Posts Tagged ‘glimpse’

A Review of the Insider Secrets Exposed Report

Friday, November 21st, 2008

You’ve probably heard plenty of reports about people that have done a great job when it comes to home and network marketing, and have secured themselves a reliable financial income or even more fantastically, have discovered their fortunes through things like network marketing.

If you’ve ever wondered what those people are doing right and whether you should be doing it yourself, this is exactly what Insider Secrets Exposed is trying to share with you. Insider Secrets Revealed calls itself a controversial report that exposes the underbelly of the work at home industry. When you are deciding whether or not you want to take the plunge, taking a look at Insider Secrets Revealed can help you make a decision.

When you get access to this valuable resource, you will have a first-hand insider glimpse at what the other side of the wall looks like in terms of MLM opportunities, networking opportunities and other work at home schemes that have spread like wildfire. You’ll find the ways that people are being lured into them, how they are being tricked and what often ends up happening. While all of this is fairly grim news in terms of making your first million at home while online, Insider Secrets Revealed does state that there are smart ways to go about making sure that the money you make online is good and reliable.

One of the most valuable things that Insider Secrets Exposed will do is break down the industry for you. While their focus is on pointing you towards getting good information when it comes to getting your business online started, you’ll find that there is a lot of useful information on what to to avoid as well. This is valuable information in a business that is made up of get rich schemes that only want to separate you from your money.

Essentially, Insider Secrets Exposed seems to be an great way to get started when it comes to the MLM or networking business. While their claims of instant wealth are a little suspicious, as are all claims of this sort, it is important to think about the fact that they are providing you with good information when it comes time to decide if you want to take the plunge.

There are many reasons to get Insider Secrets Exposed, but the best one is that they are genuinely trying to get good information across. Insider Secrets Revealed can provide a beginner or an expert with valuable insight, so make sure that you at least take a look at this resource.

Learn the Lemons from the Straight MLM Winners and read about Insider Secrets Exposed from Brian Garvin and Jeff West at MLM Review Kings. This article may be used royalty free provided Bio & Links remain intact.

Interesting Ideas For Families Looking For Cheap Holiday Breaks

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Some families don’t make the effort to plan productive holiday breaks for the whole business and spending quality time together. Then everyone wonders how the break went by, sitting at home and doing nothing. Instead, plan something exciting for your family on their holiday breaks. Cheap holiday breaks should be planned in such a way that the whole family never forgets it.

Families should try planning out a voyage to discovering their family ancestry for compelling holiday breaks to remember. Learn about your family roots and find out the historical details that might even possibly link you to famous descendants in history. A lot of travel companies are offering ancestry packages for holiday breaks to families this summer. These packages generally include luxurious travel arrangements to business ancestral locations related to your family roots and a history guide to explain the details of your family history on the trip. Many families on holiday breaks experiencing such tours, discover things they never knew about their family background and learn how widespread their family roots actually are.

Experience the English Riviera at its finest by attending the Agatha Christie Festival commemorating the most published author of all time. Take a cruise along the Devon Coastline all the way up to Greenway to view Agatha Christie’s home. Families on their holiday breaks will be able to witness intense murder mystery plays enacted by the Agatha Christie Theatre Company. There are guided walks, special tours, live events, and other activities for families to participate in during their holiday breaks. Don’t miss out the Murder Mystery Ball which is held at the place where Agatha Christie went for her honeymoon.

If you want to get back in touch with nature, make your way to Canonteign Falls with your family on one of your family breaks. It is considered to be the highest waterfall in England. Take a buggy ride down one of the many nature trails to catch a glimpse of the deer, kingfishers and other wildlife. It is a place to visit in all seasons and even has access for handicapped individuals. So pack your children into the car and experience Canonteign Falls on your family breaks this year.

Another natural partnership to spend time with your family on holiday breaks is Kent Cavern. The Kent Cavern is in the Guinness Book Of Records for being the oldest monument in England. Various ancient artifacts have been found in Kent Cavern such as axes, and also bones which are up to 450,000 years old! Most of the artifacts discovered were used by cave men who inhabited this cavern a half a million years ago! It is an important monument which stands today, representing the history of ancient Britons. Families should take the time out to see historical landmarks on their holiday breaks which represent Britain’s history.

