Thursday, September 24, 2009

Best Story


An old man lived alone in Minnesota. He wanted to spade his potato garden, but it was very hard work.His only son, who would have helped him, was in prison. The old man wrote a letter to his son and mentioned his situation.


Dear Son, I am feeling pretty bad because it looks like I won't be able to plant my potato garden this year.I hate to miss doing the garden, because your mother always loved planting time. I'm just getting too old to be digging up a garden plot. If you were here, all my troubles would be over. I know you would dig the plot for me, if you weren't in prison.


Love, Dad


Shortly, the old man received this telegram:"For Heaven's sake, Dad, don't dig up the garden!! That's where I buried the GUNS!" At 4a.m.


The next morning,A dozen FBI agents and local police officers showed up and dug up the entire garden without finding any guns.Confused, the old man wrote another note to his son telling him what happen ed, and asked him what to do next. His son's reply was: "Go ahead and plant your potatoes, Dad. It's the best I could do for you from here."


- Moral of the Story


NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE IN THE WORLD,IF YOU HAVE DECIDED TO DO SOMETHING DEEP FROM YOUR HEART, YOU CAN DO IT.IT IS THE THOUGHT THAT MATTERS NOT WHERE YOU ARE OR WHERE THE PERSON IS.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Mother

Who is a Mother ?

A Mother has so many things to do, From washing, ironing, cleaning to tying a shoe.She scrubs, she mends, she cooks and sews, She bathes the children and washes their clothes, When they forget to wash their faces clean, And their clothes are the muddiest you've ever seen, Who repairs the clothes and scrubs them like new? Of course, that is what a Mother will do.

Who becomes the doctor or the nurse when they are ill, Applying a bandage or giving them a pill? Who becomes a teacher when a child has homework? She must never her duty shirk. Who becomes a detective to find a toy or a book? For missing things she must look and look? Who becomes a listener to every heartache, to every accomplishment that a child makes? Who scolds their children when they are naughty, or remind them of God when they are to haughty? Who tends her family with love and patience, too? Of course that is what a Mother will do.

Why we need a Mother

There are times when only a Mother's love can understand our tears, Can soothe our disappoints and calm all of our fears.

There are times when only a Mother's love can share the joy we feel When something we've dreamed about quite suddenly is real.

There are times when only a Mother's faith can help us on life's way And inspire in us the confidence we need from day to day.

For a Mother's heart and a Mother's faith and a Mother's steadfast love Were fashioned by the Angels and sent from God above...Mother is a Priceless Gift from God

My Miracle Mother
Mom, I look at you and see a walking miracle. Your unfailing love without limit, your ability to soothe my every hurt the way you are on duty, unselfishly, every hour, every day, makes me so grateful that I am yours, and you are mine. With open arms and open heart, with enduring patience and inner strength, you gave so much for me, sometimes at your expense. You are my teacher, my comforter, my encourager, appreciating all, forgiving all.

Sometimes I took you for granted, Mom, but I don’t now, and I never will again. I know that everything I am today relates to you and your loving care. I gaze in wonder as I watch you being you— my miracle, my mother.

Improve Your Acting Skills

Ten Ways to Improve Your Acting Skills

Are you looking for great ways to improve your current acting skills? Believe it or not, you could probably fill rooms of your home or apartment with books that can teach you how to be a better actor and improve upon the acting skills that you already posses. Instead of reading each of those books and wasting your valuable time, I have compiled a list of ten ways you can improve your acting skills rather easily and quickly.

1- The first thing you must always do is read your script and know it like the back of your hand. You must know your lines and the lines of your fellow actors so you are not caught off guard when it is your turn.

2- Once you know your lines, you must then be an active listener. You should always be giving the director and your audience the impression that you are listening to everything going on. Also, don't be too quick to blurt out your lines just to prove that you know them. You are trying to convince people that you are having a real conversation, so make it seem real.

3- This one might be one of the simplest, but hardest ones yet, Be brave! Always be looking for a job that might cause you to leave your comfort zone and stretch your abilities. This is one of the best ways to grow and improve yourself as an actor.

4- You must learn to breathe properly. You should be practicing breathing techniques for at least 20 minutes per day. This will help you fight the stress associated with an acting career and also help you fight stage fright.

5- Always be professional! Make sure that you show up on time or if possible, early.

6- Avoid talking ill of your fellow actors. Those who put down or insult other actors, especially those that you work closely with usually end up blaming the others for their own short comings and fail to take advantage of areas they need to improve upon.

7- Keep your cool, even if everyone else isn't. If you do, your performance will definitely stand out from everyone else's.

8- Practice, practice, practice. The more you practice acting, the better you will get.

9- Not only work to improve your acting ability but work hard to make your fellow actors look as good as possible. This will enhance your own performance and help you develop much quicker.

10- Learn how to accept and deal with rejection and harsh criticism. Just keep in mind that a lot of actors get rejected for most jobs most of the time. It is simply part of the business.

I hope these steps help you get a general idea of what you need to start doing today to become a better actor. Start working on them today and immediately see results that will benefit you greatly.

Acting - Things you should know

TIMING

Ability "to move and speak in precise manner at right moment for particular impact; pacing of action

RHYTHM

Ability to understand and utilize the rhythmic expression of the play - dictated by script, director, other actors, type of play

STYLE

Ability to absorb and produce particular way of presentation; unified form of any play dictated by director's vision, company agreement; conventions of particular type of play, particular period of theatre

PACE

Ability to regulate speed of delivery and speed of action - dictated by dramatic potential

ATMOSPHERE

Ability to create atmosphere - self-belief so that audience believe (Stanislavski - if, imagination

INTERACTION

Communication with, and reaction to other actors; identification with relationships within roles with other characters

CHARACTERISATION

Ability to create a believable character within a role - through analysis, understanding, discussion, improvisation, belief, faith, living the part (Stanislavski - action, imagination, faith and a sense of truth, emotion memory; threshold of subconscious)

EMOTIONAL IMPACT

Ability to feel right emotions within the role, and communicate them to audience (Stanislavki - fundamental of system)

FOCUS

Ability to hold attention of actors and audience, and to direct attention of audience to specific persons or areas of stage (Stanislavski - circles of attention)

SUSTAIN

Ability to sustain a role through an entire play; to sustain momentum, mood, atmosphere, pace as required.

GENEROSITY

Ability to offer something to play off to others; ability to allow focus to be with other actors

STILLNESS

Ability to show thoughts and emotions without movement (Stanislavski – dramatic inaction)

SPATIAL AWARENESS

Ability to create space around self and other actors; positioning - in relation to each other/to audience; physical movement on stage; utilization of props or set

BREATH CONTROL

Ability to control breath for vocal projection; for physical control of energy and use of voice

STAMINA

Ability "to maintain energy, sustain role or momentum

STRENGTH

Ability to maintain stamina, fitness for physical and vocal control; for emotional control - carrying it through (emotional tension/sensation is physically draining)

RELAXATION

Ability to use voice and body without damage; to allow emotions to come through within character .at points of high tension (Stanislavski - relaxation of muscles; threshold of subconscious)

CONTROL

Ability to have power over voice, body; relaxation and suppleness of body; over scene; over audience response (Stanislavski - communion, adaptation)

COMMUNICATION

Ability to be in communication with other actors; with audience (Stanislavski communion, adaptation)

PHYSICAL

Flexibility - characterization; use of positions; type of walk, limp, injury; how to hold body
Versatility - able to adapt postures to different characterizations; move body in variety of ways
Adaptability - adjust -for character, to other actors, to audience, to set, to stage (differs in different theatres)
Agility - body easily able to adopt any required posture

Good Presentation Skills

The Eight Points of Good Presentation Skills

Good presentation skills are cultivated. While some people do indeed have the talent for speaking in public, for you to acquire good presentation skills is not an impossible feat to achieve. In fact, it is necessary for you to have good presentation skills if you want to get far ahead in your career.

There are actually eight points that characterize exemplary presentation skills. If you have already had the pleasure of listening to a good public speaker, it would be easy for you to identify them.

These eight points are:

1. A good opening. Knowing how to make a good opening is part of having good presentation skills. A good opening has two functions. First, it grabs the attention of the audience. Second, it states the purpose of the presentation, what the speaker aims to achieve with it.

2. A logical structure. Good presentation skills involve knowing how to organize a presentation so that it flows smoothly and logically. A logical structure keeps the audience in tune with what you are saying. The quickest way to lose the attention of the audience is to be disorganized with the structure of your speech.

3. Relevant key points. Determining relevant key points is another characteristic of having good presentation skills. The key points of your presentation are what most of your audience will remember about it. Make sure that your key points are clear and well-emphasized.

