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Other Added - Midlife Courage: Transitioning Uncertainty with a Spirit of Adventure
Clean Website Design not better, from her efforts.Taste comes in many forms . What may seem poor website design to one, may be good website design to another. Website design is an expensive and extensive part of any website build Going two and Going to and fro between the client and the designer is a costly business, but it doesn't need to be. Commonly most clients are currently looking for clean web designThe search engine experts will tell you that the best web sites provide the content to the search engines of the top of the page followed by links and other content . This normally means that the best position for a menu is on the right hand side. However by using CSS (cascading style sheets) it is possible to block the content so that you can position the content blocks for search engines at the beginning of the code for the page and show it in the middle or to the right as you wish. So with this in mind we will look at the most suitable choice of design for your websiteThe majority of web sites come in three different formats. They are one column, two column or three column web sites. The choice of each should be dictated by the amount of information which needs to be shown .Then there is the size of the displayable web page. We have to tak That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by 5 Ways To Increase Your Income From Home In our fast-paced, multitasking lifestyles, where most of us over-40s struggle to get from one task to the next, a concept like courage seems a bit out of place. Courage in today’s society might be an attribute best left to our growing passive experiences of movies, DVD rentals, reality TV, or an exciting novel. What need is there for courage in us Baby Boomers who have been dubbed “the privileged generation”? What are the costs of keeping courage as a strictly passive activity? What are ways to activate courage?Many people are looking for new ways to make money from home, Now with the internet is very easy, but it is not the only way, there are many things that can be done from home, here are 5 ways to make money and increase your income:1.- Writing articles, there are many ways you can make money from home writing articles. One way is to use the articles as an advertising method, you can write an article and place your website link, with this way you can direct people to your website. Other way to make money with article writing is to set up an article writing business, writing articles for other people.2.- Create your own website, creating your own website is crucial if you wish to make money on the internet. One of the ways that you can make money with your website is from affiliate programs, you can sell your own products.3.- Using affiliate programs, this is a great way to make money on the internet.4.- Create and sell your product, create your own product and sell it can potentially increase your income, but you need to know that it is the most difficult and time-consuming way to make money on the Network market.5.- Freelance opportunities, freelance opportunities are What is courage? First of all, what is courage? Courage is the ability to confront fear, pain, danger and uncertainty. Courage is defined differently for everyone. Some might see courage as lacking fear in a situation that normally would trigger it. Some might even consider a courageous act to be reckless. At the heart of courage is the ability to confront. Confrontation is something most of us shy away from, and yet fear, pain and uncertainty are a part of life for people over 40. “At midlife, the part of ourselves that we have known, the caterpillar, is in essence disintegrating. We are stepping into the abyss without a clue as to where we will emerge from it. We are leaving behind what we have known ourselves to be and all the safe and predictable containers of that reality,” writes Kathleen Brehony in Awakening at Midlife. How frightening, uncertain, and painful is that? My own story is an example of stepping into the abyss. At the age of 47, I was a long-time single woman with my children off creating their own lives. I had a middle-class life with a nice house, a great but stressful job, and a 401K. I did not, however, know the woman who looked back at me in the mirror. I could have made several choices. The first would have been to keep working hard and ignore the inner rumbling, and for a while, I did just that. I kept doing what I was doing. Then a friend of mine was diagnosed with terminal cancer and I was overcome with emotion that was very personal. I was concerned for her; but I was equally concerned with ME. What if that were me? What about my unlived life? I was scared. I was in pain. I did not like the place where I was, feeling uncertain. I call this “walking through the valley.” I needed to go deep within myself for the courage to confront the fear, uncertainty and pain. I found my courage through discovering my own spirit of adventure. The spirit of adventure Jeff Saltz in The Way of Adventure says, “Adventure is any intentional experience that substantially alters our perspective long enough to see things we have never seen before—to see familiar things in ways we have never seen them. The most exotic destination of all is the one that fulfills all your yearnings—found within your own adventurous spirit—after you’ve put yourself to the test and found hidden reserves of creativity, resourcefulness, and perseverance.” Sounds exciting, eh? Perhaps in theory…but how