Madame Tussauds Wax Museum is an attraction for all families on holiday breaks to see. The wax museum holds wax models and figures of famous people throughout the history of our time. The collection includes historical figures and infamous murderers and also has models made of current celebrities today. Certain items which date to 1765 are even on display during holiday breaks for families to view!

Take the time to check out the events taking place in and around your area. You may find that attending a highlighted attraction nearby and including it on your family’s agenda will provide great experiences for holiday breaks and keep the whole family entertained!

Pontin’s is known for its special offers and has all the resources families need to plan their cheap holiday breaks. It has been around in the business since 1946 and is currently providing exclusive UK holiday break packages.

Quotations #9

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

*Great men are the gifts of kind heaven to our poor world; instruments by which the Highest One works out His designs; light-radiators to give guidance and blessing to the travelers of time. Moses Harvey.

*Grief, like a tree, has tears for its fruit. Bulwer-Lytton.

*She grieves sincerely who grieves unseen. Martial.

*Well has it been said that there is no grief like the grief which does not speak. Longfellow.

*We hear the rain fall, but not the snow. Bitter grief is loud, calm grief is silent. Auerbach.

*It is dangerous to abandon one’s self to the luxury of grief; it deprives one of courage, and even of the wish for recovery.

*Nothing speaks our grief so well as to speak nothing. Crashaw.

*If our griefs were seen written on our brow, how many would be pitied who are now envied! Metastasio.

*Great grief makes sacred those upon whom its hand is laid. Joy may elevate, ambition glorify, but sorrow alone can consecrate. Horace Greeley.

*Grief, which disposes gentle natures to retirement, to inaction, and to meditation, only makes restless spirits more restless. Macaulay.

*All the joys of earth will not assuage our thirst for happiness; while a single grief suffices to shroud life in a sombre veil, and smite it with nothingness at all points. Mme. Swetchine.

*What is grief? It is an obscure labyrinth into which God leads man, that he may remember his faults and abjure them, that he may appreciate the calm which virtue gives. Leopold Scheffer.

*Griefs are like the beings that endure them–the little ones are the most clamorous and noisy; those of older growth and greater magnitude are generally tranquil, and sometimes silent. Chatfield.

*He that hath so many causes of joy, and so great, is very much in love with sorrow and peevishness, who loses all these pleasures, and chooses to sit down on his little handful of thorns. Jeremy Taylor.

*I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and cry, it is all barren. Sterne.

*When a man is full of the Holy Ghost, he is the very last man to be complaining of other people.
D.L. Moody.

*There is an unfortunate disposition in a man to attend much more to the faults of his companions which offend him, than to their perfections which please him. Greville. *Those who are moved by a genuine desire to do good have little time for murmuring or complaint. Robert West.

*Habit is a cable. We weave a thread of it every day, and at last we cannot break it. Horace Mann.

*The chains of habit are generally too small to be felt till they are too strong to be broken. Johnson.

*To learn new habits is everything, for it is to reach the substance of life. Life is but a tissue of habits. Amiel.

*Habits, soft and pliant at first, are like some coral stones, which are easily cut when first quarried, but soon become hard as adamant. Spurgeon.

*That beneficent harness of routine, which enables silly men to live respectably and happy men to live calmly. George Eliot.

*The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. Sow an act, and you reap a habit; sow a habit, and you reap a character; sow a character, and you reap a destiny. G.D. Boardman.

*It must be conceded that, after affection, habit has its peculiar value. It is a little stream which flows softly, but freshens everything along its course. Madame Swetchine.

*The will that yields the first time with some reluctance does so the second time with less hesitation, and the third time with none at all, until presently the habit is adopted. Henry Giles.

*The habit of virtue cannot be formed in a closet. Habits are formed by acts of reason in a persevering struggle through temptation. Gilpin.

*To be perpetually longing and impatiently desirous of anything, so that a man cannot abstain from it, is to lose a man’s liberty…Jeremy Taylor.

*I will govern my life and my thoughts as if the whole world were to see the one and to read the other; for what does it signify to make anything a secret to my neighbor, when to God (who is the searcher of our hearts) all our privacies are open? Seneca.

*Like flakes of snow that fall unperceived upon the earth the seemingly unimportant events of life succeed one another. As the snow gathers together, so are our habits formed. No single flake that is added to the pile produces a sensible change; no single action creates, however it may exhibit, a man’s character. Jeremy Taylor.

