Wisdom and Knowledge is supreme!

"Flatter me, and I may not believe you. Criticize me, and I may not like you. Ignore me, and I may not forgive you. Encourage me, and I may not forget you." William Arthur

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Location: Panabo City, Davao Del Norte, Philippines

Hi! My name is Moises ( A.K.A. Moses) P. Reconalla. I graduated my Bachelors degree in History, Minor in Political Science from Adventist University of the Philippines. I hold a master's degree in teaching and education in Guidance & Counseling from Cor Jesu College. I am a teacher and Guidance Counselor by Profession. I created this blog just to share my thoughts about the goodness of my Loving God in my life. "Live full, Die empty!"

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Apologizing Sincerely When You Make A Withdrawal


When we make withdrawals from the Emotional Bank Account, we need to apologize and we need to do it sincerely.

Great deposits come in the sincere words: "I was wrong."
: "That was unkind of me."
"I showed you no respect."
"I gave you no dignity, and I'm deeply sorry."
"I embarrassed you in front of your friends and I had no call to do that. Even though I wanted to make a point, I never should have done it. I apologize."

It takes a great deal of character strength to apologize quickly out of one's heart rather than out of pity. A person must possess himself and have a deep sense of security in fundamental principles and values in order to genuinely apologize.

People with little internal security can't do it. It makes them too vulnerable. They feel it makes them appear soft and weak, and they fear that others will take advantage of their weaknesses. Their security is based on the opinions of other people, and they worry about what others might think. In addition, they usually feel justified in what they did. They rationalize their own wrong in the name of the other person's wrong, and if they apologize at all, it's superficial.

Sincere apologies make deposits; repeated apologies interpreted as insincere make withdrawals. And the quality of the relationship reflects it.

It is one thing to make a mistake, and quite another thing not to admit it. People will forgive mistakes, because mistakes are usually of the mind, mistakes of the judgement. But people will not easily forgive the mistakes of the heart, the ill intention, the bad motives, the prideful justifying cover-up of the first mistake.

Reproduced from "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People" by Stephen R. Covey

Sunday, June 25, 2006

DREAM THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM

The person with a fixed goal, a clear picture of his desire, or an ideal always before him, causes it, through repetition, to be buried deeply in his subconscious mind and is thus enabled, thanks to its generative and sustaining power, to realize his goal in a minimum of time and with a minimum of physical effort. Just pursue the thought unceasingly. Step by step you will achieve realization, for all your faculties and powers become directed to that end.-- Claude M. Bristol

We all have dreams and desires but if we do not know how to go about achieving them they are nothing but pipedreams. But with a clear plan in mind one can turn the pipe dreams of today into the reality of tommorow. In life, we need reasons for what we do. Goals keep us from just reacting to what's going on around us. Goals can inspire and motivate. They help us make our life happen rather than letting it happen. Most of all, Goals produce results. There are three main points to goal setting:

1. Clarifying your unique goal

2. Reinforcing your goal
3. Tracking, Measuring and assessing progressIn this article we will look at each one of these steps and access how they work.

All around us the internet is changing. Because of the so called recession, everyone is starting to charge for what once was free for the taking. Every site had free stuff. Some still do, but, for example, I had a free list at Listbot and now they are charging. I was quite happy with my site and thought about staying with them even if they charged. However my small ezine is not in a financial postion to pay the prices that Listbot will charge. So what to do? Why are people charging for everything that was free? The media tells us that stocks for dot.com's are down. All around us dot.com's are failing. So if this little ezine was to survive I needed to get a really good map of where I was going. Well, I am a person who dreams the impossible dream -- always have and always will. I have been told since I was a child that I was a dreamer.

Well I am, and as I said, will always be but the difference between my dreams and some others I talk to is that I accomplish them.Believing that I can accomplish anything I set out to do and I deserve success is the first step in accomplishing any goal. How did I get this belief in myself? Partly because to my parents I was the "apple of their eye." They believed I could do anything including fulfill their unfulfilled dreams. I never did do that but I have fulfilled a lot of my own dreams. So with experience behind me I learned that if I stay focused, I can accomplish the impossible dream. So why should a little recession or other dot.com's going down influence my little ezine? One thing I don't do is listen to the media much even though as an ezine owner I am part of that media. I need to stay focused, and that is why I do not listen to negative input from people or the media; it just breeds fear and fear never accomplishes anything. So I go apart in my own little world and I dream my impossible dream.

