Friday, January 26, 2007

What Does America Think About Breakups? Survey Says…















To get a better understanding of the how's and why's of breakups, the Yahoo! Personals survey looked at attitudes, preferences, and experiences of a broad spectrum of people throughout the United States. The data provides a fascinating glimpse into the breakup cycle, from the best (and worst) ways to deliver the blow, to how people act during and after a relationship ends.

The online survey was conducted by Yahoo! Personals in July 2006. Respondents were 18+ year-old visitors to Yahoo! Personals. In total, over 2,500 people from all across the United States took the 24-question survey. Here's what we found out:

BREAKUP EXPERIENCES:

  • THOUGHT ABOUT IT: In the past five years 56 percent had considered breaking up but did not.
  • SHE DID IT TO ME: Slightly more women are breaking up with men than the other way around. 81 percent of women have broken up with someone in the past five years vs. 77 percent of men.

  • ABOUT DATING IN GENERAL:

  • BEST DAY FOR A FIRST DATE: 35 percent think that Saturday is the best day for a first date, and 26 percent say that Friday is the best day for a first date.

  • WE MET THROUGH A FRIEND:
  • 71 percent most trust a friend to set them up on a blind date.
  • 40+ men are the most likely to trust their co-worker to set them up on a blind date.
  • Women 18-29 and women 50+ are more likely to trust their family to set them up on a blind date than others.
  • Coastal respondents (West Coast, East Coast) were more likely than southerners to trust a family member to set them up.
  • NICE TO SEE YOU AGAIN: 42 percent are at their best on a second date (unless you're from the Midwest, in which case it's the third date).
  • DOING ANYTHING LATER?: 65 percent think you should make a date a few days in advance, and 27 percent think you should make the date one week in advance.
  • SHE'S A KEEPER: About 50 percent of daters give people three to five dates before they decide how they feel (though West Coasters tend to judge a little quicker).
  • WHEN IS IT OFFICIAL?: Men are quicker than women to consider their date to be their girlfriend/boyfriend. Especially men in their 40s. 16 percent of men vs. 8 percent of women consider their date their boyfriend/girlfriend after three to five dates. Men on the West Coast are significantly more likely than other men to have exclusivity before considering someone their boyfriend/girlfriend.
  • FIRST-DATE FLUBS:


    On your first date, if your date said...

  • "When we have kids" - 48 percent of people would be turned off/uninterested. More women than men would be turned off/uninterested (53 percent of women vs. 42 percent of men).
  • "I'm not the marrying kind" - 47 percent would be turned off/uninterested, with significantly more women than men feeling this way (57 percent of women vs. 34 percent of men).
  • "You remind me of my ex" - 61 percent would be turned off/uninterested, with significantly more women than men (66 percent of women vs. 54 percent of men).
  • BREAKING UP:

  • NOT FEELING IT: 48 percent say conflicting views of the future and 40 percent say feeling unfulfilled/in a rut would lead them to reassess their dating life and move on from a relationship.
  • IT'S IN THE AIR: Daters in their 20s and 30s are more likely to reassess their dating life during the summer than older daters.
  • BE SOMEONE ELSE'S VALENTINE: Younger daters are more likely to reassess their dating life on Valentine's Day (13 percent for 18-29 years old vs. 9 percent for all others).

  • Who daters listen to the most for advice before ending a relationship differs by age and somewhat by region:

  • 48 percent say conflicting views of the future and 40 percent say feeling unfulfilled/in a rut would lead them to reassess their dating life and move on from a relationship.
  • THANKS MOM: People in their 20s are more likely to listen to dating advice from family and parents.
  • THANKS DOC: 20 percent of daters 50+ listen to the advice of a therapist the most before ending a relationship. Daters 50+ are least likely to listen most to the advice of friends before ending relationships.
  • West Coasters are most likely to listen to the advice of friends vs. daters from other regions (62 percent of West Coasters vs. 49 percent of East Coasters, 55 percent of Midwesterners, and 54 percent of Southerners).
  • SAD BIRTHDAY TO ME: 35 percent think birthdays (your own or your boyfriend's/ girlfriend's) are the worst occasion for a breakup.
  • UNHAPPY HOLIDAYS: 30 percent think the December holidays are the worst time to break up.
  • SUBJECT: "GOODBYE": 31 percent think an email sent to work is the worst way to break up with someone, while 27 percent think through a friend/family member is the worst way.
  • READ THE SIGNS: BEFORE BREAKING UP WITH SOMEONE...

  • 62 percent are likely to avoid the other person.
  • 40 percent would go online to check out their options.
  • 38 percent would have a drink to loosen up.
  • 31 percent would spend one last night of hurrah together.
  • AFTER BREAKING UP WITH SOMEONE…

  • 76 percent will immerse themselves in work.
  • 73 percent will go online to check out other options.
  • 50 percent will take themselves on a vacation.
  • 37 percent will go out and have a few too many drinks.
  • 23 percent will cut him/her out of all their photos.
  • GETTING BACK IN THE GAME:

  • 42 percent of respondents would wait more than a month before dating again.
  • Following a breakup 37 percent of respondents would search for their date online to get more information.
  • 18-to-29-year-olds are more likely to play their favorite song on repeat than other daters to prepare for their first date after a breakup. (18 percent of 18-to-29-year-olds vs. 11 percent of total population). Older daters are more likely to do this than younger daters -- 55 percent of 50+ daters would do this vs. just 22 percent of 18-to-29-year-old daters.



  • Source:Hindustanis.org

    Top 12 New Year Resolutions

    Beginning of the year is a good time to hitch on to some good habits and best practices. Get wise, keep fit and have the faith! Remember, you have nothing to lose. Here're 12 resolutions you can take up this year...

    GET WISE
    1. Be a Better Person in Body, Mind & Intellect: Here're 8 things you can do to inculcate and assimilate the essential values into your personality.

    2. Attain Peace of Mind, and Enhance Your Mental Stability & Equanimity: Discover the10 commandments of attaining peace of mind and learn how to approach opposed feelings with a sense of equanimity.

    3. Kill Pride, Ego and Arrogance & Jealousy: Find out how to keep your ego,arrogance and pride at bay.

    And don't ever let jealousy trouble you.

    4. Start Reading the Scriptures: The vedas, the upnishads the bhagavad-gita and the epics. have all the knowledge you need to make your earthly existence much more meaningful and wise.

    STAY HEALTHY

    5. Begin a Breathing Exercise: This is a stepping step to staying healthy, fit and energetic. Spare a few moments and find out more about 'pranayama'.

    6. Reap the Benefits of Yoga: Check out the basics of this time-tested physical discipline before you get stated.

    7. Meditate Regularly: Mastering your mind through meditation may work wonders for your health and happiness. Check out the techniques of meditations.

