Looks like the mild winter worked well for the local turkey population — should be a good season for local hunters! Click images to enlarge…
On respect for the American flag…
I don’t know why this bothers me so much, but a local dairy in our area is not only flying a Mexican flag on the same pole, but their American flag is in SHAMEFUL condition…


The flag should be cleaned and mended when necessary. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette
When a flag is so worn it is no longer fit to serve as a symbol of our country, it should be destroyed by burning in a dignified manner. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette
When flown with the national banner of other countries, each flag must be displayed from a separate pole of the same height. Each flag should be the same size. They should be raised and lowered simultaneously. The flag of one nation may not be displayed above that of another nation. Source: USFlag.org: A website dedicated to the Flag of the United States of America – Flag Etiquette
Call the owner and let him know how you feel! Or, maybe we should set up a fund to buy this ‘poor’ farmer a new flag…
Duescher’s Legendairy Farms
N6388 Longfellow Rd, Algoma, WI 54201
(920) 487-2040
P.S. Here’s an Italian company in Ashwaubenon that gets it!

It’s not magic, it’s effective
Positive thinking works because it gets to the root of success: taking back your power and mastering your own destiny. The power of positive thinking doesn’t come from magic, it comes from a shift to a more effective mental state and the powerful action that it inspires.
It’s effective for many rational and powerful reasons – when you use it to get in the driver’s seat of your own life.
via A Rational Defense of Positive Thinking: It’s Not Magic, It’s Effective « Marie Wetmore.
Follow the ‘via’ link above to read more of Marie’s perspective — it’s a well written post that’s worth the trip…
The sum of living…
Not what we would, but what we must, makes up the sum of living. — Richard Henry Stoddard
On balancing energy…
Kristin Barton Cuthriell has an excellent post on balancing energy. She says…
What would happen if you were to drive your car without ever stopping to refuel? You guessed it. You would run out of gas. Your body is no different. If you continue to run, without taking time to refuel, you too, will stop. Your body needs to maintain a balance of energy to function properly.
We are going to take a moment to talk about this balancing of energy; balancing the energy coming into your body, input energy, and energy leaving your body, expenditure energy. Optimal wellness depends on maintaining a healthy balance of these two different types of energy.
Lets look at some examples of both input energy and expenditure energy.
Go to the source if you’d like more and follow her blog if you like what you see there!
Gratitude and forgiveness…
“Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow.” ~Melody Beattie
Follow the ‘via’ link above if you’d like to read the rest of Melody Beattie’s post…
Set your mind free
“Would you rather be right or free?” ~Byron Katie
via Tiny Wisdom: Set Your Mind Free | Tiny Buddha: Wisdom Quotes, Letting Go, Letting Happiness In.
The kind of supper you would remember…
One of my favorite Christian writers Jon Swanson has an excellent reflection on the Last Supper today…
“I am leaving soon. Just as I’ve been telling you for months. You will keep seeing each other, but I’ll be gone, taking care of our business. This bread? Every time you eat it, remember this time. Remember my hands. This wine? Every time you drink it, remember that what’s about to happen is for you.”
If you heard that, you’d remember. Your whole life would remember.
Source: The kind of supper you would remember. | 300 words a day
Go to the source if you’d like to read the entire post. Follow his blog while you’re there…
Choose…
“The last, if not the greatest, of the human freedoms: to choose their own attitude in any given circumstance.”
– Bruno Bettelheim
Stand up to your fear of abandonment
Melody Beattie writes…
Many of us have a fear of abandonment. Some of us let it rule our lives. We’ll do anything just so that person doesn’t walk out and leave us alone.
I spent many years letting fear of abandonment control me. After a while, I finally wore out that belief. I just got sick and tired of worrying about whether I was good enough for that person.
Then a new thought set me free: If you don’t want to be my friend, or my lover, or my employer, I don’t want you in my life.
No more emotional blackmail. No more stress. No more having to second-guess what that other person is feeling.
Are you spending your time worried about someone leaving you? Does your fear of being abandoned leave you feeling like an underdog in your relationships? Let it go. Stand fast. And listen to what I’m about to tell you: If that person doesn’t want to be in your life, just let him or her leave. Do you want someone in your life who really doesn’t want to be there? Of course not. Let him or her go.
Once you adopt this belief, it’s easy to send the bad relationships packing, and the good people want to stay.
God, help me believe that I deserve only the best of relationships.
Source: April 5: Stand Up to Your Fear of Abandonment | Language of Letting Go
Related articles
- Relationships and Fear (whollyhappy.wordpress.com)
- Getting over Fear (plantfueled.wordpress.com)
- From Frozen Feelings to Fear to Freedom (michelewhitney.wordpress.com)
- Go easy (toddlohenry.com)
- Thursday Quote – Melody Beattie (elizaggie.wordpress.com)
Dare to be selfish
Jason Moskovitz writes…
This is not a call to be careless or to be preoccupied with yourself. This is not a call to be full of yourself. I would argue that many of us are far less than full of ourselves. I urge you to fill your self up MORE.
We all have mothers. Many of them are naturally giving—often to a fault. In this day, mothers often find themselves parenting, working, and socializing at the same time, with less support from our communities when compared to traditional times when it literally took a village to raise a child.
Whether you are a parent, an artist, an athlete, or a giver of any kind—many of us can give too much. Maybe we give as part of our nature, maybe we focus on the needs of others as a way to distract from our own needs and desires.We burn ourselves out. We empty ourselves.
Now is the time to become self-centered. Focus on what makes you happy. Focus on what you want. Be that strongest link that holds your family, your workplace, and your community together for the long haul. Here are nine things to assist in filling yourself up…
I have found recently that if you don’t take care of yourself in a healthy way it’s hard to take care of your responsibilities in a healthy way. Go to the source if you’d like to see the 9 ways…
