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What hinders a Healthy Sex Life in Committed relationships by Dr. Patrick E. Prince

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Sex or sexual issues are usually symptoms of other problems within the relationship. When these are resolved, most couples realized it was never about sex.

The following checklist highlights a few of the common relationship issues that I have experienced / addressed throughout my 23+ years of practice dealing with couples. This is not limited to TCI, but includes my Country, St. Kitts & Nevis, as well as other Caribbean Countries, and the United States of America where I studies and trained. This is not an exhaustive list; and these so-called sexual issues are often not about sex or sexual activities, but are signs and symptoms of other fundamental issues that are ignored:

1. Boundary Issues – most spouses want to change their partners, and can’t; thus, there are holdouts on sexual activities as a way to pressure that change, which often never comes. Instead, it puts more strain on the relationship and on sexual activity.

2. Decreased or Lack of Intimacy – as a result of couples not being able to spend the quality time and communicating as openly and positively as before, when they first met; desire for and affection towards each other decline. This often leaves both partners, or at least one partner unsatisfied; and sexual activity becomes more of a chore than a cloud of bliss.

3. Distracted Attention – couples usually bring children into the mix. Children are a blessing; but couples have a tendency to allow children to distract their love, romance, and intimacy. Couples don’t date anymore, don’t have their sexual cat-plays anymore, they don’t dress sexily in the bedroom anymore… when asked why? The usual response, “the Children.” Of course, this hinders getting to the home base (Sex!!!).

4. Emotional Cheating – because of all of the above previously highlighted issues, couples usual turn to a friend or a online buddy or a neighbor to confide in. This becomes a habitual activity. And, before you know it, it has gone too far. In most cases, there are no physical sexual interactions. However, the partner becomes so caught up in the emotional relationship that it distracts from the actual “real” relationship. Not finding a way to effectively communicate their needs and the relational hiccups, couples cause the door to the bedroom to be temporary closed.

5. Lack of Appreciation – can trigger infidelity or emotional cheating. When a partner does not feel appreciated, s/he often turn to others for such attention. More often than not does “it” stays as verbal compliments. Left attended, it crosses over to the other side… where sexual activity looks brighter.

6. Lack of Effective Communication – instead of couples communicate with each other, they talk at each other, complain to each other, and criticize one another as a means to communicate. What this does is turn off the switch to the activities in bedroom, starting with a decline in intimacy and foreplaying.

7. Money – The Mighty King Sparrow (Calypsonian) sings, “No Money, No Love.” Couples are often not openly honest with each other about the finances. In many relationships, couples don’t budget; and the financial resources become depleted. The bills are yet to paid, but one partner has a new set of leather car seats or the other partner gets her ballroom-style gown, nails done, hair style off the chain for the upcoming event… Either way, neither partner previously discussed their spending; and thus, this turns into a verbal fight of yelling and name calling, resulting into resentment lasting for weeks up to months. When this happens, you know the bedroom door is closed for business… No Money, No Love!

8. Poor Time Management – due to the stressful demands of work and hours spent on community volunteering activities, couples become so busy and distressed that the quality of their marital relationship decline, starting with the lack of spending quality time with each other. Therefore, the teasing and cat-playing that usual precedes awesome sexual activities are stopped; thus, killing the “big bang” feeling during sexual activities.

9. Technological Interference and Distraction – with technology comes responsibility. Many couples text at dinner, at family meetings, in the bedroom – when they should be touching and gently caressing each other. Having the laptop in bed all the time next to your partner, doe not equal “Quality Time.” Many couples are on Facebook, when they should be kissing their partners faces. Many are on Twitter, when they should be tweeting the words of love in their partners ears. When this happens, partners will be turned off; thus, shutting the lid to the cookie jar.

10. Unwillingness to Forgive – “I can forgive, but I can’t forget” … is usually what is said when asked about forgiving the past and moving on for the better. Many couples are NOT willing to forgive; … they are able to forgive, but more often, they are NOT willing to forgive. When this happens, resentment usually dominates and many partners resort to sleeping in the children’s or other bedroom or on the sofa / couch to avoid intimacy or sexual interactions with their significant other.

Magnetic Media is a Telly Award winning multi-media company specializing in creating compelling and socially uplifting TV and Radio broadcast programming as a means for advertising and public relations exposure for its clients.

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The Cost of Unprotected Culture

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“Where are the local artists?”, This question is not simply about visibility. It’s about structure and law. And more precisely, it is about whether Turks and Caicos has fully come to terms with what it means to exist within the global framework of intellectual property while still failing to execute it locally. The absence of local artists in major developments is not an accident of taste. It is the predictable outcome of a system that recognizes rights in theory but struggles to enforce them in practice.

When culture is reduced to atmosphere, the people who produce it are reduced to suppliers as with the business license structure and how cultural creators are categorized as retail entities which further support this framework. Their work becomes interchangeable with references and motifs. Their intellectual property becomes negotiable.