    8. Become a Vegan: If you're not yet a vegetrain find out the benefits of being one.

    LIVE SPIRITUALLY

    9. Pray to God Everyday of the Year: Prayers can make you strong! Find out why and how to pray discover the power of chanting various mantras, including the gayatri mantra.

    10. Practice Dual Religion: Whether you're a hindu or not, whether you belong to the east or west, experiencing the best of both worlds can be most meaningful.

    11. Set up a Puja Room for Yourself: a place for puja and prayers can change the way you relate to the divine. So can listening to devotional music. Check out this top 5 list of music for relaxation.

    12. Go on a Pilgrimage, or Visit a nearby Temple regularly: Visiting holy places and temples can be a welcome change from your humdrum routine. Read how to plan for a pilgrimage Or find a temple near you (Remember, wherever you are, you're not far from the Absolute!).



    Source:Hindustanis.org

    Friday, January 19, 2007

    the flat earth society

    Welcome to the Flat Earth Society Homepage! Please, be our guest. Just sit back at your computer, and let us do the talking. We'll tell you who we are, what we're doing, and what we're accomplishing in the world. You can look at some of our latest theories and insights, and, if you're interested, you can even become an honorary member of the Flat Earth Society. So stick around.

    Mission Statement-

    • Background information on the Flat Earth Society
    • The Flat Earth Society's purpose - why we do what we do

    Why a Flat Earth?

    • Why we don't believe the world is round
    • Scientific data and measurements backing up our claims

      Fighting the "Evidence"-

    • Dispelling common myths about "proof" regarding round earth theory
    • Uncovering the conspiracy to withold the truth from the public

    Current Events-

    • What the Flat Earth Society is doing
    • What you can do to help out in your own community

    Join the Flat Earth Society-

    • Become a member of the Flat Earth Society
    • Help dispel heretic notions and re-educate the masses!
    The Flat Earth Society is not in any way responsible for the failure of the French to repel the Germans at the Maginot Line during WWII. Nor is the Flat Earth Society responsible for the recent yeti sightings outside the Vatican, or for the unfortunate enslavement of the Nabisco Inc. factory employees by a rogue hamster insurrectionist group. Furthermore, we are not responsible for the loss of one or more of the following, which may possibly occur as the result of exposing one's self to the dogmatic and dangerously subversive statements made within: life, limb, vision, Francois Mitterand, hearing, taste, smell, touch, thumb, Aunt Mildred, citizenship, spleen, bedrock, cloves, I Love Lucy reruns, toaster, pine derby racer, toy duck, antelope, horseradish, prosthetic ankle, double-cheeseburger, tin foil, limestone, watermelon-scented air freshner, sanity, paprika, German to Pig Latin dictionary, dish towel, pet Chihuahua, pogo stick, Golf Digest subscription, floor tile, upper torso or halibut.
    source:alaska.net



    Source:Hindustanis.org

    The Society












    A society is a group of people who form a semi-closed system. At its simplest, the term society refers to a large group of people sharing their own culture and institutions. A society, then, is a network of relationships between people. The English word society is derived from the French société, which, in turn, had its origin in the Latinsocietas, a "friendly association with others," from sociussocial. Implicit in the meaning of society is that its members may share some mutual concern or interest, a common objective or common characteristics. The social sciences generally use the term society to mean a group of people who form a semi-closed social system, in which most interactions are with other individuals belonging to the group. More abstractly, a society is defined as a network of relationships between social entities. A society is also sometimes defined as an interdependent community, but the sociologist Tönniessocial structure, aspects of which include roles and social ranking. meaning "companion, associate, comrade or business partner." Thus, the meaning of society is closely related to what is considered to be sought to draw a contrast between society and community. An important feature of society is social structure, aspects of which include roles and social ranking.
    A society is a grouping of individuals, which is characterized by common interest and may have distinctive culture and institutions. "Society" may refer to a particular people, such as the Nuer, to a nation state, such as Switzerland, or to a broader cultural group, such as Western society. Society can also be explained as an organized group of people associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes.













    Young people interacting within an ethnically diverse society.

    Origin and usage

    The English word society emerged in the 15th century and is derived from the French société. The French word, in turn, had its origin in the Latin societas, a "friendly association with others," from socius meaning "companion, associate, comrade or business partner." Implicit in the meaning of society is that its members share some mutual concern or interest, a common objective or common characteristics.

    In political science, the term is often used to mean the totality of human relationships, generally in contrast to the State, i.e., the apparatus of rule or government within a territory:

    "I mean by it [the State] that summation of privileges and dominating positions which are brought into being by extra-economic power... I mean by Society, the totality of concepts of all purely natural relations and institutions between man and man..." [1]

    In the social sciences society has been used to mean a group of people that form a semi-closed social system, in which most interactions are with other individuals belonging to the group.

    According sociologist Richard Jenkins, the term addresses a number of important existential issues facing people:

    1. How humans think and exchange information – the sensory world makes up only a fraction of human experience. In order to understand the world, we have to conceive of human interaction in the abstract (i.e., society). 2. Many phenomena cannot be reduced to individual behavior – to explain certain conditions, a view of something "greater than the sum of its parts" is needed. 3. Collectives often endure beyond the lifespan of individual members. 4. The human condition has always meant going beyond the evidence of our senses; every aspect of our lives is tied to the collective.

    [2]

    [edit] Evolution of societiey

    Gerhard Lenski, a sociologist, differentiates societies based on their level of technology, communication and economy: (1) hunters and gatherers, (2) simple agricultural, (3) advanced agricultural, (4) industrial.[3] This is somewhat similar to the system earlier developed by anthropologistsMorton H. Fried, a conflict theorist, and Elman Service, an integration theorist, who have produced a system of classification for societies in all human cultures based on the evolution of social inequality and the role of the state. This system of classification contains four categories:

    Over time, some cultures have progressed toward more-complex forms of organization and control. This cultural evolution has a profound effect on patterns of community. Hunter-gatherer tribes settled around seasonal foodstocks to become agrarian villages. Villages grew to become towns and cities. Cities turned into city-states and nation-states.[4]

    [edit] Characteristics of society

    The following three components are common to all definitions of society:

    • Social networks
    • Criteria for membership, and
    • Characteristic patterns of organization

    Each of these will be explored further in the following sections.

    [edit] Social networks

    Main article: Social network

    Social networks are maps of the relationships between people. Structural features such as proximity, frequency of contact and type of relationship (e.g., relative, friend, colleague) define various social networks.

    [edit] Organization of society

    Main article: Social organization

    Human societies are often organized according to their primary means of subsistence. As noted in the section on " Evolution of societies", above, social scientists identify hunter-gatherer societies, nomadic pastoral societies, horticulturalist or simple farming societies, and intensive agricultural societies, also called civilizations. Some consider industrial and post-industrial societies to be qualitatively different from traditional agricultural societies.