4. Conciseness. Nobody loves to listen to long-winded speeches. Therefore, part of having good presentation skills is knowing just how long your presentation should be. This is so your audience would not end up being bored with the sheer length of it.

5. Use of visual aids. Words tend to slip through the audience’s mind. Therefore, use powerful visual aids to reinforce whatever message that you wish to convey. After all, a single picture can paint a thousand words. This is where a good PowerPoint slide show comes in.

6. Use of speaker notes. A speaker with good presentation skills knows that the fast way to cut the connection he or she has with the audience is reading directly from the PowerPoint slide show. Using speaker notes will guide you through your presentation without losing your rapport with your audience.

7. Ample rehearsal. A speaker with good presentation skills knows how important it is to rehearse the presentation before actually going on stage to speak. If your presentation is well rehearsed, you will look more professional and more competent before your audience.

8. A good closing. As much as a good opening will grab the attention of the audience and state the purpose of the presentation, a good closing will leave a lasting impression of what you have just talked about with your audience.

These are the eight points of having good presentation skills. Remember, having good presentation skills is not something a person is born with. These skills are something that you can easily acquire and cultivate but must continuously hone

Fear of Public Speaking

Ways to successfully tame the fear of public speaking

If you develop cold feet while on stage, if words don’t seem to come of your mouth and if you suddenly get excessively nervous, chances are you’re suffering from the fear of public speaking. For most people, the fear of public speaking is one of the largest obstacles to career growth in an organization.

There is a way out

Public speaking need not be a harrowing experience anymore. You can now effortlessly speak on any topic of choice provided you know how to overcome your fear of public speaking. There are many programs designed these days to help people overcome issues like stage fright and facing a large audience.

They are as human as you are!

It’s important to remember that when you are on stage you are essentially speaking to humans – just like you! Trembling legs, shaky voices and a lack of confidence is something many orators have learnt to overcome. When they could successfully overcome their fear of public speaking so can you!

Don’t form preconceived notions

Most of us perceive successful public speakers as being witty and smart with loads of polished appeal. That is far from the truth. We perceive them that way because their fear of public speaking is never brought to the fore. It’s all about the way you project yourself vis-à-vis the way you actually are!

Keep it simple!

Follow the KISS principle – Keep It Simple and Short. You’ll never go wrong! Fact is, most famous public speakers don’t go on and on about a topic. They break it up with interesting anecdotes, jokes and incidents. That’s what helps also in overcoming the fear of public speaking. Try and stick to two or at the most three main points. Elaborate on them and illustrate with interesting examples.

Why am I speaking?

The goal of every public speech is to accomplish a certain objective in the end. Many people who have the fear of public speaking think it is sufficient to just have a good topic and sound interesting. That’s not entirely true. You also need to have a purpose in mind. You shouldn’t set out making a speech thinking you need to impress the audience. No matter how good you become or how much you overcome your fear of public speaking you can never ever get 100% approval from the audience. The trick to success lies in accepting this fact first!

Just be yourself – and the world will like you!

Many of us perceive successful public speakers as being eloquent and charming with certain distinct attributes. That’s not true. Most famous public speakers have not only overcome their fear of public speaking but have remained true to themselves. They are just being themselves when they talk on stage! That’s what makes their speeches more likeable.

Don’t boast

People who flatter themselves and indulge in puffery almost always remain unpopular. The same goes for public speaking too. One of the ways to overcome the fear of public speaking is to remain humble and have a sense of humor. It makes the speech livelier.

Three Mindsets behind the Fear of Public Speaking

The actor George Jessel was known in his lifetime as the Toastmaster General of the United States because of his frequent stints at hosting and acting as a master of ceremonies in various affairs, both political and showbiz. He once said that, “The human brain starts working the moment you are born and never stops until you stand up to speak in public.” That is a very apt way to describe the fear of public speaking. To a lot of people, nothing is more frightening than the prospect of speaking in front of a crowd.

However, not many people are aware of the fact that it is they themselves who are causing their own fear of public speaking. More often than not, the fear of public speaking is something that the mind creates on its own. It becomes a kind of self-fulfilling mantra; once the mind conceives of it, it starts to believe in it.

So, if a person has a fear of public speaking, most likely he or she is only afraid because of a certain mindset that he or she has come to have. What are the mindsets that cause people to have a fear of public speaking? Here are three:

1. The mindset that public speaking is difficult. Sometimes, the fear of public speaking stems from the mindset that a person may have, which is that public speaking is a difficult task and that should be left only to those who are capable of doing it. And so, the people who have this mindset shy away from opportunities of speaking in public because they think they are not capable of doing it.

2. The mindset that public speaking is for smart people. There are times that the fear of public speaking comes from the notion of some people that in public speaking, it is essential for them to appear smart. Certainly, the need to look smart adds to a person’s credibility as a public speaker, but sometimes it is taken too seriously. As a result, they convey far too much information than what is necessary in their presentation, they mimic other public speakers instead of just being themselves, or they brag about being an expert on the topic they are handling instead of showing humility before their audience.

3. The mindset that in public speaking, the audience needs to be controlled. In some cases, a person’s fear of public speaking rises from the belief that his or her audience needs to be controlled as the speech or the presentation is delivered. The thing is, the members of the audience will fidget and talk among themselves no matter what the speaker does. The speaker will never be able to control his or her audience; what the speaker can control are his or her own thoughts, behaviour and visual aids.

Public speaking is a challenging, but nonetheless a rewarding and fulfilling task. However, there are a number of mindsets that lead people to have a fear of public speaking. To overcome the fear of public speaking, these mindsets must be overcome as well.

Presentation Skills

5 Ways to Develop Presentation Skills

One of the foremost criterions of developing good presentation skills is to know the objective of the presentation. Presentations are, typically, given to inform, educate, persuade, ideate, or to train. After you identify the goal, you can start developing your presentation skills.
Here are 5 Ways that will help you develop your skills of presentation.

1. Confidence is the Key

Before anything, develop a certain degree of confidence about your own abilities. Don’t go out there with the feeling that everyone is your enemy and is just waiting to rip you apart.
You can also build a certain degree of confidence by being well prepared for the presentation. Don’t leave any facet out, and make it a point to have a script that is tightly edited. Even if you don’t make all the information at your disposal, a part of the presentation, make sure that you have an in-depth understanding of the topic.

2. Be Engaging and Do Not Lecture

Develop an interesting presentation. This is a significant aspect of developing presentation skills. Learn to interact with your audience while giving a presentation. Don’t just stand and dump your
data on them.

Be compelling enough, so that the people hear your presentation, without giving you a bored look or without showing disinterest in the presentation. It’s important to understand that, you don’t know more than the audience, and even if you think you do, you are giving the presentation for their benefit and not yours.

3. Knowing Your Audience

Make it a point to know your audience. Meaning, you must know the basic characteristics of the audience. You must also know the number of senior people that would be a part of the audience, or what would be the initial attitude of the people vis-à-vis the topic.
If the people in front of you are intelligent and well-informed, you must be prepared accordingly and try to mold your presentation skills accordingly. Each presentation is different, and needs a few common skill sets in conjunction with skill sets that have been developed for a particular audience.

4. Keep it Short and Simple

Don’t go in for a lengthy presentation. A simple and short presentation does not mean a presentation that falls short of expectations or does not provide important information.
If you try and integrate simplicity, you will develop an orderliness, and will also know what to select and in what amount. You will also become better organized, and not meander away from the topic.

5. Anticipation

You can develop presentation skills by learning to anticipate any eventuality, especially with respect to the questions asked. If you do not learn to expect the unexpected, you might just lose your credibility in the process.

Always identify the questions or problems that your might face, and form an adequate response for the same

Stage fear

Afraid to speak on stage?

Most people get jittery when they have to speak on stage. They suddenly seem to suffer from stage fright. This is also often a deterrent to socializing and enhancing office contacts. To overcome these limitations a public speaking training program can do a world of good. Most of these public speaking training sessions focus on enhancing the confidence levels of a person and eliminating stage fright.

Releasing excess energy

Many times in a public speaking training session you will find that the trainer advises you to do some light exercises before the speech. A short and light run or some regular punches on the boxing bag can actually free up all your excess energy. The fidgetiness and hyperactivity can vanish by doing such light exercise forms. Why is it great? These exercises taught at a public speaking training program make you stress free but not so laid-back that you end up messing up your speech.

Don’t let those faces intimidate you

Usually when a person stands up on stage and the lights come on, the first thing that greets him is the stare of a thousand faces. It can be an intimidating experience. What most public speaking training programs aim to do is to help you think of these faces as your friends rather than a series of judgmental people sitting across you. They say the best way to conquer your fears is to face them. That’s why proper eye contact with the audience is critical. In any public speaking training session the trainer will help the person to initiate eye contact with the people in the room while giving a speech.

