Here are 3 things we’re sure you’ve heard people say with conviction – whether in the break room at work or at dinner parties with your friends. We’re pleased to provide you with some thought-provoking responses…
Culture is a set of values and behaviors that are learned and shared by a group of people who have common experiences and influences. National culture fits this definition. However, although national culture influences each of us greatly, it’s only ONE of the many cultures that impact us. We’re also members of numerous other cultures! When you think about the people that you share values and behaviors with, and with whom you also have common experiences and influences, you start seeing cultures based on education (what and where you studied), work experience (where you’ve worked, for how long), particular life experiences (e.g., growing up with a single parent, traveling around the world, managing a chronic illness, being married or single, being a parent or not), socio-economic experience (middle class vs. low income upbringing vs. never having to worry about money), or geographic location (what area of the country you grew up, city vs. suburban vs. rural). Our culture or worldview is also influenced by our gender identity (and all the experiences that come from belonging to a particular gender), our age (i.e., the era when we grew up), our sexual and gender identity, our religious faith (or lack thereof), and our ethnic background. Your organization has culture. New employees in your organization have a culture (compare to the culture of those who have worked at your organization for 20 years). The Greek Orthodox have a culture. People who grew up navigating life from a wheelchair have a culture. If we share similar values and beliefs with a group of people, that is culture.
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Cultures exist because a group has found a way to make their lives better. No culture is inherently worse or better than any other. Rather, some cultures may have values and behaviors that don’t support success when their environment changes. Consider, for example, the difficulties faced by the Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians in the early 90’s when they became the first republics to declare independence from the Soviet Union. How do people whose culture was defined by 50 years of experience with closed borders and a centrally planned economy suddenly operate under a system where they are members of a democracy, with open borders, and a market-based economy? Or, for example, American culture and its faith in independence and taking responsibility for your own choices. This is very useful when the economic situation allows for ongoing individual success. What happens, however, when things change, and suddenly the historical belief that “moving back in with your family” is a sign of failure is at odds with the reality of people losing their homes and their jobs, and having no one to turn to? In addition, most cultures are benevolent and have positive intentions behind any values they instill. (The vast majority of people don’t want to intentionally create conflict or fail!). It’s our inability to see things wholeheartedly from their perspective that may cause us to judge another culture as cruel, stupid, antiquated, or naïve.
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The environment we all live in may be changing (slowly or quickly) impacted by such things as the internet, or YouTube, or Hollywood, or Bollywood, or 15 hour flights that connect Asia to Europe, or pandemics like the flu, or outsourcing, or migration – but the bottom line is that we all still interact with these commonalities based on our cultures. In the long run, we may begin to share certain values and behaviors, but the French will always have French history and French pride, and the Bolivians will always have Bolivian history and Bolivian pride. Until such time as we all speak the same language, go to the same schools, share the same history, and have uniform laws, policies, and holidays, we will continue to be unique.Sexual preference is a subjective concept and has nothing to do with biology as such should not be taught like it is.
Well I for one am relieved to see Indian-British Naomi, Egyptian Canadian Mena, Will Smith the greatest showman, SNL's Nasim all dressed up in Traditionally Semitic garb to portray a tale that is in… link.
The misconception that some people are born gay stems from a singular study, conducted on men; that suggested that for that small group of mostly gay men; among other things, being left handed indicated a tendency to be homosexual.
Muskan Jiwa: Khush Aamadi Qasida (with Music, Lyrics & Translations)
If there was a biological reasoning behind homosexuality it would mean that all gay men would be without semen, impotent, incapable of impregnating a women ( Since procreation is the #biology behind #heterosexuality) and all lesbians would be infertile without eggs/ova, wombs, lacking the ability to give birth at all points of existence.
In that singular study, there was nothing on women, but in my experience, both men & women who have experienced childhood and adolescent sexual abuse tend to question sexual orientation because of a conditioned psychological distaste for heterosexual association because of the dilemma of dealing with the sins of the father, uncle, or any other Male predator/s in a previously or rather publicly or rather mummy assigned/imputed, positive Mentor role.