    One common theme for societies in general is that they serve to aid individuals in a time of crisis. Traditionally, when an individual requires aid, for example at birth, death, sickness, or disaster, members of that society will rally others to render aid, in some form—symbolic, linguistic, physical, mental, emotional, financial, medical, or religious. Many societies will distribute largess, at the behest of some individual or some larger group of people. This type of generosity can be seen in all known cultures; typically, prestige accrues to the generous individual or group. Conversely, members of a society may also shun or scapegoat members of the society who violate its norms. Mechanisms such as gift-giving and scapegoating, which may be seen in various types of human groupings, tend to be institutionalized within a society.

    Some societies will bestow status on an individual or group of people, when that individual or group performs an admired or desired action. This type of recognition is bestowed by members of that society on the individual or group in the form of a name, title, manner of dress, or monetary reward. Males, in many societies, are particularly susceptible to this type of action and subsequent reward, even at the risk of their lives. Action by an individual or larger group in behalf of some cultural ideal is seen in all societies. The phenomena of community action, shunning, scapegoating, generosity, and shared risk and reward occur in subsistence-based societies and in more technology-based civilizations.

    Societies may also be organized according to their politicalbands, tribes, chiefdoms, and state societies. These structures may have varying degrees of political power, depending on the cultural geographical, and historicalsee history for examples}. A society that is unable to offer an effective response to other societies it competes with will usually be subsumed into the culture of the competing society (see technology for examples). structure. In order of increasing size and complexity, there are environments that these societies must contend with. Thus, a more isolated society with the same level of technology and culture as other societies is more likely to survive than one in closer proximity to others that may encroach on their resources (

    [edit] Shared belief or common goal















    Religious procession.

    Peoples of many nations united by common political and cultural traditions, beliefs, or values are sometimes also said to be a society (such as Judeo-Christian, Eastern, and Western). When used in this context, the term is employed as a means of contrasting two or more "societies" whose members represent alternative conflicting and competing worldviews (see Secret Societies).

    Some academic, learned and scholarly associationssocieties (for example, the American Society of Mathematics. More commonly, professional organizations often refer to themselves as societies (e.g., the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Chemical Society). In the United Kingdom and the United States, learned societies are normally nonprofit and have charitable status. In science, they range in size to include national scientific societies (i.e., the Royal Society) to regional natural history societies. Academic societies may have interest in a wide range of subjects, including the arts, humanities and science. describe themselves as

    In some countries (for example the United States and France), the term "society" is used in commerce to denote a partnership between investors or to start a business. In the United Kingdom, partnerships are not called societies, but cooperatives or mutuals are often known as societies (such as friendly societies and building societies). In Latin America, the term society may also be used in commerce denoting a partnership between investors, or anonymous investors; for example: "Proveedor Industrial Anahuac S.A." where S.A. stands for Anonymous Society (Sociedad Anonima); however in Mexico in other type of partnership it would be declared as S.A. de C.V.

    [edit] Ontology

    As a related note, there is still an ongoing debate in sociological and anthropological circles as to whether there exists an entity we could call society. Some MarxistLouis Althusser, Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Zizek, have argued that society is nothing more than an effect of the ruling ideology of a certain class system, and shouldn't be used as a sociological notion. Marx's concept of society as the sum total of social relations among members of a community contrasts with interpretations from the perspective of methodological individualism theorists, like where society is simply the sum total of individuals in a territory.


    Source:Hindustanis.org


    Host a wine tasting party











    Choosing the Wines
    The variety of grapes such as chardonnay, merlot, or zinfandel determines the wine's taste, color, and aroma. Most American wines are named for the principal grape used in making them; a European wine label can be more difficult to decipher. For this reason, beginners may want to start by tasting American wines.
    For an introductory tasting, compare six wines, three white and three red, each made from a different variety of grape. For the whites, try a sauvignon blanc, a chardonnay, and a dry riesling. For the reds, try a pinot noir, a merlot, and a cabernet sauvignon. Ask the staff in a good wine shop to help you make representative choices in your price range.

    Serving the Wines
    Clear crystal wineglasses are best for tasting wines; cut or colored glasses prevent you from really looking at the wine, which is an important part of the process. Traditionally, white wine is served in glasses that are a little smaller than those for red. Smaller glasses keep white wines chilled, while the larger bowls of red-wine glasses give fuller-bodied reds more room to breathe. For the tasting described above, you'll want at least three glasses per person. If you don't have separate white- and red-wine glasses, compare the three whites first, wash the glasses, then taste the reds.
    Before serving, chill the white wines for 30 minutes to an hour, to a temperature of 45 to 50 ; if they're too cold, the taste of the wine will be dulled. Red wine is served at room temperature, but if a house is particularly warm, the wine may need to be chilled slightly. Red wine should be served at a temperature of 50 to 65 (serve lighter wines at the lower end of that range, full-bodied wines at the higher end).
    Fill the wineglasses no more than halfway. Have water and crackers or bread available for clearing the palate between sips. Once you've poured the wines, you are ready to begin the process-but even before you actually taste the wine, there's a lot you can learn.

    Appearance
    Begin by looking at the wines in the glasses. Hold them up against a white surface, such as a sheet or a piece of paper. A white wine should be clear, and it will range from almost white to gold. Red wines are purple to red-brown. The deeper the color, the more full-bodied the wine.

    Aroma
    A wine's aroma is very telling of its taste and character. Swirl each wine in its glass, then take a deep, gentle whiff of the wine. With your guests, describe the aromas you detect. Start with general terms such as fruity, spicy, herbal, floral, and earthy, then be more specific, even creative. Good wines have a complex aroma, which is the reason professional wine tasters use such terms.
    Smell each one, then go back and forth among the glasses, comparing their aromas. A subtle scent hints that the wine will be light and delicate in flavor.
    At last it's time to taste the wines. Take a sip, then breathe a little bit of air into your mouth to release the wine's flavors. Take 10 to 15 seconds to move the wine through your mouth; different parts of your tongue will register different details. Ask yourself how the wine tastes and feels; when you swallow, does the flavor linger?
    Here are a few things to look for in the wines described above. In the whites, the sauvignon blanc is light, dry, and herbal; the chardonnay is full-bodied, creamy, and has an oaky taste from the barrels it is aged in; the riesling is fruity and crisp. As for the reds, the pinot noir is fruity and light compared to the others, with a spicy taste; the merlot is more subtle and smooth; the cabernet sauvignon is more complicated, evoking black currant and dried herbs.


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    How to Make a Great First Impression Online

    What do you look for in an online profile when deciding whether to contact someone?

