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Know
& Grow Monthly Magazine There
is more in us than we know. If we can be made to see it, perhaps for the
rest of our lives we will be unwilling to settle for less." ~ Kurt Hahn ...

January 25, 2010 |
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TODAY'S TUNE [ON/OFF]   "Total Eclipse of the Heart"
If
the song doesn't play, simply:
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HERE to open a media window.
 THIS WEEK'S ISSUE From the Inside Out... What Friends
Do Fascinating Facts... Egyptian Symbol
of the Soul
Yes You Can!... Discover
What Makes You Happy
Just for YOU... Treats &
Announcements
Online All the Time...
Computer Tips, Travel
Guides, Books, Quotes, Music & More
 BE the World You Want to See!
| Ruth Carter Stapleton wrote her philosophy
of life in 1981, which was later read at her graveside service. She said: "Time
is passing. Each day is a glorious opportunity to live and enjoy. Today I will
let the past die all the undone things, all the misjudged things... Today,
there are new pleasures, new challenges, new magic." |

~ Chelle Thompson, Editor
GO
HERE TO FIND OUT HOW ... you can help
people in Haiti and elsewhere without
any risk.
| From the Inside Out
WHAT FRIENDS DO Jack
tossed the papers on my desk his eyebrows knit into a straight line as
he glared at me. "What's
wrong?" I asked. He
jabbed a finger at the proposal. "Next time you want to change anything,
ask me first," he said, turning on his heels and leaving me stewing in
anger. How
dare he treat me like that, I thought. I had changed one long sentence, and corrected
grammar something I thought I was paid to do. It's
not that I hadn't been warned. The other women, who had served in my place before
me, called him names I couldn't repeat. One coworker took me aside the first day.
"He's personally responsible for two different secretaries leaving the
firm," she whispered. As
the weeks went by, I grew to despise Jack. It was against everything I believed
in turn the other cheek and love your enemies. But Jack quickly slapped
a verbal insult on any cheek turned his way. I prayed about it, but to be honest,
I wanted to put him in his place, not love him. One
day, another of his episodes left me in tears. I stormed into his office, prepared
to lose my job if needed, but not before I let the man know how I felt. I opened
the door and Jack glanced up. "What?" he said abruptly. Suddenly
I knew what I had to do. After all, he deserved it. I sat across from him. "Jack,
the way you've been treating me is wrong. I've never had anyone speak to me that
way. As a professional, it's wrong, and it's wrong for me to allow it to continue,"
I said. Jack snickered nervously and leaned back in his chair. I closed my eyes
briefly. Heaven help me, I implored. "I
want to make you a promise. I will be a friend," I said. "I will
treat you as you deserve to be treated, with respect and kindness. You deserve
that," I said. "Everybody does." I slipped out of the
chair and closed the door behind me. Jack
avoided me the rest of the week. Proposals, specs, and letters appeared on my
desk while I was at lunch, and the corrected versions were not seen again. I brought
cookies to the office one day and left a batch on Jack's desk. Another day I left
a note. "Hope your day is going great," it read. Over the next
few weeks, Jack reappeared. He was reserved, but there were no other episodes.
Coworkers cornered me in the break room. "Guess
you got to Jack," they said. "You must have told him off good."
I shook my head. "Jack and I are becoming friends," I said in
faith. I refused to talk about him. Every time I saw Jack in the hall, I smiled
at him. After
all, that's what friends do. One
year after our "talk", I discovered I had breast cancer. I was 32, the
mother of three beautiful young children, and scared. The cancer had metastasized
to my lymph nodes and the statistics were not great for long-term survival. After
surgery, I visited with friends and loved ones who tried to find the right words
to say. No one knew what to say. Many said the wrong things. Others wept, and
I tried to encourage them. I clung to hope. The
last day of my hospital stay, the door darkened and Jack stood awkwardly on the
threshold. I waved him in with a smile and he walked over to my bed and, without
a word, placed a bundle beside me. Inside lay several bulbs. "Tulips,"
he said. I smiled, not understanding. He
cleared his throat. "If you plant them when you get home, they'll come
up next spring." He shuffled his feet. "I just wanted you to
know that I think you'll be there to see them when they come up." Tears
clouded my eyes and I reached out my hand. "Thank you," I whispered.