At the centre of this is the Berne Convention (1886) for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.

Protection..But, Not Really

On paper, Turks and Caicos benefits from international copyright protections through its constitutional relationship with the UK. The Berne Convention guarantees that creators (authors, musicians, painters, photographers, sculptors, filmmakers etc). automatically own rights to their work without formal registration, that sounds modern.

But the reality is; the only operative copyright framework materially available to artists in Turks and Caicos remains the Copyright Act 1911. A law written for a different century, drafted before digital reproduction and predates the very economy that uses art as a commercial asset. So while the convention exists as an international standard, the local mechanism through which an artist must assert and defend their rights is effectively anchored in the 1911 act, while the Brene convention was revised in 1971.

Regional Contrast

Countries such as Bermuda and The Bahamas have moved beyond inherited frameworks and enacted modern copyright legislation that gives real effect to the Berne Convention within their domestic systems. They have updated copyright laws aligned with contemporary use, enacted clearer enforcement pathways, provided legal recognition of digital and commercial reproduction and have systems that better position artists within the economic structure.

In other words, they have translated the Convention from principle into practice.

The Berene Convention

The Berne Convention establishes three core principles:

  • automatic protection
  • national treatment
  • minimum standards for rights

But none of these principles enforce themselves. They require local systems to give them force, what exists is not a functioning copyright ecosystem. It is a legal inheritance.

There is:

  • no modern, locally tailored copyright regime
  • no structured licensing or royalty collection systems
  • limited institutional pathways for enforcement
  • and a heavy reliance on outdated legal provisions to address contemporary commercial use

In this context, the Convention becomes theoretical; while artists are left to operate within a system that has not caught up.

A Cultural Economy Being Built on Outdated Law

Turks and Caicos is not lacking in the arts. It is lacking in legal infrastructure that treats art as an economic asset in real time. The reliance on the 1911 Copyright Act produces a specific set of conditions:

  • reproduction rights are often misunderstood or ignored
  • commercial use of artwork in marketing exists in a grey zone until challenged
  • enforcement becomes expensive, slow, and reactive
  • artists must carry the burden of asserting rights that should already be structurally protected

So when developments ask for culture, what they are often engaging with is not a regulated market, but an unsecured one.

Tourism, Aesthetics, and Unregulated Value

The Turks and Caicos Islands sells an image of place. That image is not just beaches and water. It is culture, even if some persons may not agree, it is identity and visual language.

Arts sit inside this concept with a contradiction: culture is used to increase property value, brand identity, and global appeal. Yet the legal system governing that culture remains outdated and under-enforced. This creates an environme nt where art can be absorbed into commercial projects without clear frameworks, artists are treated as aesthetic contributors rather than rights holders and value flows outward without structured returns.

Not because the Berne Convention allows it, but because the local system fails to prevent it.

The Berne Convention assumes a baseline: that authorship will be respected. But in jurisdictions where: legal literacy is uneven, enforcement mechanisms are weak and power imbalances are significant, that assumption collapses. What remains is a gap between what the law says could be possible (by extension as a UK terittory) and what artists can realistically enforce. That gap is filled by the continued reliance on a 1911 statute to manage 21st-century commercial realities.

Artists’ Rights

The conversation cannot stop at inclusion. It must move to ownership and enforcement. If Turks and Caicos is serious and wishes to further expand its economic sectors via the creative economy; its reliance on the Copyright Act 1911 is no longer sufficient. A modern legal framework is required to address digital use, marketing reproduction, and commercial exploitation of work.

  1. Institutional Development
    Systems must exist to support licensing, rights management, and dispute resolution that are accessible to local artists.
  2. Developer Responsibility
    Cultural due diligence must become standard practice. Intellectual property cannot remain an afterthought in projects that rely on cultural branding.
  3. Repositioning the Artist
    Artists must be recognised not as optional additions, but as rights holders whose work carries enforceable economic value.

To support local culture is not to decorate with it. It is to protect it, regulate it, and ensure that those who produce it participate in the value it generates. Right now, Turks and Caicos exists in a contradiction that anchors it to a 1911 legal framework without significant revision. Until that is resolved, the system will continue to produce the same outcome and so the question is no longer just: “Where are the local artists?” but;

“What legal system has been built for artists to stand on?”

Because without that system, the Berne Convention remains what it currently is in Turks and Caicos:

A principle without power.

PHOTO CAPTION:  1 Brass Manilla, artwork from the Tears of the Trouvadore series)

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Where to Draw the Line? TCI and Bahamas Advance Maritime Boundary Talks

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June 16, 2026 – Thirty-four years after formal negotiations began, Turks and Caicos Islands and The Bahamas are still working to define an agreed maritime boundary between the neighbouring archipelagos, a revelation emerging from a recent Turks and Caicos Cabinet summary which has brought renewed attention to a largely overlooked diplomatic and security issue.