    Is it easier or harder for men versus women to make the first move in online dating?

    How do you maximize your odds of getting a positive response back from someone?

    You have seen lots about face-to-face first impressions. But what does it take to make a great first impression online? Thanks to interviews with Candace, Harris and Jason-- three active, insightful online daters--we finally have some answers.

    It’s your move

    “I like to make first contact with prospects,” says Candace, a 29-year-old high school English teacher from New York City. “I can pick out exactly what I want from the mix.”

    Harris, a 35-year-old retail manager from New Jersey, likes for women to make the first move. “I find it more encouraging if I know right off the bat that the other person is interested,” shares Harris. “There’s less chance of rejection that way!” When rejection fears drop, they are replaced by confidence, an important feeling in dating.

    What’s the bottom line? The traditional days of waiting for men to make the first move are over! If a woman sees an intriguing profile, she can make that first move. The guy will likely be flattered.

    The gender advantage

    Who really has it easier online, the men or the women? According to Jason, a 32-year-old computer engineer from California, “It’s easier for men because they are really just choosing based on photos. If she looks good in the photo, send her a note and hope she looks like her photo in person.”

    Candace and Harris both believe women have the advantage in cyber-dating. “All a woman has to do is put up a cute photo and make contact,” says Candace. Harris agrees, “Women can go after what they want and then have the right of refusal!”

    It looks like we won’t solve this gender battle here. But one thing is for sure, a terrific yet genuine online photo makes all the difference.

    A profile to make them smile

    Genders aside, what does it really take to get someone fired up about your profile? It comes down to turn-ons and turn-offs. So what do Candace, Jason and Harris believe is on each list?

  • Turn-ons: intelligence, humility, sense of humor, down-to-earth, authenticity
  • Turn-offs: negativity, cockiness, high-maintenance, snobby, players
  • So if your profile sounds smart, funny, honest and humble, the dates will be rolling in. However, if your profile makes you come across as conceited, demanding and pretentious, get ready for “no new messages” in your online dating inbox.

    Cyber-love me, cyber-love me not!

    Deciding who to contact is one thing, actually mustering the courage to do it is another. The key here is to personalize the message. “I’ll send an email to the guy mentioning something interesting I read in his profile,” explains Candace. “I’ll also mention any common interests and offer to chat further.”

    Harris also strives to stimulate further conversation. “I’ll ask a few specific questions that require more than a simple yes or no response.” Jason is a big believer in humor. “I’ll remark about their username or something in their profile. I lighten the mood by being silly and see if they respond to that.”

    The key is to engage the other person. Pique their curiosity and you’ll open the door to continued conversation.

    Anybody home?

    Once you send that first email or instant message, it’s out of your hands. Hoping for a positive response can lead to anxiety, vulnerability and impatience. But Candace, Harris and Jason take it all in stride. “I feel curious more than anything,” says Candace. “I try not to get too excited because it’s so early in the process.”

    Harris and Jason both feel a sense of accomplishment after sending that first email. “I feel satisfied that I was able to come up with something clever and wait to see if it works out,” says Harris. Jason doesn’t let himself get too worried. “I don’t even know if they’re going to respond at this point, so why get too concerned?”

    Good netiquette

    If you respond to a profile right away, does that make you desperate? Does waiting two weeks to respond kill your chances? “People usually respond within a couple of days or not at all,” shares Candace. “It’s really way too early to take any of it personally.”

    Harris and Jason agree with the one- to two-day window. “A quick response shows interest,” says Harris. Jason has a wisecrack ready for women who take more than two weeks to respond. “It usually doesn’t go anywhere when they take more than two weeks, so I’ll definitely make a comment about it.”

    Be specific

    So why do some emails get responses in one or two days, and others two weeks or never? Attraction is important, of course, but what you write in your first communication makes a huge difference too. “I never want my emails to sound generic because there’s nothing worse than that,” reveals Candace. “I try to pick out specific points from his profile and write about that.” One time Candace noticed a prospect liked the show “Family Guy,” just like her. “I made a funny reference to a specific episode and I guess he thought that was cool because he responded right away.”

    Jason believes in the power of humor. “I try to start with a catchy and flirty phrase and see what happens.” If Jason gets back something flirtatious, he knows he’s piqued their interest and distinguished himself from the online crowd.

    The fault line

    It’s not all about what you do right. There are some common mistakes and pitfalls that can get your email deleted faster than spam. “Coming across too confident can be a mistake,” believes Harris. “In the same respect, being nervous and unsure of yourself can cost you.” Jason thinks it’s all about creativity. “Sending out two or three generic, boring lines just won’t cut it.”

    Candace believes you need to start simple. “Don’t get too personal in that first email,” she explains. “You don’t even know if the guy is interested, so there’s no need to spill everything right away.”

    Ready, set, date!

    Whether you’re looking for a casual relationship or your soul mate, it all starts with the online first impression. So take some web dating advice from Candace, Harris and Jason and you’ll be on your way to making a great second impression!


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    What's your dating personality?

    Before opting for dinner and a movie, determine what "personality" your date should reflect. Are you a dance-'til-you-drop diva or poetry slam patron? Do you crave the finest martini or prefer to ponder trees falling in a forest? Whatever your dating style is, impress your special someone by choosing a unique dating spot.

    Active. You have boundless energy and get bored with a lapse in conversation - you are the party. Extreme sports are your preference, and no doorman has ever kept you behind the velvet rope. Your perfect mate will go bungee-jumping by day and rave with you all night long. You don't work for the man; you are the man. "No rules, no boundaries" is your mantra.

    Quiet Intellectual. You prefer a good book to a loud club but thrive on a good, heated debate. Your perfect mate will discuss Sartre and socialism until the sun comes up and shares your admiration for Einstein and Warhol. When you watch TV, it's either PBS or "Jeopardy!". You prefer coffee to cocktails, and you kick ass at Scrabble. You know the best jazz clubs and independent bookstores. The unexamined life is not worth living.

    Executive. You're a busy corporate type who appreciates the finer things in life. The best restaurant's maítre d' knows you by name, you own a Chagall, and you have season tickets to both the ballet and your beloved basketball team. Your perfect A-type mate owns a Palm Pilot, has the perfect portfolio, works out as much as you do, and loves to share a bottle of fine wine with you after a long day at work. Greed is good.

    Outdoors. Your four-wheel drive is never clean. Your dogs have been your roommates and best friends since you left school. You like to hike, bike and camp, and your backpack is perpetually packed. Your special someone prefers Birkenstocks and hiking boots and thinks sunscreen is for wimps. Beer, beans and barbecue is your ideal meal. Your timeshare is a pup tent.


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    How to Flirt Online: Three success keys and 10 email questions













    What can you say in an email to entice someone to get to coffee talk? You are trying to get to the first date level. So what are the tricks to flirting online?