do we really do this? Take a leap of faith. If you always do what you’ve always done, you get the same outcomes. Deep within you, you know what you want to do. It’s the action that makes the difference. Joseph Campbell writes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, “A hero ventures from the world of the common day into a region of supernatural wonder.” Connie was a 51-year-old divorced mother of two grown children. She had worked for years teaching elementary school because it was a good income and gave her summers and school holidays off. She had to admit, however, that her heart had gone from teaching for the previous few years. Bureaucracy and changes in the education culture had driven Connie to dread weekdays and long for weekends. She worked harder at trying to “love her work,” doing gratitude journaling and starting a teacher’s support group. The problem was, she felt worse, not better, from her efforts. That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by w Stop Wasting Your Money On Home Business Opportunities That Don't Work inty are a part of life for people over 40."Stop Wasting Your Money On Home Business Opportunities That Don't Work and Get Your Own Stinkin' Niche That Can Make You Money, Even If You've Tried Everything Before!"I'll show you step-by-step how to stop wasting your money on work at home business opportunities and how to "Get Your Own Stinkin' Niche" - no matter how hard you've tried before..Dear Friend,Of course, you want your own home based business that will crank in profits 24 hours a day and build your bank account with heaping mounds of cash. But you've tried so many MLMs, partner sites, membership sites, etc, you don't know who or what to believe anymore.You just want to stop throwing your hard earned money away on junk sites more than anything else, and you should!That's where I come in. My name is Patrick Mahoney and I'm an online entrepreneur who has created many successful "niche" businesses, and I'm going to show you how I created them.See if this sounds familiar?You've made the choice to start your own home based business, and everywhere you turn you're presented with work at home "biz-ops" that all sound like a turnkey solution to your problems.After giving up some of yo “At midlife, the part of ourselves that we have known, the caterpillar, is in essence disintegrating. We are stepping into the abyss without a clue as to where we will emerge from it. We are leaving behind what we have known ourselves to be and all the safe and predictable containers of that reality,” writes Kathleen Brehony in Awakening at Midlife. How frightening, uncertain, and painful is that? My own story is an example of stepping into the abyss. At the age of 47, I was a long-time single woman with my children off creating their own lives. I had a middle-class life with a nice house, a great but stressful job, and a 401K. I did not, however, know the woman who looked back at me in the mirror. I could have made several choices. The first would have been to keep working hard and ignore the inner rumbling, and for a while, I did just that. I kept doing what I was doing. Then a friend of mine was diagnosed with terminal cancer and I was overcome with emotion that was very personal. I was concerned for her; but I was equally concerned with ME. What if that were me? What about my unlived life? I was scared. I was in pain. I did not like the place where I was, feeling uncertain. I call this “walking through the valley.” I needed to go deep within myself for the courage to confront the fear, uncertainty and pain. I found my courage through discovering my own spirit of adventure. The spirit of adventure Jeff Saltz in The Way of Adventure says, “Adventure is any intentional experience that substantially alters our perspective long enough to see things we have never seen before—to see familiar things in ways we have never seen them. The most exotic destination of all is the one that fulfills all your yearnings—found within your own adventurous spirit—after you’ve put yourself to the test and found hidden reserves of creativity, resourcefulness, and perseverance.” Sounds exciting, eh? Perhaps in theory…but how do we really do this? Take a leap of faith. If you always do what you’ve always done, you get the same outcomes. Deep within you, you know what you want to do. It’s the action that makes the difference. Joseph Campbell writes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, “A hero ventures from the world of the common day into a region of supernatural wonder.” Connie was a 51-year-old divorced mother of two grown children. She had worked for years teaching elementary school because it was a good income and gave her summers and school holidays off. She had to admit, however, that her heart had gone from teaching for the previous few years. Bureaucracy and changes in the education culture had driven Connie to dread weekdays and long for weekends. She worked harder at trying to “love her work,” doing gratitude journaling and starting a teacher’s support group. The problem was, she felt worse, not better, from her efforts. That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by Term Life Insurance for Business Owners or Key Executives iagnosed with terminal cancer and I was overcome with emotion that was very personal. I was concerned for her; but I was equally concerned with ME. What if that were me? What about my unlived life?Starting a business is a stressful endeavor. There is so much to consider regarding basic operations and so many forms to fill out and papers to file. It is truly a