Periodically, they unpack these
Periodically, they unpack these suitcases and review every situation in which they feel they were treated unfairly.
"Resentment is an extremely bitter diet, and eventually poisonous. I have no desire to make my own toxins," declares Neil Kinnock. Hanging on to anger and resentment is toxic, and the resulting sludge can slowly poison you.
It's easy to lose your perspective about the bigger picture and to be become obsessed with how things "should" have been and how others "should" have treated you. In your mind, you may visualize yourself zapping the other person with the perfect verbal comeback or having the opportunity to get even in some way.
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Try design or graphic arts or drafting
Try design or graphic arts or drafting or even landscaping.
Getting trained in a trade will give you confidence and allow you to find a great job. Employers want trained people. Give them what they want and you'll get want you want. Having a skill set is like having money in your wallet, you can lose!
So many people are stuck in boring jobs because they didn't take the time to find out what is out there. They just fell into some job and all of a sudden that's their career. You're going to spend at least one third of your life working. You need to take time and consider what you want to do.
Do some research and see if there is a perfect career fit for you. Don't you want to go through life loving your occupation instead of dreading the job?
Dots McLeod is webmaster for http://www.grabfacts.com a resource guide to trade schools and job training..
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Nexia Set to Acquire Seven Residential Properties in Northern Utah
Market Wire, January, 2009
Nexia Holdings, Inc. (OTCBB: NXHD)
reported that the new management of Wasatch Capital Corporation has
identified seven new properties for acquisition under the real estate
acquisition strategy being implemented under Richard Surber's direction.
The total value of the properties is estimated to be $1.6 million and the
company is currently conducting reviews and due diligence on the properties
to establish the final purchase numbers and condition of the individual
properties. The properties range in estimated value from $90,000 to
$480,000 and are all located in the northern Utah area, from the Salt Lake
Valley north to Ogden, Utah.
Richard Surber, CEO of Nexia Holdings, stated, "These acquisitions would
bring our residential property holdings up to a total of 10 properties and
I believe that the growth of our portfolio would make future acquisitions
easier. The success and future operations of Wasatch Capital Corporation
under its new management utilizing our real estate acquisition strategy
appear to be on track."
About Nexia Holdings Inc.
Nexia Holdings Inc
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What they said
What they said
0 Comments | Herald Express; Torquay (UK), Aug 22, 2009
"This is ghastly spin, the sort of behaviour you expect from the gutter" -- General Lord Guthrie, a former chief of the defence staff, on reports that Labour MPs have been smearing General Sir Richard Dannatt, the head of the army. "I've never been on a London bus, and I've never travelled on the Underground" -- Cilla Black, boasting that she does not have a pensioner's bus pass.
"Oh, how heart-tuggingly, liver-clutchingly, gut wrenchingly attractive young people look in this weather" -- Stephen Fry. "They always have the same kind of dead-looking girls. It isn't interesting and the girls aren't interesting. Because they are not girls. They are androids
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RECIPE OF THE WEEK; Food Salmon with new potatoes and beetroot pesto
RECIPE OF THE WEEK; Food Salmon with new potatoes and beetroot pesto
0 Comments | Journal (Newcastle, England), The, July 11, 2008
THIS week's recipe uses a beetroot pesto as its sauce. We recently received a complaint on a comment card saying that we obviously didn't know what pesto was as it contains basil, and I guess we were guilty of confusing things. But if I wanted to be pedantic, the word pesto derives, I understand, from the Latin pestle meaning to damage or crush, hence the tool used to crush herbs and spices in a mortar.
Generally considered to have originally come from Genoa, northern Italy, Pesto alla Genovese is a thick sauce comprising basil, salt and garlic, crushed together in a mortar and pestle before the addition of crushed pine nuts, Italian hard cheese (such as Parmesan) and olive oil. Here, we've replaced the basil with beetroot to give it an unusual twist.
Two whole beetroots, washed and boiled until tender then peeled
Two cloves garlic, peeled
50g grated Parmesan cheese
50g toasted pine nuts
Extra virgin olive oil
Four salmon fillets - about 200g to 250g each, skin on
A couple of handfuls of wild rocket
Three red onions, peeled and cut into wedges
Red wine vinegar
300g Jersey new potatoes, boiled and halved
Sea salt and freshly-ground black pepper
Pre-heat the oven to 200degC, gas mark 6.
First make the pesto by blending together the peeled beetroot, garlic, Parmesan and pine nuts. Add enough olive oil to make a loose paste and season to taste with salt and pepper.
You could use the traditional mortar and pestle which will give a slightly more rustic sauce.
Heat an oven-proof frying pan, add a little olive oil and fry the salmon fillets, skin side down, for a few minutes until the skin begins to crisp. Turn the fillets over, add a little salt and pepper and place in the oven for a further five or six minutes.
Meanwhile, drop the onion wedges into a pan of boiling water for 45 seconds.
Remove and drain then add them to the potatoes and rocket in a mixing bowl. Add a slug of olive oil, a little salt and pepper and a dash of red wine vinegar.
Mix and taste, adjusting the salt, pepper and vinegar if necessary.