    A 38-year-old female comedian told me, " I don't think it is hard to flirt via email at all. It's like acting. It's very fun to flirt online." Here are some ideas that should help you get to a first date faster.

    Three online flirting success keys:

    1. Humor is your ally: A 35-year-old male film editor told me, "It depends on the person. You need to be able to read the person to tell what kind of humor you can get away with. Humor is definitely sexy and so is confidence because girls pick that up."

    2. Keep it simple: Use light-hearted emails with an upbeat tone to attract dates online. A 40-something female painter shared, " Make your responses simple and use easy questions in your emails to flirt." There is no need for long emails either. A 42-year-old accountant told me, "I can tell if I am interested in three or four sentences."

    3. Hand out compliments: One of the best ways to flirt online is to extend a sincere compliment. One guy told me, "I always try to say something subtle, but sincere." You might say to someone who plays the piano, "I think it is awesome that you play piano." He added, "Be sincere and don't throw out phony baloney."

    10 email flirting questions

    Based on interviews with hundreds of active daters for my book, "smart man hunting," here are 10 questions that can help you ignite sparks online:

    • Where did you get that fantastic smile?


    • What is your favorite ice cream flavor and why?


    • What is the most romantic place that you've been on a date?


    • What would you do if we got stuck in a snow storm in the mountains?


    • If you were going to take me out for a romantic evening, what would we do?


    • What is your favorite thing to do with a partner for fun?


    • If you could go anywhere in the world, where would you go and why?


    • How long have you played guitar? (Ask about something in their profile.)


    • Wow, is that your cute golden retriever? (Compliment something in their photograph.)


    • When are we going to meet to find out whether we would ever want to kiss each other? (Depending on the person, you can sound cute using this one)
    • Have some fun -- use humor and good will. Keep it simple when you're using these email flirting questions. You will have better luck using levity and sincere compliments online.



      Source:Hindustanis.org

    I make $6.50 an hour. Am I poor?













    Here's how I slipped from the middle class into near poverty, and what I'm doing about it.

    As a single professional woman, for years I sat securely among the lower rungs of the middle class.

    Now I've fallen off the ladder.

    In a matter of months, I went from a comfortable life with decent pay and health insurance to a $6.50-an-hour job with no insurance, no furniture and just enough resources to keep the wolf from the door.

    I no longer buy anything unless it's absolutely essential. I spend $40 at the supermarket and make it last for more than two weeks. I never turn down a free meal. I've learned to graciously accept money, furniture, elk meat and encouragement from worried friends.

    I am no longer proud.

    I have no romantic notions about being poor. I'm not nobler than others, and I'm not a victim. But I am one minor medical emergency away from welfare.

    Simply put, I'm in survival mode.

    Here's my story in a nutshell: I lost my job as a managing editor at a small newspaper in Montana after the ownership changed hands. Six months later, I moved to Pennsylvania to take a similar job. My living arrangements fell through, and as I searched for a rental that would accept my three dogs, I lived in a campground. When it became clear that I'd be a campground dweller for a while, my boss fired me, telling me my living situation was "bad for business." I sold off my household goods -- everything from a sofa to pots and pans -- and drove back to small-town Montana.

    I still own a house here. And I have a network of loving friends.


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    The Seven Habits of Truly Happy People

    Put a smile on your face by following these tips
    The best way to ditch the seven deadlies is to replace them with what psychiatrist Dr. William Glasser calls the seven caring habits: supporting, encouraging, listening, accepting, trusting, respecting, and negotiating differences.
    They sound simple, right? All you have to do is accept people for who they are, listen to them, respect them, trust them, encourage and support them, and negotiate any differences you may have. But, like most of what's worthwhile in life, the caring habits are a little harder to put into place than you might think, especially if they represent an about-face for you.
    Run a reality check. How did you talk with the people you live with this morning? Did you listen to what they were saying? Or did you let their words run in one ear and out the other? Did you encourage them to move ahead with what they've planned for the day? Did you support them in their choices? Or did you put them down or just nod your head as you drank your coffee?
    Really listen. "Treat people like they're your best friends," says Suzy Hallock-Bannigan, a trainer with the Glasser Institute who is based in South Pomfret, VT. Hang on their every word. Find time to sit down with them and really pay attention, without being distracted by cell phones, passing traffic, or the demands of other people. Then give them time to get out what they have to say. "I also try to check in with people all the time to make sure I've correctly heard what they're saying," she says.
    Envision the new you. Draw a mental picture of yourself as a person who practices the seven caring habits. Keep it in the back of your mind, then pull it forward when you're talking with those close to you to see if you're acting like a caring person. "Sam" does this all the time. When he and his fiancee, "Maggie," were considering a move, for example, Sam was not happy. The two had had an understanding that they would live in the Northeast for the rest of their days. Then Maggie got a great job offer in Florida, and she wanted to go.
    "My immediate reaction was, 'How could she do this to me?'" says Sam. "It seemed so unfair. I felt resentful, I felt frightened. I felt angry. I felt betrayed. And, at that moment, I realized that I could choose to react from those feelings or not.
    "I took a deep breath, then thought, 'How do I want to be in the world?' The answer is, I want to be gentle and loving and strong. Okay, so if I were a gentle and loving and strong person, how would I act? What would I be saying to myself right now? And to Maggie?"
    By framing the issue in terms of who he wanted to be rather than what he wanted the outcome of their discussion to be, Sam was able to loving and supporting relationship with Maggie and work out a compromise. Since Maggie's a teacher, they decided to rent a home in Florida for the school year and return to Vermont every summer. (To show that she understood his passion for the Vermont mountains, Maggie even encouraged Sam to buy 10 acres and a cabin for them.)
    Ask the right question. In that split second after which the urge to blame, complain, criticize, nag, threaten, punish, or bribe arises, but before the words actually leave your mouth, stop, and ask yourself, "Is this really important?" Hallock-Bannigan doesn't like unmade beds. When her husband, who knows this, left the bed unmade one morning, she felt the heat of generations of righteous bed makers rise up within her. "If he really loved me," she caught herself thinking, "he would have made the bed." When her husband came into the room, she was about to complain but instead asked herself, "Just how important is an unmade bed?" The answer was obvious even to a bed maker such as Hallock-Bannigan.
    Accept reality. "You have to understand that the only person you can change is yourself," says Hallock-Bannigan. If your husband is a tightwad who hates it when you spend a dime, you can't do a thing about his attitude. But you can control yours. Instead of slugging it out with him over whether or not a $15 pair of Liz Claiborne socks is "necessary," hold your irritation in check and apply as many of the seven caring habits as you can. Look for a compromise, such as holding the line at one pair of socks, or promising to check store knockoffs that are as pretty but cheaper.
    "When you have a difference with someone who's important to you, you negotiate," says Dr. Glasser. But what happens if your partner digs in his heels? To deal with that, Dr. Glasser developed something called the "solving circle"--a piece of string that forms a circle outline on the floor. You and your partner face each other and, as each of you feels ready, you step into the circle and say, "The most important thing in my life is our relationship. We have a problem with ______ (name the problem). We know that arguing and blaming will do no good. And in order to avoid wounding our relationship, I am willing to _______ (say what you're willing to do that will help)." It may take a few days to get this accomplished, and some people may find that a third party--a therapist or marriage counselor--may be a necessary ingredient.
    Pick a model. When Hallock-Bannigan was training Sisters in Ireland to use the caring habits, one good Sister was having trouble figuring out how to respond to someone who was criticizing her. So Hallock-Bannigan asked her, "Who's the woman you most look up to?" The answer was Mary Robinson, president of Ireland and a champion of human rights. "Well, what do you think she would be thinking and feeling in this situation?" asked Hallock-Bannigan. "What would you see her doing?" Ten seconds later, the Sister was off to do what Mary would've done.
    Write about it. Keep a daily journal to help think your way through the transition and keep track of your progress, says Hallock-Bannigan. Sam does, and looking back over nearly a decade, he can honestly say, "I'm a very different person than I was 10 years ago. It doesn't mean I'm perfect," he adds with an endearing grin. "But I try."


