Thursday, December 2, 2010

HOW TO FORGET YOUR EX IN ONE DAY!

After breaking up most people are having a hard time to forget about their ex, this is because in their mind they still processing thoughts about the ex relationship.  Just like a hot pot, it takes time to cool down so is their mind. This thought process may continue as long as they allow it.

But the beauty of the mind is that it is not bias to any command. It accepts anything we tell it to do. We can use this to our advantage by telling it to stop thinking about our ex.

Here is an example on how to do this...

Imagine your mind to be like "tap water" and your thought process like the speed of water flow. You can control any amount of water flowing by adjusting the water faucet, whether you want to have a full blast or small drops, it is up to you.
Just like the water flow, you have a full control of yourself. No body and I mean "NO BODY" will ever control your mind except you.

If someone tells you to do something, you have a full control doing it or not.

Now can you allow yourself to imagine that tap water flowing at high speed, be your
Ex Memories, those bad memories, painful experiences and abusive relationship. Now...


See water flowing... the higher the speed, the more pain you may have. As you can see now that, the more turbulent the water is, the more thoughts your mind process. For example you might feel lonely, depressed or frustrated.
Now you can control the flow of water by adjusting the faucet, you can adjust it until you see small drips. Everything will be calm and there will be no more turbulence.

 
As you remember the way you were tightening the faucet, your mind will be slowing its bad thought processing. By the time there was no water flow, the thought process in the mind about your ex will be gone.
Try to do this exercise every day by imagining the flow of water be your past drama. The more you reduce the water flow the more you reduce"your ex" memories in your mind.
If you do this several times a day you might forget your ex in 24hrs.

Read more at http://www.articlealley.com/article_17982_24.html?ktrack=kcplink

Read more at http://www.articlealley.com/article_17982_24.html?ktrack=kcplink


Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Stifmeister: How To Impress A Girl

Stifmeister: How To Impress A Girl: "Well, after seeing a beautiful girl, every guy is haunted by the same question-How to impress this girl? Till the time he doesn’t know the..."

How To Impress A Girl

Well, after seeing a beautiful girl, every guy is haunted by the same question-How to impress this girl? Till the time he doesn’t know the way out, the task appears really demanding. To reveal the truth, the art of impressing girls has the simple fact, that girls are not impressed by fake things. Most guys are likely to act smart or be like someone else just to impress girls, yet they never succeed with this policy. The solution to this question is to be original so as to impress your girl. Read further to get acquainted with some tips for impressing girls.
 
  • Good work starts with good hygiene. Usually guys are careless about personal hygiene but girls are really watchful about this. So, be well-groomed and wear clean clothes to attract your girl.
  • Have a good attitude because girls don’t like guys who flaunt. Be modest and don’t attempt to impress everyone. Guys, slightly inclined towards good humor, are liked by girls.
  • Show respect towards everyone and give them their space; this will fetch your respect from them too. Especially with girls, showing respect works even better.
  • Have healthy conversations and don’t speak too much before girls. Speak in moderation; the other person should not feel that you’re not interested and also don’t speak in excess so that he/she doesn’t get time to speak.
  • Prefer talking on topics of common interest. Girls don’t like guys who talk about themselves only. Show interest in her speech. Ask her about her interests like hobbies, favorite books, music, etc. If she starts asking you about yours, speak briefly and again focus on her interests. 
  • Try to flirt. If you both make an eye contact, just pass a smile. Perhaps she will get blushed or start looking away, but don’t react. Remember you don’t have to stare her down. If she likes you, she will definitely give glances.
  • Always respect her opinion and ideas, and don’t criticize her. Give her compliments and never talk anything disgraceful to her friends.
  • Be romantic, but not in excess. If you’ve been dating for a month, you can attempt a romantic gesture. For example, hold her hand while looking in her eyes or get down on your knees to bow her.
  • Start speaking with her casually. If you don’t know the girl, start friendly conversation. Ask for the time, and praise her watch.
  • Make an effort to get her attention to your plus points and away from negative points, remember to be original.
  • Don’t tell her straightaway that you like her. Ask her out. If she refuses, don’t take any tensions. You can change the style and say ‘Oh! Actually we friends are planning to go on a dinner; I thought that you might like to join us”.
  • Don’t get stick to her. Give her some time and like this, you’ll definitely get her attention.
Good Luck Guys :'))

