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Sunday, September 16, 2012

Usher’s Ex-Wife Denied Retrial In Child Custody Battle With Ex-Hubby Usher

Usher’s Ex-Wife Denied Retrial In Child Custody Battle With Ex-Hubby Usher:
usher tameka raymond child custody retrial requestTameka Foster was denied a retrial in her child custody battle with her ex-husband and superstar entertainer, Usher, TMZ reports.
But, according to the entertainment new site, Foster is not giving up. She plans to appeal the judge’s ruling.
Foster filed documents earlier this month appealing a ruling that granted Usher primary custody because she felt the judge was biased because she received campaign money from Usher’s lawyer.
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But this week, the same judge denied her retrial request, pointing out that, since 2008, it has been public knowledge that Usher’s lawyer donated money to her re-election campaign. The judge add that, had Foster checked, she would learned of this long before she filed her motion.

Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s Ex: I’m Not Mad At Him For Hitting Me

Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s Ex: I’m Not Mad At Him For Hitting Me:
Josie Harris Floyd Mayweather Domestic Abuse
TMZ
Many people may hold a grudge against Floyd Mayweather Jr. for hitting his ex during a domestic dispute that sent him to prison for two months. But the victim has chosen to let bygones be bygones, TMZ reports.
Josie Harris, Mayweather’s ex, told TMZ that she and her pound-for-pound top boxer on earth ex are trying to put their rocky past behind them for the sake of their three children.
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Here is more from TMZ:
You’ll recall … Floyd was popped back in 2010 after Josie accused him of striking her “multiple times in the head with his fist” and then threatening to kill her. Josie and Floyd’s children were present.
Floyd later pled guilty to misdemeanor domestic violence and served two months in jail.
Now Josie says, “S**t happens. I’m not mad at him at all … I love Floyd to death.”
She adds, “[Floyd] loves his kids and is a great father. He would never do anything like that again … I’m sorry the situation happened … now we will just progress and start over and move forward together.”
Do you think that Harris’ words were conciliatory or do they gloss over the seriousness of domestic violence? Sound off!
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Hubby Allegedly Shoots Air Force Wife So She Wouldn’t Be Deployed Overseas

Hubby Allegedly Shoots Air Force Wife So She Wouldn’t Be Deployed Overseas:
Christopher Tyquan GroomesBOSSIER CITY, La. — A woman trying to avoid an Air Force deployment to Asia had her husband shoot her before lying to investigators that an intruder was to blame, Bossier City police said.
SEE ALSO: Woman Pulls Gun On Man While Having Sex In A Moving Car
Mark Natale, a police spokesman, said Staff Sgt. Judy Groomes, 25, was treated for wounds on both of her legs from one round from a handgun fired by her husband, Staff Sgt. Christopher Tyquan Groomes (pictured), 26. Both are active military based at nearby Barksdale Air Force Base.
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Maj. Bryan Purtell, 2nd Bomb Wing Public Affairs officer, said Judy Groomes is assigned to the 2nd Logistics Squadron Inbound Receiving Section, and was scheduled to deploy to Southwest Asia in the coming months. Groomes’ husband is assigned to the 548th Combat Training Squadron. Both have been at Barksdale for nearly four years, he said.
SEE ALSO: iPhone 5 features: Everything You Need To Know
Police said Groomes allegedly claimed an intruder shot her early Friday while her husband and two children slept. Police responded to their home at about 3:30 a.m. She told investigators the alleged intruder fled out a back door on foot.
But police said an investigation found that she convinced her husband to shoot her to avoid military service.
Christopher Groomes was later arrested on a gun charge and booked into the Bossier City Jail. Judy Groomes was issued a summons on a criminal mischief charge for allegedly filing a false police report.
It was not immediately known if either had an attorney.
“The Air Force takes all allegations of misconduct against its Airmen seriously,” Purtell said in a statement. “We are cooperating fully with local law enforcement and continue to work with local authorities during the investigation, but since the matter is ongoing, we cannot comment further on the police investigation.”

