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Love
is unpredictable
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![]() Burn me and i'll promise you an ugly scar!(I have long nails! beware!) Arrived from Venus on th 31st of May, 1993. which makes it th 17th year on earth. Wasnt made to get hurt but gotten hurt anyhow. People frm Mars are weird and hurtful. But some of them are Kind Sweet and HOT! God didnt make me perfect in everyone's eyes but he told me once that he don't have any regrets how i am , cos im perfect in his eyes. Currently OBSSESED WITH JUSTIN BIEBER! Hes th perfect Soft Spot/Mop-top/box of cutes. Taylor Swift too and dont break my heart cos i may just write a song about you! to be heading off to RP on 8april, wish me luck with school. Sunday, March 14, 2010
5:04 AM
★ Bored To Death!
When to this weird site that ALEXANDRA MUI linked me to. was suppose to see th comedy strips but i ventured further... learn loads of stuff.... for one,DID YOU KNOW ![]() The YKK on zippers stands for Yoshida Kogyo Kabushikikaisha (say that five times fast). In 1934 Tadao Yoshida founded Yoshida Kogyo Kabushikikaisha (translated Yoshida Industries Limited). This company is now the worlds foremost zipper manufacturer, making about 90% of all zippers in over 206 facilities in 52 countries. In fact, they not only make the zippers, they also make the machines that make the zippers; no word on if they make the machines that make the parts that make up the machines that make the zippers. and secondly, Why We Kiss: The Science of Sex By: Brie Cadman (View Profile) ![]() Pecking, smooching, Frenching, and playing tonsil-hockey—there are as many names for kissing as there are ways to do it. Whether we use it as an informal greeting or an intensely romantic gesture, kissing is one of those ingrained human behaviors that seems to defy explanation. Its many purposes—a blow and peck for good luck on dice, lips to ground after a rocky boat ride, kisses in the air to an acquaintance, and the long slow smooches of Hollywood—have different meanings yet are similar in nature. So why is it that we love to pucker up? A Kiss Isn’t Just a Kiss Philematologists, the scientists who study kissing, aren’t exactly sure why humans started locking lips in the first place. The most likely theory is that it stems from primate mothers passing along chewed food to their toothless babies. The lip-to-lip contact may have been passed on through evolution, not only as a necessary means of survival, but also as a general way to promote social bonding and as an expression of love. But something’s obviously happened to kissing since the time of the chewed-food pass. Now, it’s believed that kissing helps transfer critical information, rather than just meat bits. The kissing we associate with romantic courtship may help us to choose a good mate, send chemical signals, and foster long-term relationships. All of this is important in evolution’s ultimate goal—successful procreation. Kissing allows us to get close enough to a mate to assess essential characteristics about them, none of which we’re consciously processing. Part of this information exchange is most likely facilitated by pheromones, chemical signals that are passed between animals to help send messages. We know that animals use pheromones to alert their peers of things like mating, food sources, and danger, and researchers hypothesize that pheromones can play a role in human behavior as well. Although the vomeronasal organs, which are responsible for pheromone detection and brain function in animals, are thought to be vestigial and inactive in humans, research indicates we do communicate with chemicals. See What You Can Learn When you Are Bored?! |