3 Effective Ways on How to Perk Up Your Social Life
October 6, 2009 by
Filed under Self Improvement
If you’re one of the `chosen’ few who can make any party the social event of the century, then you must be lucky. But for those who are, well, taking the sidelines and spending the entire night talking to the wall, you must do something to your social life before it becomes extinct!
It’s hard to fit in. And much harder to be the ‘belle of the ball’. In case you don’t know, the way you enter the scene also has its importance. The way you walk into a party will set the pace for the rest of the night. If you get your entrance right, no one will want you to exit.
According to a photographer with an eye for style, confidence is the key if you want to be noticed for all the right reasons. You have to look as though you’re worth noticing. First, observe proper posture. Stand up straight with your shoulders back and your head held high. As you walk into the room, all eyes will be on you — so, make that first impression a good one. Wear some color, even if it’s just a splash. This will be your chance to shine in the sea of black. But again, you should be confident enough to let the color speak for itself. To get noticed, you need to stand out from the crowd. Your make-up could be different or your dress, your hair, your shoes — whatever. You must have something that makes you unique. Show off your assets. They say if you’ve got it, then flaunt it! Use it to your advantage.
Here are 3 effective ways on how to perk up your social life:
1. BE THE CENTER OF ATTENTION
Who would ever want to be a budding wallflower? Of course, it’s always better to be the life of the party and the center of attention. But actually, the most important thing is just to have a blast. It’s a party so it’s supposed to spell F-U-N. Here are some tips:
• Smile and look as if you’re having a good time.
• Remember names and pay attention. Good listening skills are crucial.
• Stand by the bar so you can talk to people as they pass.
• Circulate! If you know the host, offer to take around food and drinks. In that way, you’ll automatically be more involved.
• Keep them laughing. Humor is a sure-fire people puller.
2. BE BIG ON SMALL TALK
Too nervous to get inside the circle? Most of the time, people are having a hard time to fit into the party crowd. Don’t let your tongue-tied self get into your partying. Keep these simple but effective ways in mind:
• If shy, just say ‘Hi, my name is
‘. As simple as that, it’s a sure way of starting a conversation. And most people are delighted to be approached.
• Introduce others into the circle. In that way, there will be more people to socialize with. The more the merrier!
• Compliment people. Just don’t overdo it. People always feel annoyed when someone is babbling.
• Don’t talk politics. It can be seen as too earnest. Different beliefs maybe the start of a misunderstanding.
• Commenting on the weather is fine but accentuate the positive.
3. JOIN THE COOL CREW
Spotting a bunch of elite-looking people having a blast is a drag. It makes you wish you were just one of them. If you can’t beat them, join them, right? Here’s how to rub elbows with them.
• Waltz over and offer to share your fresh bottle of champagne. This never fails.
• Know the designers and drop the name as soon as you recognize an item. The person wearing it will be thrilled.
• Swagger over, say “Hi, sweetie!” and air-kiss someone. When they look puzzled, gasp, “I’m so sorry, you look just like a good friend of mine! Do you know David Smith by the way?” And off you go.
2 Ingredients to Tap Your Creativity
October 6, 2009 by
Filed under Self Improvement
MOTIVATION
The first ingredient then is motivation. The question to ask is why. It must be the right motivation so that will it build up enthusiasm in you. Perhaps you want to invent a much simpler, more convenient and efficient well rice thresher which is well within the price that small farmers can afford. That is motivation enough. Your sincerity in wanting to help the small farmers will make you work harder from now on.
The second step then is to gather sufficient data about rice threshers already in the market, what materials you need, how much the new product will approximately cost, how much time is needed to finish it. You also study the farmers’ needs, marketing problems, financing. You talk to people knowledgeable in this field, ever to the end–users themselves — the farmers.
In short, you make an in-depth study of the project.
You make a detailed plan, complete with sketches and figures. With all these now in your position, you go into the third step. Assemble the machine in. your mind as you see it, as you imagine it. You can almost see its shape, feel its solid form, and see it working even. In other words, the machine is now working in your mind.