wonder that businesses are able to get off the ground at all. If you are a new business owner, you know that insurance of all types is very much part of the equation in the development and opening of your business. However busy you are with the basic operations of business, you must take time out to implement a strategy to keep your business secure. To be sure, an essential ingredient to this security is taking out “key person” insurance (also known as Business Life Insurance).Key person term life insurance is taken out on the life of the key executive or the business owner. All firms or small businesses depend on the key people or business owner to manage and keep the business running. These head people are critical for the success of the business and therefore the insurance is actually taken out for the benefit of the business. Businesses take out the policy on the key individuals and so the business also pays for the policy premiums. The monies that are paid to the business upon the death of the key executive or business owner allows that I was scared. I was in pain. I did not like the place where I was, feeling uncertain. I call this “walking through the valley.” I needed to go deep within myself for the courage to confront the fear, uncertainty and pain. I found my courage through discovering my own spirit of adventure. The spirit of adventure Jeff Saltz in The Way of Adventure says, “Adventure is any intentional experience that substantially alters our perspective long enough to see things we have never seen before—to see familiar things in ways we have never seen them. The most exotic destination of all is the one that fulfills all your yearnings—found within your own adventurous spirit—after you’ve put yourself to the test and found hidden reserves of creativity, resourcefulness, and perseverance.” Sounds exciting, eh? Perhaps in theory…but how do we really do this? Take a leap of faith. If you always do what you’ve always done, you get the same outcomes. Deep within you, you know what you want to do. It’s the action that makes the difference. Joseph Campbell writes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, “A hero ventures from the world of the common day into a region of supernatural wonder.” Connie was a 51-year-old divorced mother of two grown children. She had worked for years teaching elementary school because it was a good income and gave her summers and school holidays off. She had to admit, however, that her heart had gone from teaching for the previous few years. Bureaucracy and changes in the education culture had driven Connie to dread weekdays and long for weekends. She worked harder at trying to “love her work,” doing gratitude journaling and starting a teacher’s support group. The problem was, she felt worse, not better, from her efforts. That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by Internet Business Will Make Me Rich - The Myth and perseverance.”Developing a successful business on the internet is not an easy task and a one time process. It requires hard work, commitment, dedication, consistency, powerful strategies, and self-motivation. Your internet business can be a successful one when you market it promptly with sure fire strategies and when you do it correctly without any fraudulent. You have to plan carefully before you extend your business online.Define your goals: Set your own long term and short term goals. Work towards it consistently by setting new and innovative strategies.Discipline: Be keen on time, maintain self-discipline, and take your business very seriously because online business is entirely different from offline.Self motivation: Motivate yourself; improve your skills by constantly reading books and gathering knowledge related to your business.Positive Attitude:Attitude is very important to succeed in business. Develop positive attitude. There are number of books available in the market to improve your positive attitude. Positive attitude is all about believing in you to succeed in internet business.Skills required: The most important skills require is analytical skill, Sounds exciting, eh? Perhaps in theory…but how do we really do this? Take a leap of faith. If you always do what you’ve always done, you get the same outcomes. Deep within you, you know what you want to do. It’s the action that makes the difference. Joseph Campbell writes in The Hero with a Thousand Faces, “A hero ventures from the world of the common day into a region of supernatural wonder.” Connie was a 51-year-old divorced mother of two grown children. She had worked for years teaching elementary school because it was a good income and gave her summers and school holidays off. She had to admit, however, that her heart had gone from teaching for the previous few years. Bureaucracy and changes in the education culture had driven Connie to dread weekdays and long for weekends. She worked harder at trying to “love her work,” doing gratitude journaling and starting a teacher’s support group. The problem was, she felt worse, not better, from her efforts. That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by The Great Value Of Accident Photographs not better, from her efforts.You were humming along on a bright and sunny day when suddenly Fred Fuddle, a local character from a nearby town, drunk as a skunk and zooming along in his pickup, flew through stop sign crashing into the right front of your motor vehicle. You had no choice to avoid him. Now the time has come to settle your claim for property damage and personal injuries. Let’s talk about photographs one of the basics that should have