Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Your Mountain Can Still Be Moved - Johnny Morney

If you are not living the life of your dreams,
I am writing to tell you that you can still
give birth to the greatness inside of you.

It doesn't matter what stage or age you are
in at this moment.

And most of all it doesn't matter what
obstacles or mountains have held you back
in the past.

If you start today you can still move
your mountain. If you have faith the size
of a mustard seed I promise you the mountain
can be moved.

You may be saying Johnny you don't know
what I'm going through. You don't know my
circumstances. And you are right I don't know
what your mountain is, but I do know that
if you have faith you can still move
your mountain.

How do I know you ask? Well I'm glad you
asked that question. You see about 5
years ago I was addicted to crack cocaine,
my wife left me.

I was unemployed, my car was repoed and I was
evicted out of my apartment. I became ill
and the doctor told me it was possibly
colon cancer.

As you can see I had one huge mountain
to move. According to society, people
and statistics my life was over.

My circumstances didn't look very promising
to the untrained eye.

But to someone like me with the faith of a
mustard seed it was an opportunity to
prove them all wrong. It was my chance to
move my mountain.

You must understand that I was 42 years
old when this took place. So, I was
certainly old enough to know the difference
between right and wrong.

This proves that age alone does not mean
you will always make the right decisions.

I was also at an age to where I could have
said I am too old to change my life. I could
have said society and people are right the
statistics say that this is how my life will end.

Therefore, I don't have the power to change
my life or my circumstances.

I decided to take responsibility and control
of my life. I climbed out of my pit and moved
my mountain and so can you.

It doesn't matter what you are going through
or how long you have been going through it.
Your mountain can still be moved!

You want to buy a new home and you have bad
credit, so what, move your mountain.

You want that promotion on your job but you
don't have the education required to get
it, so what, move your mountain.

The doctor said ..... so what, move your
mountain. You did presentations for 20
people and they all said no to your
business, so what,move your mountain.

Your spouse walked out and left you,
so what, move your mountain.

Ten banks turned you down for a loan,
so what, move your mountain.

Your family and friends told you that you
would never be nothing, so what, move
your mountain.

You were downsized, laid off, so what,
move your mountain.

They said you were too old to start
over, so what, move your mountain.

They said you couldn't do it because
you are a woman or a single mom,
so what, move your mountain.

Hold on to your dreams, keep the faith
and move your mountain!

You Are Just A Step Away!

====================================================
'You may have a fresh start any moment you choose,
for this thing that we call "failure" is not falling
down, but the staying down.' - Mary Pickford
=====================================================
http://www.justastepaway.com
=====================================================
Johnny Morney
3904 Crestgate
Midland, TX
79703
US

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Chiropractic and Reducing Stress

This health and wellness article issue for March 2008 is brought to you by chirohealthwellness.com


We certainly live in stressful times. It's not easy to assess whether our era is the most stressful, but we do have plenty of daily stress. The job, the home, the kids, the relatives, the economy - all these stresses add up and yet we wonder why we have so many aches and pains. What can we do? The external stresses in our lives aren't going away. Interestingly, chiropractic treatment can be of great assistance in reducing the effects of stress on the body.

Read the full text of the article

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Quote for the day - W Clement Stone

"Be careful the environment you choose for it will shape you; be careful the friends you choose for you will become like them."
Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet.
W. Clement Stone
1902-2002, Author and Businessman

Sunday, March 16, 2008

What Makes Up Proper Business Meeting Etiquette - By: Jeff Schuman

How do you have a meeting everyone can leave feeling good about? Meetings have become an inevitable part of doing business for almost every business owner. There are meetings with clients, meetings with employees and meetings with peers or associates.
Almost everyone has suffered through meetings that take up your valuable time and accomplish very little.

In fact, you may find that you yourself have now become numb to that fact that your meetings aren't as good as they could be. And everywhere you look, it seems as if somebody has another idea about how to fix your meetings, and make them more focused, more productive, and more fun! Do you listen to any of them? Some of them may be worth trying. At the very least it is always a good idea to seek input from your team.

So what can you do about it? Simple business meeting etiquette can help you put on a quality meeting. Here are a few tips and ideas for planning your next quality meeting.

1. Schedule your meetings at the best time.
2. Make sure your meetings all start on time - (and whenever possible, avoid scheduling meetings when someone is up against a deadline, or on a tight schedule).
3. Maintain a consistent focus on what topics will be covered (use an agenda).
4. Ensure there is a good level of rapport in the group (people can talk to each other and exchange ideas about what is being discussed).
5. Arrive at a decision - (find new ways to avoid covering the same ground, and ask for input to help create a plan of action.)
6. Use parliamentary procedures - (so that the correct methods for amending or making a motion, following the agenda and taking turns before speaking are being followed).
7. Choose the best location and environment for your meetings - (for example, trying to fit 15 people into a closet-sized room that doesn't have windows or a proper ventilation system is poor planning on your part.)
8. Do not schedule meetings to go over routine topics - (you can send a memo or email for this.)
9. Talk to your group and make your meetings interactive. They will be more attentive if they are involved.
10. Always ask for feedback from participants and allow them to present ideas or get involved.

