SACCHA PYAAR 9.12 DT pg 18
Paresh Rawal blasts Anupama Chopra over Dharundar Review.
🏏South Africa tour of India 2025: India vs SA - 1st T20I🏏
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BHAI & FAMILY 10.12
Honest Opinion on the Finalist Rankings
negative reviews being pulled down 😭
Jatinder from PV calls out Harminder from BoI for bias against Ranveer
Deepika in Mahavatar
Kavach Mahashivratri FF ~ Chapter 3 on pg 2
6 year leap promo : Tulsi-Mihir separation
Aditya Dhar and Yami paid to troll
Shah Rukh Khan new video launching Danube property
Originally posted by: sonalgupta2004
Can anyone clear this that are they divorced or it is not needed in a contract marriage...
What is their current status??
Originally posted by: sonalgupta2004
Can anyone clear this that are they divorced or it is not needed in a contract marriage...
What is their current status??
Originally posted by: Kiranbs300
While we're at it, let's compare three kinds of marriage: a no-fault contract (where either party can obtain a divorce on demand), a mutual-consent contract (where both parties must agree to a divorce), and a covenant marriage (where even mutual consent is not enough). You might think that no-fault marriages are always the most likely to end in divorce. That isn't true, and here's one reason why: A lot of marital issues are negotiable--like who should do the dishes, who gets to operate the remote control, which one wears the anti-snore device and which one wears the earplugs, and so on. Here the negotiating process itself provides all the right incentives to respect your spouse's needs. What you won't do for love, you'll still do for a bribe. And those things you won't do even for a bribe are, presumably, sufficiently distasteful that you shouldn't do them.
Originally posted by: Kiranbs300
While we're at it, let's comparethreekinds of marriage: a no-fault contract (where either party can obtain a divorce on demand), a mutual-consent contract (where both parties must agree to a divorce), and a covenant marriage (where even mutual consent is not enough). You might think that no-fault marriages are always the most likely to end in divorce. That isn't true, and here's one reason why: A lot of marital issues are negotiable--like who should do the dishes, who gets to operate the remote control, which one wears the anti-snore device and which one wears the earplugs, and so on. Here the negotiating process itself provides all the right incentives to respect your spouse's needs. What you won't do for love, you'll still do for a bribe. And those things you won't do even for a bribe are, presumably, sufficiently distasteful that youshouldn'tdo them.
It will be a long road for Ashvin. Even after they get together, this might be a question that will linger in her mind. Can it create an insecurity in her ? How is he going to handle it ?