If I want to know where I am going I must have a clear picture of where I want to be in the next year, five years and beyond that. Life is for living and I intend to live fully until I die.I find that getting away from the computer and writing down my goals helps me. I personally have to sort through wants and desires, and values to define where I want to be. This step can't be vague. One has to be like that little child at Christmas that knows what she wants, that doll, that bike. Often when I am meditating on goals I try and recapture that feeling of childhood where I could feel myself playing with that pretty doll, brushing her hair, or riding that bike, wind in my hair. Wanting this one thing more than anything, thinking I would die without it. This is the kind of feeling you have to have for what you want before you write your goal. Then the next step is to weed out the wants, desires, brought on by what others say you should want and by family programming of what you should be doing. Well-meaning friends and family often make suggestions. But this is your goal and you need to draw upon your unique dream to pull out this goal. This is a process that can take weeks to or months achieve, but don't get discouraged that things are not moving fast enough.

This is a really important step because this is the basis of your map of getting what you want in life. One of the common pitfalls at this stage is to be in a all or nothing frame of mind. I want all of this now not later! It is important to set goals that are medium term and easily recognizable so one can say to themselves, "Yes, I am on my way because I have accomplished this goal. Now on to the next one."Another pitfall might be to set goals that disrupt everything else in your life. So look at this carefully. What would you do if you had no obstacles to doing anything you want in life. Believe in yourself you can do it. Don't be a perfectionist if everything doesn't go just as you plan and give up. This all or nothing kind of thinking has no room in this plan. You are developing a plan that is uniquely yours, that will make you desire having it just as you did that Christmas doll.

Also, choose who you share your goal with carefully as it is fragile, not yet manifested and of this world, and can easily be smashed. There is a time to share with others, but not yet. Solidify it on paper; this brings it as a real thing into the real world. So now in the next few weeks or months you will know where you are going and why you are going there. You no longer are lost in the forest. You soon will be able to draw a clear map. Next week I will write on the clear map. How not to buy a ticket to Seattle when it is San Francisco you long for.

Remember -- dream the impossible dream.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR==================Judi Singleton is the webmistress of Jassmine.com and Gotojassminesitenow.com, and the owner of Jassmine's Journal . She was a counselor for 20 years. You can receive her inspirational newsletter, Jassmine's Journal, by sending an email today to jassminejournal-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

Becoming Passionate About Your Life

Living a life that you are passionate about, opens up a world of joy, fulfillment and abundance. It is one of the greatest life experiences. According to the American Heritage Dictionary, passion is defined as "boundless enthusiasm".

Imagine waking up every day eagerly looking forward to life? When we love the life we live and are using our gifts, we are then operating at our fullest potential. We are contributing something unique and special to the world.

Living out our passion is living our life's purpose. When we are on purpose, we are no longer restless, unhappy or searching for something more to feel complete. Our passion is our purpose and it is from there we can create and live our best life.

Passions nuture and feed the soul. In order to find our passions, we have to first rediscover our selves. The expectations of others coupled with the hectic pace of life and our own emotional baggage, often overshadow the essence of who we are as individuals. By reconnecting with our inner selves, we can begin to reclaim forgotten dreams, goals and even create some new ones.
How can you begin to eagerly look forward to life? What is it that you are passionate about? What excites you? These are just a few questions to help you discover your passions. Below are some additional questions, take your time and think about your answers.

Jot them down in a journal, notebook or on a piece of paper. Stretch your imagination;go deep inside to discover your answers. Write what your heart says is true and do not feel your responses are unrealistic or that others may not approve. The goal of these questions is to get you to start thinking about your life.
What are your hobbies or talents?

If there were no obstacles in your way, what type of life would you envision living and why?
What are some forgotten childhood dreams?
What do you think has been the biggest obstacle that has stopped you from living up to your fullest potential?

How can that obstacle challenge you to move you from where you are to where you want to be?
What would you not change about your life?
What type of feeling do you want to experience on a daily basis?
What is one thing you can do today to connect with your passion?

(c)2001 Tara Pray

Personal Choices

Sometimes we look around at our lives and wonder what we ever did that landed us in THIS mess. Well, we made choices along the road that we took and those choices had consequences. Those consequences are what we live with every day. And each day that we live we continue to make more choices. So, if our lives are not exactly where we want them to be, maybe we should change the way we make choices. Listening to older folks talk, I often wonder if they realize that they really did choose to be where they are at the time. Some of them are so bitter and angry in their lives. They have no understanding of how they got there, and they blame everyone else for being where they are, but they made the choices in their lives themselves. Then I look at my own life and wonder at the choices I’ve made.

