…but while it was responsive it did not have custom posts, hence, back to the old look. Click the image for things to think about when choosing a theme…
Things to think about when picking a WordPress.com theme
You want one that is responsive and has customs posts at the very least. Here’s how to find them…
Things to think about when picking a WordPress.com theme
You want one that is responsive and has customs posts at the very least. Here’s how to find them…

Little Duck’s Thoughts
#zenduck!
Inspired by:
I’ll tell you what love of this life is.
It’s looking up
through trees newly bare of leaves
and seeing there the oldest road,
a broken line of white stars
stretching out across the sky.
It’s thinking,
this could be enough.– Susan Elbe, Light Made From Nothing
Credits: Little Duck Comic Adapted from Poorly Drawn Lines. Susan Elbe quote: Whiskey River
Chocolate. Now. Full Stop.
Ahhh. Zen and the Art of Chocolate! :-D
Todd Masonis, the co-founder of Dandelion Chocolate, a beautiful little chocolate factory/shop on Valencia Street shares some tips on tasting chocolate in a post titled the Art of Tasting Chocolate Mindfully. Here’s a few excerpts of his tips (along with my editorial comments of course):
1) “The first step is to slow down. Before you rip apart the packaging and dig in, take a moment to read about the bar…Chocolate makers think through countless decisions and this is our opportunity to share our perspective. Even the physicality of our packaging should draw you into the chocolate experience. In our case, the handmade cotton paper should feel soft. Like our bars, the slightly imperfect screenprinting should reinforce the touch-of-the-hand craftsmanship that goes into each of our bars….” (DK: Really. Slow down, huh? Hmmmm. Let’s try step two.)
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Twitter embed test…
Did you know you can embed single or multiple tweets in a WordPress post? It’s easy and it looks good…
10 things business should learn from 'Star Trek' – Denver Business Journal http://t.co/vimUu25cpM
— Todd Lohenry (@toddlohenry) July 19, 2013
Come on, humans :D
…via Tumblr.
My thought leadership workflow is so simple…
…that you can get great results from a $249 Chromebook and less than $25 per year*. Internet connection required… :-D

*Does not include training or consulting fees…
Simplicity
Thoughts that guide me. Click image to enlarge…
Is it Time for a Digital Detox?
This year, I completely unplugged on my birthday. I wish I could say it was intentional, but it had more to do with poor phone reception and not wanting to pay for wireless internet. Nontheless, the benefits of being disconnected from the internet and present with my family were wonderful. Seems like it’s a trend:
Randi Zuckerberg called it exactly right. In her recent roundup of the top 10 social media trends, the former Facebook chief marketing officer said it was time for a digital detox, arguing that people need to understand that while “the phone is an amazing tool… we own our devices, they don’t own us.”
Picking up on the same theme, Alice G. Walton recently wrote in Forbes that our dependence on mobile technology could be harming our mental health, noting:
“It may be time to take the workday back, at least in part, and when it comes to responding to a colleague at some ungodly hour, to just say ‘no.’ Or at least, ‘I’ll get back to you during business hours’.”
via Is it Time for a Digital Detox? | Innovation Insights | Wired.com.
Millennials. Listen up.
This as much for anyone still in the workforce as it is for millennials! Good catch, David…
#2: Writing Effectively. My 10th Grade English teacher underscored this for me YEARS ago. And I see too much today that hurts the eyes.
Source: Pewresearch
Simplify Your Life…
…via Tumblr.
A story about George Washington…

Have you ever heard this one?
About a dozen years before the Revolutionary War, tensions increased in America between the British and the French with their Indian allies, resulting in battles.
The most notable period of the French and Indian Wars lasted from 1754 to 1763. It is considered the first global war, as allies of the French and English fought all around the world.
On July 9, 1755, about 1,400 British troops marched over the Appalachian Mountains to seize French Fort Duquesne, near present day Pittsburgh. As they marched through a deep wooded ravine along the Monongahela River eight miles from the fort, they were ambushed by French regulars, Canadians, and Potawatomi and Ottawa Indians.
Not accustomed to fighting unless in an open field, over 900 British soldiers were annihilated.
It was known as the Battle of the Wilderness or Battle of Monongahela.
23-year-old Virginia Colonel George Washington rode back and forth during the battle delivering orders for General Edward Braddock, the Commander-in-Chief of British forces in America.
Eventually, Braddock was killed and every officer on horseback was shot, except Washington.
Washington carried Braddock from the field.
Braddock’s field desk was captured, revealing all of the British military plans, enabling the French to surprise and defeat British forces in succeeding battles at Fort Oswego, Fort William Henry, Fort Duquesne, and Carillon. The Iroquois tribes of Senecas and Cayugas decided to switch their allegiance to the French.
Before he died, Braddock gave Washington his battle uniform sash, which Washington reportedly carried with him while serving as Commander-in-Chief and as President.
Washington presided at the burial service for General Braddock, as the chaplain was wounded. Braddock’s body was buried in the middle of the road so as to prevent his body from being found and desecrated.
Shortly thereafter, writing from Fort Cumberland, George Washington described the Battle of Monongahela to his younger brother, John Augustine Washington, JULY 18, 1755:
“As I have heard, since my arrival at this place, a circumstantial account of my death and dying speech, I take this early opportunity of contradicting the first, and of assuring you, that I have not as yet composed the latter.
But by the All-Powerful Dispensations of Providence, I have been protected beyond all human probability or expectation; for I had four bullets through my coat, and two horses shot under me, yet escaped unhurt, although death was leveling my companions on every side of me!”
An Indian warrior later declared:
“Washington was never born to be killed by a bullet! I had seventeen fair fires at him with my rifle and after all could not bring him to the ground!”















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