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  • Will You Add? - Slow Down

    Living Creatively - Avoiding Routine When You Own an Art Home-Based Business
    Though all my customers know I make many different crafts, what I am known for, and consequently what I sell, is jewelry. In a week, jewelry making/selling takes 80% of my time. If I'm not at the craft room, coiling wire, then I am at the computer, promoting or writing. In many weeks, that 80% of time becomes 100%.There are two sides to home-based business: if your products sell, you can easily get trapped in the routine of making always the same things over and over; but if you pick
    ot true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste

    Customer Service at Airlines
    Customer Service at the airlines has deteriorated in a big way over the past few years and now they seem to treat folks like cattle. Of course in all fairness your flying experience is not necessarily only from the airlines. It starts during loading and unloading only zones at the curb and a security guard with a sub-machine gun and gets worse from there as they expect you to take off your shoes, check your metal objects into a tray and ask you stupid questions.Worse off those asking
    Sanity Saver# 6 Slow Down

    There is more to life than increasing its speed.

    Gandhi

    Most of us live as if we are careening down a freeway. Think about how much you miss when you’re traveling at warp speed. We need to take the first available exit and pull into a quiet country lane, slow down and reflect on our lives. There is a saying in Thailand, “Life is so short--we must move very slowly.”

    Since we can’t slow down the things around us we try to speed ourselves up. We hurry, rush, we hustle. We run ourselves ragged trying to get ahead or stay even or to catch up.

    And then we occasionally encounter someone who seems to have time for everything and for everyone. He doesn’t hurry. He doesn’t seem stressed, rushed or impatient. It’s almost as if he’s got nothing to do yet he gets so much done.

    Consider for a moment, stressed people are always in a hurry. People who hurry are always stressed. People who don’t hurry aren’t frustrated. People who aren’t frustrated don’t hurry. Which comes first? Does hurry cause stress or does it result from it?

    Is it possible that our attitude and our approach to life actually affect how fast our time passes? Is it possible that we’re a little like a hamster on a treadmill who by running faster and faster succeeds only in making our world spin ever faster. And perhaps if we consciously slow ourselves down and become a little more patient, a little more aware we can slow ourselves down and find that we are able to accomplish more with less hurry.

    I have to admit that slowing down is a challenge. I was recently on my way to a meditation retreat to learn how to slow down when I was pulled over by a state trooper. I was in such a hurry to learn how to slow down that I got a ticket for speeding. So I’m not saying that slowing down is an easy thing to do. It isn’t.

    Many of us think that fast is equated with happy, but it isn’t. In fact the faster we go the more stress we have in our lives. Ask yourself, “What’s my hurry?” Hurry is your enemy. We do a lot of rushing around trying to squeeze in more stuff than we should, leading us to do all of it less well and making it all less enjoyable. Why hurry? You probably answer because you have to. But that’s simply not true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste i

    Handling Questions with Authority
    At some point in your presentation you will be expected to answer questions from your audience. They might have some burning questions that need to be answered before they buy into your message. Handling their questions with authority can make the difference for you between a successful presentation and a waste of time. This is the opportunity for the audience to test your knowledge on the topic and commitment to your message.1. Explain at which points during the presentation you will
    head or stay even or to catch up.

    And then we occasionally encounter someone who seems to have time for everything and for everyone. He doesn’t hurry. He doesn’t seem stressed, rushed or impatient. It’s almost as if he’s got nothing to do yet he gets so much done.

    Consider for a moment, stressed people are always in a hurry. People who hurry are always stressed. People who don’t hurry aren’t frustrated. People who aren’t frustrated don’t hurry. Which comes first? Does hurry cause stress or does it result from it?

    Is it possible that our attitude and our approach to life actually affect how fast our time passes? Is it possible that we’re a little like a hamster on a treadmill who by running faster and faster succeeds only in making our world spin ever faster. And perhaps if we consciously slow ourselves down and become a little more patient, a little more aware we can slow ourselves down and find that we are able to accomplish more with less hurry.

    I have to admit that slowing down is a challenge. I was recently on my way to a meditation retreat to learn how to slow down when I was pulled over by a state trooper. I was in such a hurry to learn how to slow down that I got a ticket for speeding. So I’m not saying that slowing down is an easy thing to do. It isn’t.

