Relationship Topics



Relationship Info ...

The Importance Of Dog Training For A Happy, Balanced Pet-owner Relationship ... Teach respect, a dog has to be taught to respect its owner. You have to be his leader and not let him be yours...

Platonic Friendships Last - Relationships Don't - Why? ... Have you ever noticed that the second that you introduce sex into a relationship, it begins to slide into a bottomless pit and die? At least we wish that it would die. We should only be so lucky...

Train Your Dog: Build Strong Relationship By Proper Training Of Your Dog ... Every dog owner would like to give best training to his dog. Each dog should be well trained and well behaved, A well behaved dog will follow all your orders very easily and quickly...

4 Steps To Use Fears As Friends: Don’t Be A Thunder Dog! ... Imagine humungous, bulbous, billowing alto-cumulus clouds building higher and higher in the sky. They are as black as tar at the bottom and snowy white at the top...

Even when they cannot be always available, the parents’ fierce, unique love for their child makes them different in the child’s heart and mind from all other caregivers. In spite of a long working day, a parent’s passion for his or her child retains its many nuances of emotional intensity, ranging from rapture and delight to impatience and even rage, that no other relationship in the child’s life can match. Even very young infants are smart enough to recognize this passionate commitment and to reciprocate it in kind.
—Alicia F. Lieberman (20th century)

Sisters is probably the most competitive relationship within the family, but once the sisters are grown, it becomes the strongest relationship.
—Margaret Mead (1901–1978)

It is just as wrong to judge paintings from the point of view of pictures as it is to judge pictures from the point of view of painting. A painting has its own rule, its own justification within itself. A picture has its criterion outside itself, in the external reality it imitates. Several critics have recently made the remark that nonrepresentational art has this major defect, that being unrelated to external reality, it has no criterion by which it can be judged. The argument would be valid if the art of painting were the art of picturing. As it is, all judgments and appreciations of paintings founded upon their relation to an external model are irrelevant to painting. A painting is the embodiment of a form in a matter; the whole being of a picture is determined by the relationship that obtains between the image itself and some external reality.... As compared with a painting, whose ultimate end is to achieve a fitting object of contemplation, images are characterized by their ambition to represent all the objects they include, and to represent these objects with all the details that are compatible with their pictorial representation.
—Etienne Gilson (1884–1978)