Wednesday, December 12, 2012

WHEN WOULD IT BE

Where on the horizon will north meet south?
What's with the question, What is it all about
When will black mixed with white not be gray?
What is with May and December anyway? 

So would two different worlds meet by the way?
And should you care? or would I dare?

What stroke of fate brought you into my life
Why do I now dream of your smile each night 
Life used to be so simple then, isn't it right?
You don't search, you don't find, oh so trite.

Now my heart is screaming Stop! 
Don't let this happen so fast!
I don't want to be foolish Again
... Not again... not over again

How would two different worlds meet?
Not meant to be ... just not meant to be...
Like the sun which does not shine on the West
Not meant to be ... Not meant to be...

Oh What freak of circumstance 
So would there be a chance
that our paths would cross even just for once 
Would there be? 
Oh please let it be
I am hoping can't you see?

But Why do I resist?
Or Should I not insist?
Well 'cause there is no certainty
And that is the Reality
At the very least I should say
you'll eventually sail away...

Should we let things be
Care not of uncertainty
Let the sun rise in the east
Then let fate take care of the rest

Just let each day be its best
No questions asked of the day's quest
If it should come ...Then It would come 
someday you'll see... You'll be right here beside me, 'twill be!

Leadership Vs.Management

Big Picture
Detail Oriented
Strategic
Tactical
"Are We in the Right Jungle?"
Cutting Trees Efficiently
Vision, Strategy, Execution
Goals, Projects, Tasks
Effectiveness
Efficiency
Forge Vision
Follow Vision
Right Brain/Lateral Thinking
Left Brain/Linear Thinking
Progress
Process, Results
People are the Reason
People are the Means
People More Important than Task
Task More Important than People
Internal Frame of Reference
External Frame of Reference
Intuitive: Seek Internal Guidance
Sensing: Seek External Data
Visionary, Dreamer, Romantic
Level-headed, Realistic, Practical
Goose: Production Capacity
Golden Eggs: Productivity, Production
Panoramic Vision
Tunnel Vision

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Zig Ziglar Quotes 3


“It is not your aptitude but your ATTITUDE that decides your altitude in life.”

“You hit what you aim at, and if you aim at nothing you will hit it every time.”

“People do not wander around and then find themselves at the top of Mount Everest.”

“It's not where you start or even what happens to you along the way that's important. What is important is that you persevere and never give up on yourself.”

“Money isn’t the most important thing in life, but it’s reasonably close to oxygen on the ‘gotta have it’ scale.”

“Most people who fail in their dream fail not from lack of ability but from lack of commitment.”

“Life is a classroom -- only those who are willing to be lifelong learners will move to the head of the class.”

“Be helpful. When you see a person without a smile, give him one of yours. ~”

“We cannot start over, but we can begin now, and make a new beginning”

“The seed of a bamboo tree is planted, fertilized and watered. Nothing happens for the first year. There´s no sign of growth. Not even a hint. The same thing happens - or doesn´t happen - the second year. And then the third year. The tree is carefully watered and fertilized each year, but nothing shows. No growth. No anything. For eight years it can continue. Eight years! Then - after the eight years of fertilizing and watering have passed, with nothing to show for it - the bamboo tree suddenly sprouts and grows thirty feet in three months!”

“We all need a daily checkup from the neck up to avoid stinkin' thinkin' which ultimately leads to hardening of the attitudes.”

·    I'ts not what happens to you that determines how far you will go in life; it is how you handle what happens to you.

·         “It was character that got us out of bed, commitment that moved us into action and discipline that enabled us to follow through.” 
·         “You cannot consistently perform in a manner which is inconsistent with the way you see yourself.” 
·         “Ability can take you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there” 
·         “It's not how far you fall, but how high you bounce that counts.” 

  • “Remember that failure is an event, not a person.”
  • “You will get all you want in life, if you help enough other people get what they want.”
  • “People often say motivation doesn’t last. Neither does bathing—that’s why we recommend it daily.”
  • “There has never been a statue erected to honor a critic.”
  • “People don’t buy for logical reasons. They buy for emotional reasons.”
  • “Expect the best. Prepare for the worst. Capitalize on what comes.”
  • “If you go looking for a friend, you’re going to find they’re scarce. If you go out to be a friend, you’ll find them everywhere.”
  • “A goal properly set is halfway reached.”
  • “Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude.”
  • “If you can dream it, you can achieve it.”
   “Ask yourself a question: Is my attitude worth catching?”
·      “It is not your aptitude but your ATTITUDE that decides your altitude in life.”        

