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Digg it UP - Imperfection Is Beautiful
5 Regular Mistakes In Speaking In Public s look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart.1. The audience will listen because I’m a subject matter expert and what I have to say is interesting.This is probably one of the most frequent mistakes made by speakers.We all like to think that we know our stuff, and many people do. But that alone will not engage your audience.Albert Mehrebian the US Educational Psychologist’s research demonstrated that only 7% of your presentation’s impact will be your words. Only 7%... This is worrying for subject matter experts. You could prepare for weeks, select the best words and key messages, you could have the best introduction, middle section and ending than any speaker on the bill, but your impact could be negligible.A few year’s ago I became a schoo I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Emai Consciousness Awareness Mind Intuition and Independent Thinking Several years ago, I sat on the sidelines and watched other women light up rooms. They weren’t stunning in the way that women are supposed to be, but they had this beauty about them that I just couldn’t pinpoint. All I knew was that I was lacking in it. It was body confidence, I later found out -- a confidence I embrace today, knowing full well how long it took me to find.The world is beating to a new rhythm. Do you feel it too? Perhaps you’ve also noticed, that the rules of the game of life, as we have known them so far, have changed. Most of the knowledge we have accumulated in the past centuries, in particular the lessons and the training we received in the past decades, are antiquated and inadequate. Equipped with an open mind and sensitive to the super natural, some individuals have been aware of this change for some time now. Free of fear they are able to embrace the new and to meet the challenges they face. They are quick to pick up the new vibrations and quick to adapt to the new rules that have not as yet been defined clearly. Those who resist change and the unknown as a rul When I was 13 years old, something as minor as a pimple could leave me moping for hours. I wore heavy makeup to conceal my acne -- so much so that I could spend an hour in the bathroom before school to make sure every blotch on my face was hidden. ‘Friends’ at school called me “zit face” to be cruel; I tried to ignore them, but I knew it was true. When I looked in the mirror, I saw a pale comparison of the girl I used to be. That year, our school took a three-day field trip to Washington D.C., where we stayed at a hotel with a swimming pool. I wasn’t embarrassed to be seen in a swimsuit, but I always wore a t-shirt to hide the acne that scattered my arms and back. As my right foot skimmed the cool water, the lifeguard yelled, “Sorry, it’s against hotel policy to wear t-shirts in the pool.” I watched my friends splash around, confident with their flawless skin and knew I could never expose myself. I faked a stomachache and bolted for the privacy of my hotel bathroom. Outraged, I peeled off my t-shirt to unmask scabbed, irritated skin. I cursed the imperfect reflection in the bathroom mirror. I screamed, “I HATE you! You’re SO ugly!” By the time I turned 15, the acne had vanished thanks to medication. Eventually, the scars faded to the background. When I looked in the mirror, I saw a face that was pretty again, but a body that was all wrong. I discovered in a dressing room that at 130 pounds, I was too fat for my 5’2’’ body. “I’m hideous!” I moaned to my mother, creaking the dressing room door open so she could see my fat thighs in the sparkly black mini. Sigh. “No you’re not,” she reassured, smiling sadly. She suggested that exercise might make me feel better. I bought exercise videos and gave up ice cream and chocolate, those sinful foods women aren’t supposed to eat. In the high school cafeteria, I ate dry turkey subs (the cafeteria didn’t offer low-fat mayo packets), skim milk, and cups of pineapples. My taller and thinner girlfriend enjoyed chocolate milk, fries, and Doritos. She also went to bed at night with her makeup on and never saw a pimple in her life. Talk about fairness. By age 20, I maintained a stable weight of 120 pounds and accepted my short legs. I then obsessed about my too-small chest! At a small 34B, I felt my body would be better if only my breasts were larger like women on magazine covers and on television. I’d never been a sucker for gimmicks, never chanted, “I must, I must, I must increase my bust” while squeezing my pecks but an obsession had taken hold. I bought padded bras, gel-filled inserts, and pills promising to increase bust-size (they didn’t). I contemplated breast augmentation. Small breasts signified something was missing -- a scaled down version of femininity, I was sure. Then in college, I devoured books about America’s obsessive quest for physical beauty and how impossible standards hurt women and girls. Something as insignificant as a mirror holds the power to control our self-image. A piece of glass can determine how we feel about ourselves. I had enough. FINALLY. I stood before my bedroom mirror, stripped of clothing, exposed to myself. I studied my body slowly, trying to see beyond the pain and insecurity to find what remained -- just me. I saw my father’s deep brown eyes, my mother’s thick brown hair, and full lips that reveal a fantastic smile when I’m happy enough to show it off. I saw thin, shapely arms sprinkled with nineteen beauty marks, a flat stomach, and small breasts proportional to my body. I turned around. Sure, my behind was a teensy bit bigger than I would have liked, but it certainly wasn’t anything to be ashamed of. My legs were short, but I liked how toned they looked. They were petite and curvy. At that moment, I finally just saw me. Perhaps for the first time in my life, I accepted myself as a beautifully flawed woman. When I was a teenager, one of my best friends had a beautiful dancer’s body. She flaunted long graceful legs, small hips, and a flat bottom -- everything I had always wanted. Imagine my surprise when she confided that she was jealous of me! “Are you SERIOUS?” I gasped, inspecting myself in her dresser mirror. “You’re tall and can eat anything you want and never gain a pound. Your legs are so thin.” “But you’re curvy,” she responded. “Guys look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart. I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Emai Don't Try And Keep Up With The Jones' - Drag Them Down To Your Level I watched my friends splash around, confident with their flawless skin and knew I could never expose myself. I faked a stomachache and bolted for the privacy of my hotel bathroom. Outraged, I peeled off my t-shirt to unmask scabbed, irritated skin. I cursed the imperfect reflection in the bathroom mirror. I screamed, “I HATE you! You’re SO ugly!”That's a lyric from songwriter and musician Neil Innes. It amuses me as a song, but in real life, I'm strongly opposed to the message.I like individual excellence rather than conformist, defeatist, mediocrity. If those words means something to you too, here's what it takes to rise far above the rest of the field - 'massive action'.Thinking is great, it's definitely got its uses, but action trumps thinking. You can have the most brilliant thoughts, the greatest ambitions, conceive wonderful inventions, but until you've taken action, they have no more existence than a computer file you close without saving.If thinking about taking action, gives you a strong desire to go and lie down for half an hour, here's a handy 'chea By the time I turned 15, the acne had vanished thanks to medication. Eventually, the scars faded to the background. When I looked in the mirror, I saw a face that was pretty again, but a body that was all wrong. I discovered in a dressing room that at 130 pounds, I was too fat for my 5’2’’ body. “I’m hideous!” I moaned to my mother, creaking the dressing room door open so she could see my fat thighs in the sparkly black mini. Sigh. “No you’re not,” she reassured, smiling sadly. She suggested that exercise might make me feel better. I bought exercise videos and gave up ice cream and chocolate, those sinful foods women aren’t supposed to eat. In the high school cafeteria, I ate dry turkey subs (the cafeteria didn’t offer low-fat mayo packets), skim milk, and cups of pineapples. My taller and thinner girlfriend enjoyed chocolate milk, fries, and Doritos. She also went to bed at night with her makeup on and never saw a pimple in her life. Talk about fairness. By age 20, I maintained a stable weight of 120 pounds and accepted my short legs. I then obsessed about my too-small chest! At a small 34B, I felt my body would be better if only my breasts were larger like women on magazine covers and on television. I’d never been a sucker for gimmicks, never chanted, “I must, I must, I must increase my bust” while squeezing my pecks but an obsession had taken hold. I bought padded bras, gel-filled inserts, and pills promising to increase bust-size (they didn’t). I contemplated breast augmentation. Small breasts signified something was missing -- a scaled down version of femininity, I was sure. Then in college, I devoured books about America’s obsessive quest for physical beauty and how impossible standards hurt women and girls. Something as insignificant as a mirror holds the power to control our self-image. A piece of glass can determine how we feel about ourselves. I had enough. FINALLY. I stood before my bedroom mirror, stripped of clothing, exposed to myself. I studied my body slowly, trying to see beyond the pain and insecurity to find what remained -- just me. I saw my father’s deep brown eyes, my mother’s thick brown hair, and full lips that reveal a fantastic smile when I’m happy enough to show it off. I saw thin, shapely arms sprinkled with nineteen beauty marks, a flat stomach, and small breasts proportional to my body. I turned around. Sure, my behind was a teensy bit bigger than I would have liked, but it certainly wasn’t anything to be ashamed of. My legs were short, but I liked how toned they looked. They were petite and curvy. At that moment, I finally just saw me. Perhaps for the first time in my life, I accepted myself as a beautifully flawed woman. When I was a teenager, one of my best friends had a beautiful dancer’s body. She flaunted long graceful legs, small hips, and a flat bottom -- everything I had always wanted. Imagine my surprise when she confided that she was jealous of me! “Are you SERIOUS?” I gasped, inspecting myself in her dresser mirror. “You’re tall and can eat anything you want and never gain a pound. Your legs are so thin.” “But you’re curvy,” she responded. “Guys look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart. I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Emai Cell Phone Privacy: Keeping It To Yourself riend enjoyed chocolate milk, fries, and Doritos. She also went to bed at night with her makeup on and never saw a pimple in her life. Talk about fairness.Privacy has become the topic of a great deal of news coverage and focus by the federal government in recent years. Financial institutions, health care providers, and many other organizations have been forced to deal with concerns about assuring the safety of personal information that they collect and maintain about the individuals who access their goods and services. Without safeguards, information can be shared with third parties, sold, or stolen. In other instances, individuals sometimes fail to take precautions to safeguard their own private/personal information. Privacy issues related to cell phone use have been the subject of some attention in recent years as well. Concerns have ranged from strangers listening in to conversations, By age 20, I maintained a stable weight of 120 pounds and accepted my short legs. I then obsessed about my too-small chest! At a small 34B, I felt my body would be better if only my breasts were larger like women on magazine covers and on television. I’d never been a sucker for gimmicks, never