Up to this point, all you’ve been using is your conscious mina, your brain. It has analyzed your problem, calculated the expenses, figured out everything that has to be done, imagined how it ‘would work. That is all it could do. At this point, your brain has reached its limit. It cannot create the machine for you; it has no power to create. It can only provide you the thought or the idea, nothing more.
What shall it do?
Now it drops like a seed all the data into your subconscious mind, there to incubate and germinate just as the soil does to a mustard seed. The subconscious will now take over.
YOU NEED FAITH, TOO
The second ingredient is faith. Of course, you need to believe in all these. Without your faith in the creative power of your subconscious, nothing will ever come out of your efforts. You yourself will be confused and pessimistic. You know you could do it, the idea is there, the motivation is there, but lack of faith prevents you from accomplishing your goal.
You see, faith is the substance of things unseen.
Do You Know That Your Dreams Have Creative Power?
October 6, 2009 by
Filed under Self Improvement
Whether you are a writer, a painter, an inventor, a farmer, a businessman, a doctor, a housewife or an ordinary employee, your dreams can create things for you if you will only let them do their job.
Many of the things you see and use today were created from dreams by people who have learned to value the creative power of their dreams. The sewing machine needles, the airplane, the submarine, the telegraph, even the lowly paper clip — all these were created by dreams — and a lot more.
Of course, you need not have a college degree to have the ability to dream. Each one of us dreams every time we sleep whether we remember our dreams or not. We spend about 20 percent of our total sleep time in a dream state. Research has found that, on the average, we spend some one and a half hours each night dreaming, or a total of approximately four years of our lifetime.
Many of our dreams are potentially creative, but we never provide the fuel to give them creative power.
The images that appear in your dream await to be given form and shape in your waking hours. They could well be the characters for a story, the scenes for a painting masterpiece, the missing link to a new invention, or the actual image of a pros1wctive life partner.
In an issue of the Reader’s Digest, a girl had sketched the face of a man she had seen in a dream. Unfortunately, she died before she could ever meet him. In a strange twist of fate, he became the recipient of one of her eyes in an eye transplant. When he finally met her family to thank there personally, he was astonished to see the startling likeness of the pencil sketch to him.
THOUGHTS ARE THINGS
Dreams are visual images distilled, during sleep, by the subconscious mind from our experiences, thoughts and emotions. These are the shape of things we have seen or will see, of people we met or will soon meet; the images of our thoughts and imaginings. Many are distorted out of focus; others are very vague and not recognizable at all.
It is your conscious thoughts that deeply affect the content of your dreams. Be negative, sour and fatalistic, and your dreams will he as negative. Positive thinking is the key to positive —and therefore, creative — dreaming.
Thoughts are things, someone had said. He was right. Unfortunately, we hardly see the things in our thoughts. We see the words that give expression to our thoughts, but we cannot visualize the forms that they evoke until someone shows them to us, or creates them for us.
Take the word “stone.” At once, you see it in your mind as something scattered by the roadside or in the river bed. It is round, it is oblong or jagged. It is big, it is small. It is black, it is white. Many shapes, many sizes. But it is just a stone. You don’t see it as a magnificent building, an exquisite jewelry, or an exotic garden decor. .
On the other hand, when you think of the word “glass,” it immediately evokes in your mind the many different products made of glass that you have already seen like drinking glass, eyeglasses, mirror, bottles, window panes, or broken glass. This is because someone with an unusual creative imagination has molded glass into these products. He had thought of glass as an idea with shape and form. Like thoughts dreams are things too. Many primitive cultures have discovered this a long time ago. The American Indians, the Senois of Malaysia, the batik makers of Indonesia, the porcelain potters of China, even the Igorot weavers and carvers of the mountain provinces in the Philippines have produced exquisite products with the help of the creative power of their dreams.
You can too.


