ANGST

Very Demotivational – The Demotivational Posters Blog via ANGST.

Garden Party

Pops Digital via Garden Party.

Never-Before-Seen Blues Brothers Photographs by Norman Seeff, 1978/1981

Retronaut. Get more here: Never-Before-Seen Blues Brothers Photographs by Norman Seeff, 1978/1981.

How to break habits

Comforting Glow

Pops Digital via Comforting Glow.

:-D

via A Saturday morning cartoon. For more: http://nyr.kr/NbsPDT.

Get and find

“Since sex got easier to get, love got harder to find” via Get and find « emocrippled.

I’m a rock star at rocky times

If that’s not true for you fake it ’til you make it! notsalmon via I’m a rock star at rocky times.

THE HOME ADVANTAGE

 

COURSE HERO INFOGRAPHIC: THE HOME ADVANTAGE | Course Hero.

Failure Is the New Success

Five or six years ago, I wrote 100 pages of a non-fiction book about failure.

And guess what?

It failed to sell to a publisher!

I love that punch-line — now — but at the time, the failure of my failure book made me feel like a total loser. No one was buying failure at the time as a general topic — even all tarted up with a “positive” title like “Failure: A Love Story,” since failure, especially financial, wasn’t as widespread as it is now. The fact that my own personal economic recession started long before everyone else’s — before the actual and legitimate economic recession — was embarrassing, and alienating. Back then, failure was failure, plain and simple: a shameful little secret you confessed to as few people as possible, not only to preserve your own dignity but also to spare others the discomfort of dealing with your lack of success.

It’s different now!

Failure is cool! Failure is hip!

Failure has had a complete make-over and rebranding!

Failure has become a competitive sport everyone wants to win at! via Failure Is the New Success | Psychology Today.

Meanwhile in Canada

 

MEANWHILE.. – Very Demotivational – The Demotivational Posters Blog.

Connecting the dots…

  1. Newsflash! You’re not perfect and it doesn’t matter…

  2. Looking for some good curation tips? I did a hangout on that yesterday…
  3. Just in case you missed this profound tweets…

  4. toddlohenry
    Guy Hijacks Wedding With Fabulous “Proud Mary” Performance http://bit.ly/LPkwia
    Sat, Jun 23 2012 09:20:07
  5. toddlohenry
    Six-year-old Boy Declares the Word “Perfect” to Be Extinct http://bit.ly/KseH4E
    Sat, Jun 23 2012 08:30:17
  6. toddlohenry
    TGIF! Security Cameras Don’t Just Capture Crime, They Capture Life http://bit.ly/LcvB78
    Fri, Jun 22 2012 18:50:07
  7. toddlohenry
    Could a little Wabi Sabi be the answer to a successful relationship? http://bit.ly/MCDmpb
    Fri, Jun 22 2012 18:00:44

Work and recovery

Melody Beattie writes this about work:

Just as we have relationship histories, most of us have work histories.

Just as we have a present circumstance to accept and deal with in our relationship life, we have a present circumstance to accept and deal with in our work life.

Just as we develop a healthy attitude toward our relationship history – one that will help us learn and move forward – we can develop a healthy attitude toward our work history.

I have worked many jobs in my life, since I was eleven years old. Just as I have learned many things about myself through my relationships, I have learned many lessons through my work. Often, these lessons run parallel to the lessons I’m learning in other areas of my life.

I have worked at jobs I hated but was temporarily dependent on. I have gotten stuck in jobs because I was afraid to strike out on my own and find my next set of circumstances.

I have been in some jobs to develop skills. Sometimes, I didn’t realize I was developing those skills until later on when they become an important part of the career of my choice.

I have worked at jobs where I felt victimized, where I gave and gave and received nothing in return. I have been in relationships where I manufactured similar feelings.

I have worked at some jobs that have taught me what I absolutely didn’t want; others sparked in me an idea of what I really did want and deserve in my career.

Some of my jobs have helped me develop character; others have helped me fine tune skills. They have all been a place to practice recovery behaviors.

Just as I have had to deal with my feelings and messages about myself in relationships, I have had to deal with my feelings and messages about myself, and what I believed I deserved at work.

I have been through two major career changes in my life. I learned that neither career was a mistake and no job was wasted time. I have learned something from each job, and my work history has helped create who I am.

I learned something else: there was a Plan, and I was being led. The more I trusted my instincts, what I wanted, and what felt right, the more I felt that I was being led.

