Archive for December, 2009
Here is a New Year’s resolution you almost never hear: “This year I vow to keep everything the same, I am going to weigh the same, exercise the same, talk to all of the same people and be exactly the same.” New Year’s resolutions are about change and sometimes change is difficult. Let’s explore some of the reason you make and then avoid (or don’t keep) those resolutions.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)Our memories of the events in our lives and the roles we played in those events, for good or bad, may often be exaggerated or otherwise skewed. Understanding and admitting our fallibility as human beings allows us to be more critical in our assessments of the facts, as well as more compassionate toward ourselves and others.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)In order for any ethics be true, they must be conducted from the truth that everyone who live in this world equally exist, born unknowing. The fundamental truth is that every known being has consciousness, and that there is none is born with the knowledge of where his/her ego/soul has emerged from.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)Success in life depends on your people skills. Greater success means an easier life. If your success isn’t where you want it to be, then think about upgrading your people skills.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)The phrase “Forgive and Forget” is a nice thought but one of those things that is hard to do in practice. My question is why do we link the two in the first place?
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)Self confidence can be fleeting. It can be difficult to attain and easy to lose. If we define ourselves by our failures or constantly worry that we will fail again, we will never be able to see our true worth and experience the peace that self confidence can bring. We can experience that peace by building self confidence. There are several things that can help.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)Given all that you do day-in and day-out, some days it is easy to feel like a gerbil on a squeaky exercise wheel. Yet, maybe if you said “no” more often, the exercise wheel would not be squeaking so loudly! So how do you determine what you are going to say “no” to, and how do you do it without upsetting those you are saying “no” to?
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)What can you do everyday to live a more peaceful life? You can verbalize gratitude. It is the single most powerful step toward inner peace you can invoke. Read on to learn how to use this powerful tool.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)The article offers 6 principles of growth for those of us who are in The Third Age (45 to 75 years of age) of life based on interviews conducted by William Sadler, Ph.D. author of the book, “The Third Age.” Integrating these principles result in renewal, fulfillment and happiness.
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If you like this post, please buy me a beer for $3 8-)Mercury retrograde is a blessed time for a course correction in life. The car breaks down, your computer stops working, your emails get mysteriously lost, communications of all sorts become foggy. What to do? Three times every year (sometimes four) Mercury turns retrograde and asks us an important question.
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