3-Year-Old Helps Save Aunt’s Life After She Passes Out From Seizure

3-Year-Old Helps Save Aunt’s Life After She Passes Out From Seizure:
Tyrone Copeland JrMost three-year-old boys would panic if they saw their aunt collapse to the ground from a seizure. But not Tyrone Copeland (pictured) of Wilmington, Delaware.
MUST SEE: Omarosa Reveals How Her Faith Keeps Her Strong (EXCLUSIVE VIDEO)
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WPVI-TV in Philadelphia reports that the little superhero knew exactly what to do when his aunt passed out in a public park in Wilmington.
“Her got hurt and they took her to the hospital,” Tyrone said.
Scroll down for video
The little tot ran through the park, crossed a local street and approached two strangers to tell them about his aunt’s condition.
“He is just amazing because he knew his name, he knew his address, and he told us concisely what was wrong and where to go,” said Paula Thomas.
Thomas and another friend were outside of their home when the Copeland came asking for their help.
“His exact words were ‘she was laying there and she’d had a seizure and her mouth was closed, and she didn’t open her eyes and she was having a she wasn’t moving,” Thomas explained.
The two women ran to the little boy’s aunt and called 911. Paramedics quickly arrived at the scene and rushed the woman to the hospital where she recovered. WPVI-TV reports that the boy’s family was surprised to learn of the boy’s poise.
“I didn’t even know he was able to do that,” said Tyrone Copeland, Sr.
“Any other person probably wouldn’t have done that, and for his age, I am very thankful,” said Deneene.
And so are we. It is wonderful that little Tyrone was so brave at such a young age to help save his aunt’s life. We need more pint-sized heros like him in the world!









Friday, September 7, 2012

BILL CLINTON: The Hero IGNORANCE created and continues to maintain..


The Sheer IGNORANCE of the American Public is STUNNING. Bill Clinton is praised and hailed as sometime type of admired hero when this is the same Bill Clinton that signed the "1999 Financial Services Act" that Repealed the Glass-Steagall Act which deregulated Banking and created the Economic Crisis that we are currently experiencing. Leading to Trillions of Dollars in BANK BAILOUTS! Don't take my
word here's the link. http://goo.gl/vaIk0

This is the same Bill Clinton that signed N.A.F.T.A.
Excuse me, but When Clinton signed off on the North American Free Trade Agreement and the General Agreement on Trade & Tariffs in 1993, otherwise known as NAFTA/GATT, he quite literally slashed the economic throat of the United States. We've been hemorrhaging jobs to foreign nations like Communist China ever since, don't take my word here's the link.http://rense.com/general76/cclle.htm.

One final question, who of you would leave your "developing" 16 yr old daughter alone with Bill Clinton?? Take all the time you like to answer that question. Even Clinton himself must be SHOCKED at the UNINFORMED IGNORANCE of the American People. It's all Celebrity worship no one wants to be bothered by the FACTS!! In reality, Bill Clinton should be in Prison, not hailed as some type of Hero. (God help us.)
 
 

How to Deal with Unfairness and Change the Things You Can

How to Deal with Unfairness and Change the Things You Can:

by Lori Deschene
“If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change the way you think about it.” ~Mary Engelbreit
Many times in the past, I’ve complained that things weren’t fair.
Sometimes, I was legitimately wronged—like when I was a kid and an adult in my life regularly told people lies about me, seemingly to justify her disdain and mistreatment.
Other times, I victimized myself to avoid taking responsibility—like when I didn’t prepare well and bombed at a community theater audition, but attributed my failure to favoritism.
As an indignant adolescent, I blamed many of my difficult early experiences for the perpetual chip on my shoulder. I bemoaned the injustices of the world because I felt so many befell me.
It wasn’t my fault that I was angry all the time; there was just a lot to be bitter about. At least that’s what I thought back then.
One day, when I was commiserating with a friend who was upset about a seemingly unfair situation in her life, I wondered: What good does this do us?
Grumbling about injustice doesn’t make things just—and the ensuing hostility doesn’t help us effectively address things that need fixing.
You can’t create positive change from a negative mindset.  You have to heal your pain before you can set out to heal the world. And you have to stop seeing yourself as a victim if you want to access your personal power.
Still, despite knowing this and making a conscious effort to change, I still feel an instinctively strong and irate response to perceived unfairness at times.
If a friend gets passed over for a promotion because it went to the boss’ daughter, I feel outraged for that friend.
If I see someone hit a parked car and speed away, I seriously consider following them and issuing a citizen’s arrest.
If I believe someone is earning boatloads of money unethically, I ruminate on how it’s not right, and wish I could do something to stop it.
I think it’s wrong when someone cuts in line; it’s wrong when someone bucks a system; it’s wrong when systems don’t do what they’re supposed to—the list goes on and on.
I’m learning to understand my strong emotional response so that I can challenge the feelings and thoughts that disempower me. If you’d like to do the same, you may find this post helpful.

