Minnesota

Review Question!!??
Jon James 50 Reviews 2471 reads
posted

I've recently posted a review of Julia (Thank GOD she is back!!!).  In checking the status of the reivew through  'account manager', the review has been accepted and I have received VIP credit.  The only problem is that the review has not appeared.  Have emailed TER and received no response.  Help anyone??

Mr. Info2016 reads

If you click on your post and then click on your
reviews you can bring up your review of Julia.
If you then click on 'see providers profile' you
will see that her profile is no longer available.

This means she has been delisted.  That means she
does not have an active profile and so she can't
be searched via the TER search form.  You will
always be able to access your review (or anyone
elses of Julia) by searching directly on a reviewer's name.

Thank You Mr. Info.  I will let Julia know she should re-enlist.

Thank you for your help Mr. Info.  Are you the board moderator I should refer questions to?

Mr. Info3907 reads

You can always ask me questions though.  In fact,
I try to help out with questions on the newbie
board.

You can be banned for spamming people with TER's
private mail, posting private information about
someone on the board (e.g. their real name), or
posting a self-review.  I'm sure there are many
others reasons.

I've included a link below by Girl Next Door.

-- Modified on 8/10/2005 3:18:00 PM

Ben Dover2334 reads

Freud - figured out the connection way back in 1915, here's some Psychology 101 for why YOU grew up jerking off to the rules and procedures manual while the rest of us were stealing our dad's playboys and jerking off to the pics of NAKED WOMEN in the bathroom!
 
Freud's Psychosexual Stages of Development:
What we do and why we do it, who we are and how we became this way are all related to our sexual drive. Differences in personalities originate in differences in childhood sexual experiences. In the Freudian psychoanalytical model, child personality development is discussed in terms of "psychosexual stages". In his "Three Essays on Sexuality" (1915), Freud outlined five stages of manifestations of the sexual drive: Oral, Anal, Phallic, Latency, and Genital. At each stage, different areas of the child's body become the focus of his pleasure and the dominant source of sexual arousal. Differences in satisfying the sexual urges at each stage will inevitably lead to differences in adult personalities. ***Conflicts between the sex drive and rules of society are present at every stage. A proper resolution of the conflicts will lead the child to progress past one stage and move on to the next. Failure to achieve a proper resolution, however, will make the child fixated in the present stage. The latter is believed to be the cause of many personality and behavioral disorders. ***

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