best way how to deal with boyfriend breakups

How do I cope with the loss of my boyfriend?
We celebrated our 1st month back together after a break. As we were about to get into his car, I bent to kiss her. The next thing I know a black man pointing a gun at us to get my purse. He won silver and fired on us. I was shot in the chest and he was shot four times as he tried to save me! I would like he did not! I wish I was dead instead. I miss him and I want it back. It was a year, but I have not made much progress. I think I died with him. Please help.
I can not imagine my boyfriend and I die 'm sure it will take a long time. I would definitely suggest going to see a counselor if you have not already done so because it is obvious that it was a traumatic experience and perhaps talk about this might help. I do not know if this is the route you want to do, but they could prescribe antidepressants … is not to be ashamed of you obviously suffer from depression (everyone in this situation).
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How to Deal $6.71 In Halley’s junior year she faces the death of her best friend Scarlett’s boyfriend, Scarlett’s pregnancy, and Halley’s own first relationship, and during the summer of her divorced father’s remarriage and her sister’s wedding, Haven lets go the myths of |
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Boyfriend $19.98 Boyfriend |
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Deal With It $7.99 Indigo Summer and her best friend, Jade, are at the top of their game. They're the most popular girls at school, the best dancers on the high-school squad, and now one of them is going to be team captain. Indigo just never expected it to be Jade. For the first time in forever, Indigo is jealous of her best friend, and they're not the only ones on the squad dealing with major drama. Tameka rocked her SATs and is destined for a top college, but one lapse in judgment with her boyfriend, Vance, will change everything.Friendships, the team, their futures…this time, it's all on the line. |
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Raise Your Voice/How to Deal $12.71 RAISE YOUR VOICE: Terri Fletcher (Hilary Duff) is your typical sweet-hearted, small-town girl and she always obeys her intensely overprotective dad (David Keith), but when she gets accepted to a summer program at a prestigious Los Angeles music school and he forbids her to go, she realizes it’s time to break away. With the help of her cool aunt (Rebecca De Mornay), Terri figures out a ruse to sneak off to LA and seize the chance to fulfill her musical dreams. But when she gets there, it’s wake-up time, as she realizes being naive, adorable, blonde, un-pierced, and un-tattooed means being ostracized in this too-cool musical community. Luckily, John Corbett, a sympathetic music teacher, is there to help, and there’s time for romance to bloom with a British classmate (Oliver James). Before this little star can truly blossom though, she still has to cope with the trauma of losing her brother in a car accident (it’s left her terrified of bright lights, a real problem for a stage performer). And then there’s the matter of telling the truth to her furious father. Duff’s effortless charisma lifts this sturdy, comfortably worn vehicle easily over the bumpier clich s, and delivers it safely to its inspiring destination.HOW TO DEAL: Being a teenager is hard enough without having to deal with your parents’ divorce, your sister’s wedding, your best friend’s pregnancy, and the death of a friend. And falling in love for the first time? That only makes everything harder. At least that’s what 17-year-old Halley Martin (Mandy Moore) discovers during her junior year in high school. A confirmed skeptic on love after dealing with her parents’ divorce, Halley doesn’t understand how her best friend, Scarlett (Alexandra Holden), can suddenly be head over heels for her first serious boyfriend. Or, for that matter, how her older sister, Ashley (Mary Catherine Garrison), can marry stuffy Lewis (Mackenzie Austin) when they seem to disagree all the time. But when her friendship with a quirky schoolmate, Macon Forrester (Trent Ford), ultimately blossoms into romance, Halley suddenly has to reconsider everything she thought to be true about love. Allison Janney stars as Lydia, Halley’s mom, a new divorcée dealing with being dumped for a younger woman by her ultra-hip DJ husband, Len (Peter Gallagher). Clare Kilner (JANICE BEARD: 45 WORDS PER MINUTE) is the director of this coming-of-age tale. |