    Many of us think that fast is equated with happy, but it isn’t. In fact the faster we go the more stress we have in our lives. Ask yourself, “What’s my hurry?” Hurry is your enemy. We do a lot of rushing around trying to squeeze in more stuff than we should, leading us to do all of it less well and making it all less enjoyable. Why hurry? You probably answer because you have to. But that’s simply not true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste

    Taking Advantage of Online Offers Without Giving Up Your Credit Card Info
    My wife works for the local BlockBuster video in town and they are supposed to get people to sign up for an online account but the problem is that a lot of people are afraid to sign up for these things because of fear of having to put their credit card info on the form. With the world coming online credit card fraud is on the increase. How are we able to take advantage of the savings from these online offers without having to give up our personal credit card information?Whenever I si
    and our approach to life actually affect how fast our time passes? Is it possible that we’re a little like a hamster on a treadmill who by running faster and faster succeeds only in making our world spin ever faster. And perhaps if we consciously slow ourselves down and become a little more patient, a little more aware we can slow ourselves down and find that we are able to accomplish more with less hurry.

    I have to admit that slowing down is a challenge. I was recently on my way to a meditation retreat to learn how to slow down when I was pulled over by a state trooper. I was in such a hurry to learn how to slow down that I got a ticket for speeding. So I’m not saying that slowing down is an easy thing to do. It isn’t.

    Many of us think that fast is equated with happy, but it isn’t. In fact the faster we go the more stress we have in our lives. Ask yourself, “What’s my hurry?” Hurry is your enemy. We do a lot of rushing around trying to squeeze in more stuff than we should, leading us to do all of it less well and making it all less enjoyable. Why hurry? You probably answer because you have to. But that’s simply not true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste

    Online Training on Autopilot Series: Persuasion Through Influence, Part 1 of 4
    Is there a difference between Influence and Persuasion? Yes there is.Influence is the process of changing someone’s behavior.To persuade is to alter someone’s attitude or beliefs.Are the two similar in nature? Sure. But they are not the same and often times many people confuse the two.While persuasion can be a tool to create influence, as an employee – influence is far more important. Having less customer complaints and higher sales can only come from a positi
    trooper. I was in such a hurry to learn how to slow down that I got a ticket for speeding. So I’m not saying that slowing down is an easy thing to do. It isn’t.

    Many of us think that fast is equated with happy, but it isn’t. In fact the faster we go the more stress we have in our lives. Ask yourself, “What’s my hurry?” Hurry is your enemy. We do a lot of rushing around trying to squeeze in more stuff than we should, leading us to do all of it less well and making it all less enjoyable. Why hurry? You probably answer because you have to. But that’s simply not true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste

    The Big Advantages of Small Business
    We have all heard it said that small business is the backbone of the economy, and we all seem to know that is true. The exact definition for small business is not so clear, but what is clear is that most businesses are small by that allusive definition.It is a bit of an irony that some business owners try to project the idea that they are bigger than they really are. As much as we might say bigger is not better, our attitudes and actions will determine whether we really believe that o
    ot true.

    Don’t fill in all the time with new activities, but rather let the rest of what you do proceed more leisurely. By doing this, you can slow down. This will make you both more effective and more fulfilled. Our information overload has conditioned us to require more speed, more stimulation to feel engaged and not bored. We’re on the fast track.

    Do you know where your time goes? Most of us budget our money down to the last penny, but very few people budget their time. But let’s fact it, time is much more important than money. We spend it, we waste it and we “kill it.” Time is a finite resource, but we behave as if it were infinite.

    Consider for a moment, if I said I would give you $86,400 every day for the rest of your life, but you had to spend it wisely or you’d lose it what would you do? Of course you’d do everything possible to spend the money wisely. Yet each of us is given 86,400 seconds every day and the same proposition challenges us, spend it wisely or lose it. You’ll never get back the hours you waste at work, etc. that time is gone forever. The way you spend your time separates the successful people from those who continue to struggle. If you are continually amazed at people who live a calmer life than you do, take charge of your time.

    If time is flying you have to be the pilot. Guard it as a treasured possession—because it is. Spend it thoughtfully because you can’t get it back. But slowing down requires courage and commitment. It means swimming against the societal tide. We must learn when to “do” and when to “be.” How to strike a vibrant balance between the two becomes crucial.

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