These ten simple business meeting etiquette tips that guarantee a better meeting for everyone. Follow these and you will see results on what you covered as well as a better attendance at future meetings.

Article source: Articlecat.com

Author: Jeff Schuman invites you to visit his small business resources website more small business training. http://www.sites-plus.com/business-meeting-etiquette.html
 
 

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Quote for the Day

"Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything." ~ George Bernard Shaw
 
 

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Becoming a Proactive Leader by Denis Waitley

Becoming a Proactive Leader

The knowledge era’s new leaders, many of whom are immigrants and women, are managing change by conceiving innovative organizations and novel ways to attract and motivate employees. They are learning to be proactive instead of reactive, and to appreciate the full importance of relationships and alliances. They also have a healthy aptitude for risk and perseverance, and know how to gain strength from setbacks and failure.

Life’s Batting Average

Baseball’s greatest hitter grew up near my neighborhood in San Diego. When Ted Williams slugged for the Boston Red Sox, my father and I kept a record of his daily batting average. And when I played Little League ball, my dad told me not to worry about striking out. In Williams’s finest year, dad reminded me, the champion failed at the plate about 60 percent of the time.

Football’s greatest quarterbacks complete only six out of ten passes. The best basketball players make only half their shots. Even with satellite mapping and expert geologists, leading oil companies make strikes in only one out of ten wells. Actors and actresses auditioning for roles are turned down twenty-nine in thirty times. And stock market winners make money on only two out of five of their investments.

Since failure is a given in life, success takes more than leadership beliefs and solid behavioral patterns. It also takes an appropriate response to the inevitable, including an effective combination of risk-taking and perseverance. I meet many individuals who are seeking security at all costs, and avoiding risk whenever and wherever possible. Knowing that certain changes would make success much more likely for them, they nevertheless take the path of least resistance: no change. For the temporary, often illusory comfort of staying as they are, they pay the terrible price of a life not truly lived.

Parable of the Cautious Man

There was a very cautious man,

who never laughed or cried.

He never risked, he never lost,

he never won nor tried.

And when he one day passed away,

his insurance was denied,

For since he never really lived,

they claimed he never died.

In other words, missed opportunities are the curse of potential. Just after the Great Depression, Americans, perhaps understandably at the time, took many steps intended to minimize risk. The government guaranteed much of our savings. Citizens bought billions of dollars worth of insurance. We sought lifetime employment and our unions fought for guaranteed annual cost-of-living increases to protect us from inflation. This security-blanket mentality has continued in recent decades as executives awarded themselves giant golden parachutes in case a merger or takeover took their plum jobs.

These measures had many benefits, but the drawbacks have also been heavy, even if less obvious. In our eagerness to avoid risk, we forgot its positive aspects. Many of us continue to overlook the fact that progress comes only when chances are taken. And the security we sought and continue to seek often produces boredom, mediocrity, apathy and reduced opportunity.

We still hear much about security, especially from federal and state politicians. But total security is a myth except, perhaps, for those six feet underground in the cemetery. We may indeed ask our government for guaranteed benefits. But we must be aware that when a structure starts with a floor, walls and ceilings will follow. And herein lies a paradoxical proverb:

You must risk in order to gain security, but you must never seek security.

When security becomes a major goal in life – when fulfillment and joy are reduced to merely holding on, sustaining the status quo – the risk remains heavy. It is then a risk of losing the prospects of real advancement, of not being able to ride the wave of change today and tomorrow. Had the founders of Yahoo, Amazon.com and America Online been concerned with immediate profits and return on investment, we would not be enjoying those Internet services today, each of which has a greater market capitalization than IBM or General Motors.

Procrastination Doesn’t Make Perfect

Perfectionists are often great procrastinators. Having stalled until the last minutes, they tear into a project with dust flying and complaints about insufficient time. Perfectionist-procrastinators are masters of the excuse that short notice kept them from doing the quality job they could have done.

But that’s hardly the only variety of procrastination – which is one of my own favorite hiding places when I try to blame external conditions instead of myself for some difficulty. Mine comes with a gnawing feeling of being fatigued, always behind. I try to tell myself that I’m taking it easy and gathering my energies for a big new push, but procrastination differs markedly from genuine relaxation – which is truly needed. And it saves me no time or energy. On the contrary, it drains both, leaving me with self-doubt on top of self-delusion.