Zig Ziglar Quotes 2

"A positive attitude and personal motivation allow you to remain excited about what you are doing - no matter how difficult the challenges may be day to day."

“You cannot consistently perform in a manner which is inconsistent with the way you see yourself.”

“Make failure your teacher, not your undertaker.”

“What you get by achieving your goals is not as important as what you become by achieving your goals.”

“A narrow mind and a fat head invariably come on the same person.”

“If God would have wanted us to live in a permissive society He would have given us Ten Suggestions and not Ten Commandments.”

“Ability can take you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there”

“It's not how far you fall, but how high you bounce that counts.”

“Don’t become a wandering generality. Be a meaningful specific.”

“Failing is an event, not a person. Yesterday ended last night.”

“When you put faith, hope and love together, you can raise positive kids in a negative world.”

“Optimists are those who go after Moby dick in a row boat with a bucket of tarter sauce.”

“Confidence is going after Moby Dick in a rowboat and taking the tartar sauce with you.”

“If you learn from defeat, you haven't really lost.”

“Motivation is the fuel, necessary to keep the human engine running.”

“When you are tough on yourself, life is going to be infinitely easier on you”

“If you can dream it, then you can achieve it. You will get all you want in life if you help enough other people get what they want. ”

“Everybody says they want to be free. Take the train off the tracks and it’s free-but it can’t go anywhere.”

“A goal properly set is halfway reached.”

“If standard of living is your major objective, quality of life almost never improves, but if quality of life is your number one objective, your standard of living almost always improves.”

“Motivation gets you going and habit gets you there.”

“The great majority of people are “wandering generalities” rather than “meaningful specifics”. The fact is that you can't bit a target that you can't see. If you don't know where you are going, you will probably end up somewhere else. You have to have goals.”

“Ask yourself a question: Is my attitude worth catching?”

“Don't be distracted by criticism. Remember ~ the only taste of success some people have is when they take a bite out of you.”

“You can succeed at almost anything for which you have unbridled enthusiasm.”

“Take one cup of love, two cups of loyalty, three cups of forgiveness, four quarts of faith and one barrel of laughter. Take love and loyalty and mix them thoroughly with faith; blend with tenderness, kindness and understanding. Add friendship and hope. Sprinkle abundantly with laughter. Bake it with sunshine. Wrap it regularly with lots of hugs. Serve generous helpings daily.”

“Go as far as you can see and you will see further.”

“Chance made us sisters. Hearts made us friends.”

“Money is not everything but it ranks right up there with oxygen”

“Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly--until you can learn to do it well.”

“Put all excuses aside and remember this: YOU are capable.”

“It makes no difference where you go, there you are. And it makes no difference what you have, there’s always more to want. Until you are happy with who you are, you will never be happy because of what you have.”

“U can feed ur ego or u can feed ur family. U can’t feed them both.”

“You don't drown by falling in water; you only drown if you stay there.”

“It's not what you've got, it's what you use that makes a difference.”

“Success occurs when opportunity meets preparation”

“Encouragement is the fuel on which hope runs.”

Zig Ziglar Quotes

“Our favorite attitude should be gratitude”

“Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude.”

"Failure is a detour, not a dead-end street”

"If you learn from defeat, you haven't really lost."

“Of course motivation is not permanent. But then, neither is bathing; but it is 

something you should do on a regular basis.”

“Rich people have small TVs and big libraries, and poor people have small libraries and big TVs.”

“Lack of direction, not lack of time, is the problem. We all have twenty-four hour days.”

“When obstacles arise, you change your direction to reach your goal; you do not change your decision to get there.”

“Among the things you can give and still keep are your word, a smile, and a grateful heart.”

“You don't have to be great to start, but you have to start to be great”

“The chief cause of failure and unhappiness is trading what you want most for what you want right now”

“Many marriages would be better if the husband and wife clearly understood that they're on the same side. ”

“A lot of people have gone further than they thought they could because someone else thought they could”

“If you go out looking for friends, you're going to find they are very scarce. If you go out to be a friend, you'll find them everywhere.”

“Make today worth remembering.”

 “You can have everything in life that you want if you just give enough other people what they want.”

“If you aim at nothing, you will hit it every time.”

“You never know when a moment and a
few sincere words can have an impact on a life.”

“There are no traffic jams on the extra mile.”

“You are what you are and you are where you are because of what has gone into your mind. You change what you are and you change where you are by changing what goes into your mind.”