What eye contact really means

Most public speaking training programs will essentially help you differentiate between the glaring eye contact and the subtle glance that you give to an audience. The second approach has proven to be far more effective than demanding a direct eye contact with each person in the audience. It can be intimidating for the audience as well. Thus most public speaking training programs say that a regular sweeping gaze across the entire audience can help get their attention much better than direct eye contact.

Giving presentations impromptu

Most of us don’t have enough time to actually prepare for a public speech or presentation. Our boss may have asked us to give a presentation the very next day. In such cases having guidance from a public speaking training program can do a world of good. Such programs help you nail a presentation effectively within just a single day! By having the main points in mind, one can elaborate on these and deliver a flawless presentation without hassles.

Performing select actions

There are certain actions which subtly distinguish a successful public speaker from an amateur one. We may not notice them consciously but a public speaking training program can certainly point out these actions to us. These public speaking training sessions seek to repeatedly let the student practice these actions until it becomes almost like a reflex action which comes naturally

Public Speaking Training is Important

5 Reasons Why Public Speaking Training is Important

Public speaking training is important as there are various occasions in your professional or social life when you might be called on to speak publicly. You need to do it right and you need to do it effectively. If you are not confident about your own ability in this regard, then it makes sense to take public speaking training.

There are quite a few people who think that public speaking qualities are ingrained in a person and training won’t help matters at all. However, it is the confidence and ability that is a part of the person and not public speaking in general.

The 5 Reasons:

1. Alleviating Your Fears

Many people have stage fright. They are fearful of speaking to a crowd of people. They are frightened of all the attention that would be on them and hence they are not comfortable with the aspect of public speaking.

An effective public speaking training course would help people allay those fears effectively. This is one of the most important components of any such course. Once the fear factor is minimized, persons can effectively give a speech without faltering or losing faith in their abilities.

2. Help Build Confidence

The inherent lack of confidence is something that always acts as a deterrent to effective public speaking. Such courses, help in building up your confidence. This is done by enhancing a person’s specific skill sets to generate maximum impact.

A person is shown how to maintain eye contact with the audience, and the various aspects of voice modulation. This will go a long way in making the person confident about his/her abilities.
One of the more important aspects of confidence building is to have content that is relevant to the topic in question. Moreover, speakers should also be comfortable with the content and all that is asked from them.

3. Will Help Develop an Individualistic Style

The best part about being a part of any public speaking training program is the fact that, your individual characteristics, abilities, and qualities will be used to create a unique public speaking style, which will suit your requirements.

A person’s own exclusive style will make, him/her a good orator. An effective training program, will not ask the participants to copy a style, but help them build a whole new distinctive style, which will be their own, and not borrowed from somebody else.

4. Will Introduce You to the Intimate Facets

There are various minute facets of public speaking that you might not know about. Things like creating a great first impression, when to give a pause, how to be interactive, the small but critical mistakes, etc are all brought to a person’s attention in a training program related to public speaking.

A person should know how and when to use humor in the speech. This would keep the audience interested and attentive. You can only know about these facets through a public speaking training course.

5. Giving a Platform for Practice

In the end, its practice that makes one perfect! You can practice in front of a mirror, but nothing compares to practicing in front of an audience. Most classroom training programs allow you to do just that, thus making it comfortable for you to speak in front of a real audience, when the time comes.

You must be careful about choosing a training program that integrates all the reasons that we have talked about. Moreover, to have any success in public speaking training, it’s important to be interested in it.

There are many more reasons why you must join such a training program. A public speaking training program is definitely important

Public speaker's success

Any public speaker's success depends on the orator's ability to attract the audience's attention and further retain it for as much time as it is necessary to completely expound the necessary ideas. This simple objective is reachable only in case the following principles are observed.

1. The audience must be interested in the topic of the speech. To be memorized, the speech should appeal to each listener in the audience and therefore topicality is the primary principle that should be taken into account when preparing a speech. Therefore, each speech is prepared on the basis of the previously collected information about the preferences and interests of the target auditorium.

2. The orator must use his fascination to persuade the audience. He must believe unconditionally in the subject of his speech and in the same time he should expound his ideas as if they have just stricken his mind, despite the fact that the speech could be composed beforehand by the professional speechwriters. It is necessary to understand that the listener has a subtle perception of creativity and as soon as he will realize that the speaker does not believe in what he says or the idea is someone else's words, the interest will fade instantly.

3. Emotional background is an important constituent of every speech. It is necessary to maintain versatility during the process of speaking. The speaker must control rhythm, inflexion, pauses and accents. It is possible to keep the audience's attention only in case the orator is able to maintain its emotional alteration.

4. Gestures and mimics of the orator must be natural, although it is hard to formulate the universal advice in this case. However, it is possible to say with utmost certitude that hesitating speaker is given out by his body. Successful orator does not merely control the process of speaking, but also watches his gestures and mimics, remaining inwardly emancipated.

5. The orator must be sincere. Advanced techniques of public speaking and any other manipulations are worth nothing without sincerity.

Oration Tips Inspired by Frederick Douglass

Oration Tips Inspired by Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass spent the majority of his life reading, writing, and spreading the message of equality for all humanity. He harnessed the power of words to inspire the hearts and minds of people all over the world. Refined oratorical skills were one of his primary weapons against the oppressive, unjust forces in society. When Frederick Douglass was a teenager, he earned enough money to buy his first book, The Columbian Orator by Caleb Bingham. The Columbian Orator is a book about the art of oration, as well as a collection of great speeches throughout history. Not only did this book help Douglass learn how to read, but it also helped him become one of the greatest orators of all time. The following tips are tried and true lessons employed and perfected by Frederick Douglass.

PRONUNCIATION is the most important part of oration. The audience must understand the words you are saying.

Pay proper attention to accent, emphasis, and cadence. The simple question, Will you ride to town today? can mean 4 different things, depending on the placement of the emphasis.

Do not be monotonous. Vary your volume, intonation, and pitch.

Keep your voice at a natural volume. If you are naturally soft-spoken, do not resort to shrill yelling for the sake of volume.

Control facial expressions and body gestures to coincide with the mood of the speech. Do not appear stiff.

Believe what you are saying. It makes the oration more natural, and therefore more moving.

Make the best use of your natural voice. Do not try to make your voice something it is not.

In general, try to end each sentence louder than its beginning.

Oratory

“Oratory is the parent of liberty. By the constitution of things it was ordained that eloquence should be the last stay and support of liberty, and that with her she is ever destined to live, to flourish, and to die. It is to the interest of tyrants to cripple and debilitate every species of eloquence. They have no other safety. It is then, the duty of free states to foster oratory.”
-Henry Hardwicke

The power of the spoken word is undeniable. At all the great crisis and hinges in history, we find great speeches which swayed the outcome. Great speeches have motivated citizens to fight injustice, throw off tyranny, and lay down their life for a worthy cause. Words have drawn meaning out of tragedy, comforted those who mourn, and memorialized events with the dignity and solemnity they deserved. Words can move people to risk life and limb, shed tears, laugh out loud, recommit to virtue, change their life, or feel patriotic. By weaving and spinning words into great tapestries of art, a man can wield an almost god-like power. Of course, even the most malicious leaders have known this and sought diligently to hone this skill for nefarious purposes.

The power of speech can be used for good or evil and comes with great responsibility. Those who uphold virtue and goodness must be prepared to speak as masterfully as those who seductively and smoothly seek to convince the public to abandon its values and principles.

What is oratory?

“Not until human nature is other than what it is, will the function of the living voice-the greatest force on earth among men-cease. . . I advocate, therefore, in its full extent, and for every reason of humanity, of patriotism, and of religion, a more through culture of oratory and I define oratory to be the art of influencing conduct with the truth set home by all the resources of the living man.”
-Henry Ward Beecher

All oratory is public speaking, but not all public speaking is oratory. A teacher’s lecture, the best man’s speech, a political candidate’s stump speech, all of these things are not necessarily oratory, but they can be elevated to that status.

If public speaking is fast food, oratory is a gourmet meal. Not in pretentiousness or inaccessibility, but in the fact that oratory exists above the ordinary; it is prepared with passion, infused with creativity, and masterfully crafted to offer a sublime experience. Oratory seeks to convince the listener of something, whether that is to accept a certain definition of freedom or simply of the fact that the recently deceased was a person worthy to be mourned.

Oratory has been called the highest art for it encompasses all other disciplines. It requires a knowledge of literature, the ability to construct prose, and an ear for rhythm, harmony and musicality. Oratory is not mere speaking, but speech that appeals to our noblest sentiments, animates our souls, stirs passions and emotions, and inspires virtuous action. It is often at its finest when fostered during times of tragedy, pain, crisis, fear, and turmoil. In these situations it serves as a light, a guide to those who cannot themselves make sense of the chaos and look to a leader to point the way.

