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Show If such a girl, untreated, marries a kind, mild man, she is likely to provoke i me violent. This does not She wearies of op- then be able to understand why she has rejected other possible partners to whom she was not initially attracted. The wo acting under a compulsion to get involved with Mr. Wrong probably is attractive to many men, but is not intrigued by the “right” ones. She shculd accept invitations anyhow —to dinner, movies and parties—with men other than the type she usually se- never ill. She simply needs to be punished. What lies behind the Married Man Syndrome, the girl who consistently gets involved with martied men? This can be blamed on a woman's desire for a manalready established in life (like her father) or her need for full-fledged and more. There are success stories. . . . Take Adele. She maintained a hideaway apartment on a quiet street for her inarried lover’s convenience. He was defying his wife, his church, his children, even ‘grandchildren and his own conscience. But Adele’s beauty, passion ry she had with her mother. and devotion were too much for him. It took therapy to show Adele that she loved him only because he repre- When a womanconsistently picks on alcoholic men as lovers, you will gener- sented her father—hard-drinking, grayhaired, paunchy and _hail-fellow-well- ally find that her father, or some older met in manner. After seeing herself clearly as a. woman enslaved by the rivalry with a woman,suchas therival- relative or family friend—someone she loved as a child—was alcoholic. Such a woman consistently breaks dates with more suitable men to seek out alcoholics because they—and they alone—can evoke in her a powerful response. What can be done about such women? Can they be helped? Yes, butit is no snap course. Remember that something inside all of us is still involved in the dim, farremoved world of our childhood, where shadowy memories loom vast. Remember, too, that in this world there really is no place like that first home, be it ever so humble, so rich, so gentle—orso violent. The self-punishing woman may not be happy with her destructive pattern, but she feels safer with it because it is familiar. It is never useful to blame one’s parents after one is well out of childhood. Nor should a woman blame herself. She should simply decide to give herself a new chance in life. She may past, she was able to break off with him. At the age of 40 she has found an eligible man, enough like her father to interest her, but with many good characteristics all his own. They plan to be married within the year. A girl who cannot seem to find her way alone can obtain list of qualified psychologists and psychiatrists by con- ® “I love the new, bi Diamond-patterned glass. Self-sealing “Dome” lids. (No monebatparaffin)Color we 5 or the county medical society. Some young women may be able to change ful, table-pretty caps. All the loveliness of Quilted Crystal—but in 12-0z. size. Packed in —— storage trays you can cutin half for gift giving. And there's a sheaf ofself-sticking labels in every tray! their lives simply by reading and self- analysis. In any case, no one should remain enslaved by the past. Those SEND TODAY! over 450 tested recipes. Step-by-step and freezing pictures. Over 11 million copies already in use. who have shaken off their chains say Dr. Arthur N. Foxe is a former prison psychiatrist and author of “Studies of Criminology.” At present, he has a private practiée in New York City. Family Weekly. June 20, 1971 13 ted Joan Fisher—MRS. AMERICA 1970 _ tacting her family doctor or a university it’s like getting out of prison. What's sad is that the prison was of their ewn making. Femily-Size Crystal jelly jarsfromBall.” ra Pes snes ses rs see Es “only from her fathez. She marries this man, and the marriage thrives. She is lects. She must talk with them and learn that such men can be good friends BALL BLUE BOOK BoxW—Diarmond Bar, California 91766 Please rush me my Ball Blue Book, ! enclose 35¢ (in coin). NAME ADDRESS. city__ © BC 1971 STATE |