chanted, “I must, I must, I must increase my bust” while squeezing my pecks but an obsession had taken hold. I bought padded bras, gel-filled inserts, and pills promising to increase bust-size (they didn’t). I contemplated breast augmentation. Small breasts signified something was missing -- a scaled down version of femininity, I was sure. Then in college, I devoured books about America’s obsessive quest for physical beauty and how impossible standards hurt women and girls. Something as insignificant as a mirror holds the power to control our self-image. A piece of glass can determine how we feel about ourselves. I had enough. FINALLY. I stood before my bedroom mirror, stripped of clothing, exposed to myself. I studied my body slowly, trying to see beyond the pain and insecurity to find what remained -- just me. I saw my father’s deep brown eyes, my mother’s thick brown hair, and full lips that reveal a fantastic smile when I’m happy enough to show it off. I saw thin, shapely arms sprinkled with nineteen beauty marks, a flat stomach, and small breasts proportional to my body. I turned around. Sure, my behind was a teensy bit bigger than I would have liked, but it certainly wasn’t anything to be ashamed of. My legs were short, but I liked how toned they looked. They were petite and curvy. At that moment, I finally just saw me. Perhaps for the first time in my life, I accepted myself as a beautifully flawed woman. When I was a teenager, one of my best friends had a beautiful dancer’s body. She flaunted long graceful legs, small hips, and a flat bottom -- everything I had always wanted. Imagine my surprise when she confided that she was jealous of me! “Are you SERIOUS?” I gasped, inspecting myself in her dresser mirror. “You’re tall and can eat anything you want and never gain a pound. Your legs are so thin.” “But you’re curvy,” she responded. “Guys look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart. I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Emai Successful Business Debt Consolidation self. I studied my body slowly, trying to see beyond the pain and insecurity to find what remained -- just me.Many businesses run into financial trouble and look to financial advisors to help develop a business debt consolidation plan. Of course, just as with a personal debt consolidation plan, the key to the success of any business debt consolidation plan is to keep to it until you have got your finances back on track. If you have not already done so then you need to ensure that you take some extra steps to give your business debt consolidation plan the best chance to succeed. Some of these steps may seem harsh but if you want to save your business from going bankrupt then you will need to make some tough decisions.The first step in any business debt consolidation plan is to assess just hoe many of your outgoings are essential to the busin I saw my father’s deep brown eyes, my mother’s thick brown hair, and full lips that reveal a fantastic smile when I’m happy enough to show it off. I saw thin, shapely arms sprinkled with nineteen beauty marks, a flat stomach, and small breasts proportional to my body. I turned around. Sure, my behind was a teensy bit bigger than I would have liked, but it certainly wasn’t anything to be ashamed of. My legs were short, but I liked how toned they looked. They were petite and curvy. At that moment, I finally just saw me. Perhaps for the first time in my life, I accepted myself as a beautifully flawed woman. When I was a teenager, one of my best friends had a beautiful dancer’s body. She flaunted long graceful legs, small hips, and a flat bottom -- everything I had always wanted. Imagine my surprise when she confided that she was jealous of me! “Are you SERIOUS?” I gasped, inspecting myself in her dresser mirror. “You’re tall and can eat anything you want and never gain a pound. Your legs are so thin.” “But you’re curvy,” she responded. “Guys look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart. I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Emai Best Contract Deals s look at you.” A single tear glided down her left cheek as she pulled her long legs close to her chest. She grabbed her favorite teddy bear from her bed and ran her fingers through its soft white fur, careful to avert my gaze. I didn’t have the courage to tell her the truth, so I let the silence hang between us until she changed the subject. We eventually drifted apart.Before selecting a mobile phone plan, you need to make a list of your personal preferences and needs. Contract mobile phones are mostly preferred as they bring along a lot of attractive offers along with them. Contract mobile phones want you to sign a contract and pay a particular amount of money as security. When you buy a contract mobile phone, you need to pay a fixed monthly rent plus the bill for the calls you make and the services you avail. You can find various contract mobile phone deals online with great cash back offers, free mobile phones, etc.Contract mobile phones are useful when you have the habit of talking quite a lot on your mobile phone. The best part of contract mobile phones is that they come with lots of benefi I should have told her, “Imagine how amazing we both could feel if we saw in ourselves what others have seen all along.” My younger self never did, and my older self wishes I would have. At age 27, I find loving my body means accepting that it will NEVER be perfect. No matter how much I work out, I accept that my behind will never look flawless, like bronzed goddesses on television. I’ll never look like a supermodel, but I don’t care. I’m real and when I brush past a mirror, I’m finally comfortable with everything I see. Thankfully, my surrendered battle with the mirror empowers me to focus on more important aspects of my life … Like realizing my dreams. Special Requirements for Reprint: Please include Maria’s full name, website and resource box with live hyperlinks. Email a copy of the published article to maria@campuscalm.com.
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