We’re all very busy. Every day we seem to have a giant to-do list of people to see, projects to complete, e-mails to read, e-mails to write. We have calls to answer and calls to make, then more calls to people with whom we keep playing voice-mail tag.

Henri Nouwen’s classic book Making All Things New likens our lives to "overstuffed suitcases that are bursting at the seams."

Feeling there is forever far too much to do, we say we’re really under the gun this week. But working hard or even heroically to solve a problem is little to our credit if we created the problem in the first place. When most people refer to themselves as being under the gun, they want to believe, or do believe, that the pressures and problems are not of their own making. In most cases, however, the gun appeared after failure to attend to business in good time. Instead of being proactive early, they procrastinated until the due date became a crisis deadline.

By the Inch Life’s a Cinch, by the Yard it’s Hard

One of the best escapes from the prison of procrastination is to take even the smallest steps toward your goals. People usually procrastinate because of fear and lack of self-confidence – and, ironically, become even more afraid when under the gun. There are many ways to experiment and test new ground without risking the whole ball game on one play.

 

Experience has shown that when people go after one big goal at once, they invariably fail. If you had to swallow a twelve-ounce steak all at once, you’d choke. You have to cut the steak into small pieces, eating one bite at a time. So it is with prioritizing. Proactive goal achievement means taking every project and cutting it up into bite-sized pieces. Each small task or requirement on the way to the ultimate goal becomes a mini-goal in itself. Using this method, the goal becomes manageable. When mini-mistakes are made, they are easy to correct. And with the achievement of each mini-goal, you receive reinforcement and motivation in the form of positive feedback. As basic as this sounds, much frustration and failure is caused when people try to "bite off more than they can chew" by taking on assignments with limited resources and impossible timeline expectations.

Two major fears that sire procrastination are fear of the unknown and fear of rejection or looking foolish. A third fear – of success – is often overlooked. Many people, even many executives, fear success because it carries added responsibility that can seem too heavy to bear, such as setting an example of excellence that calls for additional effort and willingness to take risks. Success, without adequate self-esteem or the belief that it is deserved, also can create feelings of guilt and the result is only temporary or fleeting high achievement. Playing it safe can seem more tempting than a need to step forward with determination to do it now and do it right.

Moving from Procrastination to Proactivation:

Here are some ideas to help make you a victor over change rather than a victim of change:

1.    Set your wake-up time a half hour earlier tomorrow and keep the clock at that setting. Use the extra time to think about the best way to spend your day.

2.    Memorize and repeat this motto: "Action TNT: Today, not Tomorrow." Handle each piece of incoming mail only once. Answer your e-mail either early in the morning or after working hours. Block out specific times to initiate phone calls, personally take incoming calls, and to meet people in person.

3.    When people tell you their problems, give solution-oriented feedback. Rather than taking on the problem as your own assignment, first, ask what’s the next step they plan to take, or what they would like to see happen.

4.    Finish what you start. Concentrate all your energy and intensity without distraction on successfully completing your current major project.

5.    Be constructively helpful instead of unhelpfully critical. Single out someone or something to praise instead of participating in group griping, grudge collecting or pity parties.

6.    Limit your television viewing or Internet surfing to mostly educational or otherwise enlightening programs. Watch no more than one hour of television per day or night, unless there is a special program you have been anticipating. The Internet has also become a great procrastinator’s hideout for tension-relieving instead of goal-achieving activities.

7.    Make a list of five necessary but unpleasant projects you’ve been putting off, with a completion date for each project. Immediate action on unpleasant projects reduces stress and tension. It is very difficult to be active and depressed at the same time.

8.    Seek out and converse with a successful role model and mentor. Learning from others’ successes and setbacks will inevitably improve production of any kind. Truly listen; really find out how your role models do it right.

9.    Understand that fear, as an acronym, is False Evidence Appearing Real, and that luck could mean Laboring Under Correct Knowledge. The more information you have on any subject – especially case histories – the less likely you’ll be to put off your decisions.

10.             Accept problems as inevitable offshoots of change and progress. With the ever more rapid pace of change in society and business, you’ll be overwhelmed unless you view change as normal and learn to look for its positive aspects – such as new opportunities and improvements – rather than bemoan the negative.

There is actually no such thing as a "future" decision; there are only present decisions that will affect the future. Procrastinators wait for just the right moment to decide.

If you wait for the prefect moment, you become a security-seeker who is running in place, unwittingly digging yourself deeper into your rut. If you wait for every objection to be overcome, you’ll attempt nothing. Get out of your comfort zone and go from procrastinating to “proactivating.” Make your personal motto: "Stop stewing and start doing!"                   

