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  • Will You Add? - Make Time For the Relationships In Your Life

    Using A Reverse Mortgage To Pay for Long-term Care and Avoid A Nursing Home
    Alternatives to Long Term Care Insurance: Using a Reverse Mortgage and Other Methods to Pay for Long-term Care CostsBecause long-term care insurance requires you to be in good health, this planning option is not available to everyone, especially older applicants for whom the premiums may also be prohibitive. If you are at least 62 years of age and you own your home, you could use a reverse mortgage to pay for care at home or for a long-term care insurance policy that otherwise may be unaffordable.A reverse mortgage is a means of borrowing money from the amount you have already paid for your house. You are freeing up money that would otherwise only be available to you if you sold the house. You can st
    itted to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by thos

    The Coming Fair Tax Revolution
    Few people would expect a book about taxes to take The New York Times bestseller list by storm, but that's exactly what The Fair Tax Book has done. For decades, Americans from every point on the political spectrum have moaned about April 15th and the maze of ridiculous instructions and high confiscatory taxation that accompanies that day. The current tax code is a labyrinth of over nine million pages of indecipherable jargon only a federal bureaucrat could fully appreciate. So is there anything we can do about this monstrosity?You bet. The Fair Tax Book, authored by Georgia Congressman John Linder and nationally syndicated talk radio host Neal Boortz, lays out a perfect case for why the
    Most of us today are very, very busy.

    Many of us are trying to juggle a lot of different responsibilities. We try to keep a household going, and try to have a good relationship with our mate at home. At the same time we have to keep track of all our kids and their various activities, while also trying to do a full time job outside the home. We may have aging parents who take up more and more of our time.

    If we're younger, we may be juggling full time classes at school while also doing a part time job and trying to have a social life. We may be doing volunteer work in the community. The demands on our time never seem to end, and often it’s hard to take a few moments out of our busy lives to decide what our priorities should really be.

    Many of us today are on the go all the time. We rush from appointment to appointment until we collapse exhausted.

    One place that many of us have cut back is on spending time unwinding with our friends. We often feel guilty just at the thought of taking time to hang around. Spending time just relaxing with friends seems like a luxury we can't afford.

    Those lazy days when life seemed to be about spending quality time with your family and friends seem to belong to a different century.

    One way that many of us try to cope with this overload is that we try to juggle doing two or three things at once.

    While we are at work, we may be trying to get caught up with our friends and families with emails and phone calls. And when we are with our friends and family, our minds are often elsewhere, as we're also trying to get caught up on our other emails and text messages, and checking in at the office. We may be talking to one person in front of us while emailing another.

    Many of us are very proud of how many things we seem to be able to do at one time, without realizing that we are not fully present for any of them.

    Many of us are not fully present at our jobs and we’re not fully present with our families and friends. Instead we are often in a kind of trance induced by the fact we are trying to be everywhere at once. We can use our busyness to distance ourselves from close human contact.

    And all our modern technology such as email, cell phones, and text messaging and tiny music players and portable videos seem to distract our attention from the present moment more and more.

    Even though all the new technological toys we have today were supposed to free up our time and make us more connected, they can have an opposite effect.

    If we're trying to check our emails and messages while we are with our friends and families, we're distracted from being present in the relationship.

    Many of us are used to not just multi-tasking with our jobs, but also with our friends. Why give our attention to the person in front of us, when there might be a message on our computer at the same time?

    How often have you been speaking to a friend on the telephone, and heard the clacking of typewriter keys in the background? Your friend may be typing up email messages to someone else at the same time he or she is talking to you. So you’re not getting his full attention, and neither is the other person.

    A better, more exciting offer might come in any minute, on our cell phone, or in our email.

    Our attention is never really where we are. Our mind is split. We’re never really committed to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by those

    Dental and Medical Collection Legal Guidelines
    Every medical and dental practice has to deal with patients who do not pay. If it doesn't deal with such patients, the costs will simply be passed on to other patients - the practice may simply suffer or fold.Yet the very real dental and medical collection laws issues mean you should think carefully before reminding your patients to pay up. In the end, you may very well be better off outsourcing your medical or dental accounts receivables to one of the new medical and dental collection agency/accounts payable processing centers.According to the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act (FDCPA), your medical or dental billing notices fall under essentially the same regulations as a mega-bank's car loan coll
    we collapse exhausted.

    One place that many of us have cut back is on spending time unwinding with our friends. We often feel guilty just at the thought of taking time to hang around. Spending time just relaxing with friends seems like a luxury we can't afford.

    Those lazy days when life seemed to be about spending quality time with your family and friends seem to belong to a different century.

    One way that many of us try to cope with this overload is that we try to juggle doing two or three things at once.

    While we are at work, we may be trying to get caught up with our friends and families with emails and phone calls. And when we are with our friends and family, our minds are often elsewhere, as we're also trying to get caught up on our other emails and text messages, and checking in at the office. We may be talking to one person in front of us while emailing another.

    Many of us are very proud of how many things we seem to be able to do at one time, without realizing that we are not fully present for any of them.

    Many of us are not fully present at our jobs and we’re not fully present with our families and friends. Instead we are often in a kind of trance induced by the fact we are trying to be everywhere at once. We can use our busyness to distance ourselves from close human contact.

    And all our modern technology such as email, cell phones, and text messaging and tiny music players and portable videos seem to distract our attention from the present moment more and more.

    Even though all the new technological toys we have today were supposed to free up our time and make us more connected, they can have an opposite effect.

    If we're trying to check our emails and messages while we are with our friends and families, we're distracted from being present in the relationship.

    Many of us are used to not just multi-tasking with our jobs, but also with our friends. Why give our attention to the person in front of us, when there might be a message on our computer at the same time?