The history of oratory

Oratory in Greece

While the spoken word has been central to humanity since our species began to vocalize, it was in ancient Greece that speech would be raised to an art and true oratory would be born. A “golden age of eloquence” was ushered in by the statesman, general, and master orator Pericles. His funeral oration was perhaps the first great speech to be written and prepared for the public, and set the standard for all orations to come. Yet it is Demosthenes who is remembered as the greatest orator of Greece and perhaps all time. His speaking ability roused an Athenian people, deep in an apathetic slumber, to fight the threat Philip of Macedon posed to their liberty.
Yet the practice of oratory was not confined to the elites of Athenian society. Oratory was considered one of the highest arts, even a virtue. It was an essential part of every man’s education, the foundation upon which all other academic pursuits and disciplines were built. The mastery of oratory was considered an essential part of being a well-rounded man.

Oratory blossomed so splendidly and reached such an apex in ancient Greece because of its central function in public life. Athens’ democratic government marshaled every male citizen into politics. Any citizen could be called upon or inspired to sway others to the merits or criticisms of a particular piece of legislation. Laws were few and simple, giving judges considerable latitude in applying justice and lawyers great flexibility in making their case. The assembly, council, and courts were thus filled with vigorous debate and brilliant oratory.

Oratory in Rome

The art of oratory was slow in coming to Rome, but began to flourish when that empire conquered Greece and began to be influenced by its traditions. Roman oratory thrived in the courts, Comitia (assemblies where people debated the passing of laws), and Senate. Roman oratory borrowed much of its style from Greece, although there were differences. The Romans were less intellectual than the Greeks, their speeches less meaty and studded with more stylistic flourishes, stories, and metaphors. Nevertheless, Roman oratory was still a vibrant art and produced its own virtuoso: Cicero. Cicero’s “Catiline Orations” exposed a plot to overthrow the Roman government and did so with masterful eloquence and skill.

Great forensic oratory passed away with the fall of the Roman empire for “eloquence cannot exist under a despotic form of government. It can only be found in countries where free institutions flourish.” Tacitus, a century after Cicero’s death, lamented in the “Causes of the Corruption of Eloquence” that “the speakers of the present day are called pleaders, and advocates, and barristers, and anything rather than orators.” Lawyers began to hire claquers to attend their speeches and applaud generously, leading Pliny to note, “You may rest assured that he is the worst speaker who has the loudest applause.”

Modern Oratory

As democracy waned, so did great oratory. During the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, oratory was largely confined to the religious sphere. But it would be revived in the 18th centuries as France, England, and America created parliamentary bodies of government and the issues of liberty and freedom burned brightly in debates.

Great oratory began its current decline with the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Taking office during the Great Depression, FDR soon began his famous fireside chats. The country was demoralized and frightened, and Roosevelt’s warm, grandfatherly voice poured into millions of Americans homes, bringing a sense of comfort and security.

After FDR, Americans expected the same “folksy” speaking approach from all their presidents. Grand, eloquent speeches were considered a bit suspect, smacking of pretension and the lack of a common touch. Yet the reception and praise given to Barack Obama’s speeches suggest that there has been an untapped hunger among citizens for oratory that will inspire them and touch on their ideals (although the ancient Greeks would have criticized Obama’s speeches for sometimes emphasizing style over substance).

While a few great orators exist today, the art has generally fallen into disregard. When a man is called upon to speak, he often hems and haws, boring his audience to tears. It should not be so, gentlemen. It is time to resurrect and cultivate the art of oration.

Becoming a great orator

“Oratory is the masculine of music.” -John Atgeld

While most men will never summon troops into battle or debate a Congressional bill, every man should strive to be a great orator. Whether it is giving the best man speech, arguing against a policy at a city council, making a proposal at work, or giving a eulogy, you will be asked to publicly speak at least a few times in your life. Don’t be a man that shakes and shudders at that thought. Be a man who welcomes, nay, relishes the opportunity to move and inspire people with the power of his words. When a speaking opportunity arises, be the guy everyone thinks of first.
Being a great orator takes work. You must do the following thing if you wish to master the craft:
Practice, practice, practice:

“The history of the world is full of testimony to prove how much depends upon industry. Not an eminent orator has lived but is an example of it. Yet, in contradiction to all this, the almost universal feeling appears to be, that industry can affect nothing, that eminence is the result of accident, and that everyone must be content to remain just what he may happen to be. . . For any other art they would have served an apprenticeship and would be ashamed to practice it in public before they had learned it. . . But the extempore speaker, who is to invent as well as to utter, to carry on an operation of the mind, as well as to produce sound enters upon the work without preparatory discipline, and then wonders why he fails!”

The great myth perpetuated about public speaking is that talent in this area is inherent and inborn and cannot be learned. But our manly forbearers knew better. The great orators of the world from Cicero to Rockne practiced the art of oratory with resolute single-mindedness. Demosthenes exemplified this drive particularly well. As he was a child he was weak and awkward in both body and speech. But he determined that he would become a great oratory. Like TR, he built up his body with vigorous exercise. And he did a series of unusual tactics to hone his speaking skills. He would go to the ocean and attempt to recite orations louder than the waves. He then isolated himself in a cave to put full focus on the attainment of his goal. In order to avoid being tempted to leave the cave before he had mastered the art of oratory, he shaved half his head bald, knowing he would be subjected to ridicule were he to show his face in that state. In an attempt to improve his enunciation, he recited speeches while his mouth was filled with pebbles. He daily practiced his speaking in front of a mirror, improving any defect in his delivery or bodily movements. Finally, he had a nervous tic of raising one shoulder while he spoke. So to correct this, he hung a sword above that shoulder which would cut him were he to raise the shoulder. His work paid off handsomely; he became the one of the greatest orators of all time.

Be a virtuous man

“The speech of one who knows what he is talking about and means what he says-it is thought on fire.” -William Jennings Bryan

No grammatical garnish or oratorical flourish can add as much to a speech as good character. The very hint of hypocrisy will doom even the most eloquent speech. Conversely, when you are virtuous, honest, and earnestly committed to that which you speak of, this inner-commitment will tinge each word you utter with sincerity. The audience will feel the depth of your commitment and will listen far more intently then when they know it is mere claptrap.

Study all the arts

“In an orator, the acuteness of the logicians, the wisdom of the philosophers, the language almost of poetry, the memory of lawyers, the voice of tragedians, the gesture almost of the best actors, is required. Nothing therefore is more rarely found among mankind than a consummate orator.” -Cicero

In order to appeal to noblest and finest sentiments within your audience, your speeches must be filled with allusions to the greatest characters, events, and artistic expressions of history. Oratory thus combines all of the arts into one expression. You must keep abreast of current events and study human nature, religion, science, literature, and poetry. Read the newspaper. Watch great films. Read a least a paragraph of great literature each day. Do not simply frequent blogs and media sources that flatter your pre-existing view points! A great orator must be aware of the counterarguments your critics will raise and deftly address and defuse them before anyone else has the chance to.

Immerse yourself in great oratory

Take as your coaches and mentors all the great orators of the past. Read their speeches. Study the way in which they constructed their sentences, how the placement and arrangement of words builds rhythm, how the choice of words and stories creates vivid imagery. Examine how each line flows into the next, how the lines are distinct and yet together compose a cohesive, unified whole. Listen to great speeches. Listen to where the orators pause for effect, where their voice rises and falls. Ponder what makes certain sections electrifying and other parts captivating.

Want to be a speaker or an orator..?

...If you want to be a speaker or an orator, you certainly desire a very interesting thing, and certainly a very enjoyable job, if you can make a living out of it. Not only can you speak about something you are delighted in but you can encourage and build people! What a great feeling when you see someone's face smiling or when a person from the audience thanks you for being so comforting, delivering such good talks! Unfortunately some speakers are really boring. They are far from being good orator. Listening to such public speech is a waste of time for the public. I am sure that if you apply the 10 following tips, you are bound to become a great speaker, a talented orator!
TIP 1: Good Look
Be neat and clean, Hair should be neatly combed. Posture should convey an attentive attitude. Your personal appearance says much about you. When you are clean and well-groomed, others will likely conclude that you have self-respect, and they will be more inclined to listen to you.

TIP 2: Use of Microphone
What is said will benefit others only if it can be heard clearly. If they are to benefit from what is said, your audience must be able to hear clearly.
The Sound Equipment can amplify the volume of your voice many times and yet adequately maintain the quality and tone of your voice. Listeners will not have to strain to catch what is said. Instead, they can concentrate on the message.

TIP 3: Use of Visual Aids
Use pictures, maps, charts, or other objects to make important points of the lecture more vivid. A visual aid often makes a clearer or a more lasting impression on the mind than does just words.