Jack
grasped my hand and gruffly replied, "You're welcome. You can't see it
now, but next spring you'll see the colors I picked out for you." He
turned and left without a word. I
have seen those red and white striped tulips push through the soil every spring
for over ten years now. In fact, this September the doctor will declare me cured.
I've seen my children graduate from high school and enter college. In
a moment when I hoped for just the right word, a man with very few words said
all the right things. After
all, that's what friends do.
~ By T. Suzanne Eller, Speaker, Columnist
Author**
*Other
Stories & More*

| HUGS
FOR THE HEART (click here) A
Story Collection That Touches the Heart as Only a Hug Can Do
This
delightful collection of inspirational stories is a warm hug for your waiting
heart. Read
them one at a time or a few in a sitting, and each cozy story will provide a sweet
moment of rest and a reason to smile. You'll find stories by some of your favorite
authors, such as **T. Suzanne Eller,
Patsy Clairmont, Zig Ziglar, Ravi Zacharias, Florence Littauer, and Alan Loy McGinnis,
as well as some by new friends you'll enjoy getting to know. Sweet stories that
hug the heart a gift worth giving yourself, as well as those you love.
Rhonda
Hogan (Compiler)
To
Change Ad to Book Image: Click Refresh |
| | Fascinating
Facts EGYPTIAN SYMBOL OF THE SOUL...
| |
Who
put the butter in the BUTTER-fly?
LEARN MORE HERE 
| |
| |
| Yes You Can! DISCOVER WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY
 | In
my new book The
Happiness Project I describe the year I spent test-driving the
wisdom of the ages, the current scientific studies, and the lessons from popular
culture about how to be happier from Aristotle to Thoreau to Seligman to
Oprah. In my
column, I've recounted some of my adventures and conclusions in pursuit
of happiness. I'm describing research for my book and online
happiness project, but of course, the point of this is to encourage
you to start YOUR OWN happiness project... |
To take just one small example, I've written about my idea of the abstainer/moderator
split: when it comes to resisting temptation, some people
find it much easier to abstain altogether, while others do better exercising moderation.
(Here's a quiz
to tell you which camp you're in.) Abstainers and moderators judge
each other harshly; abstainers think moderators constantly cheat, and moderators
think abstainers have a rigid, unhealthy attitude. Neither
way is the right way to resist temptation. As with many aspects of happiness,
it's a matter of knowing the right approach for you. I myself am an abstainer
like Samuel Johnson, who observed, "Abstinence is as easy to me
as temperance would be difficult." When you recognize your own nature,
you're better able to devise a happiness project that works for you. One
woman commented: Learning that I am an abstainer ... has been a great boon
to my happiness. Knowing myself better helped me make the choice to give up sugar
and flour all together. I have found it much easier to stick to my resolution
when abstaining totally. Plus, I have lost 45 unwanted pounds over the last several
months. And that is a certainly a happiness booster!
Before
I started my happiness project, I certainly didn't realize I was an abstainer,
and it surprised me to discover that it was far easier for to give up things altogether
than to indulge every once in a while. In fact, as I used myself as guinea pig
to test various theories about how to be happier, I discovered several things
that surprised me. The most effective ways to pursue happiness were sometimes
counter-intuitive. 1.
Do buy happiness. Well, maybe money can't buy happiness, but spent
wisely, it can buy things that contribute mightily to happiness. Some of the best
things in life aren't free. To be happy, we need to feel loved, secure, good at
what we do, and have a sense of control. Money doesn't automatically fill these
requirements, of course, but it sure can help. 2.
Don't get organized. When I faced tackling the intimidating piles
of clutter in my apartment and office, my first impulse was to run to a supply
store to buy lots of organizing gizmos. Then I realized no! My first task
was to get rid of things that I didn't need or didn't work. The most important
tool in my clutter-clearing arsenal turned out to be trashbags. In many cases,
after sorting through a pile, I found myself left with nothing to organize. Conquering
clutter is a happiness booster because for most people, outer order contributes
to inner calm. (Here are 27
bonus tips for keeping your house in order.) 3.