Rasheed Wallace retired



Rasheed Wallace(notes) represents every pointed comment I've had sent me since I started writing about this game, online, in 1997. Everyone's worst-case scenario? Every bit of bias or bile? Listen, I think I overcame quite a bit and worked my tail off to move past what I didn't like about Rasheed Wallace, but the fact remains (and will sustain) that I did not like Rasheed Wallace, the basketball player.
Bear in mind that I think the profession of playing basketball exceeds making the extra pass, executing a play or rotating defensively. I think the profession involves speaking to your fans about what they want to hear the most — why their favorite team won, or why their favorite team lost — and it includes treating your lesser teammates as if they were champions of the highest order. No towels in the face, no warmup jackets to the head, no 60-foot basketball bombs to the unsuspecting cranium.
Also find that I consider absolutely nothing of any off-court significance (OK; off-off court, away from the stadium) to work part and parcel with having anything to do with the profession of playing basketball. These players are under no obligation to work the charity ends to no end on their spare time. Which is why Rasheed — an absolute avatar of the highest order when it comes to making a difference in terms of charity and community help — is an absolute giant in that area. To be commended, to be appreciated.
What lies in the middle is even tougher to figure out.
Then we'll take it to the basketball court, his actual on-court career. Finding a way within the nuances of that 14-year turn is even tougher.
Rasheed Wallace is a tough guy to figure out. He's a tough guy to write about, and he's a tough guy to get to know. Especially if you look like me. He's a tough guy, and he's an absolute softie. He's a complete let-down, and a team picker-upper.
He's Rasheed Wallace. And I can't stand the guy.
Is this column turning into something more about me, or as much about me, as it is Rasheed? No doubt. But that's how Rasheed's career — something that is apparently over after walking away from the final two years and nearly $13 million on his contract with the Boston Celtics — has spun. Nothing about Rasheed has been easy, in any way, to discuss. And I've a feeling, that in spite of making this bit about Wallace a column dedicated to my personal thoughts on the man, that this won't go away.
Because I cannot forget the way he frittered away his own career. I can't slough that off. Can't forget the way he dawdled on the perimeter as the Portland Trail Blazers frittered away a 15-point lead in Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference finals, with only a helpless and ancient A.C. Green working as Wallace's primary defender.
I can't forget the constant absence of leadership as that veteran Blazers team then morphed into a younger version, built around Wallace, who was a clubhouse cancer of the highest order.
I can't forget him leaving Robert Horry(notes) on the perimeter in 2005. I can't forget his 4-12 showing in Detroit's final game of 2006. I can't forget his 5-14 in Detroit's final game the next year against Cleveland, an absolute meltdown that saw Rasheed foul himself out and take home two technical fouls along the way. Or his 2-12 showing in Detroit's final game in 2008, with more needless, costly fouls late. That's an 11-38 (28.9 percent) mark when his Detroit teams needed him the most, if you're scoring at home.
I can't forget the way he responded to the faith the Boston Celtics had in him — with Kevin Garnett(notes) leading a team-wide charge to pitch personally for Rasheed to sign with the C's — how Sheed showed up massively out of shape to start his final season, staying that way until the very end. The guy was having training camp-styled cramps and strains in the final weeks of the season.
So, maybe he was supposed to walk away from that money. Supposed to give something back, after all those years of CtC play. A bit of penance, somehow making up for it in the end.
Rasheed Wallace never fouled anyone, in his eyes. Even with the stings of a shooter's forearms still burning his own arms, Rasheed never touched anyone. It was that sort of delusion that permeated his entire game, and changed the way people thought of it. Unselfish to the most selfish degree, disappearing when it counted the most, fighting the good fight at the absolute worst time, somehow getting away with it. Cool sayings and a self-styled nickname and it's all forgotten.
Not by this guy. I'll remember it all, the good and the bad. There was plenty of good, because he did help his teams win. But there was so, so much bad. Team-killing ploys that junior high kids shouldn't get away with that. That's part of Sheed's package.
One I can assure you that he absolutely doesn't give a rip about what you think of it. He clearly doesn't care. And, with all things regarding Rasheed Wallace, this is a good and bad thing.