Our Biological Response to Unfairness

While we all learned about fairness in childhood, scientists have proven we’re actually hardwired for it.
Studies have shown that the reward centers of our brains activate when we recognize fairness—even when it pertains to someone else. When we witness unfairness, it triggers our amygdala, the primitive part of the brain that controls fear and anger.
This means that when we feel like we’ve been treated unfairly, we go into “fight or flight” mode, with its resulting sense of anxiety.
Psychologists suggest that when we fight for fairness for others, it’s actually self-interest in disguise; meaning we’ve recognized it provides us with some type of advantage to be fair.
No matter how you slice it, we experience a strong, instant physical and biological reaction to perceived injustices, and this can limit our ability to think rationally and respond proactively.

Life Isn’t Always Fair

Every day, we have abundant opportunity to recognize injustice, on scales large and small, in our own lives and the lives of people we love.
You could find out you make less than someone else in the same job. You could lose a promotion to someone else who is far less qualified. You could lose a court case when it feels obvious someone else was in the wrong.
You could discover that a friend of yours is losing her savings because her accountant mismanaged her money. You could learn that someone you trusted to care for your mother took advantage of her good nature. You can find out that your sister’s losing her home because of predatory lending.
And this doesn’t even touch upon the massive injustices happening all over the world, far outside the scope of our everyday experience.
Life isn’t always fair. Whether it’s self-preservation, basic human decency, or a combination of both, we want to change that.
In some cases, we can. We are not powerless, and we don’t have to simply accept every injustice as an unavoidable part of life.
We do, however, need to accept that our response to perceived wrongs affects our ability to right them.

Dealing with Unfairness

Those people who don’t let unfairness make them bitter aren’t somehow better than others.
They aren’t necessarily people who haven’t experienced severe injustice or inequality; and they also aren’t people who simply accept whatever happens without ever taking a stand.
The people who handle unfairness well possess three things in common:
  • They catch their emotional response before it leads to obsessive thinking
  • They think rationally before they act
  • They recognize the difference between what they can control and what they can’t

Stopping Obsessive Thinking 

Dwelling on unfairness doesn’t do anything to change it; it actually affects our ability to do that since obsessive thinking drains our energy, magnifies our emotions, and keeps us more focused on problems than solutions.
This has been the biggest challenge for me, as I’ve found it almost satisfying at times to think about things that seem wrong—as if this is productive.
If you struggle with this as well, recognize when you start fixating on blaming thoughts, and visualize a stop sign in your head. Then repeat an affirmation along the lines of, “This isn’t productive. It is what it is, and I can either accept it or try to change it.”

Thinking Rationally Before Acting

In order to think rationally, we need to recognize that our biological reaction is just that, and consciously choose not to let it dictate our actions.
According to psychologist and author Marcia Reynolds, when we feel slighted or cheated, and react emotionally, we then use our logical brain to rationalize that response. For example, we may tell ourselves, “I snapped, but he deserved it!”
We can be far more effective if we use our logical brain first, before we do something we’ll later regret.
In some cases, when we think rationally, we may realize an unfair situation is not a big deal in the grand scheme of things—when someone cuts us off and runs a red light, for example.
It’s annoying, but is it really worth fuming during a car ride that could otherwise be pleasant?
Other times we’ll still feel strongly that we need to fight for justice—but this doesn’t require us to act with aggression. It requires calm, careful planning and acting, if it’s something we can, in fact, control. This leads to the last step.