    How often have you been speaking to a friend on the telephone, and heard the clacking of typewriter keys in the background? Your friend may be typing up email messages to someone else at the same time he or she is talking to you. So you’re not getting his full attention, and neither is the other person.

    A better, more exciting offer might come in any minute, on our cell phone, or in our email.

    Our attention is never really where we are. Our mind is split. We’re never really committed to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by thos

    3 Ways to Make Money with your Podcast
    How would you like to make money with your podcast? If you are podcasting, the potential to generate revenue from your podcast is an extra-added benefit to you as a podcaster.As a podcaster, you don’t have to worry about large overhead and the revenue generated through your podcast will be mostly profit.There are three main ways in which you can make money with your podcast.1. Generate Revenue through Commerical SponsorsOne of the greatest ways to generate revenue for your podcast is through commercial sponsorship of your show. If you are able to obtain a major sponsor, you can bring in large revenue for your podcast. As time goes on, major companies are beginning to recognize the
    one person in front of us while emailing another.

    Many of us are very proud of how many things we seem to be able to do at one time, without realizing that we are not fully present for any of them.

    Many of us are not fully present at our jobs and we’re not fully present with our families and friends. Instead we are often in a kind of trance induced by the fact we are trying to be everywhere at once. We can use our busyness to distance ourselves from close human contact.

    And all our modern technology such as email, cell phones, and text messaging and tiny music players and portable videos seem to distract our attention from the present moment more and more.

    Even though all the new technological toys we have today were supposed to free up our time and make us more connected, they can have an opposite effect.

    If we're trying to check our emails and messages while we are with our friends and families, we're distracted from being present in the relationship.

    Many of us are used to not just multi-tasking with our jobs, but also with our friends. Why give our attention to the person in front of us, when there might be a message on our computer at the same time?

    How often have you been speaking to a friend on the telephone, and heard the clacking of typewriter keys in the background? Your friend may be typing up email messages to someone else at the same time he or she is talking to you. So you’re not getting his full attention, and neither is the other person.

    A better, more exciting offer might come in any minute, on our cell phone, or in our email.

    Our attention is never really where we are. Our mind is split. We’re never really committed to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by thos

    Cold Calling for Introverts
    In her book, The Introvert Advantage, Marty Olsen Laney talks about the defining moment when she embraced the fact that she was an introvert. It came in the form of a statement, “Oh, there’s nothing wrong with me, I’m just an introvert!”According to her research only 25% of people are introverted which leaves us the daunting task of dealing with the 75% extroverts of the world. And surprising as it seems, there are those of us who have, for one reason or another, chosen to make our living in sales.Being in sales poses many problems for introverts but probably the biggest is the idea of making cold calls. Now before we look at cold calling for introverts let’s look at the concept of cold calling itsel
    e trying to check our emails and messages while we are with our friends and families, we're distracted from being present in the relationship.

    Many of us are used to not just multi-tasking with our jobs, but also with our friends. Why give our attention to the person in front of us, when there might be a message on our computer at the same time?

    How often have you been speaking to a friend on the telephone, and heard the clacking of typewriter keys in the background? Your friend may be typing up email messages to someone else at the same time he or she is talking to you. So you’re not getting his full attention, and neither is the other person.

    A better, more exciting offer might come in any minute, on our cell phone, or in our email.

    Our attention is never really where we are. Our mind is split. We’re never really committed to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by thos

    Barack Obama says American Alcohoilism is the Cause of Iraq War
    According to Democratic Presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama, American Alcohoilism is the root cause of the Iraq War, soon to be the Iran War. The immense, gluttonous, ridiculous over consumption of oil by the people of the United States of America is the root cause of the Iraq War said Senator Barack Obama of Illinois.At the time that America went to war in Iraq Senator Barack Obama was a state legislator. He opposed the war in Iraq from the beginning unlike all of the other leading candidates from both parties who voted to go to war in Iraq proving that the color of your skin and long years of experience do not always translate into good foresight and wisdom. Yesterday Barack Obama addressed the DN
    itted to working when we are at work, and when we're with our friends and loved ones, we're never really present with the people we care about, because someone else is on the line. Or something else is on our mind.

    When was the last time you were with someone who really paid a lot of close, personal attention to you? That made you feel like you might be a valuable human being?

    How rare is that today?

    When was the last time you paid close personal attention to someone else? Made them feel really valued because you gave them the gift of yourself?

    When we spend time with the people who truly love us and accept us, we have a chance to let go of our false roles.

    We can feel emotionally and spiritually recharged by spending time together with others. We can feel more accepted and relaxed when we are surrounded by those who care about us. We don't need to be on the go all the time, and we don't need to be always putting on a front or keeping others at a distance.

    But for our relationships to have a beneficial, healing effect, we have to be fully present with people who are also fully present with us.

    How many people today, living modern, busy lives, make thier relationships such a priority that they are actually fully present and paying attention?

    How many people make it a priority to be really present with their loved ones, instead of just being physically present, and mentally distracted?

    Very often, being really present with our friends and loved ones is a victim of our busy life styles.

    If you’re always busy and distracted, are you using your busyness as an escape? Does your current lifestyle reflect your true priorities of what is really important in your life?

    Is your hectic lifestyle really bringing you the quality of life that you want? Or are you too busy buying toys to fill up some empty space inside yourself?

    Examine whether the way you are currently spending your time accurately reflects your deepest values and priorities. Make sure that you schedule adequate time for the things that are truly most important to you.

    If you really want to keep friends and loved ones in your life, make a space in your schedule and a space in your heart for them.

    And practice the art of being fully present with the important people in your life.

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