Still hurting cleveland fans have something to say to Lebron James

CLEVELAND -- The knights of Arthurian legend went a-questing for the Holy Grail. Diogenes the Cynic wandered ancient Greece carrying a lantern in broad daylight in search of an honest man.
Something more elusive? A new Cleveland Cavaliers season ticket holder at Quicken Loans Arena.
Former Cavs ticket holders? That should be a snap because, even if they aren't being 100 percent honest -- the Cavaliers have had nine home games, nine sellouts so far in 2010-11 -- there surely are folks still bitter enough over LeBron James' abrupt free-agency departure to claim that they have given up on the club.
But finding someone who made his or her "buy" decision after James bailed? Might as well look for (to put it indelicately) the rat swimming toward the sinking ship.
Yet you can find them. Gino and Tanya Viccarone and their kids bought four pretty pricey seats, season-tickets purchased for the first LeBron-less edition of Cavaliers teams since 2002-03. Seven rows off the court, a short towel-toss or glare from the visiting team's bench.
That will come in handy Thursday night when James returns, playing his first game back at The Q as a member of the Miami Heat.
"My biggest decision was that I've got three kids who play sports, and I didn't want them to think that a team relies on one person," said Viccarone, a lifelong Cleveland resident and longtime Cavs fan. "I wanted them to see that, after that All-Star leaves, you still have a team."
The Viccarones live in Columbia Station, southwest of downtown Cleveland. He owns a heating/air conditioning business, and their kids Sarah (17), Emily (14) and Jacob (12) switch off and fit in Cavs games where their busy schedules allow. Every jilted fan is different, but this family of five seemed to represent a large bloc of Cleveland sports loyalists.
"This wasn't a smart business play on my part, but I don't regret any bit of it," Gino Viccarone said. "The guys at work told me, if we can't make it, they'd come down with their families.
"We're a family that turns on SportsCenter at 5 [o'clock] in the morning and it doesn't go off. LeBron had a thousand reasons to stay and zero to leave. This city would have done anything for him. For him to do that, I didn't want these kids to think it's about that. It's about the team, and you don't let your team down. We've had the best time this year coming to the games, watching these guys try to get it together."
Like a lot of locals, the Viccarones also have enjoyed watching James and his new teammates in south Florida trying to get it together as well. The Heat's 9-8 start, prior to its victory over Washington on Monday, had created barely any separation from the 7-9 Cavs team that stepped on the floor Tuesday against Boston. It created a new spectator sport of sorts in northeast Ohio.
"You mean the fact that they're not kicking everybody's butt?" Tanya Viccarone said. "Oh yeah."
The psychologists and the Germans call that schadenfreude (shahd-n-froi-duh), the pleasure derived from the misfortunes of others. On the street, that goes by the less lofty label of payback, which will be on everyone's minds when James, the kid from Akron,steps onto the floor Thursday.
Nothing would be sweeter for the folks who savored James' talents for seven years than for the Cavs to win. It's been said that even an 8-76 season would be tolerable if Cleveland's lone remaining victory came in this first crack at the Heat. Coach Byron Scott is being urged to treat this game the way Jim Tressel preps Ohio State for Michigan, rightfully valuing it double, triple or 10 times more than any other game on the schedule.
Hoots, hollers and heckling figure to reach epic proportions in the stands, while some worry the emotions could boil over. A mere handful of passionate or overimbibing customers could turn things ugly for everyone, and even former slugger Albert Belle -- a notorious villain from Cleveland's past from his days with, and later without, the Indians -- was urging maturity and tranquility.
A story in the Cleveland Plain Dealer recalled Belle's rancorous return after he signed a $55 million free-agent deal with the Chicago White Sox that included batteries hurled onto the field, taunts, invectives and fake and real money thrown at Belle. As befitted Belle, he threw an upright middle finger back at the agitated fans.