Knowing What We Can Control and Doing Something About It

We can’t change mistreatment that happened in the past. We can address mistreatment that’s happening now.
We can’t change someone else’s decision or behavior if they aren’t willing to change. We can change how we respond to them (and choose to help educate and positively influence them).
We can’t change that tragedies have occurred, in our own lives or in places across the globe. We can support causes that seek to prevent future tragedies, or even spearhead our own.
And we can’t guarantee specific outcomes for our actions, but we can increase our odds of making a difference by being clear-headed, patient, and consistent.
Sometimes there will be unfair things that we simply need to accept, and it might feel instinctive to fight that. We’re only human, and we will sometimes give in to our emotional responses.
What’s important is that we try to move beyond them so we don’t let the things we can’t control take control of us.
Photo by Panoramas

Sunday, September 2, 2012

5 Tips To Do Work You Love While Supporting a Family

5 Tips To Do Work You Love While Supporting a Family:

There is no doubt that we all aim for: Freedom and Joy.
We are all seeking freedom of choice and having continuous joyful experiences. Most people live in pain because they are deprived of one or both.
For example, you’re hungry to quit a job you hate and start doing what you love.
However, you feel obliged to stay due to your responsibilities towards your family and your concerns about how you’re going to put food on the table and secure a decent lifestyle for your spouse and kids.

Scott Dinsmore of Live Your Legend recently hosted a great article by Leo Babauta of Zen Habits that answers this important question:
“I have a wife (or husband) and kids to support so how can I possibly make the transition to doing work I love?”
Leo created Zen Habits, one of the most popular blogs in the world, while supporting a family of 8! Which means that it’s possible to pursue your dreams while supporting your family.
Here’s what stood out for me in Leo’s answer to the important question above:
“When I finally found the passion ignited inside me, I stopped making excuses and started making priorities.”
He nailed it!
Passion is KING.
If you are truly passionate about what you want to do, you won’t accept making excuses for a long time. One day you’ll stop making excuses and start transforming your life.
No one said it is going to be easy. But, you can definitely expect that it is going to be worth it.
It will never remain hard all the time. As you move towards your passion, things will get easier. You just need to start. If you give up easily and keep on following your excuses, then don’t blame your family obligations. It’s your choice.
I believe that, “Where there is a heart, there is a way”
If you’re passionate enough, you can find the time and make the effort to create a life you can be proud of.
Conquer your excuses.
Here’re five tips to help you do work you love while supporting a family:
1. Simplify
Simplify your life. Make less commitments. Say ‘NO’ to things that don’t matter.
You will juggle between your day job and your passion business for some time, until your passion grows and takes on a life of its own.
That’s why you need to simplify every aspect of your life, so that you can find time and space to do what matters most in your spare time.
2. Safety Net
Start saving one year’s worth of living expenses. You will need it to feel secure when you make the leap from being a corporate prisoner to becoming a free soul.
It might take some time for your passion to generate solid and stable income. By having a safety net, you won’t put yourself and your family under a big risk.
3. Prototype
You must have a tested offer. You need to turn your passion into an offer that people find valuable and are willing to pay for.
When you have a successful prototype, you can be confident that when you quit you job and devote all your time and energy to its development, you’re going to be successful in the end.
4. Multiple Streams
You should create multiple streams of income. Things always don’t go as planned. Expect that your main stream of income may be blocked for a while due to unexpected reasons.
You need to be prepared. Having multiple streams of income ready makes the transition more safe. When I quit my job, four streams of income were blocked unexpectedly.
Thankfully, I was planning for more and my safety net played an important role in the transition phase too.
5. Support Group
Who will be on your corner? Who will have your back covered?
Leo’s wife was a cornerstone in his ability to pursue his passion while supporting the family. You also need to surround yourself with passionate people and key influencers in your field.
Those people will give you the support and advice you need when things get complicated.
Never underestimate the importance of connecting with passionate people.
Pursuing your passion while supporting a family is POSSIBLE.
All you need is a solid plan and to turn your back to your excuses.
When you do that, freedom and joy will be waiting for you around the corner.
—–
Mohamed Tohami is a bestselling author and the creator of “The P.A.S. Technique: The World’s Easiest Way To Find Your Passion and Purpose In Life”. Visit his Transformational Motivation blog now to grab a free copy of his special report “4 Steps to a Life of Passion” and join his free life purpose coaching online classes.
Photo credit: ‘Campfire‘ by Big Stock