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    How to Give and Receive Comfort











    When the phone rang just before the Christmas holidays, the voice on the other end was so tiny I almost didn't recognize it as belonging to Toni, my former college roommate. "What's wrong?" I asked. Toni and I don't speak often and we see each other even less. Different cities, different lives. But I knew trouble when I heard it. "I have cancer," she said.

    Worse, it was a recurrence of the breast cancer she'd been treated for 10 years earlier, which had now spread to her stomach and ribs. She was calling from home -- she's unmarried and lives alone -- and was wobbly after her first three rounds of chemo. I listened. When I hung up, I immediately called the airline and made a reservation. Next I called my husband at work to let him know that we'd have to cancel our weekend plans. Then I called Toni back to say that I was coming that very weekend. "I'm not dying yet," she protested. "All the better," I told her.

    Over the next two days, I consumed everything I could about breast cancer -- I questioned friends, searched the Internet, read up on the latest studies and treatments. One minute I felt frantic and desperate (Is she going to die?); the next, feisty and indignant (Why didn't she get a second opinion? Is her oncologist the best available?). Finally, a wise friend calmed me down. "You don't have to learn everything about cancer in two days," she told me. "Just go there and hang out with her. Watch TV. Above all, just listen."

    So that's what I did. Toni and I cooked a brisket together (squaring off in our usual way over whether to caramelize the onions first or just dump them on top). I helped her choose a wig and some caps and berets from a catalog. We looked through piles of old photographs and laughed about the people we'd known and the people we'd been. We didn't talk about cancer treatments and second opinions, not really.

    One night Toni asked me if I believed in heaven. I talked (a little) but listened more. The next day I came down with a terrible cold and arranged to leave earlier than planned, fearful about exposing her to a single rogue germ. "No, no," she objected. "This is the nicest thing anyone has ever done for me." Did I restore her thick, wavy hair? Did I beat back her cancer? No. I simply gave what was in my power to give -- some small measure of comfort.

    Comfort Is Crucial

    If adult life -- with its downturns, losses, and setbacks -- teaches us anything, it's that the need for comfort is crucial and ongoing. It's not only for the boldface crises that top the life-stress charts (illness, death, divorce), but also for life's middling traumas (your kid doesn't make it into Harvard) and minor disappointments (your best friend isn't visiting from Alaska this summer). Of course, the downturns and setbacks don't need to be our own for us to feel the loss and the need to be assuaged.

    Even if you didn't know someone who was directly affected by the World Trade Center attack, it was hard not to cry watching the television coverage -- seeing a tear fall down the brave, stone-faced cheek of a firefighter, watching a stalwart family member struggle for composure in the face of overwhelming, unbearable grief. "There's nothing more important or more intimate than giving and receiving comfort," says Malka Drucker, a rabbi in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and author of White Fire: A Portrait of Women Spiritual Leaders in America. "For this we need intuition, the invisible path to another's heart."

    Which is better for our health and fulfillment -- to give comfort or to receive it? It's well established that comfort has health benefits for those on the receiving end, but people involved in comforting professions, like nurses and nuns, have long reported a feeling of euphoria from their work. This "helpers' high" may have a basis in brain chemistry, according to recent research at the National Institutes of Health. "When we exercise compassion, the brain releases endorphins, which blunt nerve endings and give a sense of peace and tranquility," says Stephen G. Post, PhD, professor of bioethics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio.

    Children as young as 2 will respond empathically to another person's distress -- kissing a whimpering friend's cheek or saying to an adult, "Don't cry." But that instinct often gets lost in the self-consciousness of adulthood. Although we still remember how to spontaneously comfort the kids in our lives with a warm hug, soothing words, a favorite toy, or a lap to hide in, with peers we often become paralyzed and uncomfortable, uncertain what to say or do, sometimes even where to look.

    I once sat at a dinner table with a group of friends, when one of the women, newly divorced, said matter-of-factly that when her ex-husband left her for another woman it had felt "like a death." Another friend at the table began to sob; her husband had been killed in a car accident 15 years earlier. We all sat there, speechless and squirming, until the waiter came to take our order. The moment to say something soothing and meaningful was lost.

    Be Compassionate

    While some people are intuitively gifted at saying and doing exactly the right thing at the right moment, the rest of us can learn how. "Comfort boils down to empathy and acknowledgment," says New York City-based psychotherapist Jane Greer, PhD, author of Gridlock: Finding the Courage to Move on in Love, Work, and Life. Acknowledgment, in fact, is so powerful that it doesn't require the gloss of eloquence. "When someone affirms what you are feeling and conveys an understanding of your distress, their sensitivity helps you feel safe and understood," says Dr. Greer. When you offer to bring a sick friend a cup of hot soup, stop by to change the bedsheets, or send a bouquet of flowers with a warm note, you put acknowledgment into action.

    Comfort that doesn't include that crucial element of acknowledgment seems emotionally tone-deaf. "It's a good thing that she didn't suffer longer," someone said when my mother died at 73 of Parkinson's disease. That might have been the appropriate response to a survivor relieved to see a loved one's suffering end, but it didn't feel comforting to me. At that moment, I felt it was horrible that she died at all. We can be equally off-key when we hear a person's distress as an invitation to commiserate with our own tales of woe. Who isn't occasionally guilty of this? In retrospect, I could have kicked myself when I replayed in my head a conversation with a friend who called to update me about her mother's illness and I wound up telling her, at great length, about my own mother's hospitalization six years earlier. A brief mention is fine, but only if you stay focused on your friend's problem. How can we so not get it?