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New Deal $13.99 Track Listing: 1. Poison, 2. No Heart, 3. In the Honkey Tonk Shadows, 4. Johnson to Jones, 5. Blink of an Eye, 6. New Moon, 7. Better Everyday, 8. Just No Way, 9. AFC Song, 10. New Deal Blues, 11. I’m a Ghost, 12. Lie, The |
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Dirty Deal $14.99 Track Listing: 1. Last Dirty Deal, 2. Three Sides to Every Story, 3. Love Gotcha, 4. How Do You Sleep at Night?, 5. It Takes Time, 6. It’s My Own Tears, 7. Coin Operated Love, 8. Clean Slate, 9. Put the Shoe on the Other Foot, 10. It’s All Your Fault, 11. Ain’t No Brakeman |
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The Real Deal $9.99 Track Listing: 1. Live Forever, 2. There’s No Fool Like an Old Fool, 3. Livin’ a Lovin’ Lie, 4. It Just Ain’t There for Me No More, 5. Jesus Christ Is Still the King, 6. Slim Chance and the Can’t Hardly Playboys, 7. I Changed My Mind, 8. Sweet Melody, 9. Valentine, 10. You Ought to Be with Me When I’m Alone, 11. Down the Road by the Way, 12. West Texas Waltz, 13. Real Deal, The, 14. If the Trailer’s Rockin’ Don’t Come Knockin’, 15. Try and Try Again, 16. Aunt Jessie’s Chicken Ranch, 17. Feliz Navidad |
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Deal of a Lifetime - $4.99 Just how far would you go for a date with the girl of your dreams? Henry (Michael Goorjian) is a socially inept high school student who is constantly mooning over Laurie (Shiri Appleby), the most beautiful girl in his class. Henry announces he’d do practically anything to be able to go out with Laurie — which, of course, is the cue for Jerry (Kevin Pollack), Satan’s earthbound representative, to pay Henry a visit. In exchange for his soul, Jerry provides Henry with wealth, popularity, and a new girlfriend, Laurie. But before long Henry learns there’s a downside to having everything you ever wanted, and as his life starts to spin out of control, Henry decides he’d rather have his old life back — but does the Devil have a refund or exchange policy? Deal Of A Lifetime also features Jennifer Rubin and Ron Glass. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi |
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What a Girl Wants/How to Deal [2 Discs] $33.96 WHAT A GIRLS WANTS – Teenager Daphne Reynolds (Amanda Bynes) dreams of one day dancing with her father at her wedding. Her dream is complicated by the fact that she has never met her dad, Lord Henry Dashwood (Colin Firth), a British politician to whom her mother, singer Libby (Kelly Preston), was married seventeen years prior. Unfortunately, Henry’s aristocratic family did not approve of bohemian Libby and drove her away. Determined to find her father, who has no idea that she exists, Daphne leaves her New York City home and runs off to London, where, much to the dismay of Henry’s conniving fiancée (Anna Chancellor) and her jealous daughter (Christina Cole), she soon becomes a part of daily life at Dashwood Manor. Can a free-spirited American teenager survive in proper British high society? Not without a few bumps along the road. As Daphne tries to fit into her father’s world, she has to decide whether or not she is willing to give up all of the traits that make her unique. Also starring Jonathan Pryce, Eileen Atkins, and Oliver James, WHAT A GIRL WANTS is directed by Dennie Gordon (THE ADVENTURES OF JOE DIRT).HOW TO DEAL – Being a teenager is hard enough without having to deal with your parents’ divorce, your sister’s wedding, your best friend’s pregnancy, and the death of a friend. And falling in love for the first time? That only makes everything harder. At least that’s what 17-year-old Halley Martin (Mandy Moore) discovers during her junior year in high school. A confirmed skeptic on love after dealing with her parent’s divorce, Halley doesn’t understand how her best friend, Scarlett (Alexandra Holden) can suddenly be head over heels for her first serious boyfriend. Or, for that matter, how her older sister, Ashley (Mary Catherine Garrison), can marry stuffy Lewis (Mackenzie Austin) when they seem to disagree all the time. But when her friendship with a quirky schoolmate, Macon Forrester (Trent Ford), ultimately blossoms into romance, Halley suddenly has to reconsider everything she thought to be true about love. Allison Janney stars as Lydia, Halley’s mom, a new divorcee dealing with being dumped for a younger woman by her ultra-hip DJ husband, Len (Peter Gallagher). Clare Kilner (JANICE BEARD: 45 WORDS PER MINUTE) is the director of this coming of age tale. |
