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LoginWhile that's not necessarily false, I think I've come across a quicker — and more all-encompassing — method to help you fully understand your boyfriend or girlfriend : Date them for a full year and experience all four seasons with them. Well, it's recently dawned on me that I've never dated a girl for longer than eight or nine months. We never crossed the year mark. Not once did we ever repeat the same day. I'd ran through the snow with some and gone to the beach with others, shared Christmas with one while barbecuing on the Fourth of July with another. While thinking about that somewhat pathetic piece of knowledge about my dating life, it occurred to me that I truly didn't know any of those girls. Nine months is nothing to sneeze at, but the quantity of time isn't as important as the quality time you experience with an SO. While it is slightly problematic that we're potentially teetering into a two-season time period, and it's not uncommon for it to be 70 degrees in December and snowing 20 inches in March, for now climate change deniers be damned , there are four seasons, so we're gonna go with that. Spring is key for a number of reasons even if you live in New York area and only get it for about 75 minutes a year. During winter, everyone wears their basic, baggy sweaters and jeans so they can get from point to point without freezing, while limiting the amount of snow, salt and slush that can ruin good clothing.
Another post here shows how love relationships work a lot like other living things—children, pets and houseplants. Like fruit trees, they grow through the cycle of seasons, and the time before marriage seems to me a cycle of four seasons. A problem in most relationships is that the partners are in two different seasons of readiness for love. A good future for such couples requires one to speed up growth while the other slows down, so they can get into the same season.
Cuffing season refers to a period of time where single people begin looking for short term partnerships to pass the colder months of the year. Cuffing season usually begins in October and lasts until just after Valentines Day. The use of the word cuff references handcuffs, but is slang in the same vein as "hooking up" or "getting hitched. It makes sense, then, for cuffing season to be impacted by the weather. It seems like the change in seasons are only denoted by the date now.
The leaves are falling, temperatures are dropping, and all you want to do is get cozy under a warm blanket. For many singles , this means one thing: "Cuffing season" has officially begun. If you haven't heard of this dating trend yet, we brought in some experts to explain the modern. To cuff or not to cuff? Keep reading to learn the ins and outs of cuffing season, along with some expert tips to keep the love going once the season wraps.
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