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I Was Injured In Jan. 2011. I Left My Job To Go To A Job That Was Less Physically Demanding.

My husband turns me down for sex!? *and we've only been married a year :(*?

Wow that is so sad and hurtful. His actions are seriously weird. There are a few things that may be in play. One, is he working more or harder? If he tired a lot? Two, have either of you put on weight? A change in the way you look might be effecting him. But either way, this is a problem that needs attention. You need to try to talk to him in a very calm way. Crying and carrying on will only make him shut down. Tell him that to you this is serious and if he can't understand that then perhaps you should try counseling. Also, he may not know this but you are at your sexual peak. He hit his in his early twenties. Try to tell him to think back to how he felt at that age, sexually. That is what you are going through now. You needing sex more than once a week is NOT a problem and there is NOTHING wrong with you. He needs to get that straight right now. Insulting you is ridiculous and not the way to deal with a women who is feeling rejected for God's sake. Counseling may honestly be necessary if he can't have an adult conversation about this and try to hear you out. If something is "wrong" with anyone it is him. At 33 his libido isn't what it used to be, but it sure as hell shouldn't be gone completely. So, try to talk to him about it without getting upset. If that yields nothing then tell him that you need to go to a counselor and that if this marriage is important to him then he will at least try it with you.

What is Manu Ginobili's real first name?

Emanuel

Which low-paid, dangerous, physically demanding jobs are primarily or stereotypically taken by women in the US and the West?

In addition to the beauty and cleaning related fields mentioned in the question details: Elementary School Teachers In most western countries primary teachers are overwhelmingly (70-90%) women. Such jobs are decently paid (comparable with other jobs that require a similar level of education) but tend to require considerably higher hours than are actually paid, both in preparing for classroom time, meeting with students and parents after-hours, and time required for licensing and continued education (Survey: Teachers work 53 hours per week on average).Being a teacher for children under 10 is exhausting, physically taxing, and brings with it a constant exposure to illness. In addition, in the US, you have to risk that someone will attack the school: there have been over 150 fatalities (that's just deaths, not injuries) in this millennium (i.e. since 2000) related to violent attacks on education facilities.Flight Attendants All of the risks of being a pilot (one of the 10 Most Dangerous Jobs In The US) with little of the glamor and pay; flight attendants are over 70% women. Flight attendants make around $20 an hour, but only get paid for time in the air, which means a large amount of time they are "on-the-job" they are not getting paid. In addition to risks if a flight goes down, flight attendants face health risks from turbulence, falling luggage, jet lag, inconsistent schedules, disease exposure, and radiation. In addition, they spend most of their working time on their feet in a moving, cramped environment in heels and skirts, which I sure wouldn't want to do.Mothers Oh, I know. Being a mother isn't a job, right? It's something women choose to  do (like miners and truck drivers don't choose their profession?), so it doesn't count. But if being a mother were counted as "work" it would land squarely in the  10 most dangerous jobs in the US, with an average death rate (in 2013) of 28  deaths per 100,000 just from giving birth, not counting additional risks  from postpartum depression, at-home accident rates being exacerbated by  exhaustion, and our all-time favorite risk, being killed by one's  spouse. In addition, of course, being a mother is usually low paid (or unpaid!)  as well as being extremely physically and emotionally taxing.

What are the main reasons for Tiger Woods' decline?

Let’s see:He’s wealthy - Even after his expensive divorce, Eldrick Tont ’Tiger” Woods has a net worth between $550-700 million. That makes him the wealthiest athlete in the world and the 3rd wealthiest African American in the United States behind Oprah Winfrey and Michael Jordan. Considering that it’s doubtful that he could easily grow much wealthier and the difficulty in motivating oneself when you have earned more than almost all of your peers combined it’s often a wonder that Woods continues to play professional golfHe’s aging - He’ll be 39 in December 2014. While for some of us that’s not that old, for a professional athlete that is often well past the time when your skills have eroded. That he is still able to compete at a professional level at his age is impressive; but eventually he’ll be unable to do so and that time may be coming sooner rather than later.His injuries - From having LASIK surgery on his eyes twice to surgeries on his knees and back, Tiger Woods has been suffering a steady number of injuries over the last seven years. These may have been causing him some setbacks; they certainly have caused him to miss some tournaments.His personal life - Not to go into too many details, but the last ten years have been a turbulent time in Wood’s life. From the death of his father in 2006, to the scandals involving his extramarital activities to the dissolution of his marriage it’s clear that he has experienced numerous distractions which seem to have taken him out his game.Alone any of the above would have probably ended the careers of many professional athletes. Combined, along with other issues not known about by the public make it a wonder that Tiger Woods even bothers to play pro golf at all. He doesn’t need the money and he is one of the best golfers who has ever played the game.There isn’t too much left for him to achieve.

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