Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Who likes Valentine's day?

Articles writing to us at Insurance.com generally focus on insurance. (It is as if we are obsessed by it or something!) However, for Valentine's day, we decided to write a free section of insurance. We have surveyed our teammates Insurance.com about their feelings on Valentine's day and received a surprising - and surprisingly varied - response.
We found four General people categories when it comes to Valentine's day:
Are people who are thrilled to celebrate Valentine's day.Anticipatory are those that expect great things each year - only to have their unfulfilled hopes.Non-Les participants try to ignore the Valentine because of a lack of interest or participation.Hate actively despise the day or the idea - either by repeated bad experiences, or a philosophical disagreement with the idea of a day focused on love - or its commercial aspects.
Out of the 52 people who responded to our survey, 60% plan to commemorate the day in any way, while only 40% do not. Here are some of the best responses, positive to negative:
True love: "I will stay at home with my wife of more than 38 years and make dinner with candles for us both." We do the same thing every year, and it makes every day Valentine's memorable for me. "We venture to guess that this person and our final respondent don't see eye to eye.
Pure happiness: "I like happiness with my wife and my children." "Sharing the love and feelings warm and a State of mind of camaraderie and tranquillity". At least a few people can take advantage of the day, no matter what happens.
A small token: "my husband I was dinner… was only tuna Helper, but it is always pleasant." See the guys? Sometimes, it is enough that you are well reflected.
A feeling obligation: "since I now have a girlfriend, I'm sure that we will have to go out for dinner." Ah, the feeling begins to rotate. Studies have shown that women really enjoy hearing their little friends, referring to a dinner out with them by using the words "have to". (Note to men: that is a lie.) (Most of the women do not like this!)
False enthusiasm: "I have to buy my wife candy and a map." I would prefer not, but she insists. "Is it really a gift if the person insists to you? Perhaps if claim you you say.
Termination: "Valentine's day is a sham and I refuse to celebrate." Even in relations people feel this way, it is not a surprise.
Deep disapproval: "Valentine's day is one of the most ridiculous 'vacation' If you will, second day more pleasant." "It encourages unnecessary displays of public affection and it often serves to alienate others which have no significant relationships or those who may have problems." Don't hold back. Tell us how you really feel!
UH-oh: "I will avoid to go where my wife is.." We can only hope that it is a joke, or that it is not what it sounds like.
Finally, no matter how you try, your Valentine can rotate incorrectly. These teammates were at the two ends of bad experiences, but they both prove that sometimes regardless what you do.
The purpose is to: "my husband sent pink in my Office the first year we have been married… but I'm allergic." I was a mess all day. ?
None Respect: "I fought through from roads in poor condition and a foot of snow when I was younger to see my girlfriend on Valentine's day." I brought flowers, sweets and other gifts - if she could break with me. ?
We hope that your Valentine is pleasant, that you choose to celebrate or not. Don't forget that it is just a day of the year.
Not what you are looking for? Have questions or comments? Please let us know.

View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment