How to Lead a More Balanced Life

Found this on Michael Hyatt’s blog:

When I’m riding, I have a habit of looking over my shoulder to see if anyone else is coming and also to take a second look at something I just passed. At one point yesterday, traveling twenty mph, I executed my habitual over-the-shoulder look to re-see a beautiful lilac bush.

Turning my gaze forward, I realized I was off balance, heading from the paved path and into the forest where certain death awaited! (Cue dramatic music). A quick correction and I was back on track and not in the hospital.” Full story at: How to Lead a More Balanced Life | Michael Hyatt.

Maybe I’m amazed…

Thanks for posting one of my all time favorites, Jaz…

The Heart-Warming Voice Of Unconditional Love

The FinerMinds team shares this:

There’s nothing quite like the comfort and security you get from your family and friends when they love you for exactly who you are  – quirks and all.

However, when it extends to your romantic partner, you know you’ve found something really special.

In this song, The Way I Am, by Ingrid Michaelson, it talks about the unconditional love she feels for her partner, which even quite sweetly includes her buying him hair growth cream when he starts to lose his hair, because like him, she loves him for exactly the way he is.” via TGIF: The Heart-Warming Voice Of Unconditional Love (video) | FinerMinds.

BB King at 87: the last of the great bluesmen

If you love the blues like I do, then I think you’ll enjoy this article about BB King that popped up in Google Reader from an unlikely source: a Brit who traveled to Mississippi to see him play in his hometown:

The fat red sun settles itself against the horizon, throwing a last, honey-sweet light through humid evening and over a small crowd on the lawn beside a railroad track that cuts through the cotton fields beyond. A quarter-moon rises and a chorus of cicadas serenades imminent twilight, now conjoined by the sound of the band; the drummer catches the backbeat and the compere announces: “How about an Indianola hometown welcome for the one-and-only King of the Blues: BB KING!”

And on he comes, to applause from people who know him well and claim him as their own – the last of the blues masters a few weeks short of his 87th birthday. “Nice evening, isn’t it?” he says, and introduces his nephew on sax. Some of his 15 children (all by different mothers) and innumerable grandchildren are in the audience, though one of his daughters died recently of diabetes, as had BB’s mother – a poignant riptide beneath the occasion. “I guess you can look at me,” he says from the stage, “and tell I’m the old man. My name is BB King.” Full story at: BB King at 87: the last of the great bluesmen | Music | The Observer.

I’m so thankful I got to hear him live in Green Bay at the Oneida Casino back in May. Treat yourself to his top 10 songs on Spotify while you read the article…

The best of @toddlohenry for 10/6/2012

  1. Todd’s tweets…

  2. e1evation
    The Todd Tracker is out! http://bit.ly/xwdjH1 ▸ Top stories today via @toddlohenry
  3. toddlohenry
    Laughing at: “A breakdown of Facebook’s billion people [comic] – Holy Kaw!” ( http://bit.ly/Pgfg9H )
  4. toddlohenry
    “Superfoods are the most potent, nutrient-rich foods on the planet.” http://bit.ly/T7lELV
  5. toddlohenry
    Why Work Life Balance is a Fantasy and What You Can Do About It http://bit.ly/RkMeC6
  6. toddlohenry
    5 Rules for Discussing Politics without Violating Your Yoga-ness http://bit.ly/SRDVwZ
  7. toddlohenry
    Why Obama’s debate performance was so mediocre: 4 theories http://bit.ly/T593sA
  8. MAELoneee
    http://www.google.com.ph/imgres?q=quotes on life&start=257&num=10&hl=en&biw=1280&bih=699&addh=36&tbm=isch&tbnid=JCtZuErLvjSIbM:&imgrefurl=http://toddlohenry.com/category/quotes/&docid=BBNeyuoXwx9y0M&imgurl=https://brightshinyobjects.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/8036305606_3025ecf9b5_o.png%3Fw%3D290&w=290&h=290&ei=4dlvUN-UCsntrQfs5YGABg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=194&vpy=251&dur=1044&hovh=225&hovw=225&tx=82&ty=107&sig=115376903771967588549&page=14&tbnh=163&tbnw=163&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:0,s:257,i:204 This.
  9. toddlohenry
    Was out walking 2.02 miles with #Endomondo. See it here: http://bit.ly/VE9Pl8
  10. toddlohenry
    Algoma: Nell, Johnson add to trove of local history books http://gbpg.net/Pcj9ML
  11. toddlohenry
    The presidential debate: Mitt Romney swears that his tax cuts won’t add to the deficit http://bit.ly/T2mB88
  12. toddlohenry
    The Grand Pep Talk (Refer to This When in Doubt or Sick and Tired) http://bit.ly/QyWPtT

Running on faith…

Time for a music break…

I really need to do this more often… Updated!

…via Instagram!
I am blessed to live an work less than 1 mile from Lake Michigan on the ‘right side’ of Wisconsin. I love the many ‘moods’ of the lake as I travel back and forth between home and work or while doing errands. Yesterday, for the first time I went to the wayside less than a mile from my home, pulled out a folding chair, put my feet up on a fence, listened to good music over the bluetooth headphones and sat and looked at the lake for half an hour. Priceless! What opportunities to ‘stop and smell the roses’ are you overlooking in your life? Need justification? Try this article on 6 reasons to cherish your alone time from Positively Positive…

So ordinary

Here’s the studio version…

OK. I’ll admit it…

I like Britney Spears music. Or at least ‘vintage’ BS — raw and uncut…

I <3 Ryan Star…

Looks like he’s more than a ‘one hit wonder’…

Of course he’s most famous for the ‘lie to me‘ song…

Rhiannon by EZ Street

I have a lot of really talented blogging buddies. Here’s one I met through the WordPress.com community doing a cover of Rhiannon…

Rhiannon by EZ Street « jazfagan.

