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Showing posts from February, 2016
Physics didn't lie when it said a vector quantity possessed magnitude and direction. A body moving northward definitely is moving with a magnitude of velocity. Sometimes we say we don't feel the inner surge to venture into something. It's not as if there is no magnitude or energy. The fact is there is no direction. There is no sense of leading or vision. Since there is no direction, there can't be useful magnitude. There can't be a surge when there is no vision, and no matter how much energy one tries to create, it will be useless without a vision. There is no direction without a magnitude.
The journey of a thousand miles begins with a step. Nothing started big; everything existing had a starting point. Take that first step, even though the stair case is no where in sight. Do you aspire to own a business? Start thinking of a brand for it; start preparing a business plan; start learning the skills needed. They are little steps with big footprints.
While we were growing up, the question of what we wanted to be was answered blindly, and for a few posed a threat, as what they actually wanted to be couldn't be pin pointed, because they had so many of them, and the question of what they want to be even caused them anxiety. The anxiety comes from the fact that they can't actually pick something they want to be in life; the fear that they are going to be a nonentity, because they have no definite passion to run with. The truth is that the society has made us feel we choose a profession for ourselves, and run with that passion. Some people aren't wired that way: they have multiple interest in different fields, and potentials to actually tread whichever path they choose successfully, and the idea of choosing a profession or career seem like a maze. These set of people may decide writing as a profession to chase, and half way down the lane, they loose interest, and something else sets in. They are always starting again, be...
#nugget Actions always result to reactions. Whatever choice made now has a chapter that will be revealed later. Make right choices, so that your old self won't be sorry.
The difference between two people doing the same thing, with different levels of fulfilment is purpose. The person having high level of fulfilment does his with a purpose, a vision that was  conceived over time, that now stairs up the energy within, hence, yielding absolute productivity and fulfilment. On the other hand, the person with low level of fulfilment does his as a normal activity; no vision, no driving force other than the regular daily energy, hence, leading to little joy, interest, and eventually frustration. Have a clear defined purpose for whatever it is you do.
#LightUpTheDark It is the way we met it; it is what is trending; it is what everybody is doing; it is how everyone is doing it, but none of it's what it is meant to be; it's how it is meant to be; it is how i choose to do it, without compromising the legal rules. Let us wake up to reality, let's hold our light unashamed, determined, focused, and let's end the silent moans from our valiant aged, having fear of no one available to take up from where they ended. We know what is trending, we know what is happening: the unemployment; the poverty, so,  let's keep up hopes, let's feel like we still have a choice, let's not through crooked ways reach to where we wish to be; let's keep on the pace; let's leave footprints for the ones behind us. Let's not allow the corrupt practices of the ones having the rule over us influence our decisions; let's put an end to cultism in our schools, and let's not get hypnotized by the menace of the shedder...
Our brains weren’t built to multitask. Our brains are designed to focus on one thing at a time, and bombarding them with information only slows them down. MIT neuroscientist Earl Miller notes that our brains are “not wired to multitask well… when people think they’re multitasking, they’re actually just switching from one task to another very rapidly. And every time they do, there’s a cognitive cost.” This constant task-switching encourages bad brain habits. When we complete a tiny task (sending an email, answering a text message, posting a tweet), we are hit with a dollop of dopamine, our reward hormone. Our brains love that dopamine, and so we’re encouraged to keep switching between small mini-tasks that give us instant gratification. This creates a dangerous feedback loop that makes us feel like we’re accomplishing a ton, when we’re really not doing much at all (or at least nothing requiring much critical thinking). In fact, some even refer to email/Twitter/Facebook-checking ...
So many times we are overwhelmed by the success of successful people, and at many times we are just curious to know how they made it. At many instances,  Some conclude influence to be the determinant of success, and others, wealth. All wrong! They saw ways they could add value, which they did and became successful in the process of time. Albert Einstein saw physical science beyond what it was, and what his research contribution could do to modern physics, and today he is marked among the successful. Steve jobs saw the future of personal computing when he started apple. He is marked with the successful. Chasing success is more like an endless rat race without cheese, but value, an endless possibility. Seek ways to add value to people's life, and not how to get wealthy without stress, and see how your name will be listed with the successful.