do, but we believe that the only way we would know each-other (really well) is by living together. I would hate to live apart, get married, and then realize we couldn’t do it. How disappointing that would be. Living together allows us to experiment.

I want to thank Renee and Wayne for being so honest and open with me and allowing me to invade their home and their heads on this subject. I have included a slide show of what living together looks like, Renee and Wayne style. Enjoy.


| View Show | Create Your Own

 

Comming Wed. March 30, 2008

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Feature interview on how a new young couple is finding life once they moved in together. Pictures, fun and a lot more.. Stay tuned..

 

1000! March 17, 2008

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Hey everyone I just reached over a thousand hits! Thanks for reading!

-Jess

 

For the most part March 10, 2008

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THE FRIKEN BOXES AND QUESTION MARKS ARE GONE!

Seems as though when you copy and paste documents from word or works to put on your blog, some evil code appears. So I just spent the last hour or so taking out all of these horrible creatures. Now if you find one, I don’t want to know! If you have the same problem, don’t worry I cursed them off(the boxes of course) enough for the both of us.

Till Friday… Jess

 

Feature Followup: The “Hes Just Not That Into You” Sex In the City Episode March 9, 2008

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Enjoy!

 

ALERT: March 9, 2008

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ATTENTION: As I mentioned in the beginning of this endeavour, I am not technologically savvy. That said again, if your reading my blogs and you have noticed those little boxes or question mark thingers in the writing, your not the only one. I have been sitting here poking my eyeballs out trying to figure out how to get rid of them! So my sincerest apologies, I know its annoying. But the reading is hopefully worth it, so continue please! It will hopefully be fixed by Monday! Thanks- Jess