“Failure is an event not a person”

“Some people find fault like there is a reward for it”

“You were born to win, but to be a winner you must plan to win, prepare to win, and expect to win.”

“Attitude, not Aptitude, determines Altitude.”

“Outstanding people have one thing in common: an absolute sense of mission”

“The greatest of all mistakes is to do nothing because you think you can only do a little.”

“Success is the doing, not the getting; in the trying, not the triumph. Success is a personal standard, reaching for the highest that is in us, becoming all that we can be. If we do our best, we are a success.”

“The more you are grateful for what you have the more you will have to be grateful for”

“Expect the best. Prepare for the worst. Capitalize on what comes.”

“Duty makes us do things well, but love makes us do them beautifully.”

“Some of us learn from other people’s mistakes and the rest of us have to be other people.”

“The most important persuasion tool you have in your entire arsenal is integrity.”

“It was character that got us out of bed, commitment that moved us into action and discipline that enabled us to follow through.”

Thursday, October 25, 2012

LEADERS VS MANAGERS

Leaders Managers
Do the RIGHT things Do things RIGHT
Focus on WHAT can be accomplished Focus on How things should be done
INNOVATION CONFORMITY
COMMITMENT CONTROL
OUTCOME oriented RULES oriented
Transformational Transactional
Energize the System Ensure the Stability of the System
Vision, Inspiration, Courage Procedure, Strategy, Objective
CREATE CHANGE MANAGE CHANGE

Sunday, April 1, 2012

of Reasons and Emotions

Most of the time conflicting, often arguing...


Always in a push and pull...
a ceaseless tug-of-war...

Rationalizing... feeling ... philosophizing... sensing...

at the end of the day, whatever it is you listen to and choose on,
take responsibility for the decision.
Accept accountability for each chosen step, and each commitment made.


as everything is your own doing
..... to make the CHOICE
..... to take the CHANCE
..... to have the CHANGE ...

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Useful TIPs in Business Writing

Plan before you write.
◊ Look up the words you need before you start.
◊ Note the points you want to make, and order them into logical paragraphs.


Tone
Write as you would speak in a business conversation.
The tone should be friendly and polite.


Names  
◊ Make sure you check the gender of the addressee (the recipient), as well as the correct spelling of the person's name and title. 
◊ Use Ms. for women and Mr. for men. 
   You can use Mrs. for a women if you are 100% sure that she is married.


Dates
To avoid any confusion, write the month instead of using numbers
         (e.g. January 15th, 2011, or 15 January 2011)


Be concise and clear.
The easier it is to read a letter, the better.
◊ Keep sentences and paragraphs short and simple.
◊ Use straightforward vocabulary to avoid any misunderstanding.
◊ Ask direct questions.
◊ Rewrite any sentence that does not seem perfectly clear.
◊ If the recipient is not a native English-speaker, it is preferable to avoid words and expressions that are too technical or complicated.


Remember this word order principle :


Who  -  Does  -  What  -  How  -  Where  -  When
(Subject - Verb - Object - Manner - Place - Time)
               
Examples : 
▪ Mr. Brown will travel by plane to London on Monday, June 5th.
▪ A technician will install the equipment in your office on Tuesday morning.
▪ I will confirm the transport arrangements as soon as possible.


Avoid old-fashioned words Although they are used in legal documents and contracts, words like herewith', 'hereby', 'herein', 'aforementioned', etc. are rarely used in letters.
     The following style of sentence is preferable :
     "You will find more information on our products in the enclosed brochure."    

Sunday, March 11, 2012

15 Common Defense Mechanisms

Primitive Defense Mechanisms
1. Denial
Denial is the refusal to accept reality or fact, acting as if a painful event, thought or feeling did not exist. It is considered one of the most primitive of the defense mechanisms because it is characteristic of early childhood development. Many people use denial in their everyday lives to avoid dealing with painful feelings or areas of their life they don’t wish to admit. For instance, a person who is a functioning alcoholic will often simply deny they have a drinking problem, pointing to how well they function in their job and relationships.


2. Regression
Regression is the reversion to an earlier stage of development in the face of unacceptable thoughts or impulses. For an example an adolescent who is overwhelmed with fear, anger and growing sexual impulses might become clingy and start exhibiting earlier childhood behaviors he has long since overcome, such as bedwetting. An adult may regress when under a great deal of stress, refusing to leave their bed and engage in normal, everyday activities.