40 years of getting’ high with John Denver

Click the image to get the Wikipedia article on the album…

Guy Kawasaki has this right:

There are a few folks out there who are about to feel really old. Forty years ago today, back in the groovy era that was the seventies, John Denver’s “Rocky Mountain High” album was released, which pushed the folk singer into the Top 10 for the first time in his career.

Though he lacks the edge of the artists who are usually celebrated from the time, hipsters should appreciate the flannel shirt and puffy vest and Muppet fans can’t help but hold a special place in their hearts for such a good friend of Kermit.” via 40 years of getting’ high with John Denver – Holy Kaw!.

That means I was 14 years old when this album came out and I played it constantly. I had to go to Spotify and take a trip down John Denver lane. OMG! I may even have to tune my guitar!

Hmmm. Miss Piggy hasn’t changed a bit. I wonder what her secret is?

:-D

Here’s one of my favorite songs off that album; didn’t get a lot of airplay but…

Grab a ‘Little Wing’…

I am so loving ‘Little Wing’ this morning. Download Spotify [it’s free and you can thank me later] and treat yourself to a little Stevie Ray…

Bonus tracks…

Oreo Cookie Blues

Listening to my Stevie Ray Vaughan channel on Pandora, I heard this for the first time. Good blues and funny, too! Couldn’t find his version on Spotify, but here’s the most popular version I could find there…

10 Long Years

Limit Screen Time, Limit Sitting

Leo Babauta writes:

One of the hazards of our modern lifestyle is our tendency to become more and more addicted to staring at screens, and more and more sedentary.

We look at laptops and desktop computers, iPhones and Androids and iPads and iPods, TVs and movie screens, play video games, watch videos, surf the web, socialize online, work online. And we’re sitting the whole time.

I’m a victim of this as much as anyone else. My family and I are drifting toward this lifestyle, and while I’m no Luddite, I do believe that we should live less as victims and more consciously.

Too much screen time means less active time, less personal socializing, less focus on the present, less time for cooking healthy food, less time reading novels, painting, making music, making time for the ones you love. And too much sitting means fewer years on your life.

So what’s a better way?

Limits.

Limit how much screen time you have each day. Limit your sitting to short periods with breaks in between.

I realize that many people have jobs that require them to have a minimum amount of computer time, and probably mostly sitting. So I don’t recommend a certain number, only that you figure out a limit and work with that.

What I’ve Been Doing

Though I’ve set limits for myself in the past, I’ll admit that they’ve eroded in recent months, so that my screen time has grown over time. And not just for me — for my wife and kids. So recently Eva and I set limits for ourselves, and we’ve been working with them.

We find them to be great. I find daily limits to be a better balance than going on week-long or month-long digital sabbaticals, which aren’t realistic for many people.

Here’s an example:

  • We set a limit of either 4 or 5 hours of total screen time a day. (We haven’t figured out what’s best yet, still experimenting.)
  • That total is broken into 30-minute chunks. So if it’s 5 hours total, that’s 10 chunks of 30 minutes.
  • At the start of a 30-minute chunk, I set a computer timer and put a tally mark on a text document, so I know how many chunks I’ve used today. When the bell rings, I close my laptop.
  • After the 30-minute chunk, I take a break of at least 30 minutes. I try to get up and move, stretch, play with the kids, get outside. I also often read a novel. The moving is good for my body, and helps me to think.
  • If I have things I want to look up online, or write online, I’ll just make a note of it and do it when I start my next 30-minute chunk.

This isn’t the only way to do it — you’ll have to find the limit that works for you, and the chunk size that works for you. But the idea is to set limits, and to break the total up into pieces so you’ll take breaks and do other things.

Benefits of the Limits

We’ve loved it: we’re reading more books, spending more personal time with each other and the kids, getting more chores done, exercising more, playing outside more.

It also means that because we have a limit, we have to figure out the best way to use that time. We have to make choices — what’s worthy of our limited time, and what isn’t? This means more conscious use of our time.

We haven’t instituted the limits with the kids yet, though we have been talking to them about it and getting them thinking about what would work best for them. And we do tell them to take breaks from devices throughout the day, so they’ll do other things.

For the kids, this has meant they have more unstructured, imaginative play, more reading, more art and music, more activity. Kids get addicted to screens just as much as adults do, and it’s not a healthy thing for them. We’re trying to teach them ways to live a healthy lifestyle, which is a lesson with lifelong benefits.

We’ve found this lifestyle to be healthier, better for relationships, better for our peace of mind. And to me, that means it’s something work keeping.

More reading:

via Limit Screen Time, Limit Sitting.

Big results require big ambitions

BrainyQuote via Big results require big ambitions.  – Heraclitus.

The Andy Griffith Theme [with words!]

Did you know there were words to the famous tune?

Stop Motion Music Video Shot With 500+ Girls

Abe&Tell ‘s music video created by Orrin Hastings was shot with over 500 girls holding an iPad displaying one frame clip of the film. It’s pretty awesome.

via Stop Motion Music Video Shot With 500+ Girls.

Music in hell

For me? Sorry, ‘mano, but it would be Latinos who would be in charge of the music! What about you? Cartoon of the night. For more: http://nyr.kr/LLmyi3 via Cartoon of the night. For more: http://nyr.kr/LLmyi3.

100 classic riffs in a single take

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