TIP 4: Accurately Timed, Properly Proportioned
Give your talk within the allotted time, and use appropriate portions of your time for each part of the talk. Sufficient time needs to be allotted to each of the main points of instruction. It is important to end the meeting on time.

TIP 5: Make an Outline
To prepare an outline will give you more time to practice delivering the talk. Your presentations will be not only easier to give but more interesting to listen to and more motivating to your audience.

TIP 6: Be Fluent
A fluent person reads and speaks in such a manner that words and thoughts are easily understood, your words and thoughts flow smoothly. When delivery is fluent, speech is not jerky or painfully slow, and there is no stumbling over words or groping for thoughts.
When a speaker lacks fluency, the minds of the listeners may wander; wrong ideas may be conveyed. What is said may lack persuasiveness.

TIP 7: PUBLIC SPEECHER and ENTHUSIASM !
By animated delivery, give evidence of your strong feeling about the value of what you are saying.
ENTHUSIASM on your part will help to hold the interest of your listeners; it may also rouse them to action. If you are enthusiastic about what you say, your audience will be too.!

TIP 8: Visual Contact
Look at those to whom you are speaking, allowing your eyes to meet for a few seconds if that is acceptable locally. See individuals, not merely a group.
In many cultures, eye contact is viewed as an indication of interest in the person being addressed. It is also viewed as evidence that you speak with conviction.

TIP 9: Conversational Manner
Speak in a manner characteristic of everyday conversation but modified to fit your audience.

TIP 10: Develop a Theme
Go back to your theme, and mention it in various ways throughout your talk.
It unifies your presentation and helps the audience to understand what you say and to remember it

Monday, August 10, 2009

Swine flu - H1N1

Symptoms and Prevention methods of Swine Flu

Symptoms in children, emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:

· Fast breathing or trouble breathing
· Bluish or gray skin color
· Not drinking enough fluids
· Severe or persistent vomiting
· Not waking up or not interacting
· Being so irritable that the child does not want to be held
· Flu-like symptoms improve but then return with fever and worse cough

Symptoms in adults, emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:

· Difficulty in breathing or shortness of breath
· Pain or pressure in the chest or abdomen
· Sudden dizziness
· Confusion
· Severe or persistent vomiting
· Flu-like symptoms improve but then return with fever and worse cough

Steps to Lessen the Spread of Flu in the Home

When providing care to a household member who is sick with influenza, the most important ways to protect yourself and others who are not sick are to:

· Keep the sick person away from other people as much as possible
· Remind the sick person to cover their coughs, and clean their hands with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand rub often, especially after coughing and/or sneezing.
· Have everyone in the household clean their hands often, using soap and water or an alcohol-based hand rub

Placement of the sick person:

· Keep the sick person in a room separate from the common areas of the house. (For example, a spare bedroom with its own bathroom, if that’s possible.) Keep the sickroom door closed.
· Unless necessary for medical care, persons with the flu should not leave the home when they have a fever or during the time that they are most likely to spread their infection to others.
· If persons with the flu need to leave the home (for example, for medical care), they should cover their nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing and wear a loose-fitting (surgical) mask if available.
· Have the sick person wear a surgical mask if they need to be in a common area of the house near other persons.
· If possible, sick persons should use a separate bathroom. This bathroom should be cleaned daily with household disinfectant.

Protect other persons in the home:

· The sick person should not have visitors other than caregivers. A phone call is safer than a visit.
· If possible, have only one adult in the home take care of the sick person.
· Avoid having pregnant women care for the sick person. (Pregnant women are at increased risk of influenza-related complications and immunity can be suppressed during pregnancy).
· All persons in the household should clean their hands with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand rub frequently, including after every contact with the sick person or the person’s room or bathroom.
· Use paper towels for drying hands after hand washing or dedicate cloth towels to each person in the household. For example, have different colored towels for each person.
· If possible, consideration should be given to maintaining good ventilation in shared household areas (e.g., keeping windows open in restrooms, kitchen, bathroom, etc.).

If you are the caregiver:

· Avoid being face-to-face with the sick person.
· When holding small children who are sick, place their chin on your shoulder so that they will not cough in your face.
· Clean your hands with soap and water or use an alcohol-based hand rub after you touch the sick person or handle used tissues, or laundry.
· Talk to your Doctor about taking antiviral medication to prevent the caregiver from getting the flu.
· Monitor yourself and household members for flu symptoms and the local H1N1 Command Center if the symptoms occur.

Household Cleaning, Laundry, and Waste Disposal:

· Throw away tissues and other disposable items used by the sick person in the trash.
· Wash your hands after touching used tissues and similar waste.
· Keep surfaces (especially bedside tables, surfaces in the bathroom, and toys for children) clean by wiping them down with a household disinfectant according to directions on the product label.
· Linens, eating utensils, and dishes belonging to those who are sick do not need to be cleaned separately, but importantly these items should not be shared without washing thoroughly first.
· Wash linens (such as bed sheets and towels) by using household laundry soap and tumble dry on a hot setting. Avoid “hugging” laundry prior to washing it to prevent contaminating yourself.
· Clean your hands with soap and water or alcohol-based hand rub right after handling dirty laundry.
· Eating utensils should be washed either in a dishwasher or by hand with water and soap.

Thanks
Valerian Menezes

Friday, July 17, 2009

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Appearances from loved ones


A Visit From the Deceased or Spirit Guides

Appearances from loved ones that have passed on occur fairly frequently. In our sleeping state we are closer to them than when in the waking state. The reason being that our five senses and our ego are at rest allowing our sixth sense or our higher self the freedom it needs to make these communications happen.

In the sleeping state, everyone gets a chance to be close to the veil that is the dividing line between the physical state and the spiritual one. Mediums continually practice focusing themselves so that they can attain this state in order to communicate with the deceased. This requires quite a bit of time and effort on their part. However, the sleeping person is already there nearby.

A symbol in a dream

Sometimes a deceased loved one can become a part of our dreams as one of the actors in the play of coded symbols. Then through the divide and analyze interpretation technique, we use the memories associated with them to understand the meaning behind that particular dream. Your subconscious uses these loved ones just like every other symbol in its composition of a dream.

A visitation is more than a dream

There is a noticeable difference between a dream and a visitation. In the latter, the spirit of the loved one appears spontaneously and unexpectedly as the unmistakable central focus. Its image may be much brighter than in an ordinary dream. It can simply be a face to face momentary meeting with a full or partial image and no more than that. Or, it can involve an issue that has some relevance between the person and the spirit. In either case, the visitation usually leaves the dreamer with a feeling of otherworldliness about the encounter when they awake.

A visit from a friend

When Sandra was a sophomore in high school she was part of a small group of close knit friends. Whenever something was happening, they always went as a group. One day several of the boys skipped school and went swimming in an old quarry. One of them drowned. She had a difficult time dealing with it and used to pray for him regularly. Quite some time after, he appeared to her in a vivid dream. He was his very gregarious self again, wearing new shiny clothes. He was standing on a platform against which there was a ladder. She felt happy and excited and began to climb the ladder, he said in a clear consoling voice, "Sandra, stop worrying about me, I’m fine." With that the dream ended. After this dream, she felt whole again and accepted his death. She felt that he had spoken to her from heaven.

They just drop in to say "Hi"

Spirits don’t only come to resolve issues, they may appear just because the opportunity presents itself like friends that drop in unexpectedly and unannounced. Don’t ever be frightened by their appearance, greet them just as though they were in the flesh.

Future Dreams Interpretation Precognition

Future Dreams Interpretation Precognition

Two weeks before his assassination, Abraham Lincoln had a dream that there was a funeral at the White House. In the dream he asked a soldier who was in the casket and the reply was, "the president of United States". Later when he told his wife about the dream, she remarked that he would die in office.

Could he have prevented his death? It’s possible, had the dream told him how he would die. Then, instead of letting his lone personal bodyguard have the night off, he might have been more preoccupied with his own safety. However, it’s most certain that his death was deemed to happen, and that he was allowed to remain blind to his own fate by disregarding the message of his precognitive dream.

Mark Twain had a very real dream where he saw his brother in a casket. He didn’t know what to do about it and let it go. Less than a week later, his brother was killed in an explosion on a boat. Upon arriving at the town where it took place, he saw his brother laid out in a casket just like in his dream. Again, had the dream given him more specific details about his brother’s death, perhaps he could have warned him.

Unchangeable FutureIn both these cases, we have precognitive dreams of the unchangeable kind. They told the future, while not giving enough details for any one to change the predetermined outcome. Whatever happened, happened because it was already in the universal plan and this kind cannot be changed.

