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North Korea's military on Tuesday threatened the South with imminent "sledge-hammer" retaliation unless Seoul apologised for anti-Pyongyang protestors burning effigies of its revered leaders.South Korea called the North's ultimatum "regrettable" and vowed a tough response to any military provocation.

Lifestyle
 

Ex-flame’s memory lingers on in heart

Saturday - Aug 04, 2012, 04:33pm (GMT+5.5)
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Melbourne - A survey has revealed some fascinating insights into relationship break-ups, including the fact that almost a quarter of respondents - 23.8 percent - still have a  special place in heart for their ex, with 15.1 percent of those saying that was despite the relationship ending more than a decade ago.

The overwhelming majority, or 80.5 percent, of those surveyed said that they had had their heart broken, with a third, 34 percent, admitting to taking more than a year to recover.

Despite the digital age, most - 67 percent - ended their last relationship face-to-face.

But almost 15 percent said that they broke up over the phone, 8.5 percent sent a text and 2.3 percent an email, intimating their estranged partners of their decision.

The survey undertaken by the Daily Telegraph found the road to living happily ever after was often rocky, with 34.3 percent of people having broken up with their current partner in the past.

For most of them, the split lasted for less than six months, with 8.7 percent reunited after less than a week, followed by 8.5 percent who couldn’t stand to be apart for more than a month.

But absence didn’t make the heart grow fonder, with just 18.2 percent saying their relationship was better for having broken up and 13 percent who said it wasn’t.

Relationships Australia NSW counsellor Bill Hewlett said the survey results pointed mostly to the same thing - “their relationship’s capacity to evolve and change with them”.

“If there is no capacity to change they can drift apart,” News.com.au quoted Hewlett as saying.

After a honeymoon period, known as the “limerence” phase, which lasted up to 30 months and was dominated by passion, hormones and brain “chemicals”, he said that couples should know

each other well enough to work through issues as circumstances changed.

“Can you let each other be who they need to be or hold them to the original agreement, as in how it was at the beginning?” he said.

“It’s not so much what you disagree on but how you discuss it,” he said.

The study found that most couples broke up after realising the relationship had no future.

The realisation was followed by too much fighting, infidelity, boredom and division over key issues like religion or politics.

Almost 50 percent of respondents said they dumped, while just under a third said their partner left them, and about a quarter - 26.3 percent - said it was mutual.

But on being asked about their worst break-ups, respondents did not hold back - “My ex went stalker freak on me,” one woman in her 20s said.

Hewlett said couples could turn around a loveless or turbulent relationship.

“A lot of people feel trapped by the other person . . . but often the other person feels the same way,” he added.

 





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