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Archive for July, 2010

Update: Negatives Into Positive Experiences

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I just came across this video that makes my point even better than I on turning negative experiences in a positive one. Please watch this video. It’s superb. Even the big guys have made mistakes that turned into a positive for them.


Life is what we make it: we can make it a pleasure and more tolerable or we can make it miserable by the way we respond to it.

I believe I have learned a lot about responding to life’s challenges in a more appropriate manner than I used to ten years ago, and because I have, I live a much happier life.

I assume that you want the same things I do, that you want peace, joy, and happiness to permeate our lives in a positive way when we interact with those whom we associate and have dealings.

This blog is a way for me to share with you the lessons I’ve learned about “What Matters Most In Life”. I want to do this so you won’t become overwhelmed when misfortune hits you and give up on things ever getting better for you.

We cannot give up because nothing will change that’s good if we do. We can’t go backwards or stay in status quo, nothing good is there for us either! All we can do is accept the challenge and move forward, trying to change our perspective and the way we respond to life and it’s challenges.

If we cave in to the negatives of life and focus on what we don’t have, we miss the blessings and the joy that life also provides but we’ve become too jaded to notice. Doing this will NOT make our lives any more tolerable, just more miserable.

Look at your life and then turn around the negatives you see into a positive. It may take a lot of effort to find the blessings at first but before long, you will see them easier and more frequently.

Let me give you a few examples of what I mean.

Story #1: We had just received a huge income tax refund, which is NOT a usual for us. We actually had almost $5,000 in our tax refund check. We had the check for a short time before we had an emergency.

Our toilet had overflowed. Even though the water was clear, it was still considered black water and was contaminated. I didn’t know that at the time and so I was soaking up the water with towels and washing them. However, washing them added to the flooding…which I had not realized either.

Finally, a friend suggested we call a particular plumber to come out and see what was wrong. He discovered we had a pipe on our side of the road that had broken and the whole front yard had to be plowed up. It cost us a total of $4,000 after our cost of all the cleanup and plumbing work was done. We had to have new carpeting throughout the whole house except the living room because of the black water.

My husband was several states away for his father’s funeral and taking care of his dad’s affairs. I had an illness that prevented me from bending over to clean up or to pack up the house. The insurance covered the cleanup and carpeting but we had a $500 deductible. They also allowed ServPro to clean up and pack up rooms in the house. I had to make the decisions by myself because my husband couldn’t focus from all he was dealing with on his father’s affairs.

At first I was very angry because most of our refund check had gone to this emergency, and so little was left for us to do what we wanted to do with it. It took me about another day to ask myself, “What would we have done if we didn’t have that money? What if the problem had happened a few months earlier or a few months later, when the money had already been spent?” That’s when I realized the blessing in having the check when we did, and so I no longer saw the situation as a negativity.

Story #2: We wanted to see more of our grandchildren because most of them lived so far away from us that we rarely were able to see them. I had prayed and asked God if that desire would ever be realized. He assured me that it would.

Not long after the prayer, my husband was told that he and the company he worked for as a contract manager was being replaced. It was a very hard time for him, and that, in turn, made life hard on me too.

My husband had put in applications everywhere in Oregon (where we lived), he had even put in applications in Utah, Texas, and Indiana. Nothing was happening, so we decided to move to Indiana and stay with our son and his family until we secured a job. With so many states surrounding there, we thought that would give him a better chance of finding a job.

We left Oregon on July 4th 2000 and arrived in Indiana July 6th, on a Saturday. Sunday we went to church with our son and family. On Monday, my husband picked up the local sales paper and saw a management job right there in town near where we were. Tuesday, he called on the job and Wednesday they called him back and did a phone interview. On Thursday, he was offered the job.

My husband losing his job put us in Indiana near our son and his precious family. This was the beginning of my prayer being answered. Three years later, my son living in Texas called to tell my husband that his company was going to be calling him for a job interview in Texas. As it turned out, he did get the job and we moved to Texas.

Living in Texas put us only two and half hours from our son and his family and only thirteen hours from our son in Indiana. That still put us twenty-two hours from our son and his family in Utah and thirty-four hours from our daughter and her family in Oregon if we drove.

From then on, most of our spare money goes to plane tickets to Utah and Oregon to see family we are too far away from to drive. We are able to see them a lot more frequently than we had before moving to Texas. Do you see the blessing? The lost job and moving to Indiana actually brought to pass our desire to see family more often.

