Who was the man who killed his ex girlfriend?
Who was the man who killed his ex girlfriend?
Stimpson was been found guilty of murdering his ex-girlfriend – but her friends said initially Molly had said she believed they were a good match as he hid his controlling behaviour The friends have taken part in a three-part Channel 5 documentary called Stalked: Murder in Slow Motion, which airs tonight.
Is it OK to call your partner a derogatory name?
According to Hawkins, a good partner will never call you a derogatory name or insult your character or intelligence, no matter how upset they get. While it’s OK to argue in a healthy way and to disagree, it’s not OK for arguments to routinely turn toxic.
What to do if your ex is trashing you on Facebook?
“In a divorce case, there’s nothing better for the other side when you have someone claiming they have no money for spousal or child support, and yet they’re talking on Facebook about the vacation they just took,” Swickle says. If you are concerned about your ex discussing you on social media, you can try to work protections into your settlement.
What did my ex write on her blog?
Newman once had a client who wrote a blog post trashing her soon-to-be ex. “She said he was a liar, a cheat, a thief and couldn’t be trusted,” Newman says. While it may have felt good for Newman’s client to get all of that off her chest, the blog was read by her client’s husband’s boss.
“In a divorce case, there’s nothing better for the other side when you have someone claiming they have no money for spousal or child support, and yet they’re talking on Facebook about the vacation they just took,” Swickle says. If you are concerned about your ex discussing you on social media, you can try to work protections into your settlement.
According to Hawkins, a good partner will never call you a derogatory name or insult your character or intelligence, no matter how upset they get. While it’s OK to argue in a healthy way and to disagree, it’s not OK for arguments to routinely turn toxic.
What’s the best way to respond to an ex?
Use disarming statements. Politely decline your ex’s invitation to a verbal or email/text bloodbath by using disarming statements: “you may be right;” “I’ll think about that;” “I’m sorry you feel that way.” Your ex is expecting you to get upset. Responding in a calm, non-reactive fashion may seem like you’re “giving in,” but the opposite is true.
Newman once had a client who wrote a blog post trashing her soon-to-be ex. “She said he was a liar, a cheat, a thief and couldn’t be trusted,” Newman says. While it may have felt good for Newman’s client to get all of that off her chest, the blog was read by her client’s husband’s boss.