    The problem is, how much compassion we have for others is sometimes driven by the degree of compassion we have for ourselves -- and, let's face it, most of us are pretty tough on ourselves. "If you're stoic and you have a stiff upper lip, it could be hard to muster up the empathy and compassion for someone else's plight," says Dr. Greer. That was the case with a woman I know who'd been having problems with her boss. When she told her boyfriend that she feared being fired, he said, "What's the big deal? You'll call the headhunters and find another job." He didn't stop to acknowledge her wounded self-esteem, her fear of change, or her financial concerns -- that is, all the fallout that comes from your job's being imperiled.

    There does tend to be a gender divide when it comes to giving -- as well as receiving -- comfort. According to Marianne Legato, MD, founder of the Partnership for Gender-Specific Medicine at Columbia University, in New York City, men will often hunker down in solitude rather than reveal a need for comfort; they're also less skilled at soothing others: "A man will focus on solving the problem. He'll give you directions to accomplishing whatever goal he thinks you should be achieving," she says.

    On the other hand, women tend to be much better at offering a sympathetic ear and a shoulder to cry on. Women are not necessarily good, however, at allowing themselves to be comforted. Many of us have become so hyperefficient at juggling the demands of work and family that we've lost the art of being tended to. And we feel ashamed to even need tending. "Accepting comfort is like accepting a gift, but that can stir up feelings of helplessness and vulnerability in some of us," says Dr. Greer. "We think that by saying 'I don't need it' we can make ourselves feel stronger."

    Find a Hug

    But we can all do better at giving and receiving comfort. Comfort is often rooted in the flesh: Just a hug or the touch of a hand causes our brains to release the chemical serotonin, which improves mood. Remember, too, the healing power of words. The right words -- whether they are spoken in our church or synagogue, or come to us via Chicken Soup for the Soul stories or public oratory -- have the power to soothe the spirit and revive the heart. Just think of former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani's heartfelt acknowledgment that the September 11th losses were "more than we can bear."

    If you're the one in need of comfort, wisdom lies in knowing where to find it. "When things are really terrible, you need people who will affirm whatever you're feeling," says Dr. Legato. "Sit down with a friend or relative and ask if they have time to hear you discuss a problem and help you with it. You can't do it in five minutes. Make sure they have an hour or more to spend."

    When there's no human to talk to -- or give you a hug -- a pet may do just as well. Studies have shown that pets help lower blood pressure and mitigate stress on the heart. (Picture Buddy the Labrador retriever, President Clinton's ever-present pal during the Lewinsky saga, or President George W. Bush with his little Scottie in his arms.) Animals are affectionate, allow us to snuggle with them and -- in a slight improvement over spouses, children, and friends -- never judge us or offer unwanted advice.

    In the end, it may be that we are simply hardwired to do good. A study at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor reported that among older people, those who reported helping others -- even if it was just giving emotional support to a spouse -- were half as likely to die within five years as those who did not. "If comforting behavior can be linked with health and longevity, the implications are significant," says Dr. Post of Case Western. "People who live generous lives soon become aware that in the reasonable giving of self lies the discovery of self."

    Even Ebenezer Scrooge would have to agree.


    Source:Hindustanis.org

    7 Secrets of High-Energy People























    Do they sleep 12 hours a day or run marathons? No. The most powerful energy sources are in your soul, not your body. Learn how to create more joy and meaning in your life.
    Emotional Energy
    The single biggest difference between people who get what they want and people who don't is energy," says Mira Kirshenbaum, psychotherapist and clinical director of the Chestnut Hill Institute in Boston. In this excerpt from her new book, The Emotional Energy Factor, she explains how to harness it so you can live the life of your dreams.

    There's an energy crisis in America, and it has nothing to do with fossil fuels. Millions of us get up each morning already weary over what the day holds. "I just can't get started," people say. Or, "I feel drained just thinking about the long hours ahead." But it's not physical energy that most of us lack. Sure, we could all use extra sleep and a better diet. But in truth, people are healthier today than at any time in history. I can almost guarantee that if you long for more energy, the problem is not with your body.

    What you're seeking is not the adrenaline-filled, bounce-off-the-walls kind of energy. It's emotional energy. It's an aliveness of the mind and spirit that connects you to the vitality and fun of life. Yet, sad to say, life sometimes seems designed to exhaust our supply. We work too hard. We have family obligations. We encounter emergencies and personal crises. No wonder so many of us suffer from emotional fatigue, a kind of utter exhaustion of the spirit, a sense that we're just going through the motions.

    And yet we all know people who are filled with exuberance and joy, despite the sometimes grim external circumstances of their lives. Even as a child, I observed people who were dirt-poor or disabled or whose physical energy had been sapped by disease, but who nonetheless faced life with optimism and vigor. Consider Laura Hillenbrand, who, despite having been diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome, wrote the best-selling book Seabiscuit, about a horse who becomes an unlikely champion. Hillenbrand barely had enough physical energy to drag herself out of bed to write. But she was fueled by having a story she cared about and wanted to share. Or think of the painter Frida Kahlo, who endured excruciating pain her entire adult life, yet produced vibrant, deeply felt canvases.

    Emotional energy came to the rescue. The best news? Unlike physical energy, which is finite and diminishes with age, emotional energy is unlimited and has nothing to do with genes or upbringing. So how do you get it? You can't simply tell yourself to be positive. You must take action. Here are seven practical strategies that work.

    Simple Strategies

    1. Do something genuinely new.

    Very little that's new occurs in our lives. The impact of this sameness on our emotional energy is gradual, but huge: It's like a tire with a slow leak. You don't notice it at first, but eventually you'll get a flat. It's up to you to plug the leak -- even though there are always a dozen reasons to stay stuck in your rut. That's where Maura, 36, a waitress and would-be caterer, found herself a year ago.

    Fortunately, Maura had a lifeline -- a group of women friends who meet regularly to discuss their lives "like on Sex and the City," she says, "but without the sex, the city and the gorgeous clothes!" The women's lively discussions about how to shake up their lives spurred Maura to make small but nevertheless life-altering changes. She joined a gym in the next town. She took up yoga. She changed her look with a short haircut and new black T-shirts. Eventually, Maura gathered the courage to quit her job and devote herself full time to her fledgling catering business.

    Here's a challenge: If it's something you wouldn't ordinarily do, do it. Try a cuisine you've never eaten. Drive home via a different, scenic route. Listen to music you'd ordinarily tune out. You'll discover that small gestures pack a powerful emotional energy punch.