Story #3: Before we moved to Texas, my husband moved there ahead of me to set up everything for us to move there. I was working at the time, so I had to finish up my job. A month later, he came home to help me tie up loose ends and then planned on taking one of the cars back with him so he would had a vehicle to drive.

On Sunday, the day before he was to leave and go back to Texas, we went to a church conference about twenty-five miles away from home. On the way home after church, the car died right there in our town and about five miles from home. All we had to do was call our son to come rescue us. It couldn’t have been any more convenient.

The next day we had our vehicle towed to a repair shop. We were told the engine was dead and that it would take $2,500 to fix it. We only had $5,000 from the company to make our move with, which included the moving van. There was no money to fix the car and still have enough to move with so we had to get the other vehicle ready for the drive and tow the broken car behind the moving van.

Where was the blessing in this story? Do you see it? If we had not driven to church and put on those extra miles, the vehicle would have broken down somewhere late at night in the boonies and my husband would have been stranded. He would be stuck and no money to fix it. Instantly, he recognized the blessing and was thankful for it.

These are just three of the many stories I can tell you of situations where a calamity turned into a blessing. It was not always recognized as a blessing at first, but we did finally recognized it and felt grateful. Instead of feeling like life treated us badly and was always taking things from us, we saw the blessing and as a result, negatives were turned into a positive.

You can see blessings as well when you look for them and accept them with gratitude. As my stories reveal, you can turn a bad situation into a positive one when you accept life on it’s own terms and look for God’s hand in the situation.

The same is true when you see a negative situation that makes you angry, especially when someone does something that angers you, and then you do what I call, “Turn the penny over to see what’s on the other side.” In other words, you look at a situation and assume that it may not be what appears to be.

Turning the penny over means you consider what another scenario might be that would make it a different outcome that you had not considered before. Perhaps someone had a different motive than you immediately thought of or there were situations that you are not aware of that changes the situation dramatically from what it first appeared to be. In other words, turn over the penny and see what the other side presents.

Sometimes you just have to accept that “It is what it is!” and let go of it. If you can’t do anything about it or it won’t help the situation to create a commotion about it, then leave it alone. It won’t change things or make things any better, except to appease ego and emotions. It does nothing that creates peace or peace of mind in the situation, or do what’s best for the situation when the desired outcome is peace or peace of mind.

I hope my comments have given you something to think about, and that what I’ve said will help you see your trials differently.

I know God makes it clear in the scriptures that He is not pleased with people who don’t recognize His hand in their lives and then give the “enemy to peace” credit for the misfortune they experience instead of seeing the blessing that comes from Him. That’s not smart, and it’s no way to earn the Lord’s trust in our ability to accept His blessings in the future.

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27

July
2010
Time: 21:15

How To Succeed

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Success is measured in many ways, but the “mindset for succeeding” is measure by how you think and what you do about it!

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18

July
2010
Time: 17:05

Protecting What Matters

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Protecting What Matters Is Necessary Now More Than Ever!

If “what matters” is for you to function in a free society; if “what matters” is to protect your family, friends, and relationships from the fallout that is in a future without freedom, safety, and security; and if “what matters” is having peace of mind, then you need to accept some things you would rather not know or be bothered with and confront what you would rather not face.

You may want to investigate this though more. We need to become proactive in what Congress is doing to protect our businesses and our way of life. If we don’t, we will lose what we have enjoyed throughout the years.

Don’t take the last statement as a political point of view because it is not; it is a reality we are facing right now. Consider what you can do to counteract the mistakes of policy makers and take action in protecting your family. That’s why I have posted links to OurdayShopping.com changing over to WhatMattersStore.com.

If “what matters” is for you to function in a free society, and if “what matters” is to protect your family, friends, and relationships from the fallout that is in a future without freedom, safety, and security, and if “what matters” is having peace of mind, then you need to accept some things you would rather not know or be bothered with and confront what you would rather not face.

You may want to investigate this though more. I believe we need to become proactive in what Congress is doing to protect our businesses and our way of life. If we don’t, we will lose what we have enjoyed throughout the years.

Don’t take the last statement as a political point of view because it is not, it is a reality we are facing right now. Consider what you can do to counteract the mistakes of policy makers and take action in protecting your family. That’s why I have posted a link for seeds and greenhouses on this site. Check out WhatMattersStore.com.

I have been paying close attention to what’s been going on in Washington the past ten years and so I know things you would rather not know, believe me. Please heed my warning and spend money on food storage, seeds, and greenhouses, as well as emergency supplies.