It’s the reason and the situation behind the choice that often gets us into trouble. Looking back at my life, there were times when I made choices based on the situation of the moment, and not on the basis of my personal life goals. Some of these choices are necessary, but more often than not, making a choice in the moment isn’t a good idea. Choices made without a conscious view of where the result will be taking you, are the choices that leave you wondering how you got there. Those are often the choices that you ‘blame’ others for making, though you made the choice yourself. The circumstances were not of your design, therefore you didn’t think about your choice. You allowed circumstances to make the choice for you. It wasn’t that you didn’t make the choice, but rather that you didn’t make a conscientious choice based on where you wanted to be. Your choice was in part a default, because of circumstances, you allowed your choice to be made by the situation rather than conscientiously deciding to follow your life goals.
These kinds of choices are often made when a parent or sibling is ill; we choose to be part of their lives rather than moving on in our lives and getting to where we wanted to be. We accept the ‘defeat’ of giving up a part of our dream to be the kind of person we want to be at the moment. If we acknowledge our reasons for making this choice and adjust our life goals accordingly, we become better for making the choice. If we maintain our dream as it originally was without making allowances for the events in our lives, however, the default choice becomes a ‘failure’ in our thought life, and we begin to become bitter and blame others for our choices.

Becoming bitter is another means of failure in making our own choices. If we allow bitterness and blame to become part of our thoughts, we loose control of our conscientious thoughts and choices, and eventually we are the result of a mass of choices made by default and we feel like failures as people. Our lives become something that we didn’t envision and we begin to find others to blame for our failures to make choices that would have followed our dreams and goals. As a result of this process we begin to deny that we had control over our lives and that denial leaves us bitter and lonely as people begin moving away from us and out of our lives when we attempt to control them.
As we make feeble attempts to control others, anger becomes part of our personality. We become bitter, angry, and controlling as we attempt to find someone to blame for the apparent misery that we have created in our lives. The older we are, when we realize the ‘failure’ of not meeting our goals and dreams, the more likely we are to sustain the bitter anger as we attempt to control others into achieving our goals.
We have another option.

We don’t have to accept the bitter failure and angry control as ‘our life’ if we make an effort to recognize that the choices that got us to that point were our own choices. If we accept the fact that our ultimate goal was not consistent with the choices that we made along the way, we can reevaluate the goals we set for our life and acknowledge the real goals that were inspiring our choices.

Scenario 1: Often one child in a family will grow up bearing the responsibility of caring for an aging parent, while the other children go off to seek their fortunes and create families of their own. Neither achievement is any less worthy of the noble title of ‘success’. Often the child who CHOOSES to nourish the needs of the aging parent finds himself/herself needing to be nourished in their older years, and feels neglected by life.
If that person allows that feeling of being neglected to harbor and manifest itself in their lives, it becomes bitter anger. It will evolve into a feeling of hatred toward those who the person feels ‘took advantage’. If that hatred is aimed at a person the child/grownup chose to take care of, it will become a guilty ambivalence and the person will take on the dimensions of abstract importance, giving creed to the choice to stay and nurture the person, but making the person (being cared for) bigger than reality.
That person will actually become almost ‘God-like’ in the mind of the person who chose to nurture them. This ‘God-like’ person becomes so important that all others are compared to that person in ways that are unfair and unreasonable, but the guilty feeling is somehow submerged by attempting to make others feel less important or less worthy. While making others feel less worthy isn’t necessarily the objective, it is the result of elevating the importance of another person, particularly someone who is deceased.

The same can be said of the children who follow their dreams and leave the nurturing of elderly parents behind. They are missing a key component in the journey of life. They are missing the experience of loving someone more than themselves and giving to that person. Their goal may be empty – without proper value at the end, and their lives may feel empty and incomplete.
The ideal of life as a destination is hollow and desolate. Life is a journey with many obstacles that change the path and rearrange the road we choose to travel. By understanding the value of the steps we take, we give credence to the journey and distinction to the goals we achieve.
Suppose that the person in our scenario chose to recognize his/her choices, adjust the dreams and goals to include the actualization of his/her choices, and accepted a different ultimate life goal as part of their reality. The anger, guilt, and ambivalence would be unnecessary and the bitterness would fade away. Life could again be pleasant and fun, because they didn’t fail. They didn’t have to see their dreams burn up into smoke, because they adjusted their life goals to match the decisions they were making in their lives. The alternative of this is to maintain your choices in line with your life goals. Few of us are willing to blindly follow a goal that we chose as teenagers, so some adjustment is necessary as we make choices and mature in our lives.