The more I refused to lose my soul to a job and worked at it because I wanted to and not for the paycheck, the less victimized I felt by any career, even those jobs that paid a meager salary. The more I set goals and took responsibility for achieving the career I wanted, the more I could decide whether a particular job fit into that scheme of things. I could understand why I was working at a particular job and how that was going to benefit me.

There are times I have even panicked at work and about where I was in my employment history. Panic never helped. Trust and working my program did.

There were times I looked around and wondered why I was where I was. There were times people thought I should be someplace different. But when I looked into myself and at God, I knew I was in the right place, for the moment.

There were times I have had to quit a job and walk away in order to be true to myself. Sometimes, that was frightening. Sometimes, I felt like a failure. But I learned this: If I was working my program and true to myself, I never had to fear where I was being led.

There have been times I couldn’t survive on the small amount of money I was receiving. Instead of bringing that issue to a particular employer and making it his or her fault, I have had to learn to bring the issue to my Higher Power and myself. I’ve learned I’m responsible for setting my boundaries and establishing what I believe I deserve. I’ve also learned God, not a particular employer, is my source of guidance.

I’ve learned that I’m not stuck or trapped in a job no more than I am in a relationship. I have choices. I may not be able to see them clearly right now, but I do have choices. I’ve learned that if I really want to take care of myself in a particular way on a job, I will do that. And if I really want to be victimized by a job, I will allow that to happen too.

I am responsible for my choices, and I have choices.

Above all else, I’ve learned to accept and trust my present circumstances at work. That does not mean to submit; it does not mean to forego boundaries. It means to trust, accept, then take care of myself the best I’m able to on any given day.

God, help me bring my recovery behaviors to my career affairs.” via Thought for the Day — Hazelden.

Terrifying Photo From Vacation Bible School #awkward

Terrifying Photo From Vacation Bible School. #awkward

Uh-oh once again…

This cartoon perfectly illustrates a profound thought. I think that when we die we will ALL find out that we were wrong. Christians, I believe that in the first ‘Monday morning meeting’ in Heaven, God will say in his best Dr. Phil imitation “Dudes — this denomination thing. What were you thinking?” Religion is man’s feeble attempt to placate and ultimately control God. God, however, has a different plan I believe. He says:

1Cor 2:9: “as it is written:

“What no eye has seen,
what no ear has heard,
and what no human mind has conceived”[b]
the things God has prepared for those who love him—

10 these are the things God has revealed to us by his Spirit.

The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God. 11 For who knows a person’s thoughts except their own spirit within them? In the same way no one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. 12 What we have received is not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, so that we may understand what God has freely given us. 13 This is what we speak, not in words taught us by human wisdom but in words taught by the Spirit, explaining spiritual realities with Spirit-taught words.[c] 14 The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit.

I’m fully aware I may be wrong about everything I believe, but I think God is more about relationship than religion. Cartoon via Anderson Layman’s Blog Uh-oh once again…………...

Directness

Melody Beattie shares this:

We feel safe around direct, honest people. They speak their minds, and we know where we stand with them.

Indirect people, people who are afraid to say who they are, what they want, and what they’re feeling, cannot be trusted. They will somehow act out their truth even though they do not speak it. And it may catch everyone by surprise.

Directness saves time and energy. It removes us as victims. It dispenses with martyrdom and games. It helps us own our power. It creates respectful relationships.

It feels safe to be around direct, honest people. Be one.

Today, I will own my power to be direct. I do not have to be pas­sive, nor do I need to be aggressive. I will become comfortable with my own truth, so those around me can become comfortable with me.” via June 23: Directness.

Slow down. It’s Saturday!

Nicholas Bate via Mmmm.

Good question…

“Why do I have to be an example for your kid? You be an example for your own kid.” Bob Gibson via Good advice………………….

Milky Way Over The Himalayas

h/t Steve Anderson Milky Way Over The Himalayas.

People You Need To Unfriend On Facebook Immediately

Here’s how to play: First, sign into your Facebook account. Then click the link below each picture to see a list of all your friends who have “liked” the following things. If no results show up for an item, it means that you must have some pretty cool friends! Get more here: People You Need To Unfriend On Facebook Immediately.

21 Pictures That Will Restore Your Faith In Humanity

Christians at the gay pride parade in Chicago…

A response from a parade participant…

Get more here: 21 Pictures That Will Restore Your Faith In Humanity.

Start a Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