Don’t believe me and just let things happen is putting your family in jeopardy. I wish you would trust my judgment and, at least spend a little money now to put a few items aside in case I’m right. Like my son said, when I told him to put on a long sleeve shirt and long pants before riding the motorcycle to work, “I’m glad I listened to you” after a car hit him head-on as it came around a blind curve. I may say it too many times and become a squeaky wheel, but I am hoping some of you might listen.

I’m telling you that I have been paying close attention to what’s been going on in Washington the past decade and I know things you would rather not know, believe me, so please heed my warning and spend money on food storage, seeds, and greenhouses, as well as emergency supplies.

Don’t believe me and let things happen is putting your family in jeopardy. I wish you would trust my judgment and, at least spend a little money now to put a few items aside in case I’m right. That’s all I will say on this subject for now.

It is usually easier to live in default and allow things to come at you and then react –throwing up your hands and saying “I can’t do anything about it anyway”. . . I am only one person and what I think or say or do won’t change anything” — than it is to do something proactive that’s uncomfortable but necessary. Being in the driver’s seat to have “what matters” requires effort and often means swimming up stream and against the current.

You’ve probably figured out by now that, with 24 domain names and more than that in blogs on WordPress and self-hosting, I am very committed to helping people who feel as I do or who suffer from the type of depression I spoke of earlier.

Every day it gets harder to handle the news we hear on television (what little truths they allow us to hear) or read some of the propaganda they put in newspapers and magazines today. It is even harder to sift through the abundance of information available to us on the Internet without learning more than we want to know.

It is no wonder that people are feeling a bit overwhelmed by all the chaos that comes with living in our times, and no wonder they feel helpless in protecting “what matters” to them.

I am here to help you with all of that, but in some cases, I will add to your stress level by reporting on things you need to know but would rather not know right now. I realize that this is a strange statement to make because it is not what you expect to hear from me after reading the previous paragraphs. However, YOU MUST know the truth about what is going on every single day that threatens “what matters” to you and to me.

Even though you probably don’t want to know all that I know, there are some things I can tell you that you need to know but without stressing you out or causing you to become overwhelmed. If you resist the truth and not face what you should, it will only get harder for you to protect “what matters” and find peace of mind.

You’ve probably heard it said that FREEDOM is not free because someone has to pay the price for it. The more of us who share the load and pay the price, the easier it will be to protect that which the enemy among us in sheep’s clothing is trying to steal from us. . . and they will succeed in that mission if we continue to be in default and not engage ourselves.

We cannot depend on mainstream media to report honest and unbiased news anymore, which to me, is unacceptable. For a candid look at events that are not being reported by NBC, ABC, or CBS, and sometimes CNN, then perhaps you will check on my blog at CanWeBelieveIt.Info. However, be prepared to deal with truths you may not want to know and to be proactive instead of staying in default.

If “what matters” is for you to function in a free society, and if “what matters” is toprotect your family, friendships, and relationships from the fallout of a future without freedom, safety, and security, and if “what matters” is peace of mind, then you need to consider my comments in this posting and ask yourselves if you are prepared to pay the price for what is required of you to make that happen.

It is usually easier to live in default and allow things to come at you and then react –throwing up your hands and saying “I can’t do anything about it anyway” — than it is to do something that’s uncomfortable but necessary.

When you identify the things that really matter to you, and make choices that protect those things the best you can, then everything else doesn’t matter does it?

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01

July
2010
Time: 19:18

In Default or Proactive

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Are you living in default or are you in the driver’s seat?

First

Consider that it doesn’t matter if you are dissatisfied with life’s situations and the problems you face; it is what it is. What you need to do is accept things as they are and find a way to deal with it in a manner that you can accept.

Second

Consider that your attitude about life events affects the habits you develop and what you get back from life.

  • In general, a positive attitude reaps positive responses from people you interact with and life gives back what you reflect in your expectations.
  • A negative attitude reaps negativity from people around you and sets you up for a negative response from life.
  • A healthy attitude makes a huge difference in your ability to make wise decisions,
    • affecting how proactive you are in engaging yourself in life,
    • and affecting the position you place yourself because of choices you make and the consequences you receive.

Did you catch what I just said?

Let me break this down for you.