been taking place - - just as soon as possible - - after that impact had taken place.PHOTOGRAPHS OF INJURIES: Photographs are often the best evidence you can produce to increase the value of your claim. If your accident causes bodily injuries that are visible (such as bruises, deep cuts, swellings, lacerations, dislocations and/or black and blue marks) it’s crucial, to the ultimate settlement value of your case, that you have photographs taken of those just as soon as possible! Take them from 3 feet away and also as close as you can so as to capture the seriousness of heir existence. When you hand those to Adjuster I. M. Smart from the Granite Insurance Company believe me when I tell you he’ll stare at them and blanch!Question: "How does Dan know this to be so"?Answer: "Because for 3 That winter, Connie got a cold that turned to pneumonia and required bed rest for several days. During that time, she started journaling her thoughts, and came to a realization that her job was making her sick. She recognized that she no longer “needed” the things teaching once brought to her. She began to focus instead on what she did need. Connie wanted to write and express herself. At the end of school term, she put in her notice and spent the summer in a writing course. She then went to work as a librarian four days a week and began to do freelance writing on a part-time basis. Today, four short years later, Nancy has ongoing jobs as a freelance writer, and has co-written and published a book on helping children to read through common parent-child activities. Where is your leap of faith? What needs to change to allow barriers to lift? Appreciate Adversity. Buddhists say that we learn our life lessons by way of our life changes. Life events cause us to change in order to deal with them. By midlife, we can look back at our journey and get an appreciation for just how we have had to adapt. Janine, a 47-year-old gay woman, had battled juvenile arthritis since the age of 15. She prided herself on embracing yoga into daily life, practicing good nutrition, and having a good attitude. However, with the discovery of a lump in her breast and diagnosis of breast cancer, she became angry. “Why me?” she ranted on to Jill, her partner of 15 years. This “why me?” brought up a flood of angry emotions unresolved from childhood. Janine began to focus on how “different” she had always been because of the arthritis, and how unfair her life seemed to be. After some months of chemotherapy, Janine started to process her anger and, through a coaching relationship, began to focus on the gifts of being “different.” She realized that the resilience she developed as a child to deal with being different, e.g., not being able to partake in some sports and having to take rest breaks after school, allowed her the courage to “come out” as a gay women in her early 20s. Janine began to see how she could have made other choices that might not have been so favorable to her now. She began to see the power of her current situation. With renewed energy, she volunteered at the Arthritis Foundation, focusing on Youth Support. What have been the adversities in your life? How can they be reframed for your benefit? Can you see the choices you have made on your journey that have allowed you to arrive where you are right now? How can this new self-knowledge help you to take your next step? Change Your Environment. As an occupational therapist I look at a person’s experience as being powerfully affected by both inner and outer environments. Same person plus different environment equals different outcomes. We often forget this powerful variable and get into a “rut” due to years of doing the same thing. Midlife is a time to shake ourselves up a bit. Sarah was a 60-year-old married woman living in upstate New York, with four grown daughters and ten grandchildren. Sarah was the family matriarch in this strong Jewish family, and had worked for years as a social worker in an agency that supported women who were victims of domestic violence. After her mother’s death ten years ago, Sarah had looked after a very demanding father who lived in Florida, as well as her husband’s mother, a widow, aged 85 and still living on her own. Sarah, after years of wanting to travel to New Zealand and being able to afford it, but denying herself the pleasure due to guilt for all the starving children in the world, finally came to do a women-only inner/outer six-day adventure on New Zealand’s South Island. She had not had a vacation in 10 years, instead taking her vacation times to babysit grandchildren, or visit her father, or catch up on home management tasks. This adventure took Sarah away from the demanding voices of her children, grandchildren, in-laws, father and others. Her adventure dictated that she had no computer, clock, schedule, or television. Hiking for 4-6 hours a day with six other women, Sarah was strongly affected by the outer environment of nature. Daily journaling, group ceremony and facilitation gave her insights to share with other women, and Sarah started to question her beliefs. For the first time in her life, she began to see herself as a woman without attachments, a woman with a mission of her own. Sarah began to see how she was “controlling” her own life by not letting her daughters be independent of her ongoing guidance. She also saw that there were many areas in her father’s and mother-in-law’s lives where she could set boundaries. Most significantly, the achievement of backpacking the journey on her own and facing her thoughts and be
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