Scenario 2: Entering college a guy has a dream of getting out, getting the job of his dreams, marrying the girl his heart has pictured, buying the car, the house, the dream. However, as the days go by, his education seems less important and that girl across the park looks better and better, so they go out and she gets pregnant, they get married, he can’t afford to continue in college, he gets a job, they can’t afford a car, they barely can afford an apartment, and the dream is disappearing a little every day. HE feels trapped, so does she. He blames her; she blames him. Who made the choices? They each made choices that didn’t follow their life goals, and the consequences are that their life goal is fading.

They can hang onto the goal and feel failure or they can adjust their goal to include the choices they made. If they choose to feel the failure, they are ultimately choosing a very bitter road to travel, the guilt of feeling angry toward the person they promised to love, honor, and cherish will eventually become bitterness and the love they felt will become unbearable.

A marriage will be wrecked and a child will hurt because two people didn’t accept the reality of their own choices and adjust their expectations to include the changes in their lives. So what is their option? Do they have to allow their failure to proceed toward their goals to ruin a life that could be well lived? Can they choose another goal and make better choices?

A life is made up of choices and decisions that lead us to our goals. Our goals can be the specific direction we choose in life as a teenager, or the adjusted and accepted goals that we determine as we move through life making decisions based on the circumstances and situations that we experience. The destination does not determine the value of success. The value of success is the cost of what you gave up to get there.

Are you willing to give up your values to get to your life goal, or is your life goal made up of your values? It’s a personal choice, often one that is made with many tears and heartaches along the way. Obstacles can become devastating to our goals, or they can become part of the journey.
By making choices along the way and accepting the changes that happen in our lives, we suddenly are able to control the happiness we encounter along the way. Is your goal to get there no matter what? Or is your goal to enjoy the path along the way? Whichever is your goal, are you willing to pay the price? Have you figured the cost of reaching for your destination?

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Understanding the individual




Really seeking to understand another person is probably one of the most important deposits you can make, and it is the key to every other deposit. You simply don't know what constitutes a deposit to another person until you understand that individual. What might be a deposit for you - going for a walk to talk things over, going out for ice cream together, working on a common project - might not be perceived by someone else as a deposit at all. It might even be perceived as a withdrawal, if it doesn't touch the person's deep interests or needs.

One person's mission is another person's minutia. To make a deposit, what is important to another person must be as important to you as the other person is to you. You may be working on a high priority project when your six-year-old child interrupts with something that seems trivial to you, but it may be very important from the child's point of view. It takes discipline to recognize and recommit yourself to the value of that person and to subordinate your schedule to that human priority. By accepting the value of what the child has to say, you show an understanding of the child, and that makes a great deposit.

Our tendency is to project out of our own autobiographies what we think other people want or need. We project our intentions on the behavior of others. We interpret what constitutes a deposit based on our own needs and desires, either now or when we were at a similar age or stage in life. If they don't interpret our effort as a deposit, our tendency is to take it as a rejection of our well intentioned effort and to give up.

The Golden Rule says to "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you." While on the surface that could mean to do for them what you would like to have done for you, I think the more essential meaning is to understand them deeply as individuals, the way you would want to be understood, and then to treat them in terms of that understanding. As one successful parent said about raising children, "Treat them all the same by treating them differently."

Attending to the Little Things
The little kindnesses and courtesies are so important. Small discourties, little unkindnesses, little forms of disrespect make large withdrawals. In relationships, the little things are the big things. People are very tender, very sensitive inside. I don't believe age or experience makes much difference. Inside, even within the most toughened and calloused exteriors, are the tender feelings and emotions of the heart.


Attending to the Little Things
The little kindnesses and courtesies are so important. Small discourties, little unkindnesses, little forms of disrespect make large withdrawals. In relationships, the little things are the big things. People are very tender, very sensitive inside. I don't believe age or experience makes much difference. Inside, even within the most toughened and calloused exteriors, are the tender feelings and emotions of the heart.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Today's Dreams Are


Don't be afraid of high hopes
or plans that seem to be out of reach.
Life is meant to be experienced,
and every situation allows for
learning and growth.

Motivation is a positive starting point,
and action places you on a forward path.
A dream is a blueprint
of a goal not yet achieved;
the only difference between the two
is the effort involved in attaining
what you hope to accomplish.

Let your mind and heart urge you on;
allow the power of your will
to lead you to your destination.

Don't count the steps ahead;
just add up the total
of steps already covered,
and multiply it by
faith, confidence, and endurance.

Always remember that
for those who persist,
today's dreams are transformed
into tomorrow's successes.

