New Zealand is hairy wife son sex outdoor videopledging to help teens cope with heartache. Announced Wednesday, the new government initiative will aim to help young people in the country through their breakups, by "developing positive and life-long attitudes to dealing with hurt."
The initiative, called Love Better, has been given 6.4 million New Zealand dollars ($4 million) by the country's Ministry of Social Development. The cost will be allocated over three years.
Priyanca Radhakrishnan, associate minister for Social Development and Employment, said 1,200 young New Zealanders surveyed told the government "they need support to deal with early experiences of love and hurt," with breakups being deemed "a common challenge." 68 percent of those surveyed said that breakups led them to face consequences like depression, risky sexual behaviours, violence, jealousy, and stalking.
SEE ALSO: How to survive Valentine's Day when you're heartbrokenThe campaign strategy is rooted in fostering safe and equal relationships, helping young people to navigate discourse surrounding relationships and their own expectations. The goal is to support teenagers in identifying and avoiding abuse, ultimately learning how to love better. This approach was developed alongside young people, mental health experts, and government officials.
"Love Better, which asks young people to 'own the feels,' is a primary prevention campaign that features young people sharing real stories to help their peers who may be going through similar experiences," said Radhakrishnan.
The campaign features real footage of young people telling stories of their breakups, with the content being posted across social media. One video starts off with the words, "Breakups suck." Soon after, videos taken by teens on their phones are shown; one girl says to the camera: "I'm officially deleting my ex from all my socials. I'm moving on."
"This campaign sits alongside work already underway to support young people with healthy boundaries and attitudes to relationships," said Marama Davidson, minister for the Prevention of Family Violence and Sexual Violence.
The Love Better initiative is part of a wider approach to breaking harm within relationships and families. Called Te Aorerekura, the 25-year strategy from the ministry seeks to eliminate violence and strengthen prevention.
"This approach hasn’t been trialled by any government around the world. New Zealand has shameful statistics of family and sexual violence and we need innovative approaches to break the cycle," Radhakrishnan said.
Little Tokyo’s FirstSpokesperson dispels rumor about Taiwan businesses retreating from Chinese mainlandChinese mainland says crossDelegation of mainland university students, teachers kicks off Taiwan visitArtworks by Taiwan, Fujian artists on display in TaipeiLaunch of Happiness, Health, Heritage @ HomeU.S., Canadian warships disrupt stability of Taiwan Strait: military spokespersonDPP authorities responsible for crossTaiwan's businesspeople, enterprises encouraged to seize development opportunities on mainlandFujian, Taiwan eyeing closer financial links Trump had paid actors at his first presidential campaign speech Disturbing footage shows car circling street moments before it drives into crowd Prank your indecisive friends with this brutal pizza order Amazing football street performer has all the right moves Shia LaBeouf gets in fight with troll on day 3 of his 4 Graceful dog jumps over doggy gate like it's NBD 'Hollyweed' guy strikes again with a massive anti Cards Against Humanity has one specific requirement for their new CEO: Be Barack Obama How to lose your verified account: Pretend to be communist Jackie Onassis Why Londoners are standing in solidarity with the U.S. at the Women's March
0.1439s , 12398.296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【hairy wife son sex outdoor video】New Zealand puts millions into helping teens cope with breakups,Feature Flash