L o v e
Contents
Friendship
Passion or Love
Passion or Love
Fatal Attraction (theory)
Fatal Attraction (theory)
Relationship
First Dating
Marriage
Family
Divorce
Thank You!
1.98M

Love As is Contents Friendship Passion or Love Fatal attraction

1. L o v e

L/O/G/O
Love
As is

2. Contents

1
Friendship
2
Passion or Love
3
Fatal attraction (theory)
4
Relationship

3. Friendship

Respect
Trust
Love is not all you need,
nor all your spouse or
child needs; consider
respect.
Love and trust is the
requirement in a
relationship to make it
lasting
Love between
people (without
sex and
relationship)
Care
Happiness
We need to know what
our passion in a safe
place and all is well
Love and happiness go
hand in hand. We need
to feel loved and secure
in order to be happy.

4. Passion or Love

Combinations of intimacy, passion, commitment
Intimacy
Passion
Commitment
Nonlove
Liking/friendshi
p
X
Infatuated love
X
Empty love
X
Romantic love
X
Companionate
love
X
Fatuous love
Consummate
love
X
X
X
X
X
X
X

5. Passion or Love

6. Fatal Attraction (theory)

This research investigates the extent to which a quality that
initially attracts one person to another in a romantic
relationship is a positive dimension of the same overall
characteristic that leads to subsequent disaffection - i.e. a
`fatal attraction'. Three hundred and one college women and
men were asked to think of the most recent romantic
relationship they had that ended, and to list qualities that first
attracted them to that partner and characteristics they later
`least liked' about that partner.

7. Fatal Attraction (theory)

Results indicate that there were approximately 88 instances
(in 29.2% of the breakups) of what appeared to be `fatal
attractions'. Certain types of characteristics, such as exciting
and different, were also more likely to be `fatal' than others.
Additional findings point to sex differences in attracting
qualities, with, for example, males reporting significantly more
qualities than females in the Physical category.

8. Relationship

First dating
Family
Marriage
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Divorce

9. First Dating

Reasons
to have fun
Recreation
to get to know the partner
increasing social status by dating an
attractive partner
Socialization
Status grading
finding a friend to do things with
Companionship
finding a spouse
Mate selection/courtship
establishing a meaningful relationship
Intimacy

10. Marriage

Definitions
Spouses
Recognition
Weddings
A married couple can be called each
other's spouses, and spousal is used as
a legal term for the marital relation.

11. Family

Children's
Family
objectives
Parents
New
objective
s

12. Divorce

Russia
USA
European Union
51
53
44
Divorce:Marriage ratio at the
world.
53 divorces per 100 weddings
51 divorces per 100 weddings
44 divorces per 100 weddings

13. Thank You!

L/O/G/O
Thank You!
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