Friday, 30 December 2016

NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS



New Year, healthier you

New Year’s resolutions are a bit like babies: They’re fun to make but extremely difficult to maintain.

Each January, roughly one in three Americans resolve to better themselves in some way. A much smaller percentage of people actually make good on those resolutions. While about 75% of people stick to their goals for at least a week, less than half (46%) are still on target six months later, a 2002 study found.

It's hard to keep up the enthusiasm months after you've swept up the confetti, but it's not impossible. This year, pick one of the following worthy resolutions, and stick with it. Here’s to your health!

Lose weight

The fact that this is perennially among the most popular resolutions suggests just how difficult it is to commit to. But you can succeed if you don’t expect overnight success. "You want results yesterday, and desperation mode kicks in," says Pam Peeke, MD, author of Body for Life for Women. "Beware of the valley of quickie cures."

Also, plan for bumps in the road. Use a food journal to keep track of what you eat and have a support system in place. "Around week four to six...people become excuse mills," Dr. Peeke says. "That’s why it’s important to have someone there on a regular basis to get you through those rough times."

Stay in touch

Feel like old friends (or family) have fallen by the wayside? It’s good for your health to reconnect with them. Research suggests people with strong social ties live longer than those who don’t. 

In fact, a lack of social bonds can damage your health as much as alcohol abuse and smoking, and even more than obesity and lack of exercise, a 2010 study in the journalPLoS Medicine suggests. 

In a technology-fixated era, it’s never been easier to stay in touch—or rejuvenate your relationship—with friends and family, so fire up Facebook and follow up with in-person visits.

Quit smoking

Fear that you’ve failed too many times to try again? Talk to any ex-smoker, and you’ll see that multiple attempts are often the path to success.

Try different methods to find out what works. And think of the cash you’ll save! (We know you know the ginormous health benefit.)

"It’s one of the harder habits to quit," says Merle Myerson, MD, director of the Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Program at St. Luke’s and Roosevelt Hospitals, in New York City. "But I always tell people to think of how much money they will save."

Save money

Save money by making healthy lifestyle changes. Walk or ride your bike to work, or explore carpooling. (That means more money in your pocket and less air pollution.)

Cut back on gym membership costs by exercising at home. Many fitness programs on videogame systems like Nintendo’s Wii Wii Fit Plus and Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect Your Shape Fitness Evolved can get you sweating. 

Take stock of what you have in the fridge and make a grocery list. Aimless supermarket shopping can lead to poor choices for your diet and wallet.


What sort of New Year’s Resolution should a Christian make?
Question: "What sort of New Year’s Resolution should a Christian make?"

Answer: 
The practice of making New Year’s resolutions goes back over 3,000 years to the ancient Babylonians. There is just something about the start of a new year that gives us the feeling of a fresh start and a new beginning. In reality, there is no difference between December 31 and January 1. Nothing mystical occurs at midnight on December 31. The Bible does not speak for or against the concept of New Year’s resolutions. However, if a Christian determines to make a New Year’s resolution, what kind of resolution should he or she make?

Common New Year’s resolutions are commitments to quit smoking, to stop drinking, to manage money more wisely, and to spend more time with family. By far, the most common New Year’s resolution is to lose weight, in conjunction with exercising more and eating more healthily. These are all good goals to set. However, 1 Timothy 4:8 instructs us to keep exercise in perspective: “For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.” The vast majority of New Year’s resolutions, even among Christians, are in relation to physical things. This should not be.

Many Christians make New Year’s resolutions to pray more, to read the Bible every day, and to attend church more regularly. These are fantastic goals. However, these New Year’s resolutions fail just as often as the non-spiritual resolutions, because there is no power in a New Year’s resolution. Resolving to start or stop doing a certain activity has no value unless you have the proper motivation for stopping or starting that activity. For example, why do you want to read the Bible every day? Is it to honor God and grow spiritually, or is it because you have just heard that it is a good thing to do? Why do you want to lose weight? Is it to honor God with your body, or is it for vanity, to honor yourself?

Philippians 4:13 tells us, “I can do everything through Him who gives me strength.” John 15:5 declares, “I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.” If God is the center of your New Year’s resolution, it has chance for success, depending on your commitment to it. If it is God’s will for something to be fulfilled, He will enable you to fulfill it. If a resolution is not God honoring and/or is not in agreement in God’s Word, we will not receive God’s help in fulfilling the resolution.

