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DTSTART:20230530T160000Z
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CREATED:20210524T225403Z
DATE-MOD:20210621T192914Z
SUMMARY:Sortie Culturelle
NAME:Sortie Culturelle
DESCRIPTION:La culture, moins on en a, plus on l'étale! \nSource: 
 https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?TesT2
LOCATION:Avenue des Champs Elysées 75000 Paris
GEO:48.865669;2.3203067
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UID:https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?YoupiIciCEstLeTitre
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DTSTAMP:20260307T203047Z
DTSTART:20200108T000000Z
DTEND:20200111T000000Z
CREATED:20200124T094252Z
DATE-MOD:20210621T193356Z
SUMMARY:Youpi ici c'est le titre
NAME:Youpi ici c'est le titre
DESCRIPTION:Un événement autour du vin, c'est pour cela qu'il est à 
 Bordeaux... \nSource: https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?YoupiIciCEstLeTitre
LOCATION:Bordeaux
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UID:https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?YeswikidaY
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DTSTAMP:20260307T203047Z
DTSTART:20200430T070000Z
DTEND:20200430T140000Z
CREATED:20200212T112149Z
DATE-MOD:20210806T103429Z
SUMMARY:Yeswikiday
NAME:Yeswikiday
DESCRIPTION:Une journée pour faire avancer le projet Yeswiki dans la 
 bonne humeur \nSource: https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?YeswikidaY
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UID:https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?WhatTheStatisticsWonTTellYouAboutSingle
URL:https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?WhatTheStatisticsWonTTellYouAboutSingle
DTSTAMP:20260307T203047Z
DTSTART:20220514T000000Z
DTEND:20220515T000000Z
CREATED:20250514T122829Z
DATE-MOD:20250514T122829Z
SUMMARY:What the Statistics Won't Tell You About Single Mothers
NAME:What the Statistics Won't Tell You About Single Mothers
DESCRIPTION: Télécharger le fichier 0773850612x612.jpg 
 (https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?api/upload&amp;file=0773850612x612.jpg)\nYet 
 again, single mothers are in the news. The most recent Shriver Report has 
 a list of statistics that make the plight of single motherhood seem quite 
 daunting—numbers that say they are more likely to live with regret and 
 at the height of poverty, struggling so much more than those with partners
 by their sides.\n\nThese statistics aren’t unique—they come to light 
 every time somebody decides to do another study on the struggles single 
 mothers face. The research would tell you that the challenges endured by 
 single mothers are extreme and that their ability to succeed in that role 
 is limited.\n\n Sponsored Ads \nLooking For Single Parents? Try Loveawake 
 Free Dating Site:  \nDating For Single Mothers In Sweden 
 (https://www.loveawake.com/free-online-dating/Sweden-dating-service.html?p
 age=31)\nBut 
 the research doesn’t always tell you the full story.\n\nI am a Single 
 Mother by Choice, part of a growing demographic of women who choose single
 motherhood as their path to parenting. Most of us are in our 30s, well 
 educated, successful—far outside the statistics. And for many of us, 
 there is no regret in how we have become mothers. Our children are our 
 lives, the best things that have ever happened to us.\n\nThere is 
 something to be said for that choice—for the mothers who strive towards 
 single motherhood, rather than recoiling from it. Too often, the 
 statistics seem to more accurately represent Single Mothers by 
 Chance—those who became unexpectedly pregnant or those who entered 
 parenthood with partners by their side, only to be left alone without much
 of a say at some point down the line. The numbers speak more to poverty 
 and a lack of options than they do to single motherhood as a 
 whole.\n\nIt’s a flaw in the research that fails to differentiate 
 between the two groups and possibilities. But there are plenty of voices 
 telling a different story than the ones the numbers are 
 portraying.\n\nTake Tarsha Downing (blog: 
 www.tarshastreasurechest.blogspot.com), for instance, a 32-year-old law 
 office manager living in Maine. She chose to adopt her daughter, Imani, 
 from Uganda as a single woman, purely because she knew she was ready to be
 a parent. She says she doesn’t even think about the fact that she is a 
 single mom anymore. “It’s our only way,” she explained. “I would 
 do it all over again for my girl.” She says the stats on single 
 motherhood aren’t representative of her, and that “we are not doomed 
 to become something because the ones before us did.”\n\nThen there is 
 Rebecca (last name withheld for privacy). She is a 42-year old senior vice
 president in banking who is a Single Mother by Choice to daughter Ella, 21
 months old. While she had believed she found the love of her life years 
 before, it never quite worked out, and in her late 30s she decided that 
 she would rather pursue motherhood on her own than never at all. Ella was 
 born 15 weeks premature, from complications due to preeclampsia. Because 
 of that, she has developmental delays and requires more care than Rebecca 
 had initially planned for, including a private nanny who is capable of 
 dealing with Ella’s medical issues. For Rebecca, addressing those 
 concerns is the biggest challenge of motherhood, but she is quick to point
 out that the same would be true even if she had a partner. She told me she
 sometimes catches herself saying, “When I was single…” in reference 
 to her previous life, because, in her mind, she isn’t single anymore. 
