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Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2025 13:04:03 +0200
From: "Inner Circle" <RelationshipInsights@coolzen.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Inner Circle" <InnerCircle@coolzen.ru.com>
Subject: Other People's P___
To: <jad@niepodam.pl>
Message-ID: <tjk5jez1fthnd972-xs4z8ftm6emjpw39-3607b-42b21@coolzen.ru.com>
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Other People's P___
http://coolzen.ru.com/Tknvf-Dp5nl--TX1JUcMfYX3LxuM31HVMBPWScKwj7_mVn_0jQ
http://coolzen.ru.com/uEFUGEBOdbs64hKabjo78l59ot_53DCV8UU98tZPtRsUjAqgRA
ures were built as the residence and studio of the architect Paul Schweikher (1903–1997). Originally hailing from Denver, Schweikher achieved prominence through a 1933 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, working in partnership with Winston Elting. He lived in what is now Schaumburg (until 1956 part of the village of Roselle), in the Chicago metropolitan area, from 1934 to 1953. Later in his life, he became the chairman of both the Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture and the Yale School of Architecture.
Schweikher ownership
In 1936 or 1937, Schweikher obtained land in Roselle. The site was variously cited as covering 7 acres (2.8 ha) or 7+1?4 acres (2.9 ha). In exchange, Schweikher agreed to redesign a barn nearby for the person who had given him the land. At the time, he had won a cash prize from General Electric for his design of a modernistic industrial building, giving him enough money to build a house of his own. The site was rural at the time; it was 27 miles (43 km) west of Chicago, and the nearest town was 7 miles (11 km) away.
Schweikher drew up the first plans for the house while traveling back to the U.S. from Japan. He had been staying at Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel, Tokyo. The design of the house incorporated many of the Japanese design features Schweikher had seen in Japan, such as la
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<p><b>Who's down with OPP?</b></p>
<p><i>Just about everyone.</i></p>
<p><b>Let's talk about the triggers that make a woman want to cheat...</b> <u>according to the women who cheat.</u></p>
<p>They used to throw around the number <b>50%</b> for the number of men who cheated, at least once in their marriage. It was <u>less than 30%</u> for women.</p>
<p><b>The number is now over 50% for BOTH men and women</b>, and it's naturally much higher if you include relationships where the couple is unmarried.</p>
<p><u>Humans are not a faithful species!</u></p>
<p>Yet... talk to pretty much <i>ANYONE</i>, male or female, and they will tell you that <b>they hate cheaters!</b> And they would <u>never cheat themselves!</u></p>
<p>And if you've ever been cheated on, then I don't have to tell you just how much pain it can cause…</p>
<p><i>In John Mulaney's new comedy special</i> he says that when he was a kid he used to watch America's Most Wanted and think, <i>"how could anyone kill another human?"</i> Then he got cheated on for the first time and thought, <b>"ohhhh, now I get it."</b></p>
<p><b>Here's the thing:</b></p>
<p>If you spend your life being jealous, mistrustful, anxious or pissed off when other men look at your woman admiringly... then your life goes to shit:</p>
<p>Your relationships don't work, it actually <b>provokes women to cheat</b> or leave because they think you're insecure, and it practically forces her to be less feminine when you are around because she gets punished for looking good and acting sexy.</p>
<p><u>In a perfect world</u>, you want to be in a relationship with the kind of woman that <b>EVERY guy wants</b>... the girl that has that <i>sizzling feminine radiance</i> that lights up a room and takes your breath (and every other man's breath) away.</p>
<p>Just like in a perfect world, while you are <i>totally devoted</i> to the woman you adore... you also want to be the kind of man that <b>every woman in the room secretly wishes they could sneak off with</b>.</p>
<p>You want the devotion and trust of that one woman, but you're confident enough to comfortably enjoy the desire of all women.</p>
<p><b>What specific qualities in a man activate a woman's "mating instinct,"</b> and trigger her desire to cheat? <u>(Even if she stays loyal and would never act those feelings).</u></p>
<p><b>They're NOT what most people think</b>, and you can <a href="http://coolzen.ru.com/Tknvf-Dp5nl--TX1JUcMfYX3LxuM31HVMBPWScKwj7_mVn_0jQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><b><u>USE this information</u></b></a> to dramatically improve your own interactions with women.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;margin:30px 0;"><a href="http://coolzen.ru.com/Tknvf-Dp5nl--TX1JUcMfYX3LxuM31HVMBPWScKwj7_mVn_0jQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" style="display:inline-block;background-color:#e63946;color:#ffffff;text-decoration:none;padding:12px 24px;border-radius:4px;font-weight:bold;">Check out the surprising results I uncovered here »</a></p>
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<div style="color:#F9F9F9;font-size:8px;">ures were built as the residence and studio of the architect Paul Schweikher (1903–1997). Originally hailing from Denver, Schweikher achieved prominence through a 1933 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, working in partnership with Winston Elting. He lived in what is now Schaumburg (until 1956 part of the village of Roselle), in the Chicago metropolitan area, from 1934 to 1953. Later in his life, he became the chairman of both the Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture and the Yale School of Architecture. Schweikher ownership In 1936 or 1937, Schweikher obtained land in Roselle. The site was variously cited as covering 7 acres (2.8 ha) or 7+1⁄4 acres (2.9 ha). In exchange, Schweikher agreed to redesign a barn nearby for the person who had given him the land. At the time, he had won a cash prize from General Electric for his design of a modernistic industrial building, giving him enough money to build a house of his own. The site was rural at the time; it was 27 miles (43 km) west of Chicago, and the nearest town was 7 miles (11 km) away. Schweikher drew up the first plans for the house while traveling back to the U.S. from Japan. He had been staying at Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel, Tokyo. The design of the house incorporated many of the Japanese design features Schweikher had seen in Japan, such as la</div>
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