    2. Reclaim life's meaning.

    So many of the patients in my psychotherapy practice tell me that their lives used to have meaning, but that somewhere along the line things went stale. The foundation is there, but the urgency is missing.

    The first step in solving this meaning shortage is to figure out what you really care about, then do something about it. That's what meaning is: a heartfelt concern that is woven into your everyday life. A case in point is Ivy, 57, a pioneer in investment banking. "I mistakenly believed that all the money I made would mean something," she says. "But I feel rudderless, like a 22-year-old wondering what to do with her life." Ivy's solution? She started a program that shows Wall Streeters how to donate time and money to underprivileged children. In the process, Ivy infused meaning into her own life.


    3. Put yourself in the fun zone.

    Most of us grown-ups are seriously fun-deprived, and it shows in our flagging energy levels. High-energy people have the same day-to-day grinds as the rest of us, but they manage to find something enjoyable in every situation. A real-estate broker I know, whose work load is enormous, keeps herself amused -- and energized -- on the job by mentally redecorating the houses she shows to clients. "I love imagining what even the most dilapidated fixer-upper could look like with a little TLC," she says. "It's a challenge -- and the least desirable properties are usually the most fun."

    We all define fun differently, of course, but I can vouch for this: If you lighten up and inject just a bit of it into your day, your energy will zoom.


    4. Bid farewell to guilt and regret.

    Everyone's past is filled with regrets, mistakes, and missed opportunities that still cause pain. These feelings are an index of our humanity, evidence that we have a heart and a conscience. But from an emotional energy point of view, they are deadweights that keep us from moving forward. While they can't merely be willed away, I do recommend you give yourself a good talking-to. Remind yourself that everyone has negative experiences. But whatever happened is in the past, and nothing can change that. Holding on to the memory only allows the damage to continue into the present.

    5. Keep your flywheel spinning.

    People always talk about finding a passion, but something that exalted can end up being more draining than energizing. That's why I talk about flywheels, mechanical devices that store energy, then give it back to you as needed. High-energy people always have a flywheel -- an interest they connect with, no matter how eccentric. For Leslie, 29, that flywheel is collecting antique recipes. She loves to browse secondhand bookstores for old cookbooks. "I feel like an archaeologist who finds a rare dinosaur bone, only I bring the dinosaur back to life," she says.

    If you don't have a flywheel, find one. Anything fun and absorbing will do, from bike riding to gardening. Anticipating the activity can get you up in the morning and get you through an otherwise blah day.

    6. Make up your mind.

    Say you've been thinking about cutting your hair short. Will it look stylish -- or too extreme? You endlessly mull it over, debate the matter with friends. Having the decision hanging over your head is a huge energy drain. High-energy people make a choice and don't look back. The emotionally exhausted stay stuck, forever vacillating. Every time you can't decide, you burden yourself with alternatives. How to break the impasse? Quit thinking that you have to make the right decision; instead, make a good-enough decision. Any decision. Decide what you're going to eat tonight. Then decide about the haircut. That will get you in the ballpark of deciding about your future. In emotional energy land, what matters is ending your ambivalence.


    7. Give to get.

    Emotional energy has a kind of magical quality: The more you give, the more you get back. This underscores the fundamental difference between emotional energy and physical energy. With the latter, you have to get it to be able to give it. With emotional energy, however, you get it by giving it.

    But you have to take specific action. Start by asking everyone you meet, "How are you?" as if you really want to know, then listen to the reply. Be the one who hears. Most of us also need to smile more often. If you don't smile at the person you love first thing in the morning, you're sucking energy out of your relationship. Finally, help another person -- and make the help real, concrete. Give a massage to someone you love, run an errand for him, or cook her dinner. Then, expand the circle to work. Try going through an entire day asking yourself what you'd do if your goal were to be helpful rather than efficient.

    After all, if it's true that what goes around comes around, why not make sure that what's circulating around you is the good stuff?



    Source:Hindustanis.org

    Time Management for Busy Parents















    We often think about saving money for our kids. But how often do you think about saving TIME for them? Here are some tips you can start using today.
    Make Family a Priority

    Prioritize your time. The biggest mistake people make is failing to prioritize their time. Example: At the office, rather than working on the big projects early in the day when they are freshest, many men work on their mail or phone call list. Later in the day, when they are tired, they try to turn to the important projects. The result: feeling overwhelmed by a "lack of time."

    Keep a daily "To Do" list. To help prioritize tasks, make a "To Do" list and prioritize the items on the list. Be sure to include both family and work activities for that day. Make sure your family comes out high on your list of daily priorities. Share this list with your family as a way to help keep you motivated to stick to your priorities and as a subtle means of emphasizing how high up they are on your list.

    Don't worry if you don't finish all things on your list; most people don't. The important thing is getting the highest priority items completed, and that should include spending time with your family.

    Root Out Time-Wasters

    Turn off the television. Television is the great family-time killer. Limiting both your own and your children's television viewing will greatly increase the amount of time you have available to spend with each other.

    Eliminate time-wasting habits. Many people spend too much time on activities that are relatively unimportant or could be accomplished in much less time. Example: Spending 45 minutes reading the newspaper, when a quick scan of the headlines will give you essentially the same information. It's a good idea to monitor your daily habits and search for ways to reduce the time you spend doing them.

    Practice Efficiency

    Prepare for the day the night before. Using the night before to prepare for the next day is a great time-saver because it allows you to use the morning, when you are at your best, to accomplish the important tasks.

    • Lay out your work clothes for the next day before you go to bed.

    • Put your coffeemaker on a timer so your wake-up brew is already made when you wake up.

    • Organize your briefcase the night before and place it by the front door or in the car.

    • Make your daily "To Do" list before you go to bed instead of first thing in the morning.


    Learn to do several things at once. Many tasks take only a few moments, such as reading a memo or opening mail. Learn to use spare moments to get these tasks accomplished. Examples:


    • When put on hold during a telephone call, put the call on speaker phone and use the time to read a memo or open a letter.

    • Take a small tape recorder with you when running errands or traveling in a car and create oral memos that can be typed up by you or your secretary later on.


    Use e-mail instead of letters and phone calls. The informality of e-mail means you will spend less time communicating compared to writing a letter or playing phone tag.

    Delegate low-priority jobs. Not everything needs to be done by you personally. The key to effective time management is delegating everything you can.

    Overcome Perfectionism

    Fight the urge to be perfect. Perfectionism is the enemy of time. Most tasks only require that they be "good enough," not perfect. Remember, your family is really job number one. When faced with a task that competes with family time, ask yourself: "Which is more important, that this task be done perfectly or that I spend this time with my family?"

    And don't confuse neatness with efficient time management. Some people spend half their day organizing their desk. As long as your clutter is organized, you'll do fine.



    Source:Hindustanis.org