 

Denis Waitley is one of America's most respected authors, keynote lecturers

and productivity consultants on high performance human achievement. He has inspired, informed, challenged and entertained audiences for over 25 years from the board rooms of multi-national corporations to the control rooms of NASA's space program; from the locker rooms of world-class athletes to the meeting rooms of thousands of conventioneers throughout the world. He was voted business speaker of the year by the Sales and Marketing Executives' Association and by Toastmasters' International and inducted into the International Speakers' Hall of Fame. CopyrightC Denis Waitley. All rights reserved. For information about his Keynote presentations, contact the FrogPond at 800.704.FROG(3764) or email susie@FrogPond.com;

http://www.FrogPond.com

 

Owning Your Career: Personal Growth and Development

Fifty years ago, if you started a career with one company you were likely stay with that company right up until retirement. You didn’t have to worry about developing yourself to advance your career because as long as you did your job, you had a job.

Those days are long, long gone. There is no such thing as a lifetime job anymore, you have to constantly grow and develop to stay competitive in the modern workplace. Smart professionals know that personal growth and development lead to so-called soft skills that are in high demand. Companies are not just looking for workers, supervisors, and managers; they are looking for leaders, team builders, and people who can build strong interpersonal relationships.

What do I have to do?
If you want to arm yourself with these desirable skills then you must take charge of your career. Motivation is the key to learning, growing, and making yourself attractive to employers.

Your personal growth and development efforts should generally fall into four categories. They are:

1 Knowledge
2 Leadership
3 Responsibility
4 Advocacy

We’ll look at each of these in turn.

Knowledge
Cultivate your ongoing thirst for knowledge. This means constantly looking for opportunities to learn about something that will add to your base of knowledge. Take a management or business class, arrange an internship with a leader you admire, learn a foreign language, or pursue your MBA.

Check with your employer about programs available to support your acquisition of knowledge. Many companies offer tuition support, mentoring programs, career cross training, and other options to help employees expand their minds.

Leadership
Leadership is more than just a popular buzzword in the business world; it is the single most important attribute that you can develop in yourself. Companies understand that in a competitive world they need to employ people who can motivate, inspire, and lead their teams to better performance.

Look for opportunities to develop and practice your leadership skills. Volunteer to serve on a committee from your professional association, organize a community project, or serve as a mentor. Make sure that these activities are visible to others so that they will see you in a leadership role and have confidence that you are capable in this area.

Responsibility
Actively look for ways to increase the responsibilities that are part of your job description. Offer ideas or suggestions for improving the business and then lead a project to try out those ideas, or step up to manage a company program. When you demonstrate that you are enthusiastic about personal growth and development, you become a much more valuable part of the organization.

This does not mean, however, that you should run roughshod over your peers, colleagues, or employees. Be eager and motivated, but don’t be blinded by ambition or ego.

Advocacy
This last category can be challenging because it requires you to advocate for yourself to others. Instead of sitting back and waiting to be noticed, go to company leadership and talk about how you can contribute more to the organization. Show you are committed to improvement by asking for feedback and applying that information to your interactions with your management as well as your employees.

When you use tact and diplomacy to discuss your achievements you are more likely to be noticed and noted as a person with a strong future of career growth.

About the Author:
Contact Career Coaching Connections at 248-390-0781 and visit http://www.c3livingthedream.com. Cindy Swiantek has provided coaching and instruction for several hundred professionals, assisting them in planning and executing successful career transition. She brings her own experiences from personally making the transition from employee to executive in the automotive industry. Her passion for assisting others is contagious!

Monday, March 10, 2008

Quote for the Day

Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence. – Robert Frost, 1874-1963, American Poet
 
 

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Personal Success and Leadership

I was listening to the audio tape of John Maxwells book
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership and he stated this...
 
"By raising your leadership ability --
without increasing your success dedication at all --
you can increase your original effectiveness by 600
percent. Leadership has a multiplying effect" - John C. Maxwell
 
What are you doing to increase your leadership ability?
 
Just think of the impact you will have on your staff if you work
on both personal development and leadership skills.
 
All the best.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Conversation with Dr. John Maxwell...

This afternoon I listened to Dr. John Maxwell on a live teleconference.

Here is what he had to say...turn up your speakers

It was so awe-inspiring that it

would be a shame if I didn't share it with all of you.

Dr. John Maxwell Live Teleclass Replay

Details...

Make Sure you have your pen and paper ready

plus turn up your speakers...

Jump On Over to...

- >> http://www.FindYourWhy.com/maineventcall

Wait till you hear what Dr. John Maxwell shares

about *Success* 17 Minutes into the call...

Once Again...

Here's the *Private Dr. John Maxwell*

Teleclass Replay...

- >> http://www.FindYourWhy.com/maineventcall

Your Success is my Passion,

Lisa Saline 

P.S. Turn Up Your Speakers...

- > http://www.FindYourWhy.com/maineventcall