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Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - He's a Porn Addict...Now Whatr? (Overbay and Shea)

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  Today's Publisher's Pride is  He's a Porn Addict...Now What?  by Tony Overbay and Joshua Shea , which reached  #53 in sexual addiction & recovery on Amazon . Book description: Admitting you're a drug addict or alcoholic can be difficult, but when it comes to pornography addiction, the pain of betrayal can hit the addict's partner worse than the addict himself. Difficult questions come rushing: Does he look at this stuff because I'm not enough? Was he like this when I first met him? Is this God trying to test me? What kind of help is available for him? Am I just supposed to stay here and deal with this? With  He's a Porn Addict...Now What?: An Expert and a Former Addict Answer Your Questions , you'll get pertinent answers from both sides of the equation: from a therapist and from a former pornography addict. Keywords: porn addiction, recovery and healing, spouse and partner support, betrayal trauma, sexual addiction, marriage and relationships, ther...

Learning a New Language Within a Language Family

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  Why it’s easier, why it’s harder, and why the third one is different from the second Learning a second language from a family you already know—Spanish after French, Ukrainian after Russian, Dutch after German—feels like walking into a house where the furniture has been rearranged but the floor plan is familiar. You recognize the architecture, even if you stub your toe on the coffee table. Benefits: The Built‑In Head Start Several advantages show up immediately: Shared vocabulary Cognates give you a running start. Romance languages share Latin roots; Slavic languages share Proto‑Slavic roots. Even when the words aren’t identical, they rhyme with each other conceptually. Predictable grammar patterns Once you’ve internalized gender, case, aspect, or verb conjugation patterns in one language, the next language in the family feels like a variation on a theme rather than a brand‑new system. Transferable “language instincts” You start anticipating how the new language will sol...

Midlife Dating Chronicles, Episode Three: Red Flags You Only Notice After 50

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  When you’re dating in your 20s, red flags are practically decorative. You see them, you acknowledge them, and then you think, “I can fix that.” By midlife, you’ve learned two things: You are not a rehabilitation center. If someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time—and maybe take notes. Here are the red flags that midlife daters spot instantly, often before the appetizer arrives. 1. The “I’m Not Really Over My Ex” Acrobatics In your 20s, you thought this meant they were sensitive. In midlife, you know it means: Run. Red flags include: Referring to their ex as “my person” Using the phrase “technically separated” Bringing up their ex’s cat in the first ten minutes If their past relationship is still the main character, you don’t need to audition for a supporting role. 2. The “I Don’t Believe in Boundaries” Enthusiast This one is easy to spot now. They say: “I’m just being honest.” You hear: “I have no filter, no tact, and no intention of devel...