  • Attitude makes a difference in how proactive you are in choices you make, and whether you are living in default or sitting in the driver’s seat of life.
  • Sitting in the driver’s seat means you are making your own decisions instead of waiting for something to happen and then let it drag you down.
  • Instead of looking at your attitude and accepting the lesson you can learn from a bad situation, you go to the same place you always go to when you don’t like what life dishes out to you: being angry with God, your parents, your employer or anyone you think has it better than you.
  • Living in default means that, instead of realizing life sometimes hands out doses of misfortune to everyone and you are no different or think you are singled out for some reason, you just throw up your hands and give up!
  • You develop a bad attitude toward those who have a better life than you when you live in default instead of being proactive.
  • You blame people for what they have that you don’t and want, rationalizing that they had better opportunities than you without knowing if that is really true, and then expect them to help you out because they live better than you.
  • Sitting in the driver’s seat means that, instead of forcing someone to make decisions for you because you can’t or won’t, you make your own decisions and take responsibility for them.

Be around positive people

I am talking about being around people who are positive thinking, who have a healthy self-worth, and hope and vision for a better tomorrow. These type of people keep you motivated and focused on what matters instead of caving in to the problems going on around you.

Does this mean

You ignore reality and keep your head in clouds? Of course not. You have to be balanced in your life and have a healthy perspective of what is going on around you. It means you associate with people who understand the situations you face and know how to appropriately respond to challenges and still be in the driver’s seat of life.

Comments

As always, I invite you to leave a comment on this subject. I would love to hear from you.

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01

July
2010
Time: 17:34

Consider What Matters

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GOD

I suspect one thing that matters is your faith in God, that He is in charge of what happens on earth without dwelling on the fact that He allows evil to prevail through agency and choice, and that He will protect and guide you.

FREE SOCIETY

Another thing I suspect matters is your ability to function in a free society, that you have a choice to bear arms, to speak about things that are not politically correct, to protest government policy that you don’t agree with,  and to make dreams come true if you are willing to work hard and do the right things that get you what you want. Not many nations have this ability, and so you appreciate your own power to affect destiny.

RELATIONSHIPS

I also suspect “what matters” is your family, friends, and relationships. You value them and want a positive situation that allows you to enjoy the benefits of their association with you.

INCOME

In addition, I suspect “what matters” is having safety and security, peace of mind, and a job or profession that allows you to earn an income and acquire possessions.

Now let me ask you this:

  • How many of the things that matter to you are at risk of being compromised or lost today?
  • What do you plan to do about it and to protect what you value?
  • What will happen to “what matters” if you choose to live in default, allowing the world around you to dictate your life?
  • What will happen to “what matters” if you choose to live proactively by putting yourself in the driver’s seat?

I would like to hear your answer to the questions I just asked you. I would also like to know what you are doing to protect “What Matters” to you and your family?

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01

July
2010
Time: 17:18

Attitude Matters

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We live in perilous and challenging times.

We can give up and succumb to the pressure of our times or we can find a positive way to handle the events taking place around us.

Advice

Comes from Judith Sherman, author of  “The Treasure Box Series, Volume I: Peace, Joy, and Happiness”.

Choices

Right now affect how we view our situation and if we react or respond appropriately to it.

Habits

Attitude and life events affect the habits we develop and what we get back from life.

Attitude

A healthy attitude makes a huge difference in our ability to make wise decisions, affecting how proactive we are making our own decisions, and affecting how we engage in life.

  • Attitude affects whether we live in default or sit in the driver’s seat of life. Sitting in the driver’s seat means we are making our own decisions instead of waiting for something to happen and then let it drag us down.

Living in default means that, instead of realizing life sometimes hands out doses of misfortune to everyone and we are no different or think we are singled out for some reason, we just throw up our hands and give up!

  • The truth is attitude affects how we accept the lessons we are supposed to learn from a situation and if we see a blessing or not in that experience.
  • When something bad happens to us, a bad attitude sends us to the same place we always go to when we don’t like what life dishes out to us: being angry with God, our parents, our employers or anyone we think has it better than us.

Responding Appropriately

This blog is meant to help you appreciate that the world we live in can be a blessing when we know how to respond appropriately instead of reacting in default.

Being Proactive

It’s a matter of being proactive in our choices, engaging in events that require our attention, and sitting in life’s driver’s seat instead of letting things come at us and then react out of emotions, ego, or in default because we know of no other way to respond.

We Can Do It Together

Let us work closely together so we can support each other and be affective in our efforts to protect what matters to us.

If “what matters” is for you to function in a free society; if “what matters” is to protect your family, friends, and relationships from the fallout that is in a future without freedom, safety, and security; and if “what matters” is having peace of mind, then you need to accept some things you would rather not know or be bothered with and confront what you would rather not face.

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01

July
2010
Time: 17:09