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From: NY
Date: 1/7/2015
Time: 5:55:34 PM
Remote Name: 62.210.152.149

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I've come to collect a parcel <a href=" http://www.kreyol.com/creole-dictionary/?generic-nifedipine ">purchase nifedipine online</a> Don't ignore those pre-wedding jitters: they may warn of marital trouble ahead, according to a <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/justin-lavner/do-cold-feet-warn-of-mari_b_1910770.html">UCLA study published in the Journal of Family Psychology</a> in September 2012. Researchers asked 232 newlyweds in their first marriages whether they had <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/justin-lavner/do-cold-feet-warn-of-mari_b_1910770.html">"ever been uncertain or hesitant about getting married"</a> after they got engaged. The research team followed up with the couples every six months for the first four years of their marriages. In a <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/justin-lavner/do-cold-feet-warn-of-mari_b_1910770.html">HuffPost blog</a>, one of the researchers, Justin Lavner, explained that premarital doubts predicted divorce rates four years later, especially when the doubtful partner was the wife. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/justin-lavner/do-cold-feet-warn-of-mari_b_1910770.html">According to Lavner,</a> "19 percent of couples in which wives had doubts were divorced four years later, but only 8 percent of couples in which wives did not have doubts ended up divorced. Husbands' doubts did not significantly predict divorce, although divorce rates were somewhat higher among husbands with doubts (14 percent) than husbands without doubts (9 percent)."


Last changed: 01/07/15