| Written by Jacquline Karrasi Thursday, 04 March 2010 13:09 | | | Khanyi Mbau drugged business man into cheating |  Business man Thenius Crous could be forgiven for cheating on his wife Primrose Crous with Khanyi Mbau because he was drugged. A new research done in Georgia, U.S.A concluded that curvy women stimulate men's brains the same way drugs and alcohol do, and Thenius Crous could be one of the many man hooked to Khanyi Mbau’s curvy body like a drug.
The 51-year-old Eastern Cape millionaire businessman once told a reporter that Khanyi Mbau had an overpowering sex appeal that he found irresistible and m.......... | | |
| Wednesday, 12 August 2009 10:27 | | | Women spend one year and four months of their lives crying | An average woman spends the equivalent of one year and four months of her life crying, new research has shown.
The survey of 3,000 females found, that during their first year, they will shed tears for three hours a day when they need changing, feeding or entertaining.
Teenage girls cry for around two hours and 13 minutes a week and, by their mid-20s, they will cry for as much as 2.24 hours a week after falling out with their partner, watching a weepy film or losing a loved one, reports The Daily Express. | | | Written by Savibes Sunday, 12 July 2009 23:25 | | | Makosi makes surprise Big Brother Return | Remember Makosi Musambasi, the housemate on Uk | | | Friday, 10 July 2009 00:00 | | | Women spend about one year of their lives deciding what to wear | A new poll | | | Written by Kazeka Mashologu kaKuse Wednesday, 24 June 2009 11:35 | | | Paying lobola is much like paying for a long-term prostitute | Some aspects of lobola (Bride price) are downright sexist. Before screaming that the modern black woman has lost her "blackness" or "Africaness," or has embraced too much of Euro-centric feminism, take a moment to ponder that the financial aspect of lobola borders on long-term prostitution clothed as "ukwakha ubuhlobo" (building friendship).
When one observes the practice of lobola more closely, the differences between this practice and prostitution are few, indeed. The groom to be is begging for the bride to be to be his and his family's possession.
In essence, he pays once for her sexual favours for the rest of his life, to bear children who will have his name, thereby ensuring his immortality, to change her name to his, and to be the family's maid in the name of "umendo" (a practice where the wife is apprenticed in the domestic cooking and cleaning of her new family.) In truth, the woman becomes his possession, to have her serve him | | | |
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