In tandem with this is a distrust of parents oscillating between #deification and #demonisation (as they were supposed to protect, trust and love the suffering child, rather than indirectly/directly expose said child to treachery, gaslighting; censorship)
Of The Most Common Misconceptions
In fact gay men tend to deify/worship both parents in an attempt to justify and overcompensate for the damages the narcissist sociopaths scarred them with. The suppression, censorship; self gaslighting from abuses suffered generates an individual who glorifies predators, even sympathising with them as closet homosexuals and has no tolerance for people who feel violated by unwanted sexual advances.
Such men think they are feminist but really can not come to terms with the acceptance and true forgiveness for abuse suffered, since they occupy themselves with the delusion that there was no abuse. Have internalised misogyny coupled with mother worshipping.
Shakespeare’s Hamlet encapsulates perfectly a man who has been abused as a boy, his actions demonstrate what an evil man his father really was, while his words show a worshipping of that very man. After Ophelia kills herself, Hamlet also takes a self-destructive route and follows her suit after murdering what was left of his family,
Hafiz And His Contemporaries: Poetry, Performance And Patronage In Fourteenth Century Iran 9781838600624, 9781848851443
Choosing homosexuality/bisexuality where misogyny is suppressed subversive surfaces as acerbic cattiness: attractive nubile women are sluts, Cher, Madonna mothers, women who seem “Above all that” are divas, so long as they are overtly sexual and too inaccessible or too old to be traditionally sexually attractive.
Both are subconsciously trying to justify, absolve, chastise #guilt and #anger that they real should address not sugarcoat from abuse they endured as children/Adolescents directly( as victims or survivors) or indirectly ( where they were recruited in a Joint liability enterprise or as silent witnesses)

Certain Male survivors of abuse gay men or not, evolve to people who are truly wise, respect the bodies of other human beings ( None of that slut Ophelia vs Gertrude goddess or #groping which is an unfortunately ubiquitous organ of LGBTQ + womaniser +paedophilic Lolita myth culture) And manage to forge a decent committed monogamous loving relationship that lasts a lifetime. Irrespective of “psychologically subjected imputed determined” sexual orientation or in a simple word, “taste”
Which Urdu Sher Is The Closest To Your Heart?
N: Almost, I’m not jealous of Adeel Ikram Khan of Dartmouth-Oxford because I think he’s better than me, I don’t. I’ve beaten him in every single subject at least once, never cheated either, so I know I’m just as smart as him. Flunk to appease my crazy jealous mother’s insatiable ego. . . I envy him because his daddy didn’t rape him, his mummy didn’t cover it up; because one day he decided to taunt me about my lack of work ethic, saying, “ I had a hundred and four temperature and I still came to school” , has he ever disposed of a rotting blood covered bludgeoned to death by his mother pigeon or fat smelly lice infested rat killed by exclamation or taken a jhaaroo and a dust rag, sweeper clean the apartment bit by bit, or ached from head to toe
Squeezed and twisted from the inside from Fibrocystic breast condition, periods, dehydration, migraines while a nagging crazy fat scratches at him, socks the side of his head with a smartphone, spits him in the eyes with a litany of expletive gibberish?
No he has not. He isn’t trapped struggling with the possibility of never having children, he doesn’t equate womanhood with having a functional womb.He isn’t cooking or sewing on blinds either.
Culture It's A Big Term Isn't It'? An Analysis Of Child And Family Health Nurses' Understandings Of Culture And Intercultural Communication: Health Sociology Review: Vol 20, No 1
Andrea has brown eyes, Sherri has brown eyes, I have brown eyes, I can bet your dead sister Andy or Angie had brown eyes too.
And I take it, sometimes with a giggle, a laugh, a hollow one, the lost laugh like in AI’s English language mock exam essay.
Sulaiman beat the crap out of me, with Mashal’s sister Natasha banging on the basement classroom door,
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