So, what sort of New Year’s resolution should a Christian make? Here are some suggestions: (1) pray to the Lord for wisdom (James 1:5) in regards to what resolutions, if any, He would have you make; (2) pray for wisdom as to how to fulfill the goals God gives you; (3) rely on God’s strength to help you; (4) find an accountability partner who will help you and encourage you; (5) don’t become discouraged with occasional failures; instead, allow them to motivate you further; (6) don’t become proud or vain, but give God the glory.Psalm 37:5-6 says, “Commit your way to the LORD; trust in him and he will do this: He will make your righteousness shine like the dawn, the justice of your cause like the noonday sun.”




Thursday, 11 February 2016

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Thursday, 31 July 2014

FOCUS ON PROCESS, NOT OUTCOME

Focus on process, not outcome
by

It seems like the best way to reach a desired result would be to focus on that result, try to move toward it, and judge each attempt by how closely you approximate it. But actually that approach is far from optimal. If you focus your attention and effort less on the results you’re hoping for and more on the processes and techniques you use, you will learn faster, become more successful, and be happier with the outcome.
By default we tend to be forward-looking, goal-pursuing, results-focused. Why? Because we’re wired for a discontentment with the present and a striving for a better future. Because results are easier to measure and evaluate than processes. Because we know others judge us based on results and we tend to care too much what others think.
But focusing on process rather than outcome is a much better strategy. Why?
  • It eliminates the noise of external factors. Success can follow a flawed effort and failure can follow a flawless effort. In those cases, judging performance by outcome will reinforce the wrong techniques. You’ll achieve mastery of a new skill more quickly if you can learn to detect those cases and reinforce the correct processes whether or not they happened to lead to the desired outcome in that instance.
  • It encourages experimentation. When you’re wholly focused on a specific desired result, you’re less willing to try long shots, less inclined to experiment, less open to serendipity, and less likely to stumble on an even better outcome than the one you were aiming for
  • It lets you enjoy the process more. Life is lived in the present, not the future, and happiness is a process, not a place. Focusing on process will let you engage more deeply with the present and experience it more fully, which will help you learn faster and experience life more completely.
  • It puts you in control. You have only partial control over whether you reach a specific external goal. But you have complete control over the process you use. Whether you give your best effort is entirely within your power. An internal locus of control leads to empowerment, higher self-esteem, and success, all of which contribute meaningfully to life satisfaction.
  • It lets you enjoy and benefit more from whatever outcome does occur. In the long run things rarely turn out the way we expect them to. If your happiness is predicated on your success, and if your success is predicated on a specific outcome, you are setting yourself up for a high likelihood of frustration and disappointment. If you instead let go of the need for any particular outcome, you increase your chances for success and contentment. It’s fine to desire a certain outcome; just don’t make your happiness contigent on it. Instead, derive happiness from knowing that you gave every attempt your best effort.
  • It will give you confidence. Not confidence that you’ll succeed in the current attempt, but confidence that you’re on the right path to mastery. You’ll worry less about the future because you’ll know that you’ll be happy regardless of the outcome of any given situation or event. You’ll be more free to get out of your comfort zone, to be spontaneous and take risks. And being unattached to a specific outcome means you won’t be needy, or get upset when things don’t go as you had hoped. The more you focus on process over outcome, the more confident you’ll become, and there’s nothing more attractive than confidence.
So how can you focus on process over outcome?
  •  Don’t pursue the rewards directly, trust that they will come. Focus on the process with diligence and effortful study, and let the outcome take care of itself.
  • Stop worrying about what others will think of your performance.
  • View each attempt as merely practice for the next attempt.
  • Choose for yourself how to rate your performance. Rate yourself based on the effort, not the outcome. Don’t try to win today, try to become a winner. Be happier when your best effort results in defeat than when a weak effort results in victory. Determine what your best effort would look like, and then make it happen.
  • Bring awareness to your performance, either during or immediately after it, so you can learn to identify when bad results follow good processes, and vice-versa. With practice you will build the confidence needed to avoid second-guessing yourself when the results are bad but your technique is good.

Thursday, 10 April 2014

PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE


PLANNING YOUR ESTATE FOR THE BENEFIT OF CHILDREN OR MINORS
While becoming a parent is glorious, it is a life transforming experience that changes one’s perspective about life. You suddenly realize that you have a new purpose to fulfill in life.

Even though a number of parents desire a better and more secure future for their children, parents need to consider the possibility that they may not always be around for their children. Therefore as a parent or guardian, you should secure your child’s or ward’s future by having a proper, tailor-made Estate plan in place for them. The African extended family system which we used to support a bereaved child or minor is now mostly dysfunctional or non-existent.

