SEEP retirement – Video
Posted: April 29, 2014 at 1:41 am
SEEP retirement
Town of Salem Battalion Chief Tom Seep retired after 36 years.
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earlene frederickHere is the original post:
SEEP retirement - Video
Which ATP Player Is Considering Retirement? — Nishikori Makes History — Raonic Climbs Boat – Video
Posted: at 1:41 am
Which ATP Player Is Considering Retirement? -- Nishikori Makes History -- Raonic Climbs Boat
http://www.TennisNow.com In this edition of Tennis Now News, find out which ATP player is tossing around thoughts of retirement, and see what Milos Raonic, Dmitry Tursunov and Sam Stosur are up to...
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Tennis NowHere is the original post:
Which ATP Player Is Considering Retirement? -- Nishikori Makes History -- Raonic Climbs Boat - Video
Bobby Ray on Joe Moore’s retirement – Video
Posted: at 1:41 am
Bobby Ray on Joe Moore #39;s retirement
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Rob CardwellSee the article here:
Bobby Ray on Joe Moore's retirement - Video
Saras retirement april 28 2014 – Video
Posted: at 1:41 am
Saras retirement april 28 2014
Retirement party for Sara DeGori.
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laura RupcicSee the original post:
Saras retirement april 28 2014 - Video
Drawing up a Personal Development Plan – Video
Posted: at 1:40 am
Drawing up a Personal Development Plan
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BizcrowdRead this article:
Drawing up a Personal Development Plan - Video
CKD Martial Arts Kennesaw – Video
Posted: at 1:40 am
CKD Martial Arts Kennesaw
Optimum Health-Practical Self Defense-Personal Development.
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KENNESAWCKDSee the original post:
CKD Martial Arts Kennesaw - Video
Soul Sisters – Celestine Chua, Life Coach and Personal Development Blogger (Ep3) – Video
Posted: at 1:40 am
Soul Sisters - Celestine Chua, Life Coach and Personal Development Blogger (Ep3)
I #39;m very honored to have been handpicked and featured on Soul Sisters, a MediaCorp documentary about inspiring women taking unconventional paths in life. MediaCorp is the single largest TV...
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Celestine ChuaSee the original post:
Soul Sisters - Celestine Chua, Life Coach and Personal Development Blogger (Ep3) - Video
Socrates & Your Business – Video
Posted: at 1:40 am
Socrates Your Business
Socrates was a philosopher in ancient Greece, but I think he was also one of the first advocates of personal development. He never wrote down a word, but his student Plato wrote about many...
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Katherine WilderOriginal post:
Socrates & Your Business - Video
Why Artists Cannot Be Afraid to Express Emotions
Posted: April 28, 2014 at 10:48 pm
By Anthony Meindl | Posted April 28, 2014, 3 p.m.
Im the king of over-sharing.
I didnt even know what that word meant until a couple months ago, because I realized that ever since I was a kid, Id express things that most people would think were private. But it just felt normal for me to express my truth, and I think if you watch children, theyre naturally inclined to express freely in this way in the moment.
As I got older, I became self-conscious about that part of me that was made fun of for expressing feeling. I began to self-edit and self-criticize this natural part of me that seemed to be so different from what other people said was normal.
So I assimilated. Joined the crowd, tried to fit in.
And in doing so, I began to equate that simply feeling (and sharing feeling) is inherently risky and punishable.
And in a way it is. I was thinking yesterday about the brave souls who lived under Communist rule in the Soviet Union (and other countries) during the Cold War. What would I have done had I lived during that time as an artist? It was very risky for artists to express themselves freely, which ironically, is the trademark of all great art. I started thinking about the challenges of wanting to write poetry or tell stories or act in plays that expressed a political point of view, or a personal narrative that wasnt acceptable by the mandates of the organized state or religion. How brutal it must have been for those artists.
Thankfully, were free to express. So let it not be a burden of pain and anxiety. Expressing feelingeven when its scary and unfamiliaris inherently joyful because its the natural state of our being.
And thankfully, were also given second chances in life, all the time.
So dont waste opportunities to express how you feel. Do it, and not in ways that feel safe to you. Although feeling vulnerable is safe, when youre expressing something that is personal to you, the fear of rejection or disapproval or being negated might make you feel unsafe.
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Why Artists Cannot Be Afraid to Express Emotions
Joe Riley: Onward militant atheists, marching as to bore
Posted: at 10:48 pm
"We are still living in some kind of Christian country, albeit surrounded by millions of non-believers"
Last year I attended the funeral of a long-standing colleague and friend, at which another retired colleague, a once professed atheist, sitting next to me, sang mightily through every verse of ther hymn, For All the Saints.
Last week, however, it was his turn to join the choir eternal.
Had he experienced a late conversion? Definitely not, said his widow, despite the local vicar giving a eulogy.
What further proof is needed, that, as Superspoon Cameron insists, we are still living in some kind of Christian country, albeit surrounded by millions of non-believers.
Even former home secretary Jack Straw, himself a Jew, has told British Muslims that they must accept that Britain is built on Christian values.
That's certainly true historically and socially.
Folk may be forsaking congregations in droves, except at cathedrals, where most go for the music, not the prayers or preaching.
But what trendy so-called intellectual atheists, of the type who wrote in protest at David Cameron's comments, too readily forget to consider is the purpose, rather than the facts of life.
Their existence is all statistics and no spirituality. Anything they can't experience or see is false until proven (so much for x-rays, electricity etc).
Original post:
Joe Riley: Onward militant atheists, marching as to bore