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How Much Change Do People Lose Each Year

Do guys feeling change after they lose their virginity?

You're right, guys don't take sex as personally as girls do. It's something built into our DNA, in fact.

But that doesn't mean it's meaningless. My first time was over 25 years ago, best 20 seconds of my life, and I remember it like it was yesterday. I'm still friends with the girl I lost it to (and she lost it to me, how cool is that), so there goes the 'mess up the friendship' theory right there. I'm also still friends with the second virgin I 'converted', so that's two.

If anything, a guy's feelings get deeper for you after his first time. He won't ever accuse you of 'stealing' his virginity though - only girls get like that. Most guys are saving themselves FROM marriage, not for it. Unless he's a cult member (you know, Catholic, Pentecostal, etc.) he won't mind having you as his first time. Even if it's not a sacred meaningful experience, he'll be totally good with it. He'll always think well of you, even if you don't end up happily ever after.

If he wants to do it and so do you, the only thing you can mess up is a set of bedsheets. Just remember not to laugh when he goes off within 20 seconds!

How many pairs of socks do people buy each year?

Your answer in short is just under 4 billion pair of mens, ladies and children's socks are purchased each year. Where do lost socks go is a whole other question and is one that our company has been investigating for many years now. So much that we had long ago developed a product which we manufacturer and market called the Sock Clip that is made to solve this very problem. We have found several potential answers to this mystery. Some percent get lost in the washer, some in the dryer, some get stuck through static onto other laundered items or stuck in the fold of a fitted sheet, others lost on the way to the washing machine and then many are simply discarded because one cannot find the other sock as it has already been lost. We have searched every where and of course there is no real answer. There are however good statistics as to how many pair of socks are sold each year, which is nearing 4 billion pair. Imagine if each person or family owned 100 pair of socks, and each person or family lost just one sock per year, that would be one percent. Now imagine that these same people or family need to replace their lost socks. Using these statistics and assumptions that would mean that 40 million pair of socks are sold each year simply to replace lost ones. Since we know that the average person or family probably doesn't 100 pair of socks and that these same people or families probably lose more than one sock per year, the real number of how many socks are purchased each year simply to replace lost ones is more than likely substantially higher. Hope this helps. For your solution to this problem visit us at our Sock Clip site by the same name. Good luck.

By how much does the distance between the earth and sun change?

The change in the mean distance (from year to year) follows a cycle that is roughly 100,000 years long. The main culprit is Jupiter, with the rest of the planets having much smaller effects.

However, the change is not regular. For the last few years we have been moving away from the Sun, now we are getting closer.

In 2009, our mean orbital distance is diminishing. We are talking of small values here (1.000016 au to 0.999998 au from January to June 2009, a difference of 2,700 km ( 1/5 of Earth's diameter ).

This is completely separate from the eccentricity of the orbit, which takes us (in 2009) from a perihelion of 147,095,260 km to an aphelion of 152,091,221 km. The eccentricity itself changes, following a (roughly) 400,000 year cycle. However, eccentricity -- or even a changing eccentricity -- does not, by itself, change the mean distance. It only changes the distances of perihelion and aphelion.

There is also another expected effect (but not really measurable): as the Sun produces energy, it loses mass. Four million tonnes per second. As it loses mass, our orbit should move outward. But that is not much (a few metres per million years?).

Because Earth and Sun orbit a common barycentre, they form a quadropole. As such, they should emit gravitational waves (according to Relativity). This energy being lost to the system should cause the Earth to get closer to the Sun. However, the rate of "gravitational luminosity" is around 300 watts. This effect would not be measurable, even over billions of years.

How can a 17 year old girl lose weight?

Okay, so i go online to try to get some tips. I'm a 17 year old girl who has been overweight since i was little. All due to being lazy. It's HARD to just get up and move since again as i said i'm kinda lazy (which i choose to change! yay) and being that i'm an only child i've never really had any fun exercising. can anyone help give me tips on how to lose weight healthily yet before school starts again? i have all summer to trim down and enjoy my senior year.....I would like a simply explained way please. most websites i go to try to be all expertise on me. i just would like some tips, perhaps a simple way to learn how to eat healthy daily i know starving oneself is a big NO-NO. I've never really been a big junk food eater....sodas are my main enemy. I just want someone to help me out here, perhaps someone who can relate? yes i'm lazy, all that junk. but i wanna change. so.....anyone have any tips? if it helps, i'm kinda tall.....bout 5'9 or 10, can't remember. my weight is.....up there so.....can anyone just help? thanks! i'd highly appreciate it. :) ***also, perhaps can someone list fun ways to exercise? only child here....so i need an extra kick to this.***

How much blood etc do you lose during your period?

So I've actually been getting mine for years, but I was wondering how much most people actually lose during their period. I've always had a 'heavy' one where I have to change the pad every hour or so, and I end up losing about 4-5 cups of fluid (Maybe more?) during each time. I was wondering if that's a normal amount? Non of my female friends seem to have any problems with it. I always feel kind of gross during it. Is that also normal? It's also kind of thick and clumpy, and I've been told it's not supposed to clump.(After 10+ years of it I doubt it's a huge problem. I'm mostly curious.) I've always bled a lot, but I've never wondered if that's abnormal or not. (Also, is there a way to lessen the bleeding each month without birth control?)

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