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flyingrose

Last seen: 22 months ago

Rose is a 53 year old woman from Waxahachie, Texas, USA

Welcome...I've been expecting you.Add to Technorati FavoritesYou may want to click those orange thingies at the very bottom of the page next to the word comments. One subscribes you to whatever I post and the other subsribes you to comments made, I presume by others. I put here what is most important and links to others who do good works.There is much more filed by subject. Use the drop-down box that usually defaults to Entire Blog to find all posts on any particular subject. Please share what you find here with your friends, family, and other networks. Namaste, Rose

  • http://www.emomsathome.com/blog/2007/11/12/monday-motivat...

    Rated Nov 12 2007 3 reviews search, google, wisdom, freedom emomsathome.com



    Wow Andy. I am so glad to have you as my friend. Everyone has GOT to READ THIS. And subscribe to Wendy's blog while you're there so you don't miss future installments of her wisdom. It is stupendous!

    From the page: "I feel a little bad that I let Google rent so much headspace in the last few days that I posted my first ever mad rant today. I wrote it on Saturday and even let it sit for a while before hitting publish in the hopes I could tone my anger down... I failed. ;)

    Which brings up an issue that definitely can affect productivity - what do you do when you are having a really bad day? How do you turn things around when you are having a really hard time getting your game face on?

    Like today. No game face here.

    Well, what I really need to be doing is 1 :: asking myself better questions, and 2 :: focusing on what will move me forward rather than what's holding me back.

    So I will do that today as part of Monday Motivation.

    Old question :: How can I get Google back? :evil:

    New question :: How can I diversify my own traffic sources to lower Google's percentage of referral traffic from 28% down to less than 10%?"
    http://www.emomsathome.com/blog/2007/11/12/monday-motivation-recovering-rented-headspace/
  • sixthplanets favorite websites - StumbleUpon

    Rated Nov 10 2007 41 reviews stumblers, humor, wisdom stumbleupon.com



    Sixth planet has honored me with my 100th SU review: "Rose will enlighten you with her stumbles on health and spirituality. Prepare for an educational and inspirational experience!"

    Thank you sixthplanet. If you check out the reviews other stumblers have done of sixthplanet the consistent theme is that his reviews have great images and are "funny", "hilarious", and "full of laughs". Who doesn't want more fun in their life?
    sixthplanets favorite websites - StumbleUpon
  • BigIdea.com - The Official Home of VeggieTales

    Rated Nov 09 2007 7 reviews spirituality, peace, wisdom, for kids, freedom bigidea.com

    There is a channel on regular television called ION (channel 68 where I am) that has awesome cartoons for kids and adults alike. While many are tagging this as christianity, or Biblical, I do not believe that either cornered the market on wisdom or ethics.

    I happened to have Veggie Tales playing in the background today and the wisdom and ethics displayed in that episode were exceptional and just what we all - and especially Americans - really need to learn (or remember if your parents taught you integrity as a child).

    Remember that you teach by your ACTIONS - people emulate what they SEE - not what you TELL THEM TO DO. What kind of role model are you REALLY? The most accurate judge of anyone's character is how they behave AT THEIR WORST. THAT is the REAL THEM!
    BigIdea.com - The Official Home of VeggieTales
  • Seriously: Do New Thoughts and New Taglines Find Us? |...

    Rated Nov 06 2007 2 reviews spirituality, wisdom, law of attraction, the secret successful-blog.com



    Liz asks "Are our brains transmitters or receivers? Can we send out a thought or does a thought pull to where we want to be? Are we thought leaders or thought followers in a very real sense?"

    My answer: Yes

    More from the page: "It Started with an Unsearchable Thought - It started with a blog post. Somehow in writing it, I had a new thought. Seems a good reason NOT to be a thought leader . . . new thoughts aren't searchable. That thought caught a conversation about how our thoughts might connect us..."
    Seriously: Do New Thoughts and New Taglines Find Us? | Liz Strauss at Successful Blog
  • Liz Strauss at Successful Blog

    Rated Nov 05 2007 21 reviews relationships, blogging, wisdom successful-blog.com

    From the page: "Introducing Keith Dsouza, who will be writing for Successful Blog. - Ageless Thoughts from All Over the World - by Keith Dsouza

    Do you have an age syndrome with blogging? Do you always think something like I am 32 or I am 58 and I can't start blogging? Well welcome to a world that is ageless and has no restrictions on what you say. Welcome to blogging.

    It's an ageless project.

    Most professions have age restrictions, blogging does not. If you are 90 years old, you can blog about how your great grandchild plays with you with his toys and how you enjoy it.

    If you are a 13 year old, you can tell the world how well you fared at your first baseball game. If you are a mom or dad, you can write about your child's growth and after few years, let him read it. You can look back at those cheerful memories again 10 years further down the line.

    Age is never a factor for telling people what you love. A blog can get you there. Blogging can make you friends with someone who you would never have approached in real life. I am 25 but I still have a great friend in Liz who old enough to be my mom. Blogging brought us together breaking the barrier of age, without blogging I wouldn't have approached a woman of her age to be my friend.