How Action Fuels Self Improvement

How Action Fuels Self Improvement:

All of us have more than just a slight affection towards changing for better. No matter the picture we are showing outwards that screams status quo, deep down inside we all feel the urge to shake things up a bit.
And while status quo is self-preserving with majority of people, there are some, a growing number I’d like to think, that not only hear the voice deep down urging for change, but also act to an extent in correlation with it.
And while many may think that being in sync with the inherent drive for change is all there is when climbing the bar, the reality is a bit different.

I, myself, have noticed and felt the need of change. The premises are, then, as you may think, that I abandoned everything holding me back, became an agent of change in my life through the act of making new habits.
Yet, I’m not. Sure, I try to resemble that description in a way, but talking about overall improvement and change in general, I’m as guilty as the next guy, and off by a long shot when considering what I already know about improvement.
And we all do, don’t we?
We already read the books, familiarized ourselves with many of the principles out there, prepared for the change in more than one way.
Yet, here we are walking the walk; and change is still needed.
Have we made a mistake, something wrong perhaps? Have we lost all the time invested?
If you and I resemble even a tiny percent, then you’ve been asking this question too.
And I guess that it pisses you off, same as me, when you don’t know the answer. But thinking over it for quite some time, I came to a realization that made me less uneasy.
Improvement is an ongoing circle, and it’s an ever evolving thing along with the motives for it, the needs.
First of all, what do I mean by circle?
You see, we always imagined improvement to be a one way road heading up as if it were a straight line on a chart. At least I had.
The thing is though, that improvement, any form of it, is actually a trip going back and forth in order to challenge your own view and perception on things.
Therefore imagine it as a spiral circle, shrinking and expanding all of the time- since in reality it resembles the same pattern.
We grow in one direction, slightly retrograde in other, change the way on what we make of things, change our direction. Haven’t you felt that you already been in this stage before? Even for a second, an instance?
Chances are you had, and then things slightly changed form. Your perception changed, your reality, goals, aspirations.
And this happens no matter our consistency, our dedication.
Now let me try and explain myself when stating that it’s an ongoing process.
It never has an end goal achieved. Nor it has something other to measure it against, despite making the comparison with the yesterday self. And since perception is always changing too, we sometimes loose even the grasp of that.
The reason for this, I believe, is that our goals and aspirations are also evolving altogether with it, and the road changes directions unpredictably.
Have you noticed how it’s never enough?
How it never reaches a destination down the road?
The thing is we are always changing. The deep down drive that is in us screams change, even when we are actually incorporating it.
So it happens that it’s no sooner as one goal gets close to achieving, that another one appears. We thought that we were going to be driven by couple of needs, just to realize that they multiply down the road, sometimes even changing to the point where we don’t know where we actually started.
Other times we are the exact opposite, and stick our head on one goal, just to realize that time has passed and we lost grasp on the concept of improvement.
We try reminiscing our progress, and then, crickets.
All of the sudden we realize that improvement was not so naive of a process as we may thought of it at first.
But simplicity can in fact be applied. I found that thinking about it more we are not necessarily better off. Sometimes we should just try incorporating what we already know and act as ignorant while at it.
Don’t think improvement, live improvement.
I read a book titled Tao Te Ching, which has all the principles of the philosophical school of Taoism comprised in it. And it advocates simplicity more than anything else. In it we may come to a conclusion that we are beating our heads over improvement as a concept, that we are lacking the simplicity of just taking an action.
It seems we are more talking the talk, and less walking the walk.
And while these are words put in my mouth by far more cleaver people than me, the truth is, they are just words, not actions. Granted, they may lead to action, but action itself may also lead to action.
Therefore the only conclusion I make out of this is that only by following our instincts of improvement in its ongoing circle, we can live it. Not achieve it, since it cannot be achieved, only enjoyed.
And as I crave for improvement now more than ever, I realize that we are encouraging it only by living it; without holding back, without any nostalgia for status quo.
What do you make of it?
Slavko Desik is an editor and writer at Lifestyle Updated, a blog about improving one’s lifestyle and enjoying if full time. He also writes about subjects closely connected with self-improvement and personal growth.
Photo credit: ‘Action’ by Big Stock