*And it is a singular truth that, though a man may shake off national habits, accent, manner of thinking, style of dress,–though he may become perfectly identified with another nation, and speak its language well, perhaps better than his own,–yet never can he succeed in changing his handwriting to a foreign style. Disraeli.

*If we look back upon the usual course of our feelings, we shall find that we are more influenced by the frequent recurrence of objects than by their weight and importance; and that habit has more force in forming our characters than our opinions have. The mind quotes takes its tone and complexion from what it habitually contemplates. Robert Hall.

*Happiness: The soul’s calm sunshine. Pope.

*Happiness is the natural flower of duty. Phillips Brooks.

*Happiness is a rare cosmetic. G.J.W. Melville.

*Happiness is where we find it, but rarely where we seek it. J. Petit-Senn.

*We are no longer happy so soon as we wish to be happier. Landor.

*Happiness never lays its finger on its pulse. It we attempt to steal a glimpse of its features it disappears. Alexander Smith.

*Beware what earth calls happiness; beware all joys but joys that never can expire. Young.

*Happiness is not the end of duty, it is a constituent of it. It is in it and of it; not an equivalent, but an element. Henry Giles.

*Happiness is always the inaccessible castle which sinks in ruin when we set foot on it. Arsene Houssaye.

*The sunshine of life is made up of very little beams, that are bright all the time. Aiken.

*He who has no wish to be happier is the happiest of men. W.R. Alger.

*Happiness is a sunbeam, which may pass through a thousand bosoms without losing a particle of its original ray. Sir P. Sidney. *The happiness of the tender heart is increased by what it can take away of the wretchedness of others. J. Petit-Senn.

*Happiness and virtue react upon each other–the best are not the happiest, but the happiest are usually the best. Lytton.

*Hunting after happiness is like hunting after a lost sheep in the wilderness–when you find it, the chances are that it is a skeleton. H.W. Shaw.

*A sound mind in a sound body is a short but full description of a happy state in this world. Locke.

*The body is like a piano, and happiness is like music. It is needful to have the instrument in good order. Beecher.

*That state of life is most happy where superfluities are not required and necessaries are not wanting. Plutarch.

*Wouldst you ever roam abroad? See, what is good lies by thy side. Only learn to catch happiness, for happiness is ever by you. Goethe.

*The common course of things is in favor of happiness; happiness is the rule, misery the exception. Were the order reversed, our attention would be called to examples of health and competency, instead of disease and want. Paley.

*True happiness is of a retired nature, and an enemy to pomp and noise. It arises, in the first place, from the enjoyment of one’s self, and, in the next, from the friendship and conversation of a few select friends. Addison.

*When we are not too anxious about happiness and unhappiness, but devote ourselves to the strict and unsparing performance of duty, then happiness comes of itself–nay, even springs from the midst of a life of troubles and anxieties and privation. Humboldt.

*Happiness in this world, when it comes, comes incidentally. Make it the object of pursuit, and it leads us a wild-goose chase, and is never attained. Hawthorne.

*There is a gentle element, and man may breathe it with a calm, unruffled soul, and drink its living waters, till his heart is pure; and this is human happiness. Willis.

*To be happy is not only to be freed from the pains and diseases of the body, but from anxiety and vexation of spirit; not only to enjoy the pleasures of sense, but peace of conscience and tranquility of mind. Tillotson.

*Without strong affection, and humanity of heart, and gratitude to that Being whose code is mercy, and whose great attribute is benevolence to all things that breathe, true happiness can never be attained. Dickens.

*I have lived to know that the great secret of human happiness is this: Never suffer your energies to stagnate. The old adage of “too many irons in the fire” conveys an untruth–you cannot have too many –poker, tongs–and all, keep them going. Adam Clark.

*The haunts of happiness are varied and rather unaccountable, but I have more often seen her among little children, and home firesides, and in country houses, than anywhere else…Sydney Smith.

*The happiness of life is made up of minute fractions–the little, soon-forgotten charities of a kiss, a smile, a kind look, a heartfelt compliment in the disguise of a playful raillery, and the countless other infinitesimals of pleasant thought and feeling. Coleridge.

*God loves to see His creatures happy; our lawful delight is His; they know not God that think to please Him with making themselves miserable. Bishop Hall.

*The happiness of life consists, like the day, not in single flashes of light, but in one continuous mild serenity. The most beautiful period of the heart’s existence is in this calm, equable light, even although it be only moonshine or twilight. Now the mind alone can obtain for us this heavenly cheerfulness and peace. Richter.

*Happiness no more depends on station, rank, or any local or adventitious circumstances in individuals than a man’s life is connected with the color of his garment. The mind is the seat of happiness, and to make it so in reality, nothing is necessary but the balm of gospel peace, and the saving knowledge of the Son of God. Anonymous.

*Harvest: Nature’s bank-dividends. Haliburton.

*The husbandman is close to the heart of nature, lives in touch with God, and so, more than many, shares His deep content, His tranquility, and builds up a character of hardy independence, of kindly considerateness for His servants, and of helpful ministry to the poor…Believe in God, believe in nature, and do your duty; and the farm life, with its regular round of duties, its simple loves, its high thoughts, its wise economies, its immediate touch of earth, its charming gossip, its pleasant human interests, and its many windows through which we may catch sight of the face of God, will yield us all we need for a simply, manly, godly life…Do not despise your work. Do it well. Be a whole man to it while you are at it. Israel’s great men did not think it beneath them to inspect their flocks. The patriarchs were shepherds and cultivators of the soil. Job was a shepherd. Moses was a shepherd. David looked well after his flocks. Gideon was accosted by God when he was threshing wheat. A great and noble life does not depend on rank or place, but on purpose, faith, love, character and service. John Clifford, D.D.

*The year’s food only is grown in the year. Each year the world depends for James Taylor upon something freshly given it which it cannot provide for itself. As the harvest approaches the wolf is at the door. Nothing stands between us and starvation but the harvest covenant of the ever-faithful God: “Seed-time and harvest shall not cease.” Away, then, with our fancied independence!…We pray in the line of the harvest covenant when we say, “Give us this day our daily bread.” Illustrated Christian Weekly.

*The life of agricultural industry has better guaranties than the crown of kings…In its simple and steady processes it reveals the Father’s care for His children. John Clifford, D.D.

*It is the peculiarity of all the cereals that they are never found growing wild… Presbyterian Witness.

*Health and cheerfulness mutually beget each other. Addison.

*A hale cobbler is a better man than a sick king. Bickerstaff.

*Reason’s whole pleasure, all the joys of sense, lie in three words–health, peace, and competence. Pope.

*The root of sanctity is sanity. A man must be healthy before he can be holy. We bathe first, and then perfume. Mme. Swetchine.

*Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on principle at the onset. Lytton.

*He who overlooks a healthy spot for the site of his house is mad and ought to be handed over to the care of his relations and friends. Varro.

*The morbid states of health, the irritableness of disposition, arising from unstrung nerves, the impatience, the crossness, the fault-finding of men, who, full of morbid influences, are unhappy themselves, and throw the cloud of their troubles like a dark shadow upon others, teach us what eminent duty there is in health. Beecher.

*Home-keeping hearts are happiest. Longfellow.

*Be persuaded that your only treasures are those which you carry in your heart. Demophilus. 937. What sad faces one always sees in the asylums for orphans! It is more fatal to neglect the heart than the head. Theodore Parker.

*If you should take the human heart and listen to it, it would be like listening to a sea-shell; you would hear in it the hollow murmur of the infinite ocean to which it belongs, from which it draws its profoundest inspiration, and for which it yearns. Chapin.

*Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal. Moore.

*In a better world we will find our young years and our old friends. J. Petit-Senn.

*If I am allowed to give a metaphorical allusion to the future state of the blessed, I should imagine it by the orange-grove in that sheltered glen on which the sun is now beginning to shine, and of which the trees are, at the same time, loaded with sweet golden fruit and balmy silver flowers. Such objects may well portray a state in which hope and fruition become one eternal feeling. Sir Humphry Davy.

*Troops of heroes undistinguished die. Addison.

*We can all be heroes in our virtues, in our homes, in our lives. James Ellis.

*Each man is a hero and an oracle to somebody, and to that person whatever he says has an enhanced value. Emerson.

*The gentle breath of peace would leave him on the surface neglected and unmoved. It is only the tempest that lifts him from his place. Junius.

*The heroes of literary history have been no less remarkable for what they have suffered than for what they have achieved. Johnson.

*Nobody, they say, is a hero to his valet. Of course; for a man must be a hero to understand a hero. The valet, I dare say, has great respect for some person of his own stamp. Goethe.