When Life Is Sweet

Live Life Quotes, Love Life Quotes, Live Life Happy

via When Life Is Sweet.

The Awkward Pet Photo Gallery

AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com

via The Awkward Pet Photo Gallery Presented by PetSmart Charities.

Good Things Come To Those Who Believe

Live Life Quotes, Love Life Quotes, Live Life Happy

via Good Things Come To Those Who Belive.

I Don’t Know A Perfect Person

Live Life Quotes, Love Life Quotes, Live Life Happy

via I Don’t Know A Perfect Person.

The (Obvious) Truth About the 5-Second Rule

Uggh!

A recent video that’s racked up four million views and counting is really making me regret eating the apple I dropped on the floor. V Sauce creator and host Michael Stevens dives into the “five-second rule” myth to see if food on the floor can be spared if picked up in a flash.

The answer? Well, nope. Stevens discusses evidence from a study in the Journal of Applied Microbiology that tested the five-second rule. Researchers examined the survival of salmonella placed on wood, tile, and carpet after bologna was dropped on the ground. They found bacteria were transferred almost immediately to the deli meat from each surface[1]. What’s worse: After five seconds, the bologna adhered up to 8,000 bacteria. After a minute, that number increased tenfold.

via The (Obvious) Truth About the 5-Second Rule [VIDEO] | Greatist.

Choose a victor lens on your life

@notsalmon

via Choose a victor lens on your life.

5 Questions to Ask Yourself Before You Say Anything

LindseyRamage340There is a new contributor at MindBodyGreen, Lindsey Ramage. She shares:

“Before you speak, ask yourself: is it kind, is it necessary, is it true, does it improve on the silence?” – Sai Baba

Ask anyone who knows me and they’ll tell you that I’m quite a talker.

I love words.

They run fluidly from my brain and through my veins. Adrenalized. Excited. Anxious. They are ready to inspire. To heal. To touch. To move.

I remember being a child, sitting on the floor in my over sized T-shirt and striped leg warmers, writing in my Lisa Frank journal, knowing that I would someday make a difference with my words.

But what good are words if they are not compassionate, full of validity, or essential?

This Sai Baba quote above means a lot to me. What’s most moving to me is when he asks “does it improve on the silence?”

We hear, read, and exchange words all day long, but only the most stirring words affect us in the quiet hours of our day.

What are your words really saying?

Here are five questions to ask yourself the next time you’re in a conversation to be sure that you’re using your words to spread love and kindness:

1. Am I being mindful?

It’s so important to be mindful during conversations. It’s normal for our minds to wander when our co-worker is talking about her daughter’s recital, but is it polite? Are we genuinely listening? If there is one thing people have in common, it’s that we all just want to be heard! We want validation.

When you are sincerely listening to the person who is talking to you, they can feel it. It makes them feel valuable and worthy of your time. By being fully present during conversation, we create the power to change our relationships.

2. Is there a kinder way to say what I’m about to say?

We have all had that moment of instant regret as those last words left our mouth, or as I like to call it…word vomit. By allowing a short moment of silence in between our sentences we eliminate those impulsive and hurtful remarks and make way for a more kind and compassionate approach to our response!

3. Am I being honest?

As the saying goes, If you tell the truth, you don’t have to remember anything!

It’s plain and simple: keep it honest, be sincere, and always be trustworthy! Even if the truth hurts, you will most likely be well respected in the end for your honesty!

4. Am I speaking with purpose?

Challenge yourself to only speak with motive. You will find that your voice will be of more importance to others around you if you keep your words wise, short, and sweet.

5. Would silence a better choice right now?

Every so often, silence says more than words ever could. As I stated before, we all just want to be heard. Sometimes the most loving thing you can do for another person is sit with them in their grief. Be an open ear. Free of all judgement. Just present, loving, and listening.

via 5 Questions to Ask Yourself Before You Say Anything.

I look forward to more from her!

Google looks back on 2012

Seems a little early for this, but here goes:

How to Make Your Best Decisions Ever!

Kute-Blackson-261x300.pngKute Blackson shares this:

Everyday we are faced with so many decisions.

We are blessed.

However, many choices can sometimes feel overwhelming.

Should I go do this or that?

Making a clear decision can be hard and lead to indecisiveness at times.

When you try to choose simply with your mind, there is often confusion.

Have you ever experienced this?

The mind is constantly changing. One minute it wants to turn left, the next minute it tells you to turn right.

When you are faced with a tough decision or choice to make, it is important to feel deeper than your mind.

There is a part of us all that already knows everything since at the deepest level we are everything. The mind is limited and can only see from a limited viewpoint.

Usually, there is a flash of intuition or guidance that knows exactly what to do, yet we often don’t trust it fully.

We go into the mind and begin to question what we are guided to do, or the decision we know we need to make deep down. Perhaps it’s a relationship that we are considering entering or leaving; perhaps it’s traveling to some place, or moving to a different city. Whatever it might be, when you own that you DO know, whether that knowing is conscious or not, you do know. Then it allows the space for the knowing to rise to the surface of your awareness for you to consciously acknowledge it.