3. Acting Out
Acting Out is performing an extreme behavior in order to express thoughts or feelings the person feels incapable of otherwise expressing. Instead of saying, “I’m angry with you,” a person who acts out may instead throw a book at the person, or punch a hole through a wall. When a person acts out, it can act as a pressure release, and often helps the individual feel calmer and peaceful once again. For instance, a child’s temper tantrum is a form of acting out when he or she doesn’t get his or her way with a parent. Self-injury may also be a form of acting-out, expressing in physical pain what one cannot stand to feel emotionally.


4. Dissociation
Dissociation is when a person loses track of time and/or person, and instead finds another representation of their self in order to continue in the moment. A person who dissociates often loses track of time or themselves and their usual thought processes and memories. People who have a history of any kind of childhood abuse often suffer from some form of dissociation. In extreme cases, dissociation can lead to a person believing they have multiple selves (“multiple personality disorder”). People who use dissociation often have a disconnected view of themselves in their world. Time and their own self-image may not flow continuously, as it does for most people. In this manner, a person who dissociates can “disconnect” from the real world for a time, and live in a different world that is not cluttered with thoughts, feelings or memories that are unbearable.


5. Compartmentalization
Compartmentalization is a lesser form of dissociation, wherein parts of oneself are separated from awareness of other parts and behaving as if one had separate sets of values. An example might be an honest person who cheats on their income tax return and keeps their two value systems distinct and un-integrated while remaining unconscious of the cognitive dissonance.


6. Projection
Projection is the misattribution of a person’s undesired thoughts, feelings or impulses onto another person who does not have those thoughts, feelings or impulses. Projection is used especially when the thoughts are considered unacceptable for the person to express, or they feel completely ill at ease with having them. For example, a spouse may be angry at their significant other for not listening, when in fact it is the angry spouse who does not listen. Projection is often the result of a lack of insight and acknowledgement of one’s own motivations and feelings.


7. Reaction Formation
Reaction Formation is the converting of unwanted or dangerous thoughts, feelings or impulses into their opposites. For instance, a woman who is very angry with her boss and would like to quit her job may instead be overly kind and generous toward her boss and express a desire to keep working there forever. She is incapable of expressing the negative emotions of anger and unhappiness with her job, and instead becomes overly kind to publicly demonstrate her lack of anger and unhappiness.


Less Primitive, More Mature Defense Mechanisms
Less primitive defense mechanisms are a step up from the primitive defense mechanisms in the previous section. Many people employ these defenses as adults, and while they work okay for many, they are not ideal ways of dealing with our feelings, stress and anxiety. If you recognize yourself using a few of these, don’t feel bad – everybody does.


8. Repression
Repression is the unconscious blocking of unacceptable thoughts, feelings and impulses. The key to repression is that people do it unconsciously, so they often have very little control over it. “Repressed memories” are memories that have been unconsciously blocked from access or view. But because memory is very malleable and ever-changing, it is not like playing back a DVD of your life. The DVD has been filtered and even altered by your life experiences, even by what you’ve read or viewed.


9. Displacement
Displacement is the redirecting of thoughts feelings and impulses directed at one person or object, but taken out upon another person or object. People often use displacement when they cannot express their feelings in a safe manner to the person they are directed at. The classic example is the man who gets angry at his boss, but can’t express his anger to his boss for fear of being fired. He instead comes home and kicks the dog or starts an argument with his wife. The man is redirecting his anger from his boss to his dog or wife. Naturally, this is a pretty ineffective defense mechanism, because while the anger finds a route for expression, it’s misapplication to other harmless people or objects will cause additional problems for most people.


10. Intellectualization
Intellectualization is the overemphasis on thinking when confronted with an unacceptable impulse, situation or behavior without employing any emotions whatsoever to help mediate and place the thoughts into an emotional, human context. Rather than deal with the painful associated emotions, a person might employ intellectualization to distance themselves from the impulse, event or behavior. For instance, a person who has just been given a terminal medical diagnosis, instead of expressing their sadness and grief, focuses instead on the details of all possible fruitless medical procedures.


11. Rationalization
Rationalization is putting something into a different light or offering a different explanation for one’s perceptions or behaviors in the face of a changing reality. For instance, a woman who starts dating a man she really, really likes and thinks the world of is suddenly dumped by the man for no reason. She reframes the situation in her mind with, “I suspected he was a loser all along.”


12. Undoing
Undoing is the attempt to take back an unconscious behavior or thought that is unacceptable or hurtful. For instance, after realizing you just insulted your significant other unintentionally, you might spend then next hour praising their beauty, charm and intellect. By “undoing” the previous action, the person is attempting to counteract the damage done by the original comment, hoping the two will balance one another out.