A May 2026 Turks and Caicos Cabinet update suggests the long-running negotiations are continuing to advance.  In August 2023, Bahamas Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell said efforts to draw an exact maritime boundary had been slowed by the challenge of gathering the mapping and locational data required for the exercise.  The United Kingdom, which represents Turks and Caicos in the negotiations, has offered few details beyond confirming that both sides remain committed to maritime boundary delimitation talks.

The negotiations are not centred on a territorial dispute but rather on establishing a legally recognized maritime boundary under international law.  Such agreements help determine jurisdiction over fisheries, maritime resources, law enforcement activities, environmental protection and migration control in the waters between neighbouring countries.

While the discussions focus on the boundary between The Bahamas and Turks and Caicos, the exercise is part of a wider maritime delimitation effort — the process of formally marking and agreeing upon where one country’s waters end and another’s begin.  In comments to The Tribune in August 2023, Mitchell referenced similar boundary considerations involving the United States and Haiti, underscoring the broader regional importance of defining maritime jurisdictions in accordance with international law.

According to public statements from The Bahamas, formal negotiations between the two sides began in 1992 and were followed by technical discussions in 1996.  After years of little public activity, talks resumed in 2023 and have continued through a series of engagements involving legal, maritime, security and geographic information specialists.

The importance of maritime boundaries was underscored by former Bahamas Foreign Affairs Minister Brent Symonette during maritime boundary discussions between The Bahamas and the United States in 2009.  At the time, Symonette described clearly defined maritime borders as essential to national sovereignty, law enforcement, fisheries management, environmental protection and efforts to combat illegal migration.  He also argued that agreed boundaries provide legal certainty and strengthen cooperation between neighbouring countries.

The United Kingdom, which represents Turks and Caicos in the negotiations, has offered few public details beyond confirming its commitment to the process.  However, officials from the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office participated alongside TCI representatives during talks held in Nassau in August 2023.  The Turks and Caicos delegation included then Permanent Secretary Wesley Clerveaux, whose responsibilities included Marine Affairs.

At this stage, the TCI Cabinet has only publicly identified the area under discussion as being south of “Point 1.”  Information released by The Bahamas following a 2023 meeting indicates the negotiations concern waters between the southeastern Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands.  While no map has been made public, the available information places the discussions south of Bahamian islands including Mayaguana and Great Inagua.  Exactly where the proposed boundary would meet the Turks and Caicos archipelago remains unclear from public records.

The latest Cabinet update offers no indication of when the negotiations may conclude.  However, after more than three decades of intermittent discussions, recent references by both governments suggest efforts to finally draw the line between the two jurisdictions are continuing.

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Four Years to Deliver: World Oceans Day Calls for Action, Not Promises

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By Deandrea Hamilton

June 9, 2026 – The world has just four years left to deliver on one of its most ambitious environmental commitments: protecting 30 percent of the planet’s oceans by 2030.

On World Oceans Day 2026, environmental organizations, governments and international leaders are shifting the conversation away from awareness and toward action, urging countries to turn decades of promises into measurable protection for marine ecosystems.

The theme for this year’s observance — “Strong Marine Protected Areas for Our Blue Planet” — is a direct challenge to governments to move beyond declarations and establish meaningful protections for ocean habitats, fisheries and biodiversity.

The urgency is especially relevant in the Caribbean, where economies, jobs and entire communities depend on healthy oceans.

From tourism and fishing to transportation and climate resilience, the sea is the region’s most valuable natural resource.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres warned that humanity can no longer treat the ocean as limitless.

“In these turbulent times, the ocean reminds us that we are bound together,” Guterres said. “But the ocean is in deep trouble.”

The global push follows the recent ratification of the High Seas Treaty, designed to protect marine biodiversity beyond national waters. Together with the international 30×30 target, the agreement represents one of the largest conservation efforts ever attempted.

Closer to home, Caribbean nations are also advancing ocean protection initiatives.

CARICOM says it is developing a regional Ocean Policy aimed at strengthening marine governance and supporting sustainable blue economies.

In the Turks and Caicos Islands, World Oceans Day coincides with the tenth anniversary of the Blue Belt Programme, which has focused on protecting marine resources while supporting sustainable use of the Territory’s waters.

In The Bahamas, conservation advocates are encouraging citizens to reconnect with the ocean and recognize its value not only as a source of recreation, but as the foundation of national prosperity.

Yet conservationists say government action alone will not be enough.

Protecting the ocean begins with everyday decisions: reducing pollution, respecting marine habitats, supporting sustainable fishing practices, participating in clean-up efforts and holding leaders accountable for environmental commitments.

The message of World Oceans Day 2026 is straightforward.

The promises have been made.

The treaties have been signed.

The targets have been announced.

Now comes the hard part: protecting the ocean before time runs out.

Developed by Deandrea Hamilton • with ChatGPT (AI) • edited by Magnetic Media.

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