    Have you seen the ageless project? We'll be using it to explore what bloggers of every age are doing. See the gnerations of people there. Then why not add your blog? You can do that by clicking the logo below."
    Liz Strauss at Successful Blog
  • Seriously: Why NOT to Be a Thought Leader | Liz Strauss...

    Rated Nov 05 2007 3 reviews writing, spirituality, wisdom, blogging successful-blog.com



    Thank you Andy Beard for sharing this with us all. I hope Liz knows that she is NOT where she was two years ago. Rankings mean nothing. Search doesn't matter. Real people are all that count and real people share what they find with their friends - the faster and more efficiently better.

    If one method ceases to work for use we simply move on to the next one. As long as you know enough people and have multiple ways of contacting each of them, you can move on faster than our meeting places get bought up and changed.

    "Now this morning, I realize . . .Real conversation uncovering new thoughts isn't about keywords or searchable content. How could it be? . . . folks can't search for truly new ideas."

    Great comment from the page: "Hi Liz! New thoughts are not searchable because they don't need to. They have their own little strategy to finding their way to people. I did not use a search to get to your blog. However, I got here and ceased to be a stranger :) So who cares if you can't search them? Most of us find new thoughts or are provoked to think exactly when they most need it."
    Seriously: Why NOT to Be a Thought Leader  | Liz Strauss at Successful Blog
  • parataxics blog - StumbleUpon

    Rated Nov 05 2007 187 reviews stumblers, images, wisdom, inspirational stumbleupon.com



    These two images pretty much sum up what you'll find at parataxic.stumbleupon.com [parataxic.stumbleupon.com] - and I do hope you'll visit and then follow the links to where she found these two.

    That is another upgrade I'd love to see at SU - having images "borrowed" from one stumbler by another link to the permalink in their blog. I can no longer spend the time it takes tracking from stumbler to stumbler and going through page after page trying to locate the original source.

    parataxics blog - StumbleUpon
  • Your Fellow Blogger is Not a Competitor

    Rated Nov 04 2007 13 reviews spirituality, wisdom, blogging doshdosh.com



    Maki (DoshDosh) has the same perspective of creating a bigger pie that I do. We see that there is no competition as our collective efforts make the pie bigger. The traditional view is there is a limited pie that must be fought (competed) for and the only way to get ahead is to take more than your fair share.

    Welcome to the new world. And do subscribe to the DoshDosh blog. He writes some of the most insightful posts anywhere.
    Your Fellow Blogger is Not a Competitor
  • History, Digitized (and Abridged) - New York Times

    Rated Oct 27 2007 1 review books, libraries, wisdom nytimes.com




    What happens to all the books and other physical documents that do not get digitized?

    From the page: "Steinbeck artifacts are not the only important pieces of history that are at risk of disappearing or being ignored in the digital age. As more museums and archives become digital domains, and as electronic resources become the main tool for gathering information, items left behind in nondigital form, scholars and archivists say, are in danger of disappearing from the collective cultural memory, potentially leaving our historical fabric riddled with holes.

    "There's an illusion being created that all the world's knowledge is on the Web, but we haven't begun to glimpse what is out there in local archives and libraries," said Edward L. Ayers, a historian and dean of the college and graduate school of arts and sciences at the University of Virginia. "Material that is not digitized risks being neglected as it would not have been in the past, virtually lost to the great majority of potential users."
    History, Digitized (and Abridged) - New York Times
  • You cant buy our souls for 20 bucks - Opinion - smh.com.au

    Rated Oct 27 2007 9 reviews environment, futurism, politics, longnow, wisdom smh.com.au



    We collectively consistently do the wrong thing because we're focusing on the the short term instead of long range. Change our thinking and we change our lives!

    Simplistic answers are not the solution. For every change you make THERE IS and ALWAYS WILL BE at least one effect you did not expect. What is written in this post is a terrific example.

    From the page: "I want my politicians to think like a mountain. I'm not joking. Aldo Leopold, the noted American ecologist who died fighting a bushfire in 1948, wrote an essay called Thinking Like a Mountain. He remembered back to his youth, when everyone killed wolves. So did he.

    He felt, like everyone did, that immediate safety was the most important thing. And fewer wolves meant more deer. But after Leopold saw the fierce green fire die in the eyes of a wolf, he sensed that the mountain did not agree with such a view.

    Over the next generation, deer ran wild and denuded the ranges. The mountains took years to recover. Leopold learned that "just as a deer lives in mortal fear of its wolves, so does a mountain live in fear of its deer".

    The short-term answer was worse than the original problem.

    "We all strive for safety, prosperity, comfort, long life and dullness," Leopold wrote. "The deer strives with its supple legs, the cowman with trap and poison, the statesman with pen, the most of us with machines, votes and dollars - but it all comes down to the same thing: peace in our time. A measure of success in this is all well enough - but too much safety seems to yield only danger in the long run. Perhaps this is behind Thoreau's dictum: in wildness is the salvation of the world."

    And to me, in thinking long-term, wildness is the salvation of our society."

    Want to know more about long range thinking? Visit longnow.org [longnow.org]
    You cant buy our souls for 20 bucks - Opinion - smh.com.au