Mature Defense Mechanisms
Mature defense mechanisms are often the most constructive and helpful to most adults, but may require practice and effort to put into daily use. While primitive defense mechanisms do little to try and resolve underlying issues or problems, mature defenses are more focused on helping a person be a more constructive component of their environment. People with more mature defenses tend to be more at peace with themselves and those around them.


13. Sublimation
Sublimation is simply the channeling of unacceptable impulses, thoughts and emotions into more acceptable ones. For instance, when a person has sexual impulses they would like not to act upon, they may instead focus on rigorous exercise. Refocusing such unacceptable or harmful impulses into productive use helps a person channel energy that otherwise would be lost or used in a manner that might cause the person more anxiety.


Sublimation can also be done with humor or fantasy. Humor, when used as a defense mechanism, is the channeling of unacceptable impulses or thoughts into a light-hearted story or joke. Humor reduces the intensity of a situation, and places a cushion of laughter between the person and the impulses. Fantasy, when used as a defense mechanism, is the channeling of unacceptable or unattainable desires into imagination. For example, imagining one’s ultimate career goals can be helpful when one experiences temporary setbacks in academic achievement. Both can help a person look at a situation in a different way, or focus on aspects of the situation not previously explored.


14. Compensation
Compensation is a process of psychologically counterbalancing perceived weaknesses by emphasizing strength in other arenas. By emphasizing and focusing on one’s strengths, a person is recognizing they cannot be strong at all things and in all areas in their lives. For instance, when a person says, “I may not know how to cook, but I can sure do the dishes!,” they’re trying to compensate for their lack of cooking skills by emphasizing their cleaning skills instead. When done appropriately and not in an attempt to over-compensate, compensation is defense mechanism that helps reinforce a person’s self-esteem and self-image.


15. Assertiveness
Assertiveness is the emphasis of a person’s needs or thoughts in a manner that is respectful, direct and firm. Communication styles exist on a continuum, ranging from passive to aggressive, with assertiveness falling neatly in between. People who are passive and communicate in a passive manner tend to be good listeners, but rarely speak up for themselves or their own needs in a relationship. People who are aggressive and communicate in an aggressive manner tend to be good leaders, but often at the expense of being able to listen empathetically to others and their ideas and needs. People who are assertive strike a balance where they speak up for themselves, express their opinions or needs in a respectful yet firm manner, and listen when they are being spoken to. Becoming more assertive is one of the most desired communication skills and helpful defense mechanisms most people want to learn, and would benefit in doing so.


* * *
Remember, defense mechanisms are most often learned behaviors, most of which we learned during childhood. That’s a good thing, because it means that, as an adult, you can choose to learn some new behaviors and new defense mechanisms that may be more beneficial to you in your life. Many psychotherapists will help you work on these things, if you’d like. But even becoming more aware of when you’re using one of the less primitive types of defense mechanisms above can be helpful in identifying behaviors you’d like to reduce.

Psychology of Change

  • Initial Concerns: The threat to deep systems.
  • Initial Reactions: Negative or positive?
  • The Kübler-Ross Grief Cycle: The emotional cycle on given bad news.
  • Shock stage: Initial paralysis at hearing the bad news.
  • Denial stage: Trying to avoid the inevitable.
  • Anger stage: Frustrated outpouring of bottled-up emotion.
  • Bargaining stage: Seeking in vain for a way out.
  • Depression stage: Final realization of the inevitable.
  • Testing stage: Seeking realistic solutions.
  • Acceptance stage: Finally finding the way forward.
  • The Positive Change Cycle: Even good news has its ups and downs.
  • Resistance to Change: When people push back against the change.
  • Rationale for resistance: What people tell themselves.
  • The Resistance Zoo: the animals and their styles of resistance.
  • Signs of Resistance: spotting subtle signals of dissent.
  • How to Cause Resistance: there are many ways!
  • Strong and Weak Commitment: After an agreement, commitment may vary.