To serve, pile the onion and potato mixture on to serving plates, place the salmon on top and add a dollop of beetroot pesto.
Oldfields Restaurants cookbook, Passion for Real Food, is out now and available in good bookshops
We wonder what way going through his
We wonder what way going through his mind when composing such soulful pieces. They appear to us to be born from such great loss or sadness. If your mood was already on a lift at the beginning of this album, then I can assure you that you will be reaching for your hankies by the end of it. Polly Samson, the co writer and major influence behind this album, appears on vocal along with Gilmour.
Their next piece is entitled ?A Pocketful Of Stones.? We note Leszek Mozdzer on piano, Lucy Wakeford on harp and Alasdair Malloy on glass harmonica. We actually don?t recognise easily these peculiar instruments but their influence must be present somewhere. It may take a few listens to this album to start to form recognitions of these instruments. As we would listen intensely to Pink Floyd albums, we here, should do the same. Again, we are lead, in an entranced state into the final piece ?Where We Start.? A gentle, melodic piece that takes us to the end of this unusual album.
Where Pink Floyd was experimental and diverse, we find Gilmour in his twilight years here on a very strong reflective note.
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using prayer consistently
using prayer consistently and reading the Bible (Though this is a clich? for many, it actually works! Praying together with your child may do wonders, too.);
b. pushing him to delay satisfying his craving?the craving will go away eventually;
c. engaging him in a variety of activities that will keep his mind off his craving;
d. encouraging him more at every progress point until he finally overcomes the habit;
e. surrounding him with things and people who can support his resolve to quit;
f. helping him avoid stressful situations that could lead him to a relapse.
When a relapse occurs, stay positive and reassuring. Consider each failure as a learning experience for both of you that you could use to make the next attempt more successful.
7. Lastly, reward your teen when he finally quits. Plan something special for him, preferably something that your family can do together with him.
You can?t make a person quit smoking without that person?s conscious and willful conviction as well as committed cooperation to quit. But no parent should be quick to give up on guiding their children out of harm?s way.
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Don't forget Viles
Don't forget Viles
0 Comments | Concord Monitor, Nov 17, 2009
Your recent editorial appropriately listed the accomplishments of Franklin Pierce Law Center President Robert Rines and his innovative views, which have so dramatically improved the legal landscape of New Hampshire ("People are Rines's biggest legacy," Monitor, Nov. 6).
However, in extolling the virtues of Rines, you neglected to give equally appropriate attribution to Dean Robert Viles. Viles was the academic equal to Rines's creative genius. Before his retirement, Viles brought intellect, scholarship and a Mainer's dry wit to the "bull barn." The success of Franklin Pierce Law Center is due in large measure to the weird and wonderful partnership of these fine gentlemen, both of whom are missed.
ROBERT STEIN
Concord
Author Blythe Woolston’s Debut YA Novel The Freak Observer Follows One Girl Out of Orbit
Business Wire, July 27, 2010
MINNEAPOLIS -- Where does one person belong in the cosmos? How can a teenage girl find
reason and order when her universe is spinning out of control? Life for
Loa is like an unruly science experimentfixed variables are changing,
volatile toxins are mixing, and spontaneous combustion seems imminent.
Written by Blythe Woolston and published by Carolrhoda Lab, a new line
of distinctive fiction for young adults from Carolrhoda Books, The
Freak Observer provides a gritty and realistic account of Loas
life as a girl on the brink.
A struggling high school upperclassman, Loa is haunted by grief over her
sisters death. Her world is rocked once again when, a year later, she
witnesses the death of her friend, Esther. As Loa attempts to cope, she
turns away from the busy, rustic, functioning family life she has known
and turns to alcohol and aimlessness. She also turns to Corey, a
charismatic but troubled debate-teamer who convinces her to become his
partner and, perhaps, his friend.
But the friendship the two form is anything but normal
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Bar clears U of O president in disclosure case
Bar clears U of O president in disclosure case
0 Comments | Columbian; Vancouver, Wash., Dec 21, 2006 | by AP
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -- The Oregon State Bar rejected an ethics complaint filed by a University of Oregon economics professor against school president Dave Frohnmayer.
William Harbaugh's complaint involved financial disclosure forms that high-level state employees must file annually. The professor said Frohnmayer failed to properly disclose certain real estate transactions.
Cynthia Easterday, assistant general counsel for the state bar, found that Frohnmayer committed no professional misconduct and a full investigation was not warranted.
"I do not find credible facts that (Frohnmayer) knowingly made a false statement," Easterday wrote in her decision. "It was reasonable for him to believe that the information that he submitted was true, accurate and complete."
Harbaugh said the bar association's decision surprised him, and he will ask them to reconsider. Frohnmayer, a former state attorney general, is a licensed attorney in Oregon and subject to the state bar's ethics rules.
The state Government Standards and Practices Commission last month dismissed a similar complaint filed against Frohnmayer and a similar but unrelated complaint filed by Harbaugh against retired Provost John Moseley.
Harbaugh filed the complaints after unsuccessfully trying to obtain copies of past campus affirmative action plans, a document the university is required to update each year
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