So, take a step back and feel deeper.” Full story at: How to Make Your Best Decisions Ever!.

Time for a course correction? Updated 12/13/2012

Here’s another post in an infrequent series that I do to give back to the WordPress.com community

A famous comment usually attributed to Lord Leverhulme goes: “I know that half of my advertising budget is wasted, but I’m not sure which half”. The same is true of your blogging and social media time! How can you tell if you’re on track? Which 50% is working? What can you do if you’re off course? Well, the simplest way may be to check your WordPress.com stats for the past year and see what links people are actually clicking on…

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Click to enlarge…

…then give them more of what they like and less of what they don’t! @jonswanson reminded me that reviewing your mosts popular posts and doing more like them is a good review do to as well!

12-13-2012 6-26-13 AM

Another interesting way is to add twitter tool Twylah to your mix. Twylah brings your brand message into focus, extends the life of your tweets, and helps you get discovered beyond Twitter. Twitter you say? I don’t even use that! Well, you might want to start! I use the sharing feature in the WordPress settings to send every WordPress post to Twitter as a way of amplifying my posts. I also use Twitter to share articles that I don’t feel like sharing on the blog. Together — my blog posts and my tweets — create what I call a lifestream and Twylah is the place where I put that lifestream. Twylah automagically organizes my lifestream by topic and gives me a pretty good indication of how the internet views my lifestream. If the topics are way off, it might be time for a course correction! If the topics look like who you want to be known as, then Twylah provides that validation as well…

12-12-2012 5-44-39 AM

Another reason why I love Twylah in closing is that I can host Twylah on my domain so that I can effectively add Twylah to my WordPress.com blog and get Search Engine Optimization [SEO] benefits from my tweets as well. Oh, and did I mention that Twylah is free?

Blogging in the WordPress.com community is fun, but if you actually want to be recognized as an authority in an area and get found when people are looking for you, these two tools may be all you need to amp your internet presence! Oh, and by the way if you’re looking for WordPress.com or ‘thought leadership’ marketing coaching, you can stop by my business site at http://e1evation.com/services/

How to Blame Effectively!

Blame effectively? WTH? Isn’t blaming BAD? Christine Hassler shares this perspective:

Last week I attended Date with Destiny, which was my first Tony Robbins event. Tony is truly masterful at what he does and I had the extra bonus of going with Mastin, Jenna, Chris Assaad and Marie Forleo – we had a blast together sharing our breakthroughs and supporting each other.

One powerful takeaway that I wanted to share with you is about how to blame effectively. Tony talks a lot about our stories, which are created by the meaning we give to events in our life.  Our stories usually have a heaping dose of blame mixed into them.  We blame others for hurting us, making us feel a certain way, not behaving the way we wanted them to, etc.  Blame may be comforting because it justifies our hurt; however, it is completely paralyzing because it makes us a victim of our life rather than a co-creator.

Tony’s advice was that if you are going to blame, at least do so effectively by blaming them for all the lessons and blessings that came from what they did or didn’t do. This resonates with what I believe and teach, which is that EVERY person in our life serves our growth.  The Uni-verse makes no accidents in terms of who the cast of characters are in our life story . . . BUT we make the mistake of casting too many villains rather than angels in our own story.” Full story at: How to Blame Effectively!.

What has to happen for you to be happy?

Mastin Kipp writes:

One of the coolest ah-ha moments I got from Tony Robbins’s “Date with Destiny” seminar is the idea of what rules we have about what has to happen for us to feel happy or fulfilled.

And what’s amazing is that so many of us have rules that make it SO hard for us to be happy or fulfilled that we rarely ever feel like we are.” Full story at: What has to happen for you to be happy?.

The Illusion of Waiting for the Future to Be Happy

“The future is always beginning now.” ~Mark Strand

Full story at:  The Illusion of Waiting for the Future to Be Happy | Tiny Buddha.

The Catch

Straight outta Wisconsin?

AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com AwkwardFamilyPhotos.com

via The Catch.

7 Tips To Help You Slow Down and Enjoy Your Life As It Is

“There is more to life than increasing its speed.” ~Gandhi

Full story at:  7 Tips To Help You Slow Down and Enjoy Your Life As It Is | Tiny Buddha.

Being Open-Minded

Craig Harper shares some thoughts on being open-minded:

If nothing else, the last twenty years have taught me the value of being open-minded. Of being prepared to unlearn. Of being more humble and less self-righteous. Of asking better questions. Of listening to others. And of looking at old things in new ways. They have also taught me that it’s okay to not know things; which is great because I don’t know most things. And that it’s okay to be wrong. And to make mistakes. And to be scared. Which is also great because I’m often wrong, scared and mistaken.

Oh, to be omnipotent.