4 Reasons You Avoid Self-Improvement

4 Reasons You Avoid Self-Improvement:

Self-improvement and self-change is not something that comes naturally to many people.
In fact, most people are “change averse.” They have a fear of changing their lives, and especially a fear of changing their own self.
So instead of changing or improving the state of their lives, most people would rather just maintain the status quo and play it safe.
There are many different reasons people avoid self-improvement. This article covers some of the biggest hurdles that may block us.

1. You have too much pride
One of the most common things that hinders our self-improvement is that we have too much pride and arrogance.
This is because the word “self-improvement” often implies that there are areas of our life where we aren’t fully satisfied or happy with (or, at the very least, where we think we can do better).
So, to some extent, “self improvement” means that we have to admit that we can do better than our current situation – even if this temporarily hurts our egos.
You can overcome this by recognizing that no one is perfect, and everyone can improve themselves in different ways.
Understand that you are an individual who is always growing and changing, and this is nothing to be ashamed of. It’s only the person that doesn’t pursue self-improvement – who ignores that they can do better in certain areas of their life -  who really has the broken ego in the end.


2. You think there will always be tomorrow
Another problem we face when pursuing self-improvement is that we have a false belief that there will always be tomorrow.
So instead of working to make changes today, we procrastinate and hold off on our goals and dreams.
Unfortunately, if we keep following this pattern, then one day we may wake up and realize our whole life has passed us by, but we never got a chance to do the things that we really wanted to do.

“Why didn’t I learn to treat everything like it was the last time? My greatest regret was how much I believed in the future.”

Jonathan Safran Foer

The lesson here is not to wait, but to act now. Don’t let time just pass you by.
Life is remarkably short and tomorrow is never a guarantee. Take advantage of every day you have, and don’t wait until you’re on your deathbed to realize the life you’ve always wanted to live.
3. You believe you need to change everything overnight
One of the main things I warn people about in The Science of Self Improvement is the “myth of overnight success.”
We either expect big and immediate changes in our life – or nothing at all. So when things don’t magically get better in a short period of time, we quickly lose our commitment and dedication toward making gradual positive changes.
This is a common trap to fall into, because self-improvement is often small and incremental. We need to work at it for long periods of time before we can look back and see how big of a difference we’ve made.

Instead of searching for magical solutions to your life, focus on small and gradual change. Try to make a bit of progress each and everyday, but realize it’s a long-term commitment.
4. You say you are “too busy”



Last but not least, one of the most common excuses we have is that we are “too busy.”
You want to go to the gym and exercise again, but you just can’t find the time, because you’re too busy running around at work, at home, at school, or doing other errands.
Sure, life can be busy (there’s no denying that), but when you find yourself “too busy” that’s really a sign that you need to reevaluate your priorities.
“Those who think they have no time for health eating will sooner or later have to find time for illness.”
Edward Stanley
Ask yourself, “What’s really important to me?” Then make time for the things you value the most.
Steven Handel is a long-time writer on psychology and self-improvement. He blogs frequently at The Emotion Machine and is also the author of the brand new e-book The Science of Self Improvement. He encourages you to follow him on Facebook and Twitter, where he frequently shares new articles, as well as answers people’s questions about the human mind and how it works. 
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