Why Bother planning Your Estate For Your Children Or Other Minors?
It is natural as parents to simply assume that in the unlikely event that one of the couple becomes incapacitated, the spouse would automatically assume the responsibility to care for the children or alternatively that their extended family would step in and everything would be okay.

Though this may seem logical, chances are that this will not always be the case. What if the surviving partner decides to take another partner or re-marry? What if there is a child with special needs that a single parent may not be able to handle? You may also have special plans for your children that  your absence may jeopardize.

It is also obvious that the comfort or attention that a child would receive from a single parent would likely be less than he or she would receive when both parents are around. There is also the unlikely, but probable coincidence that both parents may die together. Diseases and accidents do happen.
What planning your Estate for your children involves
The first thing that often comes to mind with children is their education. You may want to take provision to ensure that your children’s education is well taken care of through an estate planning instrument you adopt.

However one must not forget that your child needs a good home to enjoy a proper education and fulfill his/her potential. It is therefore necessary that you provide for the person who would take over the custody of your children and also include an alternative guardian just to be on the safe side. Where both parents become incapacitated and have not appointed a guardian, it is up to a court to appoint one for you. This might not be an attractive option.

You may also have investments or assets that you want managed for the benefit of your children, wards or other minors. It is thus necessary that you provide in your Estate Plan for a person or entity who would manage those assets until your children reach the age of maturity.

You should also think twice about bequeathing your children with a lump sum when they come of age. Most young men for instance may not be capable of managing sudden millions rationally. You therefore have to provide a schedule of how those assets or investments are transferred absolutely to your children. According to Warren Buffet, you should leave “enough money to your kids so that they can do anything, but not enough so they can do nothing.

How to plan your Estate for your Children
There are multiple ways by which you can plan your Estate for your children. We will only discuss a few at this point.

A Will with provisions regarding your children is an obvious example. You could also provide a Trust with Funds that may be detailed to provide for your children’s education or certain special needs. Buying Life Insurance is certainly a good and cost effective way to fund your Estate or the Trust Fund that your create.  You might also want to consider purchasing assets jointly with a child (particularly when they are much older). This allows the illegal principle of survivorship to vest such assets in your children once you pass on.

Whatever choices you decide on, make sure you consult credible professionals when it comes to planning your Estate for children or minors. Do not take chances with your children’s future.

Thursday, 15 August 2013

MOTIVATIONAL MESSAGES

From the CEO's Desk

Occasionally, our founder and CEO, Tom Murcko, writes exclusive articles
for our newsletter readers. We send these special releases as part of a
new series called, ‘From the CEO's Desk'. Tom hopes that sharing the
insight gained from his career will help you achieve your goals. Cheers!

What I Learned From Steve Jobs

By Tom Murcko
CEO of BusinessDictionary.com, InvestorWords.com & InvestorGuide.com

1

Be bold.

When Steve was just 12, he called the co-founder of electronics giant
Hewlett-Packard to get spare parts for a hobby project. Hewlett was so
impressed in that one conversation that he gave Steve a job that summer
that started him on his career in technology.

2

Question everything.
http://t.ms00.net/s/c?u.qkep.5.w1tt.45x6n

Always ask, why do we do it that way? Often the answer is just inertia:
it's done that way today because it was done that way yesterday, not
because it's the best way. By questioning the way things were, he became
an expert at seeing how things could be better. He envisioned desktop
publishing, the networked office, and the pervasive, transformative
power of the internet long before most others.

3

Make your own rules.

At college he skipped the required classes and instead just took
whatever interested him. (This included a calligraphy class, which
contributed to Apple's leadership on fonts and desktop publishing.)
After a while he decided that school was too expensive for his parents
to pay for, so he stopped paying his tuition, but he was so charismatic
that the dean allowed him to audit classes and stay in a dorm with
friends, effectively going to college without having to pay.

4

Live with intensity.

Life is short. Don't spend it living someone else's life, and don't
spend it on small matters. If something isn't worth doing with
intensity, then it's not worth doing at all.

5

Learn from the best.

Steve wanted to innovate, so he studied the leading innovators. In
Apple's early days, this was Xerox Parc, so he visited their research
labs and saw demonstrations on cutting-edge technologies that changed
the trajectory of his company, including graphical user interfaces,
object oriented programming, and networked computing.

6

Let everything be your teacher.

Apple took the best ideas from all fields. The early Macintosh team
included people with backgrounds in music, poetry, art, history and
other liberal arts, who also happened to be among the best programmers
in the world. If not for computer science, they would've done amazing
things in these other fields. Bringing together diverse expertise made
the products better in countless ways.