Coping Mechanisms



  • Acting out: not coping - giving in to the pressure to misbehave.
  • Aim inhibition: lowering sights to what seems more achievable.
  • Altruism: Helping others to help self.
  • Attack: trying to beat down that which is threatening you.
  • Avoidance: mentally or physically avoiding something that causes distress.
  • Compartmentalization: separating conflicting thoughts into separated compartments.
  • Compensation: making up for a weakness in one area by gain strength in another.
  • Conversion: subconscious conversion of stress into physical symptoms.
  • Denial: refusing to acknowledge that an event has occurred.
  • Displacement: shifting of intended action to a safer target.
  • Dissociation: separating oneself from parts of your life.
  • Emotionality: Outbursts and extreme emotion.
  • Fantasy: escaping reality into a world of possibility.
  • Help-rejecting complaining: Ask for help then reject it.
  • Idealization: playing up the good points and ignoring limitations of things desired.
  • Identification: copying others to take on their characteristics.
  • Intellectualization: avoiding emotion by focusing on facts and logic.
  • Introjection: Bringing things from the outer world into the inner world.
  • Passive aggression: avoiding refusal by passive avoidance.
  • Performing rituals: Patterns that delay.
  • Post-traumatic growth: Using the energy of trauma for good.
  • Projection: seeing your own unwanted feelings in other people.
  • Provocation: Get others to act so you can retaliate.
  • Rationalization: creating logical reasons for bad behavior.
  • Reaction Formation: avoiding something by taking a polar opposite position.
  • Regression: returning to a child state to avoid problems.
  • Repression: subconsciously hiding uncomfortable thoughts.
  • Self-harming: physically damaging the body.
  • Somatization: psychological problems turned into physical symptoms.
  • Sublimation: channeling psychic energy into acceptable activities.
  • Substitution: Replacing one thing with another.
  • Suppression: consciously holding back unwanted urges.
  • Symbolization: turning unwanted thoughts into metaphoric symbols.
  • Trivializing: Making small what is really something big.
  • Undoing: actions that psychologically 'undo' wrongdoings for the wrongdoer.

5 Stages of Grief (Kubler-Ross Grief Cycle)


  • Shock stage*: Initial paralysis at hearing the bad news.
  • Denial stage: Trying to avoid the inevitable.
  • Anger stage: Frustrated outpouring of bottled-up emotion.
  • Bargaining stage: Seeking in vain for a way out.
  • Depression stage: Final realization of the inevitable.
  • Testing stage*: Seeking realistic solutions.
  • Acceptance stage: Finally finding the way forward.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

on Trying Times

Life is full of uncertainties yet is infinitely interesting.

During those trying times, what do you do? Who do you call on to?

Press the panic button!
Cry! Tears become companions!
... call God using His private line - Prayer - hoping He would answer and reply back... 
But chances are, He remains silent... 
sometimes for a short moment, 
at times for a long, long time... 


Then the long wait... 

He then sends His angels, disguised as friends to deliver His message...

Saturday, February 25, 2012

I'm Interested in...

  • Probability and Statistics
  • Numbers, Codes and Patterns
  • People and Behaviour
  • Chaos and Fractal Theory
  • Butterfly Effect
    • "...in a chaotic system, it is the sensitive dependence on an initial condition. where a miniscule change in one place at a nonlinear system can result to a far-reaching huge difference and large-scale effect in the development of the system to a later state..."

    Ghost word

    The only ghost word in the M-W dictionary is "Dord".
    Physics and Chemistry for Density. Which actually should be "D or d"!
    (click)
    http://www.merriam-webster.com/video/0027-ghostword.htm

    Saturday, February 18, 2012

    SUCCESS = KHASHH

    Success cannot be achieved overnight but over time...
    a product of KASHH

    • KNOWLEDGE - Learned
    • HABIT - Developed
    • ATTITUDE - Acquired
    • SKILLS - Honed
    • HARDWORK - Produced
    • HEALTH - Valued

    Somewhere in Time


    With my batch:
    (2006 HS Reunion Notre Dame of Dadiangas Girls Dept.)

    The morning after our Reunion... just got up and still beautiful!

    Cora Guinto, Regina Raval, Annamae Mapalo, Clemencia Dinopol, Suita Siao, Helen Clarin, Joanne Tan, Luz Narciso.

    Friday, February 17, 2012

    Secret on How to Age Gracefully...

    17 February 12

    Nothing is more heartwarming than when told... You look much younger than those women half your age!

    Caught off guard by such an unexpectedly kind remark, I could only muster a smile. It's rather remarkable, especially considering my actual age.

    "They really appear older than you," came the affirmation, followed by, "I'm intrigued, is it perhaps of their line of work?"

    Even I am uncertain, for it might be that one's perspective on life prevents the weight of years from etching onto their physical visage.

    The hidden truth?

    ... Cherish oneself ... stay enamored with life ... 
    --- and always be thankful to God for the Blessings He gives each day...
    --- the Attitude of Gratitude
    --- these are the keys to gracefully embracing the passage of time :)