I’ve also learned that, in many ways, most of us feel obligated to be ‘certain and absolute’ about some things that – if we’re being totally honest – it’s almost impossible to be certain and absolute about. God. Life after death. Love. Relationships. Happiness. The meaning of life. Right. Wrong. Justin Bieber. The Matrix. Just to name a few.

A State of Flux

It’s fair to say that my beliefs, standards, ideas and even my world-view (we all have one) have all changed significantly over the last decade or two. In fact, it’s also fair to say that, in my world, all those things are in a constant state of flux. That is, they are constantly evolving. As am I. They’re always up for discussion. And analysis. Unlike the past, these days I’m not particularly attached to them. Emotionally, that is. I don’t always need to know. I don’t need to be right. And I don’t need to win.

Despite what we’re taught, life is not a competition.

For me, letting go of the need to be right, certain and absolute was one of the most liberating and empowering journeys I’ve ever allowed myself to take. It was like stepping out of chaos and into calm. It was a relief. Looking back, I think it was my insecurity and lack of self-esteem that compelled me to (want to) be all-knowing, certain and right.

Or, at the very least, to appear that way.” Full story at: Being Open-Minded.

I have it within me to rise above whatever is presently bringing me down

@notsalmon

via I have it within me to rise above whatever is presently bringing me down.

10 Best Products That People Don’t Know About

In a typical holiday list of things to buy, I found one entertaining thought. I’d like to see someone actually use this at O’Hare Airport on a busy travel day!

9 other things you can’t live without here: 10 Best Products That People Don’t Know About – Gift Ideas.

May You Have The Courage

Live Life Quotes, Love Life Quotes, Live Life Happy

via May You Have The Courage.

Friend, mentor and client Nilofer Merchant posted recently about the problem of fragmentation:

It’s a fragmented world. And it’s only becoming more so. It used to be that when people wrote, they wrote more deeply. In the early days of the web (pre-twitter), I remember hand picking the few voices I would listen to and then putting them into my RSS feeder and checking for their essays. Essays, not tweets, were the way we shared what we were thinking. But as “content” has become more important to maintain a standing online, more and more people are entering into the fray. More and more people who may not even have a point of view to advocate but just want to participate in the conversation.

As content becomes more fragmented, you could try and compete with that by doing more and more, by curating other people’s content, by then running your content through Twylah, by having that “twitter magazine” come out which puts all your tweets and links in one place so that people can catch it if they missed each particular one.

Or you could do the opposite. You could go deep. You could be that voice that everyone listens to because when it speaks, it is so deep and rich that it’s worth slowing down to listen to. Sort of a Morgan Freeman voice, in the times of Justin Bieber bop. Maybe it will allow the light of an idea to be seen more clearly.” There’s more at the source: In a fragmented world, go deep – Nilofer Merchant

If I were talking with Nilofer, I’d gently push back on this one. ‘Going deep’ does not preclude using Twylah; rather, I think, the answer to fragmentation and ‘going deep’ is focus…

When I first started blogging I was not confident in my own skillset and my focus was a mile wide and six inches deep. My tagline was “Marketing, Sales and Technology for small business, non-profits and academic institutions”. It makes me laugh now because there are no dozen websites that can cover THIS landscape effectively. I used to curate anything and everything related to those topics sometimes posting over 20 times a day! I got traffic but it wasn’t really relevant and it didn’t get me customers. Over time, Nilofer helped me go deep and realize my ‘onlyness’ was really helping thinkers to become thought leaders through the use of a minimal toolkit for content marketing. Now my tagline is “content marketing for thought leadership” and I help experts get found when people are looking for what they do. By going deeper, I may lose the opportunity to develop a small business website but I might gain the opportunity to work with a TED Fellow like Nina Tandon which is much more rewarding in the long run. Now, too, I’m more confident in my onlyness, I only post a couple of times per week…

Nilofer and I have had this discussion before and I think we both agree: If our thoughts are going to resonate with our target audience we need to understand the questions they are asking and align our answers with their queries. If we position ourselves as the obvious answer to the questions of the people we want to attract, we will get found when people are looking for ‘that one voice’. It’s not good enough however simply to think deep thoughts; we need to let people know that we are thinking them. Nilofer is a great thinker on strategy but I direct my energy toward ‘thoughts, tools and tactics’ for content marketing and ‘thought leadership’ marketing; I think the answer here is not either/or it’s both/and. I don’t think Nilofer’s saying that Twylah is a bad thing and I think she’d agree you need to go deep thoughtwise AND master ‘thought leadership’ marketing toolwise because the two go together like peanut butter and chocolate — it’s just that mindlessly tweeting and retweeting doesn’t do much to add value…

In closing, here are the 3 tools I recommend for ‘thought leadership’ marketing:

  • Google Reader
  • WordPress
  • Twylah

Ed. 2019: The current version of this list would be:

  • Google News or Inoreader
  • WordPress
  • Buffer

I posted about them here just last week. They are the tools that will help you get found when you decide to ‘go deep’ and become the one voice [because it doesn’t matter how deep you go if no one can find you]…

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