A powerful three-step algorithm for happiness
Another powerful post from Leo Babauta…
Today I’m going to share a really simple secret that can make your day instantly better. If you’re feeling down, it can make you happier, all day long.
It’s something I’ve been trying myself, with great results.
It’s three steps, and anyone can do them. This is an algorithm that can be repeated over and over, all day long. It starts with a basic assumption: that we are all human beings capable of goodness, of love, of pain, of broken hearts and passionate love. That we all have bad days, that inside our jaded exteriors is a person who just wants love.
It is based on my observation that we take other people for granted, and that we judge others and become irritated with them for almost no good reasons, and we expect everyone to make us happy or at least behave the way we want them to, and if they don’t, our day is ruined. That’s crazy. People are living their own lives, and aren’t trying to please us or act in accordance with our expectations, and once we accept that, we can be happy.
Here are the three steps. They might sound silly to some of you, but I urge you to give them a try. For just one day. Even just an hour. They are powerful, and they work.
Source: » A Powerful Three-Step Algorithm for Happiness :zenhabits
Go to the source if you’d like the 3 steps…
We are held back by the love we do not extend now…
“We are not held back by the love we didn’t receive in the past, but by the love we’re not extending in the present.”
– Marianne Williamson
via Today’s Quotes: We Are Held Back By The Love We Do Not Extend NOW!.
More ideas for my WordPress.com blogging friends…
Out of ideas for your blog posts? Make them come to you using Google Alerts!
Google Alerts are email updates of the latest relevant Google results (web, news, etc.) based on your queries. Google Alerts – Monitor the Web for interesting new content
You’ll find a fine list of Google Alerts tutorials here…
If you really want to take it up a notch, learn how to use Google Reader to create a virtual newspaper to track the sites and searches that interest you. I’ve written a free ebook on the topic of ‘personal news aggregation’ or ‘How to create your own personal news agency’. It’s free for registering at http://e1evation.com/pna/. Oh, and I started a new category called ‘blogging tips’ for you. If you want more, come follow me at http://e1evation.com…
Questions? Feedback? Get on it! :-D
I talk frequently about curation and what a valuable tool it is. I teach my students and clients that the time to curate content like this is when you find the paragraphs you WISH you’d written and you can add value to the curated content in the process. Jeff Goins is one of the most influential writers in social media and he recently shared this:
The privilege of leadership used to belong to a select few. The social elite. The especially charismatic. The unbelievably successful.
You used to have to be the head of your own organization. Or carry a prestigious title. Influence was earned slowly over time. And few had access to it.
But now, that’s all changed.
In the age of ideas when the exchange of information is as easy as a click of the button, anyone can be a leader. In the traditional sense, leadership is dead, and influence has replaced it.
So what do you — someone who wants to lead — do?
Become a thought leader
There’s a war out there, old friend. A world war. And it’s not about who’s got the most bullets. It’s about who controls the information. What we see and hear, how we work, what we think… it’s all about the information!
—Cosmo, SneakersStart a blog. Launch a podcast. Begin recording videos of yourself and posting them on YouTube. Share your ideas with the world, and see which ones spread. This is what you need to do to see your influence grow.
In the age of the iPod, when we have instant access to gigabytes of teaching for free, the person with the best data (not the most) wins.
We don’t need more information. We need better information. We need compelling reasons to believe in a cause worth following. And those sharing them will be the leaders of tomorrow.
So where do you begin?
How about with collecting information? With becoming a learner (again)?
As they say, “leaders are readers.” But leaders are also conversationalists and event attendees.
They take people out to coffee and make friends at a party. Introvert or extrovert, they put themselves out there.
And if you want to lead, you will have to do the same.
An opportunity to lead (and learn)
Be honest. You don’t need more information. You need better discernment. I recently heard Alli Worthington share the following:
I hate it when people say they don’t know how to do something… Have you heard of Google?!
We all know this. Still, we struggle with knowing what information to believe or follow. So many choices, so little results. We just get paralyzed.
We need a process to curate. To figure out what works for us and what doesn’t. This is why I love organizations who demonstrate excellence of thought leadership not only through their example, but also through organized efforts to bring ideas and leaders together.
Source: How to Be a Leader in an Age of Information Overload | Goins, Writer
Me? I think Michael Moon of Gistics nailed it in his epic book Firebrands back in 1996. Moon hypothesized that we have now entered into a “5th Era” of man; the era of ‘trust networks’…
The potential that Jeff Goins describes is to use the “good, fast, and cheap” publishing tools available to us to become a ‘thought leader’ who heads up a trust network. If you’re intrigued by Jeff’s ideas but have no clue as to where to start comment below or use the ‘connect’ form; I offer the tools and the tactics – a ‘process for curation’ that can help you establish a thought leadership position through effective content management and content marketing…
Empty-handed, full-hearted
Leo Babauta shared this back in March…
We often load ourselves up when we travel, because we want to be prepared for various situations. This burden of being prepared leaves us with our arms full, unable to receive whatever is there when we arrive.
It leaves us tired from carrying, so that we are not happy when we meet someone new on our travels.
What if we traveled with empty hands, ready to embrace new experiences, receive new foods, touch new people?
We might feel less prepared when we leave, but the preparedness is an illusion. Stuff doesn’t make us prepared. Having empty hands but a heart that is full of love leaves us prepared for anything. Continue reading “Empty-handed, full-hearted”
When you believe something can be done…
When you believe something can be done, really believe, your mind will find ways to do it.







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