~ Kelly D. Caron ~

Food For Thought


Never welcome something you cannot entertain.

Never open your doors if you mean to close your heart.

Never accept love if you can't give yourself in return.

Never start a relationship you know you want to end.

Two of the shortest words in the English language are "YES" and "NO" and yet they are often the ones that require the most thought before they are said.

Some thoughts are better left unsaid, some feelings are better left kept to yourself, but love has its way of expressing itself despite the silence. Always say you are sorry to people you have wronged. Remember, it is not always what you say that hurts, but the words that you don't.

Never abandon an old friend. You will never find one who can take his place.

Friendship is like wine, it gets better as it grows older.

God didn't promise days without pain, laughter without sorrow, sun without rain, but He did promise strength for the day, comfort for the tears, and light for the way.

Disappointments are like road humps, they slow you down a bit but you enjoy the smooth road afterwards. Don't stay on the humps too long.
Move on!

When you feel down because you didn't get what you want, just sit tight and be happy, because God is thinking of something better to give you.

When something happens to you, good or bad, consider what it means.

There's a purpose to life's events, to teach you how to laugh more or not to cry too hard.

You can't make someone love you, all you can do is be someone who can be loved, the rest is up to the person to realize your worth.

Life is a coin. You can spend it any way you wish, but you can spend it only once.

Five rules to be happy.

1. Free your heart from hatred.
2. Free your mind from worries.
3. Live simply.
4. Give more.
5. Expect less.

What the heart gives away is never gone... It is kept in the hearts of others. Remember that great love and great achievements involve great risks. Secure a special place in your heart. A certain place only you can enter. For there will come a time when you need to find yourself and only your heart will show you the way.

The measure of love is when you love without measure. In life there are very rare chances that you'll meet the person you love and loves you in return. So once you have it don't ever let go, the chance might never come your way again.

People are made to be loved and things are made to be used. That's why there's so much chaos in the world... people are being used and things are being loved.

You cannot finish a book without closing its chapters. If you want to go on, then you have to leave the past as you turn the pages of life.

Every commitment is a choice. Non-choosers and half-choosers are a puzzle to themselves and to others. They live in the immature condition of wanting to "play everything by ear."

Every once in a while ask yourself the question: If money weren't a consideration, what would I like to be doing?

It's better to lose your pride to the one you love, than to lose the one you love because of pride. We spend so much time looking for the right person to love or finding fault with those we already love, when instead we should be perfecting the love we give.

When you truly care for someone, you don't look for faults, you don't look for answers, you don't look for mistakes. Instead, you fight the mistakes, excuses.

Why Teachers Go Crazy


TEACHER: How old were you on your last birthday?
STUDENT: Seven.
TEACHER: How old will you be on your next birthday?
STUDENT: Nine.
TEACHER: That's impossible.
STUDENT: No, it isn't, Teacher. I'm eight today.
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TEACHER: George, go to the map and find North America.
GEORGE: Here it is!
TEACHER: Correct. Now, class, who discovered America?
CLASS: George
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TEACHER: Willy, name one important thing we have today that we didn't have ten years ago.
WILLY: Me!
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SUBSTITUTE TEACHER: Are you chewing gum?
BILLY: No, I'm Billy Anderson.
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TEACHER: Didn't you promise to behave?
STUDENT: Yes, Sir.
TEACHER: And didn't I promise to punish you if you didn't?
STUDENT: Yes, Sir, but since I broke my promise, I don't expect you to keep yours.
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TEACHER: Tommy, why do you always get so dirty?
TOMMY: Well, I'm a lot closer to the ground then you are.
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HAROLD: Teacher, would you punish me for something I didn't do?
TEACHER: Of course not.
HAROLD: Good, because I didn't do my homework.
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TEACHER: Why are you late?
WEBSTER: Because of the sign.
TEACHER: What sign?
WEBSTER: The one that says, "School Ahead, Go Slow."
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TEACHER: I hope I didn't see you looking at Don's paper.
JOHN: I hope you didn't either.
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GARY: I don't think I deserve a zero on this test.
TEACHER: I agree, but it's the lowest mark I can give you.
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MOTHER: Why did you get such a low mark on that test?
JUNIOR: Because of absence.
MOTHER: You mean you were absent on the day of the test?
JUNIOR: No, but the kid who sits next to me was.
-------------------------------------------------------
SILVIA: Dad, can you write in the dark?
FATHER: I think so. What do you want me to write?
SYLVIA: Your name on this report card.
-------------------------------------------------------
TEACHER: Well, at least there's one thing I can say about your son.
FATHER: What's that?
TEACHER: With grades like these, he couldn't be cheating.
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TEACHER: In this box, I have a 10-foot snake.
SAMMY: You can't fool me, Teacher... snakes don't have feet.
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HYGIENE TEACHER: How can you prevent diseases caused by biting Insects?
JOSE: Don't bite any.
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TEACHER: Ellen, give me a sentence starting with "I".
ELLEN: I is...
TEACHER: No, Ellen. Always say, "I am."
ELLEN: All right... "I am the ninth letter of the alphabet."
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TEACHER: Max, use "defeat," "defense," and "detail" in a sentence.
MAX: The rabbit cut across the field, and defeat went over defense before detail.
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MOTHER: Why on earth did you swallow the money I gave you?
JUNIOR: You said it was my lunch money.
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TEACHER: If you received $10 from 10 people, what would you get?
SASHA: A new bike.
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TEACHER: If you had one dollar and you asked your father for another, how many dollars would you have?
VINCENT: One dollar.
TEACHER(sadly): You don't know your arithmetic.
VINCENT(sadly): You don't know my father.
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TEACHER: If I had seven oranges in one hand and eight oranges in the other, what would I have?
CLASS COMEDIAN: Big hands!
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BOY: Isn't the principal a dummy!
GIRL: Say, do you know who I am?
BOY: No.
GIRL: I'm the principal's daughter.
BOY: And do you know who I am?
GIRL: No.
BOY: Thank goodness!