Click to Read Lessons 7 - 23
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From the CEO's Desk

Occasionally, our founder and CEO, Tom Murcko, writes exclusive articles
for our newsletter readers. We send these special releases as part of a
new series called, 詮rom the CEO's Desk'. Tom hopes that sharing the
insight gained from his career will help you achieve your goals. Cheers!

What I Learned From Steve Jobs

By Tom Murcko
CEO of BusinessDictionary.com, InvestorWords.com & InvestorGuide.com

1

Be bold.

When Steve was just 12, he called the co-founder of electronics giant
Hewlett-Packard to get spare parts for a hobby project. Hewlett was so
impressed in that one conversation that he gave Steve a job that summer
that started him on his career in technology.

2

Question everything.
http://t.ms00.net/s/c?u.qkep.5.w1tt.45x6n

Always ask, why do we do it that way? Often the answer is just inertia:
it's done that way today because it was done that way yesterday, not
because it's the best way. By questioning the way things were, he became
an expert at seeing how things could be better. He envisioned desktop
publishing, the networked office, and the pervasive, transformative
power of the internet long before most others.

3

Make your own rules.

At college he skipped the required classes and instead just took
whatever interested him. (This included a calligraphy class, which
contributed to Apple's leadership on fonts and desktop publishing.)
After a while he decided that school was too expensive for his parents
to pay for, so he stopped paying his tuition, but he was so charismatic
that the dean allowed him to audit classes and stay in a dorm with
friends, effectively going to college without having to pay.

4

Live with intensity.

Life is short. Don't spend it living someone else's life, and don't
spend it on small matters. If something isn't worth doing with
intensity, then it's not worth doing at all.

5

Learn from the best.

Steve wanted to innovate, so he studied the leading innovators. In
Apple's early days, this was Xerox Parc, so he visited their research
labs and saw demonstrations on cutting-edge technologies that changed
the trajectory of his company, including graphical user interfaces,
object oriented programming, and networked computing.

6

Let everything be your teacher.

Apple took the best ideas from all fields. The early Macintosh team
included people with backgrounds in music, poetry, art, history and
other liberal arts, who also happened to be among the best programmers
in the world. If not for computer science, they would've done amazing
things in these other fields. Bringing together diverse expertise made
the products better in countless ways.

Click to Read Lessons 7 - 23
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From the CEO's Desk

 
   
 
Occasionally, our founder and CEO, Tom Murcko, writes exclusive articles for our newsletter readers. We send these special releases as part of a new series called, 詮rom the CEO's Desk'. Tom hopes that sharing the insight gained from his career will help you achieve your goals. Cheers!
What I Learned From Steve Jobs
By Tom Murcko
CEO of BusinessDictionary.com, InvestorWords.com & InvestorGuide.com
1
Be bold.
When Steve was just 12, he called the co-founder of electronics giant Hewlett-Packard to get spare parts for a hobby project. Hewlett was so impressed in that one conversation that he gave Steve a job that summer that started him on his career in technology.
2
Always ask, why do we do it that way? Often the answer is just inertia: it's done that way today because it was done that way yesterday, not because it's the best way. By questioning the way things were, he became an expert at seeing how things could be better. He envisioned desktop publishing, the networked office, and the pervasive, transformative power of the internet long before most others.
3
Make your own rules.
At college he skipped the required classes and instead just took whatever interested him. (This included a calligraphy class, which contributed to Apple's leadership on fonts and desktop publishing.) After a while he decided that school was too expensive for his parents to pay for, so he stopped paying his tuition, but he was so charismatic that the dean allowed him to audit classes and stay in a dorm with friends, effectively going to college without having to pay.
4
Live with intensity.
Life is short. Don't spend it living someone else's life, and don't spend it on small matters. If something isn't worth doing with intensity, then it's not worth doing at all.
5
Learn from the best.
Steve wanted to innovate, so he studied the leading innovators. In Apple's early days, this was Xerox Parc, so he visited their research labs and saw demonstrations on cutting-edge technologies that changed the trajectory of his company, including graphical user interfaces, object oriented programming, and networked computing.
6
Let everything be your teacher.
Apple took the best ideas from all fields. The early Macintosh team included people with backgrounds in music, poetry, art, history and other liberal arts, who also happened to be among the best programmers in the world. If not for computer science, they would've done amazing things in these other fields. Bringing together diverse expertise made the products better in countless ways.
Click to Read Lessons 7 - 23

Thursday, 17 January 2013

Here comes a new initiative!!

WISDOM GALLERY COMPUTER INSTITUTE
Arena of displaying talents

watch out for link to the blog, till then start logging.