Changeable Future

Then there are the precognitive dreams of the changeable kind that allow someone to change the future. Immediately after the Titanic sank in the Atlantic Ocean, there were at least two dozen reports of people who canceled their trip because of precognitive dreams they had about the sinking. No one knows how many had the same warning and ignored it, going to a death they could have avoided. There is one businessman that had the same precognitive dream three times and chose to ignore the warning. He still intended to make the trip until a sudden turn in
business forced him to cancel.

The Titanic gives a good example of the changeable future. Those that interpreted their dreams as a warning continued to live. They were given enough details so they could change their future. Those who ignored the warning perished. The businessman is an example of how an unchangeable future can’t be changed. For in spite of stubbornly ignoring three dream warnings, he was forced to cancel due to a sudden business problem. His unchangeable future plan required that he remain alive.


Even ordinary events sometimes have unchangeable future
Nancy had a dream where she heard herself saying, "I can’t find Jason" Upon awakening she somewhat puzzled by its meaning, since she knew only one person named Jason, a coworker. A week later, Jason was traveling in Canada for their firm and her boss asked her to locate him. Knowing his complete itinerary, she started calling everywhere, even calling his wife to see if she knew where he was. After a whole day without success, she was somewhat distressed and went to her boss saying, "I can’t find Jason". At that very moment she recalled the dream from a week earlier. This is an example of an unchangeable future. Insignificant as it may seem, it was an event that was meant to happen. Had she understood its meaning at the outset, she could have avoided using those words.

A changeable future event of the ordinary mundane kind
Sheryl had a dream about walls being cracked and broken. When she awoke she checked her house and everything was intact. Momentarily, the thought entered her mind about an apartment she was renting to some tenants. Then she just forgot about it. About a month later the tenants were about to move from the apartment she owned and in discussing the move got into a minor dispute with them. After they left she went to inspect the apartment and found that they had punched holes in the walls of three rooms for spite.

Here is a case of the changeable future. Had she taken the dream more seriously, she would have expanded her concern not just for her own house, but to the apartment she owned. Further, she could have had the foresight to avoid getting into a tiff with the tenants and avoided a spiteful response from them.

These examples should give you some insight in how to view dreams. By giving precognitive dreams more credence and looking further into them for more precise information you can benefit from this free information. Whenever you have a dream that seems significant but is unclear, you should be looking for further clarification.

You can get clarification by going back to the source. Prior to falling asleep, think about what type of information you need to clarify a previous dream. Instruct yourself to have a clarifying dream and when it comes, to awaken you. Be sure to have writing material handy. Remember! Don’t give up after only one try, keep trying and you’ll get something.

Dream Interpretation

Dream Interpretation - Instructions How to Interpret and Analyze Your Dreams

You can interpret your dreams!Your dreams are full of symbols and allegories. (Stories that are told that have a meaning other than the story itself.) When you venture into the realm of dream interpretation you must try to decode your dream, you need to dissect it into the separate fragments and examine each for its particular meaning. Each one contains a small nugget of the whole picture. Dreams are composed of a collage of little parts of your own life experience that are stored away in your brain symbolically.

Simply using a dictionary of dreams can be misleading, because these interpretations had a value to the composer of the list, which may have been a part of his or her personal experience. Someone else’s experiences don’t create the same symbols that your own mind has created. You need to develop your own set of interpretations for the symbols that are particular to your own life’s experiences.

Divide and conquer!That is one of the basic strategies that military commanders have known since antiquity. Splitting your opponent’s concentrated power into sizable chunks makes it that much easier to overcome him. Then he can be taken out piece by piece. This is the strategy to use in dream interpretation, Divide and analyze!

Here are some of the basic parts in most dreams:

You: You are directly involved or observing yourself.
Other actors: Each one is a separate actor.
The scene: There can be more than one.
The action: There can be more than one.
The object: There can be a theme or an object involved.
The end result: End results are not present in all dreams.
The technique: Take every part of the dream and separate it from the rest. Use a separate piece of paper to record your observations. With each part do the following: Recalling from your own memory; what feelings this part has for you, what memories does it evoke, who and what does it remind you of, what impression do you have for it. Add every notion you can come up with. Restrict your analysis strictly to each individual part, and not how it played a role in the dream.
After you have done this with all the parts, review what is going on in your life at the present time. Now you are ready to fit the puzzle together. Remember, you are the only one who has the information to make the final interpretation. It’s all stored in the memory bank of your brain

Health Dreams InterpretationWhat Are They Telling You?

A Health Dream is one way your body can signal you when something’s wrong or needs your attention. Pain is a tool to tell you something is wrong. There are other things that are signals that are indicators about your health, not feeling well, dizziness, weakness, etc. Dreams are another way that you can find out about your health. Your subconscious will sometimes get your attention through your dreams.

Below are a few simple examples of Health Dreams that will demonstrate this. Remember to use the ‘Divide and analyze’ technique to interpret all dreams.

Jackie’s first encounter with food while sleeping was a novelty. In a dream someone was feeding food to her and she was eating it. The whole thing seemed amusing to her. Some time later, she had another dream involving food. However, the second dream wasn’t so amusing. When the food arrived at her face, it was being forcibly being crammed down her throat so that she couldn’t breath. She woke up in a terror gasping for air, her heart pounding away. It took a while before she could return to sleep. Upon awakening, her first thought was about the dream. She felt as though a mean person was trying to punish her with the food. It was then that she assessed herself realistically; she had recently put on quite a bit of weight, she ate constantly and made light of the fact as though it was an accomplishment to be proud of. Now she realized that her body was protesting her abuse of it and that her recently acquired eating habit was not a laughing matter. This second dream woke her up and she began a weight loss program to lose
the excess baggage.

Jackie didn’t recognize what the first dream was trying to tell her. When she didn’t respond accordingly, her subconscious turned up the heat to get its message across.

Lisa played worked out at the gym and played tennis regularly. She was in her thirties and in the best of health. In her Health Dream a neatly dressed man kept staring at her breasts, she felt self-conscious and turned away trying to ignore him. He appeared in front of her again still staring at her, and while still in the dream, she noticed that one of her breasts was larger than the other. Upon awakening she examined herself and discovered a lump on the right side. She consulted a physician and began treatment immediately.

Lisa’s subconscious mind gave her an early warning signal to check herself out. She had neglected to do this previously because of her excellent physical condition.

Your subconscious mind is aware of everything that is going on in your body. It tries to talk to you when you are awake, but if that doesn’t work, it can use your dreams as the communication link. You just need to analyze your dreams and look for the meanings.

Interpretation of a psychological dream

Life’s experiences sometimes rub us the wrong way. When something happens that contradicts our sense of ‘what ought be’ regarding our view of right or wrong, good and bad, it can make us pretty unhappy and affect our outlook on life. Unfulfilled wishes and desires are another have much the same effect.

Through our dreams, the subconscious mind tries to provide us with just the right dream at just the right time, to compensate for the many things that cause our peace of mind to get out of balance.

If we have fears, it tries to feed us those fears little by little in coded dreams to help us overcome them. Occasionally it uses the brute force of a nightmare to get its point across.

If we have unfulfilled desires it may provide us with a substitute to alleviate the sense of lacking.
Some of these dreams are pretty straight forward and at other times they are embedded in deeply symbolic presentations taken from our own memory bank of experiences. To solve the riddle of our dreams we need to sort out the feelings, meanings, and the memories of what all these symbols mean to us from our experience.

Here are a few simple examples:

Right and wrong
Art is a hard working and honest immigrant from Hungary who scrapping to make ends meet. He has a Hungarian friend named Hector who made a false claim for a faked injury on a train platform in NYC. Even though he had no witnesses to his fall, the city paid him a large amount of money to settle the claim. Art is dismayed and almost delirious with anger. How could his friend be rewarded for dishonesty while he worked so hard just to get by. He became discouraged and his outlook on life and sense of right and wrong suffered.

Several months later Art had a vivid dream. He witnessed his friend Hector being arrested for fraud, the police handcuffed him and a nearby judge ordered him deported back to Europe. End of dream.

Was his friend really arrested or deported? No. It only happened in Art’s dream. But as he told the story of the dream, there was a sense of relief in his voice that somehow justice was done. His subconscious delivered Art back to his old cheery self through a dream. It gave him a substitute for justice in a dream which he accepted.

Her fear overcome

The upper bridge in Margaret’s mouth became loose one day. It didn’t actually come out, it just loosened a bit. The thought of it falling out in front of other people petrified her. She didn’t have a lot of money and couldn’t get it repaired. She lived in constant fear of this happening and for months ate liquid foods hoping to prevent it from happening. Then she had a dream. In the dream the thing she feared most happened. The bridge fell out in front of a lot of people. Then she just took it and pushed it back in her mouth and it stayed there. End of dream.
She stopped worrying about her bridge falling out. That was approximately five years prior to
the telling of the dream and it still hadn’t fallen out.