 She’s part of a family of two.\n\nLindsay Curtis, a 33-year-old 
 communications specialist and mommy to daughter Evelyn, 11 months old, 
 said that for as long as she could remember she wanted to be a mother. The
 long-term relationships just weren’t working out, and she decided to 
 take the plunge on her own. She worries about being the only financial 
 provider, but lives comfortably enough and is quick to recognize the 
 benefits of single motherhood. “I discovered strength, patience and love
 I didn’t know I was capable of or had,” she told me. And, she enjoys 
 the fact that she gets to call all the shots. No fighting or compromising 
 on parenting styles, names or anything else. She gets to parent exactly as
 she wants to. In her mind, that’s a benefit to the choice she has 
 made.\n\nFor these women, and many more like them, it came down to a 
 matter of choice. They knew what they were getting into before they ever 
 pursued becoming parents—and perhaps it is that level of thought that 
 sets them apart from the single mothers so often represented by these 
 studies. It was not too long ago that a report came out declaring 
 homosexual parents were faring better than their heterosexual 
 counterparts. According to the researchers, the difference was how the two
 groups had come to be parents in the first place—the homosexual group 
 was full of parents who had to put a great deal of thought and effort into
 achieving their dreams of child rearing, while the heterosexual parent 
 group was a mix of those who had truly dreamed of being parents and those 
 who had found themselves raising children quite by accident. These 
 differences created a dynamic where homosexual parents seemed more 
 motivated and committed to their roles as parents according to the 
 numbers, purely because each of them had needed to fight to get there in 
 the first place.\n\nFor my part, pursuing single motherhood came after 
 losing my fertility at a young age. It was a blow which made me realize 
 how ready I was to be a mother, despite how elusive finding a long-term 
 love had been. In the first few months of caring for my newborn, I 
 remember thinking to myself “How do couples do this? I barely have 
 enough time for just myself and her.” I couldn’t even imagine making 
 the space for another person. I know that people do it, but I have to say,
 there were benefits to the fact that I didn’t have to. I was able to 
 build a cocoon around myself and my daughter, making her the priority in 
 my every waking moment. Would I love to find a partner in my life now, 
 someone she can look up to and I can rely upon and trust? Absolutely. I 
 would love for my daughter to grow up in a warm and stable two-parent 
 home. But if that isn’t in the cards, and it is only just the two of us?
 I can still guarantee that we will be happy, safe and cared for. There 
 will forever be enough love in our home. We will be just fine, my girl and
 I.And we will never be what those statistics might try to tell others we 
 are.\n\nBecause I make a choice, every day, to commit to motherhood and my
 little girl.\n\nAnd because I was lucky enough to have entered single 
 motherhood at a time when I had opportunities and options.\n\nBecause that
 really is what those statistics come down to—poverty and a lack of 
 options.\n\nNot parenting on one’s own. \nSource: 
 https://tav-toulouse.xyz/?WhatTheStatisticsWonTTellYouAboutSingle
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