Reaching Your Dream Takes Courage


Courage is admitting that you're afraid and facing that fear directly. It's being strong enough to ask for help and humble enough to accept it.

Courage is standing up for what you believe in without worrying about the opinions of others. It's following your own heart, living your own life, and settling for nothing less than the best for yourself.

Courage is daring to take a first step, a big leap, or a different path. It's attempting to do something that no one has done before and all others thought impossible.

Courage is keeping heart in the face of disappointment and looking at defeat not as an end but as a new beginning. It's believing that things will ultimately get better even as they get worse.

Courage is being responsible for your own actions and admitting your own mistakes without placing blame on others. It's relying not on others for your success, but on your own skills and efforts.

Courage is refusing to quit even when you're intimidated by impossibility. It's choosing a goal, sticking with it, and finding solutions to the problems.

Courage is thinking big, aiming high, and shooting far. It's taking a dream and doing anything, risking everything, and stopping at nothing to it make it a reality.

~ Caroline Kent ~

How To Overcome The Fear Of Failure


One of the main reasons we fail, or think we fail, is because of our definition of what “failure” is.

To most of us, failure means not achieving the goals or dreams we’ve set for ourselves.

For example, on January 1st of each year, a lot of people set goals they want to achieve that year. And if they don’t accomplish them by that date, they think they’ve failed.

Sadly, because of this kind of attitude, most people fail before they even start.

In other words, they usually don’t have a plan and don’t take the necessary actions to make their goals come true. Instead, they simply hope and wish that someone or something will help them realize their aspirations.

Well, as you and I both know, that’s not how life works.

For the few individuals who actually have a plan and take the necessary actions toward achieving their goals, they may fail because (1) they have unrealistic deadlines, or (2) they give up too soon -- or both.

Believe it or not, if you allow yourself enough time, you’ll be able to achieve any goal you established for yourself, no matter how big it is.

Examine your list of goals and ask yourself whether you’ve given each one of them adequate time.

Some goals take a lifetime to attain, while others may require only a few weeks, or even days.

The main reason most people fail to achieve their goals is that they simply quit too soon.

They don’t persist long enough in their chosen field of endeavor, not understanding the universal truth that says…

Worthwhile Ambitions Always Take Time To Attain!

The people who hang on a little bit longer when encountering setbacks will eventually come out on top.

As I’ve shared with you in a previous article, it took Thomas Edison, the founder of GE, more than 10,000 attempts before he invented the light bulb. If you or I were in his shoes, imagine all the frustrations we would have experienced after 500 or 1,000 unsuccessful tries

Like most people, we probably would have given up after so many futile efforts.

But not Edison!

Instead of throwing in the towel, he looked at each “failure” as a learning experience, and he used it to help him take new and better actions toward accomplishing his goal.

After 9,999 unsuccessful attempts, a young reporter asked him whether he was going to have 10,000 failures.

Edison replied, “Young man, I didn’t fail. I just discovered 9,999 ways NOT to invent the light bulb.”

In short, Edition had a dream and he did whatever it took to make it come true. And now, as they say, the rest is history.