Do let the sun go down on my anger. In the past, I'd always conscientiously
aired every complaint before bedtime. Studies show, however, that the notion of
"anger catharsis" is nonsense. Venting anger related to minor, fleeting
annoyances just amplifies bad feelings; not expressing anger often allows them
to dissipate. 4.
Don't insist on "the best." There are two types of decision
makers: satisficers seek to satisfy certain criteria; maximizers seek to make
the best possible decision. Once satisficers find a tent or a watch that meets
their requirements, they buy it; maximizers want to find the best tent or the
best watch. Maximizers tend to be less happy than satisficers, because they agonize
over their choices. I often remind myself of one of my favorite Secrets
of Adulthood (cribbed from Voltaire): Don't let the perfect
be the enemy of the good. 5.
Do embrace the fun of failure. Positive psychologists tell us that
challenge and novelty are key elements of happiness. Studies show that people
who do new things learn a game, travel to unfamiliar places are
happier than people who stick to the familiar. When I tested this proposition,
I figured it wouldn't be true for unadventurous, routine-loving me, but to test
it, I launched a blog. True, the novelty and challenge of my blog initially often
brought me frustration and anxiety, as I had to face failing at multiple tasks
until I figured them out, but mastering those tasks made me extremely happy. 6.
Don't practice "RANDOM acts of kindness." We've all been
urged to practice random acts of kindness pay the toll for the next car
in line, feed a parking meter, buy a stranger a cup of coffee. And studies
do show that if you commit a random act of kindness, you'll feel
happier. However, the person who is the beneficiary of your random act
probably won't feel happier. This research indicates that many people reacted
to receiving a random act of kindness with suspicion! It's not the kindness
of the act that's the problem; it's the randomness. We're on guard when we
don't understand a person's actions. Of course, it's always nice to be nice, but
if you want to boost other people's happiness as well as your own, practice non-random
kindness. Help a coworker who has a tight deadline. Let someone with a few items
cut in front of you in the check-out line. If you look, you can probably find
enough opportunity for nonrandom kindnesses to keep you busy. 7.
Do "fake it till you feel it." Although we assume that
we act because of the way we feel, we often feel because of the way we act. An
almost uncannily effective way to change my emotions, I discovered, was to act
the way I wanted to feel. If I feel resentful, I act thoughtful. If I feel lethargic,
I act energetic. If I smile, I feel happier. One
experiment showed that people who used Botox may feel less angry,
because they aren't able to make angry, frowning faces! Although it may seem insincere
at first, controlling your actions is an effective way to change your feelings. Have
you been surprised by something that did or didn't make you happy, contrary
to your expectation? ~
By Gretchen Rubin a best-selling writer who shares her insights at
www.TheHappinessProject.com
and whose new book is called: The
Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean
My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun
"For
those who generally loathe the self-help genre, Rubin's book is a breath of peppermint-scented
air. Well-researched and sharply written. . . . Rubin takes an orderly, methodical
approach to forging her own path to a happier state of mind." (Cleveland
Plain Dealer )
| |
| Just
for YOU TREATS & ANNOUNCEMENTS
Visit
Dr. Sinor's New Blog: INSPIRATION
FOR RECOVERY Introducing
Dr. Barbara Sinor's new blog filled with articles, books and inspiration
to further your healing and recovery from life's traumas, passages, and addictions:
"Let's
be fellow adventurers on our journey toward more peace and compassion; be
sure to leave your comments at the end of each post...
www.DrSinor.Blogspot.com.
For
more detailed information about me and my work,
visit my web site at: www.DrSinor.com.
"My
new book Tales of Addiction and Inspiration for Recovery will be launched in April.
I invite you to learn more about this book and its potent look at over two dozen
addiction stories, as well as, my own as the mother of an alcoholic son. The book's
Foreword is by renown educator and author Cardwell C. Nuckols, Ph.D. Dr. Nuckols
writes, 'Alcohol and drugs are not the wrong direction--just the wrong method
to search for our path. Alcohol and drugs many times give us a glimpse of the
Self and our natural desire for transcendence... Tales of Addiction is a gift
from Dr. Sinor's Self to ours; it is her ability to see and understand the love
and beauty inside of others that makes this book a source of healing.'"
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