These are examples of how the subconscious mind helps to keep us in balance psychologically. Although the actual cause for the worry and concern was not really resolved for these two people, a dream provided them with a substitute for the real thing.
Other dreams may not be so straight forward and may require the use of the divide and analyze technique.

Getting knowledge and information from your dreams

Getting knowledge and information from your dreams

You have the unlimited knowledge of the universe available at all times. It’s just a dream away. Some of the very important discoveries in science were made through the help of a dream.
Information for scienceEdison is said to have invented the light bulb with the aid of a dream. In fact he used dreams quite a lot for his ideas.

Dmitry Mendeleyev provided the world of chemistry and physics the Periodic Table of Elements in 1869. The Table, for which he missed the Nobel Prize in chemistry by one vote, came to him in its completed form in a dream.

All knowledge pre-exists in the universeRemember that all knowledge already exists in the universe. Infinite quantities of knowledge and information have not yet been transmitted to the minds of humans. Who knows how many other important and mundane discoveries remain to be accessed. We tend to think of future inventions and discoveries, but in reality, these things already exist in the knowledge bank of the universe. It’s all a matter of transmission from there to here. You can access this information through your dreams. Solve your personal problems or invent something. Prior to falling asleep, program your mind to access the information in a dream. Be persistent and keep trying. You’ll get a response.

Medical Information for health problemsRick had been jogging for six months when suddenly he developed an itching on his feet that wouldn’t go away. The problem area was at the point where the hard callous on the bottom of his feet met the soft skin tissue on the side. He tried every remedy that was available at the pharmacy with out success. Then he had the following dream: A picture of his foot appeared, a hand began painting the itchy area with a cotton swab with an orange colored liquid. Then he heard the word merthiolate End of dream.

Later that afternoon, he recalled the dream and decided to try it out. Within an hour of its first application the itching was gone. He claims that after a few more applications, the itch never returned to bother him again.

Business information from a dreamHarold went to bed one night completely stressed out. He had a building contractor client that was looking for a parcel of newly developed lots that he could purchase. Harold hadn’t been able to find what his client wanted and was worried that he was about to loose him. The moment he awoke in the morning, and before he opened his eyes, he heard words in his mind. "Basin Hill Sanctuary". There was something peculiar about the way the words came to him. He began an investigation, which led him to a newly paved road named Basin Hill and on it a piece of land that was being cleared for streets. He found the only sign on the property that had hand painted words, "The Sanctuary" He was astonished at this discovery. The owner had developed the land and hadn’t yet advertised it. After some negotiations, his client bought the land from the owner.

You can obtain this information also.
In all three of these cases, the dreamer received help from outside of their subconscious mind’s scope of knowledge. Even though they didn’t specifically solicit the dream state for the help that they received, they were made the beneficiaries of freely available universal knowledge. Anyone can have the same access if they make the effort to get it. These individuals had experienced a connection to a higher and greater power and their lives benefited by the encounter. Again, the only requirement is that you actively seek out this information by programming your self to get it while you dream.

Dream Analysis & Interpretation

Dream Analysis & Interpretation

What type of dream are you dealing with?
To interpret your dreams, you need to determine what type of dream you are dealing with. There are two categories that they fit into, those that are generated from within your physical body and mind and those that come from your spirit guides or tutors. They have different purposes and it’s necessary to recognize what these differences mean to you and how they interact in your waking and dreaming state.

Two main categories

The dreams that originate with the physical body are for your functioning and survival in the world of physical nature. They deal with your physical and psychological well being. These dreams are like your manager and janitor who try to keep body and mind tidy for your general well being.

Then, there are those dreams that have a mystical and special characteristic to them which are for your spiritual development and progress. They produce instant knowledge and information that is beyond your ability to garner through intellectual or logical means.

Why you get information when you sleep

When you are asleep, so is the physical component of your self. The five senses, smelling, tasting, feeling, seeing, and hearing, and your ego, the controlling master, are all temporarily suspended from activity. Sleeping allows the other sense that you have, the sixth sense, to take over for awhile with out much interference. This is when both the physical body and your spiritual essence can perform maintenance simultaneously to help unwrinkled parts of your life. It’s ironic that this is the state of being that psychics and mediums practice for years to achieve, and everyone enters it every time they fall asleep.

There are several components to each dream category:
Dreams from the physical body
Dreams from the spiritual realm

Food
Health
Psychological
Precognitive and future
New information or knowledge
The deceased or spirit guides visit you.

Dreams from the physical bodyFood: Did you ever notice that when you take a nap after you’ve eaten lunch that you can have some crazy images go through your mind. The same thing happens at night too, because food can trigger some wild and wacky dreams. If you enjoy these psychedelic excursions, then take note of what you had to eat before hand and repeat the process. On the other hand, if you’re not interested, then take note of what you ate and make certain to avoid eating whatever it was. Food is one of the generators of dreams, which are not worth interpreting.

Health Your subconscious knows a lot about you that you don’t, or maybe don’t care to know. Often times it will tell you something about your practices or lifestyle to tip you off about what its needs are. In dreams it tries to get the point across to you, sometimes politely, at other times not so.

Psychology: Stressful relationships and social situations can cause our mind to get out of kilter but our subconscious intervenes to straighten things out.

Dreams from the spiritual world Those special visits, instructions, lessons and guidance that we receive that are sometimes (but not always) interwoven with one of those mundane dreams your body generates. They are hidden and disguised because you are not supposed to know where the information is coming from. Like it’s a big secret. You are led to think that you dreamed up all those unique thoughts and ideas all by your little ol’ self. The bad news is that they occur much less frequently than the run of the mill physical dreams. The good news is that when you do experience them, you get the feeling that something special has occurred. Even if you can’t figure out what it means, there is a profound sense of purpose or message behind it. When experienced, they become landmarks in many people’s lives leaving them with a permanent and unforgettable impression of otherworldliness embedded deep within their subconscious mind.

Anger Therapy




We all know what anger is, and we've all felt it: whether as a fleeting annoyance or as full-fledged rage.
Anger is a completely normal, usually healthy, human emotion. But when it gets out of control and turns destructive, it can lead to problems—problems at work, in your personal relationships, and in the overall quality of your life. And it can make you feel as though you're at the mercy of an unpredictable and powerful emotion. This brochure is meant to help you understand and control anger.

What is Anger?

The Nature of Anger

Anger is "an emotional state that varies in intensity from mild irritation to intense fury and rage," according to Charles Spielberger, PhD, a psychologist who specializes in the study of anger. Like other emotions, it is accompanied by physiological and biological changes; when you get angry, your heart rate and blood pressure go up, as do the levels of your energy hormones, adrenaline, and nor adrenaline.

Anger can be caused by both external and internal events. You could be angry at a specific person (Such as a coworker or supervisor) or event (a traffic jam, a canceled flight), or your anger could be caused by worrying or brooding about your personal problems. Memories of traumatic or enraging events can also trigger angry feelings.

Expressing Anger

The instinctive, natural way to express anger is to respond aggressively. Anger is a natural, adaptive response to threats; it inspires powerful, often aggressive, feelings and behaviors, which allow us to fight and to defend ourselves when we are attacked. A certain amount of anger, therefore, is necessary to our survival.

On the other hand, we can't physically lash out at every person or object that irritates or annoys us; laws, social norms, and common sense place limits on how far our anger can take us.
People use a variety of both conscious and unconscious processes to deal with their angry feelings. The three main approaches are expressing, suppressing, and calming. Expressing your angry feelings in an assertive—not aggressive—manner is the healthiest way to express anger. To do this, you have to learn how to make clear what your needs are, and how to get them met, without hurting others. Being assertive doesn't mean being pushy or demanding; it means being respectful of yourself and others.

Anger can be suppressed, and then converted or redirected. This happens when you hold in your anger, stop thinking about it, and focus on something positive. The aim is to inhibit or suppress your anger and convert it into more constructive behavior. The danger in this type of response is that if it isn't allowed outward expression, your anger can turn inward—on yourself. Anger turned inward may cause hypertension, high blood pressure, or depression.

Unexpressed anger can create other problems. It can lead to pathological expressions of anger, such as passive-aggressive behavior (getting back at people indirectly, without telling them why, rather than confronting them head-on) or a personality that seems perpetually cynical and hostile. People who are constantly putting others down, criticizing everything, and making cynical comments haven't learned how to constructively express their anger. Not surprisingly, they aren't likely to have many successful relationships.

Finally, you can calm down inside. This means not just controlling your outward behavior, but also controlling your internal responses, taking steps to lower your heart rate, calm yourself down, and let the feelings subside.