The next time you face adversity and get discouraged because you think you’ve failed, remember Thomas Edison’s story and you’ll be empowered.

If you were to adopt the belief that there’s no such thing as failure, that there are only results, you’ll try and try again until you turn your aspirations into reality.

Please keep this important fact in mind: Each time you do something; you’ll always produce a result. While it may not be the one you intended, it’s still an outcome that will give you a new insight or experience to do better the next time.

Gather your courage and strength and look fear in the eye and say, “I’m bigger than you. You can’t defeat me. There’s nothing you can do to stop me from realizing my dreams. No matter how many times you think you’ve defeated me, I’ll learn from each failure or experience and keep taking new and better actions until I’ve succeeded!”

As I’ve mentioned, a lot of people fail before they even begin because they don’t have a specific plan for turning their goals into reality.

Failure usually preys on the person who doesn’t know what he or she wants out of life.

If you haven’t created a plan for your life -- or even just for a month or a year -- then please do it right away. Without a plan, you could be drifting aimlessly everyday, like millions of people do, and eventually arrive at the end of your life realizing you’ve lived only a fraction of your potential.

Since this probably isn’t the destination of your choice, I urge you to design a plan for your life now and start heading toward where you want to go. You’ll be surprised at how quickly you can get there when you have an effective roadmap for your life.

Another reason a lot of people fail is that instead of following their heart and dreams, they try desperately to satisfy other peoples’ needs or wants.

As the American comedian, Bill Cosby, said, “I don’t know what the definition of success is, but I know failure is trying to please everybody else.”

If you’ve been trying hard to please someone else, such as your parents, husband, wife, brother, sister, son, daughter, or a friend, I suggest you change directions and start doing the things you really want to do.

This doesn’t mean you’re selfish. It just means you’re living your life according to your beliefs and values, instead of somebody else’s. When everything is said and done, that’s what counts.

Since each one of us has only one life to live on this planet, and we don’t know how much time we have left, we should live to the fullest each day, following our passions instead of chasing after our pensions.

If you’ve been feeling sorry for yourself because you haven’t succeeded in achieving your goals, please realize that today is a new day to begin over again.

If you believe in yourself and that you have the power to achieve whatever goals you set, your battle is already half-won. You’re built to conquer fear, to solve problems, and to fulfill your dreams, regardless of what obstacles may stand in your way.

Difficulties will always arise in each one of our lives. You must deal with each adversity as it shows up and cope with the changes as you face them.

Although life is like a raging river with its ups and downs, how you handle the turbulence is what really counts.

Always keep in mind…

YOU Are Responsible For Your Success Or Failure!

If you choose success and take the necessary actions to achieve it, you’ll be blessed with success (whatever your definition of success is). On the other hand, if you select failure -- whether consciously or unconsciously -- you’ll get that as well.

As human beings, one of the greatest powers we have is the power to choose. So choose carefully and…

Make Your Life Memorable, Not Just Livable!

I Will Persist Until I Succeed!


I will persist until I succeed.

In the Orient young bulls are tested for the fight arena in a certain manner. Each is bought to the ring and allowed to attack a picador who pricks them with a lance. The bravery of each bull is then rated with care according to the number of times he demonstrates his willingness to charge in spite of the sting of the blade. Henceforth will I recognize that each day I am tested by life in like manner. If I persist, if I continue to charge forward, I will succeed.

I will persist until I succeed.

I was not delivered unto this world in defeat, nor does failure course in my veins. I am not a sheep waiting to be prodded by my shepherd. I am a lion and I refuse to talk, to walk, to sleep with the sheep. I will hear not those who weep and complain, for their disease is contagious. Let them join the sheep. The slaughterhouse of failure is not my destiny.

I will persist until I succeed.

The prizes of life are at the end of each journey, not near the beginning; and it is not given to me to know how many steps are necessary in order to reach my goal. Failure I may still encounter at the thousandth step, yet success hides behind the next bend in the road. Never will I know how close it lies unless I turn the corner.

Always will I take another step. If that is of no avail I will take another, and yet another. In truth one step at a time is not too difficult.

I will persist until I succeed.

Henceforth, I will consider each day's effort as but one blow of my blade against a mighty oak. The first blow may cause not a tremor in the wood, nor the second, nor the third. Each blow, of itself, may be trifling, and seem of no consequence. Yet from childish swipes the oak will eventually tumble. So it will be with my efforts of today.

