Want your ex back? Learn from being robbed at gunpoint!

General

As I wrote a few weeks ago, Valentine’s Day can be painful when you are missing your ex.

And I told you about a system that intelligently, honestly, and kindly teaches you how to get back together with your ex.

You can have better communication with your ex, possibly enough to get him or her back.

But think about this: Is there something you can learn from being robbed at gunpoint?

As the creator of the get-your-ex-back system explains, you should set up your “first date” again after your initial contact with your ex.

And the most important part — the secret and the part that nobody else will tell you — is that the date has to be emotionally charged.

Okay?

That does not mean ‘dinner and a movie’.

… because, well, it’s boring and does not create a bonding — or, in our case, a re-bonding — experience.

In fact, you want to pack in several emotionally charged mini-dates in a span of a couple hours.

Why?

If you just do ‘dinner and a movie’, you lose out on a sociologically proven principle:

Emotionally charged experiences = bonds.

Look at it in another way.

Last time you went to the bank, do you remember the person in line in front of you?

Behind you?

Probably not. I neither.

But …

What if if the bank were robbed at gunpoint while you were in it?

Imagine that the robbers can not get the safe open.

The robbers are livid, screaming and waving huge guns around. The tension is so thick that you can cut through it with a knife.

You are lying face down on the bank’s cold floor and seeing your breath fogging up the tile below.

You are trembling because it is eerily silent for a moment.

“Oh my god!”

“Where are the robbers?”

“Are they behind me?”

“Are they watching me?”

So you slowly move your eyes around and see a sweet older lady lying right next to you.

She looks a little like Grandma, and you come out of your own haze enough to realize that she is even more terrified than you. She is softly sobbing.

You slowly reach out and take her hand in yours and give her a little squeeze that says, “It’s gonna be all right.”

NOW!

Let me ask you: Are you going to ever forget that older lady?

And …

Do you think she will ever forget you?

Not in a million Sundays!

Now I’m not saying to go rob a bank on your first date!

But you want to go on an emotionally charged and exciting date — and preferably several mini-dates — in a span of a couple hours.

A short roller coaster ride is one great example.

The get-your-ex-back system teaches you more about things like emotionally charged dates.

You will also discover psychological tactics and techniques that you can use to get back together with your ex on that (new) first date.

I have collaborated with the creator of the get-your-ex-back system to send tips to you as fast as we can assemble them, but no more often than daily.

Each tip in this newsletter will focus in one way or another on better communication between you and your ex.

If this newsletter would be helpful to you, then simply tell me where to send it:

Once you click the button, please look for a confirmation email message and click the link inside to start getting the newsletter.

I will then start your newsletter subscription for the tips.

And of course I will tell you more about that wonderful get-your-ex-back system that handles the subject in an intelligent, honest, and kind manner.

I look forward to sending this information to you.

Just send me your name — a first name will do — and email address to get started.

Kindle version of hyphenation book is in the works.

Hyphens

I hope that you saw the latest news here.

Nineteen Common Mistakes that People Make with Hyphens, my new book valued by reader consensus at $19.97, is absolutely free here now! (Update: I subsequently replaced this with How to Use Hyphens.)

I know: I might be crazy to give it away, but I think that you are going to enjoy this product so much that you are going to decide to maybe be a customer of some of my other products in the future.

And one of my upcoming books is a version of Nineteen Common Mistakes that People Make with Hyphens that will be specially formatted for the Amazon Kindle.

Having just gotten a Kindle 2, I am stoked about the way that the Kindle has revolutionized the way that people like you and me can find, buy, and read books.

That gets to my other reason why I am giving away Nineteen Common Mistakes that People Make with Hyphens absolutely free.

You see, I want you to get the book, read it, and then let me know a fair price for the Kindle version of the book.

As a thank-you, I will then send you a $27 book titled Words to Profits.

But you have to start the ball rolling.

Request my hyphenation book today!

UPDATE: My How to Use Hyphens book is now available in softcover and several eBook editions. It replaces the Nineteen Common Mistakes that People Make with Hyphens PDF. Learn more here!

“… tom | orrow …”

Hyphens

I saw this last night on the Fox TV program “Hell’s Kitchen”.

Problem:
The subtitle editor split the word “tomorrow” in the wrong place when making it span two lines.

Explanation:
The TV program “Hell’s Kitchen” sometimes must display subtitles because the audio was poorly recorded or because the producers believe that an American audience will not understand chef Gordon Ramsay or one of the contestants in the program.

I do not recall the entire subtitle, but at one point during last night’s episode someone said a sentence that contained the word “tomorrow”.

If a sentence does not fit on one line in a subtitle, the subtitle editor must make the sentence run across two or more subtitle lines.

I put the vertical bar (|) in the title of this blog post to indicate that this is where the subtitle editor chose to split the word “tomorrow” such that the first part ended one line and the second part started the next line.

Because subtitles are added in post-production and are not the equivalent of closed captioning of a live event, the subtitle editor should have had time to compose each subtitle correctly.

So it seems to me that the editor did not know how to split the word “tomorrow” into two lines.

  1. The editor split the word at the wrong letter.
  2. The editor failed to include a hyphen at the end of the first part of the split word.

A dictionary tells the reader where to split any word, and a hyphen is always required at the end of the first part of the split word.

Solution:
“… to- | morrow …”