"It's very hard to predict what will happen," said David Gilbert, head of the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission. "Even the group in The Q might not be representative of the whole community -- that's going to be a group with a lot of pent-up passion in that bulding. But I think that, in many ways, despite what might manifest itself at the game, it's a non-story anymore. Once it happened, people were clearly angry and upset about the way it happened. But the sun came up the next day, Lake Erie still had water in it, the buildings downtown were still standing and I think now a lot of people have said, 'Enough.' "
Gilbert, in the weeks leading up to James' decision to leave Cleveland, had been one of the proprietors of a web site, www.morethanaplayer.org, dedicated to keeping the player in town. Since he left, the site has gone dormant. Other sites have turned into hating or baiting destinations, and Gilbert admitted that for many residents, "a Miami loss is as nice as a Cleveland win" through the first month of the season.
Whether the vitriol at The Q gets cranked unhealthily high remains to be seen.
"Chaos," is what one fan, Uche Adigwe of Cleveland, expects. "Pandemonium" said his friend, Vick Searcy.
"This is a hostile city," Searcy said as he headed back to his seat after halftime of the Video Cavs' 106-87 loss to Boston. "I think LeBron is going to be very emotional on and off the court. I think he'll have a very good game. Thirty points. He'll come out with something to prove."
Some longtime media observers fear, if not the worst, something unseemly and maybe even messy, and plan to work the Miami game in clothes that won't be ruined. Other folks have tried to counter-program, urging disgruntled fans to simply cheer louder for the Cavs while silently shunning LeBron. Or to turn their backs to him during the visiting team's introductions. Or to exit the arena bowl before his name is announced, waiting in the concourse.
Good luck with all that.
Cavs owner Dan Gilbert has urged fans to stay classy, vowing to remove those sporting crude signs or spewing lewd language. A beefed-up security crew at The Q will be on the alert for folks who "work blue," as the old nightclub comics used to call it.
"Grumpy is good," a Cavs spokesman said about signs and messages directed at James. "Angry is fine. Disrespectful, even, is OK. But we want to stay away from profane and obscene."
Said David Gilbert (not related to the team owner): "I'm sure hoping it isn't a circus. But I would almost expect that he'll be roundly booed every time he touches the ball. On the flip side, I hope that [former Cavs center] Zydrunas Ilgauskas gets a tremendously warm reception. That's an interesting dichotomy: Two guys who become free agents and end up signing with the same team, both of them who were a big part of the Cavaliers, but now they're viewed very differently here."
It won't be an easy night to navigate emotionally for Cleveland fans. This is, after all, their moment-of-truth time with James. There is no Tweeting and running now, no Jim Gray to serve as go-between. James will face them. Presumably, he will hear them.
For a lot of them, it will be tempting to let him have it, the way Diogenes himself -- the naked philosopher in a barrel -- once lipped off to Alexander the Great when he came to visit for standing in his sun.
Then again, nothing would validate "The Decision" -- for James and his inncr circle, certainly -- more than an ugly scene driven by Cavs fans. They started down that dubious path back in May, when they still had and wanted him around, booing him lustily in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against Boston during his "quit" performance. Dan Gilbert's statement in Comic Sans to season-ticket holders when James left swung some public opinion in the player's favor, too.
Going too far would similarly backfire, which is why many are advocating moderation in vituperation Thursday.
"My son has a really nice shirt. It says something like, "[Michael] Jordan didn't have to leave to get a ring!" No foul language or anything," Tanya Viccarone said. "All I want to do is sit here and give him the stinkeye all night long."
After which, of course, James can take that stinkeye back with him to South Beach.