I will be liken to the rain drop which washes away the mountain; the ant who devours a tiger; the star which brightens the earth; the slave who builds a pyramid. I will build my castle one brick at a time for I know that small attempts, repeated, will complete any undertaking.

I will persist until I succeed.

I will never consider defeat and I will remove from my vocabulary such words and phrases as quit, cannot, unable, impossible, out of the question, improbable, failure, unworkable, hopeless, and retreat; for they are the words of fools. I will avoid despair but if this disease of the mind should infect me then I will work on in despair. I will toil and I will endure. I will ignore the obstacles at my feet and keep my eyes on the goals above my head, for I know that where dry desert ends, green grass grows.

I will persist until I succeed.

I will remember the ancient law of averages and I will bend it to my good. I will persist with knowledge that each failure to sell will increase my chance of success at the next attempt. Each nay I hear will bring me closer to the sound of yes. Each frown I meet only prepares me for the smile to come. Each misfortune I encounter will carry in it the seed of tomorrow's good luck. I must have the night to appreciate the day. I must fail often to succeed only once.

I will persist until I succeed.

I will try, and try, and try again. Each obstacle I will consider as a mere detour to my goal and a challenge to my profession. I will persist and develop my skills as the mariner develops his, by learning to ride out the wrath of each storm.

I will persist until I succeed.

Henceforth, I will learn and apply another secret of those who excel in my work. When each day is ended, not regarding whether it has been a success or failure, I will attempt to achieve one more sale. When my thoughts beckon my tired body homeward I will resist the temptation to depart. I will try again. I will make one more attempt to close with victory, and if that fails I will make another. Never will I allow any day to end with a failure. Thus will I plant the seed of tomorrow's success and gain an insurmountable advantage over those who cease their labor at a prescribed time. When other cease their struggle, then mine will begin, and my harvest will be full.

I will persist until I succeed.

Nor will I allow yesterday's success to lull me into today's complacency, for this is the great foundation of failure. I will forget the happenings of the day that is gone, whether they were good or bad, and greet the new sun with confidence that this will be the best day of my life.

So long as there is breath in me, that long will I persist. For now I know one of the greatest principles of success; if I persist long enough I will win.

I Will Persist. I Will Win.

You Can If You Think You Can!


If you think you are beaten, you are,
If you think you dare not, you don't.
If you like to win, but you think you can't,
It is almost certain you won't.

If you think you'll lose, you're lost,
For out in the world we find,
Success begins with a fellow's will.
It's all in the state of mind.

If you think you are outclassed, you are,
You've got to think high to rise,
You've got to be sure of yourself before
You can ever win a prize.

Life's battles don't always go
To the stronger or faster man.
But soon or late the man who wins,
Is the man who thinks he can.

~ C. W. Longenecker ~

An Interview with God


I dream I had an interview with God. "Come in," God said. "So, you would like to interview Me?"

"If you have the time," I said.

God smiled and said: "My time is eternity and is enough to do everything; what questions do you have in mind to ask me?"

"What surprises you most about mankind?"

God answered:

  • "That they get bored of being children, are in a rush to grow up, and then long to be children again.

  • That they lose their health to make money and then lose their money to restore their health.

  • That by thinking anxiously about the future, they forget the present, such that they live neither for the present nor the future.

  • That they live as if they will never die, and they die as if they had never lived…"

God’s hands took mine and we were silent for a while and then I asked…"As a parent, what are some of life’s lessons you want your children to learn?"

God replied with a smile:

  • "To learn that they cannot make anyone love them. What they can do is to let themselves be loved.

  • To learn that what is most valuable is not what they have in their lives, but who they have in their lives.

  • To learn that it is not good to compare themselves to others. All will be judged individually on their own merits, not as a group on a comparison basis!

  • To learn that a rich person is not the one who has the most, but is one who needs the least.

  • To learn that it only takes a few seconds to open profound wounds in persons we love, and that it takes many years to heal them.

  • To learn to forgive by practicing forgiveness.

  • To learn that there are persons that love them dearly, but simply do not know how to express or show their feelings.

  • To learn that money can buy everything but happiness.

  • To learn that two people can look at the same thing and see it totally differently.

  • To learn that a true friend is someone who knows everything about them…and likes them anyway.

  • To learn that it is not always enough that they be forgiven by others, but that they have to forgive themselves."

I sat there for a while enjoying the moment. I thanked Him for his time and for all that He has done for me and my family, and He replied, "Anytime. I’m here 24 hours a day. All you have to do is ask for me, and I’ll answer."

People will forget what you said.
People will forget what you did,
but people will never forget
how you made them feel.

-Moses Reconalla-