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How to Deal / Raise Your Voice (Double Feature) $12.72 RAISE YOUR VOICE: Terri Fletcher (Hilary Duff) is your typical sweet-hearted, small-town girl and she always obeys her intensely overprotective dad (David Keith), but when she gets accepted to a summer program at a prestigious Los Angeles music school and he forbids her to go, she realizes it’s time to break away. With the help of her cool aunt (Rebecca De Mornay), Terri figures out a ruse to sneak off to LA and seize the chance to fulfill her musical dreams. But when she gets there, it’s wake-up time, as she realizes being naive, adorable, blonde, un-pierced, and un-tattooed means being ostracized in this too-cool musical community. Luckily, John Corbett, a sympathetic music teacher, is there to help, and there’s time for romance to bloom with a British classmate (Oliver James). Before this little star can truly blossom though, she still has to cope with the trauma of losing her brother in a car accident (it’s left her terrified of bright lights, a real problem for a stage performer). And then there’s the matter of telling the truth to her furious father. Duff’s effortless charisma lifts this sturdy, comfortably worn vehicle easily over the bumpier clich s, and delivers it safely to its inspiring destination.HOW TO DEAL: Being a teenager is hard enough without having to deal with your parents’ divorce, your sister’s wedding, your best friend’s pregnancy, and the death of a friend. And falling in love for the first time? That only makes everything harder. At least that’s what 17-year-old Halley Martin (Mandy Moore) discovers during her junior year in high school. A confirmed skeptic on love after dealing with her parents’ divorce, Halley doesn’t understand how her best friend, Scarlett (Alexandra Holden), can suddenly be head over heels for her first serious boyfriend. Or, for that matter, how her older sister, Ashley (Mary Catherine Garrison), can marry stuffy Lewis (Mackenzie Austin) when they seem to disagree all the time. But when her friendship with a quirky schoolmate, Macon Forrester (Trent Ford), ultimately blossoms into romance, Halley suddenly has to reconsider everything she thought to be true about love. Allison Janney stars as Lydia, Halley’s mom, a new divorcée dealing with being dumped for a younger woman by her ultra-hip DJ husband, Len (Peter Gallagher). Clare Kilner (JANICE BEARD: 45 WORDS PER MINUTE) is the director of this coming-of-age tale. |
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Raw Deal - $44.99 A former FBI agent is recruited to root out the gangsters who killed a fellow agent’s son in this Arnold Schwarzenegger action film. After being booted out of the bureau for excessive violence, Kaminski (Schwarzenegger) lives in small-town exile with his bitter wife, Amy (Blanche Baker). He gets the chance to return to the big city, however, when Chicago mobsters murder the son of his old colleague Shannon (Darren McGavin), as well as scads of prosecution witnesses against them in an impending court case. Shannon promises to reinstate Kaminski if he’ll help engineer the downfall of gang leader Max (Robert Davi). Working undercover and without government sanction, Kaminski infiltrates the mob by posing as a bodyguard/assassin. Along the way, he tussles with beautiful gambling addict Monique (Kathryn Harrold), who starts off as an enemy but ends up more. The action comes to a head when Kaminski’s mob bosses send him to kill none other than Shannon. Released post-Terminator and pre-Predator, Raw Deal is one of several non-science fictional action flicks that cemented Schwarzenegger’s ’80s box-office appeal. Director John Irvin would return the following year with the gritty Vietnam drama Hamburger Hill. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi |