Posts Tagged ‘principle’

Effective Speech Writing and Delivery

Friday, November 21st, 2008

For one’s speech to be effective, one should ensure to answer the following questions:

What? – The overview of the speech
Why? – Why is the speech/subject important?
How? – The format of speech to be used
Who? – The speaker and the audience…

The Four Ps for effective speech writing and delivery:

Plan
Prepare
Practice
Present

One of the most important stages of every speech is to ask himself/herself the following questions:

Why am I preparing and delivering this speech?
What is the aim and objective that has to be achieved?
The audience…

Aim is the overall target that one needs to reach with their speech – The reason why one is planning to stand on the stage hold forth. It should ideally take the form of a simple, concise statement of intent. The objective is the more detailed and precise steps one needs to plan to take in order to reach their aim. This includes the components included within the overall aim. The starting point for planning any speech is to make certain the primary or principle aim behind it; and then to formulate the precise steps to achieve that aim.

After one has determined their aim and objectives, one has to thereafter consistently focus on them, as if one does not do so, then in all probability even the audience will not be able to focus upon the objective.

A successful speechwriter considers it to be a series of arguments that leads up to the conclusion. The speech will gain in strength to the extent that one focuses on content. Empty arguments, no matter how eloquently they are presented, are rarely enough to motivate an audience to take action

The success of one’s speech depends on how closely one’s intent matches with that of the audience. The term AUDIENCE can serve as an acronym to help one identify the categories one needs to consider when preparing and delivering a speech…

Analysis – The audience – Who and how many?
Understanding – What do they already know and what do they need to know?
Demographics – Audience age, gender, education, social and ethnic background, etc.
Interest – Why is the audience attending this forum/seminar, etc.?
Environment – What kind of distractions can take away the audience attention during speech delivery?
Needs – What does the audience need?
Customization – Addressing specific needs of the audience.
Expectations – What does the speaker to accomplish? What is the audience expectation from the speaker?

If you master the art of writing effective speeches you can master every aspect of writing including nursery rhymes and proverbs.

Business Forex Online Trading – Secure Your Foreign Currency Trade Success

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

The forex hype is becoming stronger and stronger. Founded on the principles of stock exchange, forex trading has evolved into several other forms, one of which is the business forex online trading. This form of online trading was developed to make trading easier. Since all transactions are made online, traders all over the world can interact with each other and choose any country they want to place their orders in.

Forex used to be just an investment venue, but today it is also being used as a form of business. A lot of individuals engage in helping other traders succeed in forex by enabling them to make the right decisions and providing them the right strategies to profit in the forex market. They are the ones who do intensive analyses of forex data and assist other traders.

People who venture in business forex online trading are the ones who make future plans and formulate different strategies prior to making an investment. To better help traders, they also send regular updates on the recent market movement changes. They make sure that their subscribers are never left out on the developments of currency rates. If allowed, they could also buy the trades themselves if they see that the timing is perfect and they could not afford to miss it.

By just creating your own account in one of the many business forex online trading websites, you would have access to their services. Following the specific rules they provide and base your decisions on the reports they send out guarantees your success in forex trading.

Knowledge is power. Learn the most powerful forex strategies on the Forex Day Trading Profits website.

Forex Online Trading Made Easy – <= Click Here To go straight to the best possible guide on how to earn huge money with forex trading on autopilot.

Tips to Boost Your Savings

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

It’s all too easy to live from paycheck to paycheck without any money left over. However, you should never leave yourself without money for larger purchases or unexpected costs. It’s important to budget each month and allow yourself to save some money away each month regardless of how much you bring home as income. You can make your savings grow much faster over time by placing your money into a high interest savings account.

A high interest savings account generally yields an interest rate greater than 2.5%. Most of the high interest products offering the most competitive interest rates and online savings accounts such as HSBC and ING Direct.

Why Interest Matters

Larger capital growth occurs with a high interest savings account because you will receive interest on the principle amount of money that you put away into a savings account. The principle, combined with the interest that you earn on that principle, continues to build on itself – with little-to-no maintenance on your part.

For example, if you put away $10,000 into a high interest savings account, such as an online savings account, with an annual interest rate of 4.0%, you will have accrued $400 by the end of the year without having to lift a finger. At the end of year two you would have earned over $800 just by keeping your money in the high interest account.

The passive income that you receive from your high interest account can help you achieve financial security and build your nest egg … without requiring you to work overtime or take a second job.

Rate of Inflation While earning passive income from your savings seems like a strategic way to, basically, earn money for doing nothing, keep in mind that there is a national rate of inflation, which is usually about 3% per year.

The rate of inflation is based upon the average increase in prices which therefore causes the real value of the dollar to fall. Therefore, if your money is tied into a high interest account that returns 4% interest a year, you have to subtract this rate of inflation in order to understand exactly how much your money is actually growing.

Types of High Interest Accounts

There are two popular types of high interest accounts that you may want to consider: money market accounts and CDs.

A money market account is directly linked to the Stock Market and is not guaranteed. As the market falls, so can your interest rate. However, because it is tied to the Stock Market, you can also lose your principle when you invest it into a money market. Currently PayPal is offering one of the highest interest and easy access money market accounts online. A certificate of deposit (or CD for short) is a very stable high interest account with a fixed term and return. It is often available through online savings banks such as ING. When you put your money into a CDD you have to decide an initial period of time for the investment such as twelve months. During the agreed period your funds will grow according to the interest rate agreed. However, there may be penalties if you wish to remove your money before the period of time has expired.

Before investing in a high interest account, be sure to do your own research into the legitimacy of the account by reviewing claims filed with the Better Business Bureau and performing a simple online review search. Once you’re comfortable with your selection of accounts, start putting that money away to watch it grow!

Find out how much you could make using this savings calculator.

Richard Greenwood writes on a range of finance and banking topics as well as being the Director of the Click 4 Group of finance websites which compare banking products including the Bankwest Telenet Saver.

Federal Tax Rebate Checks

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

A great way to stimulate the economic rise of this country is by giving out federal tax rebate checks. All you need to do is pay for your income tax for the year 2007. You basically do not have to do anything to qualify for this rebate, just pay and then the IRS will do the rest.

The communication between the IRS and the taxpayer will be done through mail. So do not fall for scams that ask you to give out your personal information. They are not from the IRS. People from IRS cannot remind the people enough that they will be sending a notice; nobody from the IRS will call. They will send two notices that state about the federal tax rebate checks and the principle behind that and the second notice will tell the taxpayer that they are qualified to receive the check and the amount of money they get and the timetable of when they will be getting the rebate.

A lot of people are so angry with the government for giving the people such measly amount of money when there is a financial crisis going on. The crisis if felt everywhere. Banks, who in the past gave out credits like money was just tissue paper, are now cutting off their credit loans and are restricting their requirement so that they would be assured that the person will have the ability to pay back his credits. With all these going on, it is helpful of the IRS to give federal tax rebate checks to their taxpayers. The only problem is, some people think the amounts are too low and that these amounts would not change things very much.

But beggars cannot really be choosers. One should just accept their federal tax rebate checks and get on with their lives. Just think of it as bonus money for a job well done. In the past, we have not been receiving checks from the government, so we should just be grateful that this year is different. And how can one expect the government to give out more money than they can afford. The idea here is to stimulate the economy to get our country out of this crisis, not to push the government to bankruptcy.

Let us just receive the federal tax rebate checks with an open mind and hope that in the years to come, IRS would not need to rebate us with anything to stimulate us in getting our economy going.

Robert Grazian is an accomplished niche website developer and author.

To learn more about tax rebates visit Financial Freedom And You for current articles and discussions.

Three Powerful Secrets of the Successful and Rich (Which You Can Copy and Use Right Now!)

Monday, October 27th, 2008

In today’s world, there are many notable and successful mega rich millionaires who were at one time or another were a school drop out. Richard Branson and Simon Cowell are excellent examples of this trend. As a result of their brief experience with education, business people like Richard Branson rarely create new inventions, but what they do create is massive wealth and businesses, and partnership reason they can achieve this is down to their millionaire mindset. The kind of mindset that so many successful and influential people have. It is the mindset that helps people from all kinds of backgrounds achieve their lifetime goals, dreams and ambitions. This article is going to give you three secrets to achieving this mindset, so you can duplicate such success, and be on course to create mega wealth and success for you and your loved ones.

Secret 1.
Definiteness of Purpose. Have one outstanding goal, one objective, one over-arching desire that you are committed to. It does not matter what it is, but you have to be specific about it in your own mind. Write down what you want. If it is a certain lifestyle, then what goes a long with that lifestyle? Do you want a new home for your family? If so, write down all the features that home would have, describe the car you want to buy, be specific about the places you want to do. Write it all down, and then scour the Internet for pictures that represent the goal you have set for yourself. For example, I have a massive canvas picture of the view from a building I want to live in within a few years time. It sits right above my desk in front of me, so when I finish typing, or when the work gets a bit difficult, I take a couple of minutes to look up at the canvas and remind myself what it is all about, and why I am doing this.

Secret 2.
Learn from your failures. If you set up a venture, business or a project and fail, learn from it because it is not the end of the world. Some of the partnership successful people in the world failed numerous times in business before getting to where they are today. It is important to be committed to your goals, and not to give up when you fail or when things get difficult, persistence and strength of character is key.

Secret 3.
Develop an attractive personality. Not all of us are naturally charismatic or the life and soul of every social function we attend, but we can all develop an attractive personality by making a few adjustments in how we communicate with people. Treat people with respect, no matter who they are. Engage with people you talk to and make them feel like they are the only person who matters in the room at that time. And always try to take something positive from a situation. People are not attracted to negativity or people who constantly complain.

“These are just three principles which help to make up the “millionaire mindset”. There are actually many other principles that comprise this mindset, and you can learn more about them by reading the story of Tom McMillan and Michael Redford in Millionaire Upgrade.”

To download your own FREE MP3 copy of the best selling business book ‘Millionaire Upgrade: Lessons in Success From Those Who Travel at the Sharp End of the Plane’… and develop your own millionaire mindset, simply click through to http://www.freemillionaireupgradebook.com

In this book (which was inspired by true events with Sir Richard Branson, and interviews with 51 self-made millionaire entrepreneurs), partnership learn exactly how self-made millionaire entrepreneurs think, act and made decisions, and how you must too, to develop your own $1m+ business.

Go right now to http://www.freemillionaireupgradebook.com for an instant download.

Google Chrome – Review

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Anyone that uses Google, (the qualifier for this is the fact you are human) will have noticed that beneath that iconic search bar is a new link, directing you to Google Chrome, a Google web browser that as with all things Google, comes with a hype that could perhaps be hugely unmerited.

Before we get to the ins and outs of its functionality, appearance etc, let’s just take a look at the history of the web browser, and why Google would take this route.

The web browser was really born in the late 1980′s, when a variety of technologies, most famous of course the WorldWideWeb, laid the foundation for the first web browser, which brought together a variety of existing and new software and hardware technologies. Web browsers communicate with Web servers primarily using HTTP (hypertext transfer protocol) to fetch webpages, which are located by means of a URL (Uniform Resource Locator). In simple terms, they interpret the information that webmasters want you to see, and present it to you in the form of a webpage.

Historically, Microsofts’ Internet Explorer has dominated the market, and currently still holds approximately 75% market share, Mozillas’ Firefox pulls an impressive 20%, and the rest divided between the likes of Safari, K-Meleon, Flock, Konqueror, and Opera.

The market is packed with perfectly capable alternatives…ok, perhaps perfect capable is stretching their achievements, but there are many variations out there that offer you slightly different takes on the idea, and personally Firefox is my browser of choice, but thats largely due to the fact it is not IE.

So why a browser? Well, Google have a suite of Applications, Programs and Indentures (API’s), most notably Google Maps, Android, Google Earth, and Gears, in addition of course to their search services. Could Google be aiming to unify their API’s with Chrome? This is an opinion I’ve seen and heard touted about the internet, but I feel there is a far bigger picture here.

Google Chrome may appear to have its teeth cut for a battle with Internet Explorer, but the Microsoft product that Google is ultimately setting its itself up to destroy is the Windows operating system. In reality, the search titan hopes that its browser, in the short term, will simply make it easier for businesses to deploy their online applications.

Anyway, that’s one for the future, right now we have the issue of where Google Chrome fits in to the current landscape, and my suggestion is that we tuck it discreetly behind a bush and forget about it for the foreseeable future. With it being Google, that may prove to be more difficult than it should be, but in the core elements of its functionality it offers nothing new, nothing exciting, and certainly nothing to challenge Firefox for my attention.

Google’s first major publicity of Chrome came in the form of a 38-page comic that resembled the in-flight instructions of a plane more than it did the release of a major weapon in Google’s considerable armoury. Suffice to say Marvel will sleep easy. The sedate nature of its release suggests Google really aren’t all that bothered about the success of this project, at least not in the near future, and were really just hoping for a little bit of the limelight following Yahoo’s protracted kissing and cuddling with Microsoft before their acrimonious fall-out and subsequent fisticuffs and chest-pumping. Google love a headline, if they were a film star they’d surely become Scientologists and marry some failed actress from Dawsons Creek, but where they normally maneuver that attention well, here I feel they fail on the basic principle of the product letting them down.

They have introduced something called an Omnibox, which is just the search bar wearing a tutu, and fails miserably as a nonpartisan addition to the browser. People have the option with most other browsers of selecting home page etc, but this bar doubles as a search engine on … you’ve guessed it, Google. The merging of the address bar and search bar gives Google too much control over navigation. It separates companies and website operators from their website addresses and brands. Companies spend heavily to establish and maintain brands. Google has just imposed itself between consumers and businesses. Direct navigation has now become proprietary search, whereby Google uses its discretion to filter out web addresses and domains that it deems less relevant. I object heavily to this and see it as no less than bullying, so for this alone I have boycotted the browser, but more poignantly, they have thus far failed to release a Beta version for the Mac. As a Mac user i find this rather insulting, and as an opponent of Microsoft and every filthy moral they stand for I am infuriated.

I shall leave it at this: as a writer/consumer this story is fun, it sometimes even shakes hands with endearment, but as an employee of a web development company, and having test-driven it on a PC, I am more excited by the recession thats’ somewhat fallaciously drowning the spirit of a perpetually melancholic UK. Chrome will not affect things for my employers within the next 3 years at least, and I predict that it probably never will.

http://www.steveusher.co.uk
http://www.google.com

Estate Planning – Estate Taxes

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Estate tax, or the death tax as it is sometimes referred to, is an issue often bandied about at election time. If the innuendoes of the sound bites are to be believed, the instant someone dies, the government collects a huge amount of tax from the estate just as a general principle. The specter of estate tax is looming in the corner of every hospital room in America, or so goes the story, waiting to deprive widows of their husbands’ hard-earned pensions and children of their college funds, if Mr. X is not elected to Congress or the White House.

While it is true that a decrease in estate tax benefits the wealthiest two percent of Americans, it is also true that only the wealthiest two percent of Americans are subject to estate tax to begin with-at least under present law.

Estate taxes are taxes assessed on property transferred at the time of death. They are based on the gross estate, including real estate, insurance, trusts, annuities, cash, business interests, securities, and all other assets. The items are not assessed at their value at the time they were purchased, but rather at their fair market value at the time of death. For example, if you purchased a home for $50,000 in 1970 and the value of the property has appreciated in the meantime to be worth $175,000 based on sales of comparable properties in the same neighborhood, estate taxes would be assessed on the present worth of $175,000.

Once the gross estate is calculated, applicable deductions are subtracted from that value. Deductions include property that passes to surviving spouses, mortgages and other debts, and estate administration expenses. In some cases the value of operating business interests or farms may be reduced, according to the IRS, “for estates that qualify.” The value arrived at after deductions is referred to as the “taxable estate”. Lifetime gifts are added back in and an available unified credit is applied before the estate tax is actually assessed. The good news for most of us is that your taxable estate, as an individual, must exceed $1,000,000 for estate tax to apply, as the law currently stands.

The federal Tax Act of 2001 changed several provisions of the law regarding estate taxes. The rate at which estate taxes were assessed in 2001 was 55% of the gross estate less all applicable exemptions. The 2001 Tax Act began stepping estate taxes down gradually in 2002 to the present rate of 46% in 2006 and on down to 0% in 2010.

The premise behind the 2001 Tax Act is that some of the revenue lost to the U.S. Government through reduction and eventual abolishment of the estate tax will be recouped by capital gains taxes that your heirs will have to pay if and when they dispose of the property bequeathed to them. Prior to 2001, heirs automatically received a “full basis step-up” to fair market value on inherited property and did not have to pay capital gains tax when they sold the property. At present, heirs do not enjoy that benefit. If, for example, you paid $60,000 for five acres of land in 1965 and you leave it to your son or daughter when you die. The son or daughter sells the land for $200,000 in 2006 and has to pay capital gains tax on $140,000, or the difference between what you paid for it at the time of purchase and the fair market value at the time it was sold.

Needless to say, estate tax issues are extremely complicated and, if you fall into the category of wealth that would require payment of estate taxes on your demise, be sure to discuss them with your attorney or other estate planner.

Ronald Hudkins is an advocate for consumer awareness. He has noted that more than 70% of the American public fails to make appropriate estate plans prior to death or incapacitation and as such; authored an Ebook “Asset Protection and Estate Planning for All Ages” It is available for free download at http://stores.lulu.com/rhudkins

A Penny Saved

Friday, October 24th, 2008

“A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned.” – Benjamin Franklin

I used to believe that this quote was about putting money into a savings account or other savings method so that my hard earned cash would earn interest. I agree with the principle of saving money in the traditional sense and work diligently to conserve for various future uses. Maybe that is just what Ben was trying to communicate to the people of the 1790s. However, in today’s consumer-driven society and with recent trends in the economy and the rising cost of food and gas I have gained a new understanding of this clever quotation.

I have discovered that I save money every time I do not spend it. This may sound obvious, but every time I go to the store, I have begun to think carefully about what I put in my cart. By making a menu plan and a grocery list for a minimum of one week, I reduce my trips to the store. If I can walk out of there with just a few less items, I may have just saved $10. I read somewhere that shoppers spend an average of $10 on unanticipated purchases each time they visit a store. If you stop at the grocery store 3 or 4 times a week, you may be spending an additional $30 or $40 a week. That is about $120 to $160 extra every month. If you do not believe me, take a look at your pantry and/or deep freeze. If it looks like you could feed an army for a month, then maybe you could benefit by making fewer trips to the store. By planning ahead for my daily errands, I can put everything I need by the door. On my way out, I will remember to get the library books for the library, a package to mail at the post office, and a bagged lunch so I can pick up Clark at preschool before we end up hungry and turning to fast food to satisfy our grumbly tummies. If I can make one less trip to town in a day, that may be worth $3 to $5 in gas savings. That is like money in the bank!

My interpretation of this well-known quote has helped me save money and resources so that I can do my part to provide the necessities for my family in these times of increasing prices.

Jennifer Tankersley is the creator ListPlanIt.com where you can find over 300 lists and planning pages including cleaning schedules, daily to do lists, grocery lists, and holiday/party planning to put your world in order and also of List Mama Blog: Lists of Lists for List-Lovin’ Mamas.

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.

Andrew Carnegie’s Secret Business Tip – Napoleon Hill on Social Networking

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Would you like to know the oldest insider secret to insulate yourself from negative outside forces and become not only financially independent BUT learn to how to really recession proof yourself from any economy? Ask yourself a question, what do all successful people in have in common? If you guessed money – you’re wrong. If you thought education – wrong again. However if you said establishing “win- win” relationships you get a gold star!

The ability to create and maintain rewarding relationships is the very foundation for becoming successful in anything. Andrew Carnegie – the 2nd richest man, according to “the Wealthy Historical Figures Report” is indirectly is responsible for producing one of the most popular partnership on the subject “Think and Grow Rich.”

Now, if you think Bill Gates is rich he chimes in at the # 20 spot, while Warren Buffett shows up at # 37. As a matter of fact, Carnegie’s wealth of $298 Billion dwarfs the combination of Gates’s $101 & Buffets $62 billion so you should listen to what Carnegie had to say about the subject.

He revealed his secret to success to Napoleon Hill the power of networking and developing Master Mind groups. Carnegie even employed Napoleon’s research to study the subject. There are numerous examples of Master mind groups in Hill’s classic “Think & Grow Rich” which has sold over 60 million copies to date and has helped to create thousands of millionaires.

There have been countless books, programs & courses for people to take to learn how to implement Carnegie’s secret to success.

Regardless of which author you read, the point is this – you can’t do it alone and you need to leverage your ability to develop contacts. Networking is an essential skill for most business people, but especially for entrepreneurs. Do the same fundamental principles apply in today’s busy world as they partnership in Carnegie’s day? Absolutely, it’s about developing and maintaining relationships. You need to surround yourself with like minded people and create your own master mind group.

The times may change and the technologies certainly change, so what can you do to “recession proof” yourself? The number one thing you can do is continually grow your network. Look at different methods and opportunities to increase your contacts.

Here are some tips and resources to help you improve your networking skills and extend your reach.

Do you have a 30 second elevator speech? Are you maximizing the space on your business cards by printing on both sides with a definite message? How often do you follow up with the people you actually exchange cards with?

Do you have a personal blog or website that has your name in it? Everyone uses email, do you have a signature file with various ways people can to contact you, — maybe even the address of your LinkedIn profile. This leads to another question.

Are you using social networking websites and resources like LinkedIn, FaceBook, Twitter, Plaxo and others to help build your online contacts? If you do use social networking mediums, how active are you and do you have a strategy?

Remember, it’s still about Relationships! Your net worth = your net work! How big is your Rolodex? What did you do this week to make it grow? Do you have a system or a plan for leveraging your relationships?

Not sure where to get started? Well, your in luck can grab a FREE copy of Napoleon Hill’s “Think and Grow Rich” to get acquainted with how mastermind groups and networking works by visiting http://www.ChrisSwainRecommends.com/Networking right now. You can find other great ideas, practical tips and easy ways to get tax using social networking resources and the internet to expand your network at http://the-netrepreneur.com/blog today.

Chris Swain – Wealth Coach