As Dr. Spielberger notes, "when none of these three techniques work, that's when someone—or something—is going to get hurt."

Anger Management

The goal of anger management is to reduce both your emotional feelings and the physiological arousal that anger causes. You can't get rid of, or avoid, the things or the people that enrage you, nor can you change them, but you can learn to control your reactions.
Are You Too Angry?

There are psychological tests that measure the intensity of angry feelings, how prone to anger you are, and how well you handle it. But chances are good that if you do have a problem with anger, you already know it. If you find yourself acting in ways that seem out of control and frightening, you might need help to find better ways to deal with this emotion.

Why Are Some People Angrier Than Others?

According to Jerry Deffenbacher, PhD, a psychologist who specializes in anger management, some people really are more "hotheaded" than others are; they get angry more easily and more intensely than the average person does. There are also those who don't show their anger in loud spectacular ways but are chronically irritable and grumpy. Easily angered people don't always curse and throw things; sometimes they withdraw socially, sulk, or get physically ill.
People who are easily angered generally have what some psychologists call a low tolerance for frustration, meaning simply that they feel that they should not have to be subjected to frustration, inconvenience, or annoyance. They can't take things in stride, and they're particularly infuriated if the situation seems somehow unjust: for example, being corrected for a minor mistake.

What makes these people this way? A number of things. One cause may be genetic or physiological: There is evidence that some children are born irritable, touchy, and easily angered, and that these signs are present from a very early age. Another may be socio-cultural. Anger is often regarded as negative; we're taught that it's all right to express anxiety, depression, or other emotions but not to express anger. As a result, we don't learn how to handle it or channel it constructively.

Research has also found that family background plays a role. Typically, people who are easily angered come from families that are disruptive, chaotic, and not skilled at emotional communications.

Is It Good To "Let it All Hang Out?"

Psychologists now say that this is a dangerous myth. Some people use this theory as a license to hurt others. Research has found that "letting it rip" with anger actually escalates anger and aggression and does nothing to help you (or the person you're angry with) resolve the situation.
It's best to find out what it is that triggers your anger, and then to develop strategies to keep those triggers from tipping you over the edge.

Strategies to Keep Anger At Bay

Relaxation

Simple relaxation tools, such as deep breathing and relaxing imagery, can help calm down angry feelings. There are books and courses that can teach you relaxation techniques, and once you learn the techniques, you can call upon them in any situation. If you are involved in a relationship where both partners are hot-tempered, it might be a good idea for both of you to learn these techniques.

Some simple steps you can try:

Breathe deeply, from your diaphragm; breathing from your chest won't relax you. Picture your breath coming up from your "gut."

Slowly repeat a calm word or phrase such as "relax," "take it easy." Repeat it to yourself while breathing deeply.

Use imagery; visualize a relaxing experience, from either your memory or your imagination.
Non-strenuous, slow yoga-like exercises can relax your muscles and make you feel much calmer.

Practice these techniques daily. Learn to use them automatically when you're in a tense situation.

Cognitive Restructuring

Simply put, this means changing the way you think. Angry people tend to curse, swear, or speak in highly colorful terms that reflect their inner thoughts. When you're angry, your thinking can get very exaggerated and overly dramatic. Try replacing these thoughts with more rational ones. For instance, instead of telling yourself, "oh, it's awful, it's terrible, everything's ruined," tell yourself, "it's frustrating, and it's understandable that I'm upset about it, but it's not the end of the world and getting angry is not going to fix it anyhow."

Be careful of words like "never" or "always" when talking about yourself or someone else. "This &*%@ machine never works," or "you're always forgetting things" are not just inaccurate, they also serve to make you feel that your anger is justified and that there's no way to solve the problem. They also alienate and humiliate people who might otherwise be willing to work with you on a solution.

Remind yourself that getting angry is not going to fix anything that it won't make you feel better (and may actually make you feel worse).

Logic defeats anger, because anger, even when it's justified, can quickly become irrational. So use cold hard logic on yourself. Remind yourself that the world is "not out to get you," you're just experiencing some of the rough spots of daily life. Do this each time you feel anger getting the best of you, and it'll help you get a more balanced perspective. Angry people tend to demand things: fairness, appreciation, agreement, willingness to do things their way. Everyone wants these things, and we are all hurt and disappointed when we don't get them, but angry people demand them, and when their demands aren't met, their disappointment becomes anger. As part of their cognitive restructuring, angry people need to become aware of their demanding nature and translate their expectations into desires. In other words, saying, "I would like" something is healthier than saying, "I demand" or "I must have" something. When you're unable to get what you want, you will experience the normal reactions—frustration, disappointment, hurt—but not anger. Some angry people use this anger as a way to avoid feeling hurt, but that doesn't mean the hurt goes away.

Problem Solving

Sometimes, our anger and frustration are caused by very real and inescapable problems in our lives. Not all anger is misplaced, and often it's a healthy, natural response to these difficulties. There is also a cultural belief that every problem has a solution, and it adds to our frustration to find out that this isn't always the case. The best attitude to bring to such a situation, then, is not to focus on finding the solution, but rather on how you handle and face the problem.
Make a plan, and check your progress along the way. Resolve to give it your best, but also not to punish yourself if an answer doesn't come right away. If you can approach it with your best intentions and efforts and make a serious attempt to face it head-on, you will be less likely to lose patience and fall into all-or-nothing thinking, even if the problem does not get solved right away.

Better Communication

Angry people tend to jump to—and act on—conclusions and some of those conclusions can be very inaccurate. The first thing to do if you're in a heated discussion is slow down and think through your responses. Don't say the first thing that comes into your head, but slow down and think carefully about what you want to say. At the same time, listen carefully to what the other person is saying and take your time before answering.

Listen, too, to what is underlying the anger. For instance, you like a certain amount of freedom and personal space, and your "significant other" wants more connection and closeness. If he or she starts complaining about your activities, don't retaliate by painting your partner as a jailer, a warden, or an albatross around your neck.

It's natural to get defensive when you're criticized, but don't fight back. Instead, listen to what's underlying the words: the message that this person might feel neglected and unloved. It may take a lot of patient questioning on your part, and it may require some breathing space, but don't let your anger—or a partner's—let a discussion spin out of control. Keeping your cool can keep the situation from becoming a disastrous one.

Using Humor

"Silly humor" can help defuse rage in a number of ways. For one thing, it can help you get a more balanced perspective. When you get angry and call someone a name or refer to them in some imaginative phrase, stop and picture what that word would literally look like. If you're at work and you think of a coworker as a "dirt bag" or a "single-cell life form," for example, picture a large bag full of dirt (or an amoeba) sitting at your colleague's desk, talking on the phone, going to meetings. Do this whenever a name comes into your head about another person. If you can, draw a picture of what the actual thing might look like. This will take a lot of the edge off your fury; and humor can always be relied on to help unknot a tense situation.

The underlying message of highly angry people, Dr. Deffenbacher says, is "things ought to go my way!" Angry people tend to feel that they are morally right, that any blocking or changing of their plans is an unbearable indignity and that they should NOT have to suffer this way. Maybe other people do, but not them!

When you feel that urge, he suggests, picture yourself as a god or goddess, a supreme ruler, who owns the streets and stores and office space, striding alone and having your way in all situations while others defer to you. The more detail you can get into your imaginary scenes, the more chances you have to realize that maybe you are being unreasonable; you'll also realize how unimportant the things you're angry about really are. There are two cautions in using humor. First, don't try to just "laugh off" your problems; rather, use humor to help yourself face them more constructively. Second, don't give in to harsh, sarcastic humor; that's just another form of unhealthy anger expression.

What these techniques have in common is a refusal to take yourself too seriously. Anger is a serious emotion, but it's often accompanied by ideas that, if examined, can make you laugh.
Changing Your Environment

Sometimes it's our immediate surroundings that give us cause for irritation and fury. Problems and responsibilities can weigh on you and make you feel angry at the "trap" you seem to have fallen into and all the people and things that form that trap.

Give yourself a break. Make sure you have some "personal time" scheduled for times of the day that you know are particularly stressful. One example is the working mother who has a standing rule that when she comes home from work, for the first 15 minutes "nobody talks to Mom unless the house is on fire." After this brief quiet time, she feels better prepared to handle demands from her kids without blowing up at them.

Some Other Tips for Easing Up on Yourself

Timing: If you and your spouse tend to fight when you discuss things at night—perhaps you're tired, or distracted, or maybe it's just habit—try changing the times when you talk about important matters so these talks don't turn into arguments.

Avoidance: If your child's chaotic room makes you furious every time you walk by it, shut the door. Don't make yourself look at what infuriates you. Don't say, "well, my child should clean up the room so I won't have to be angry!" That's not the point. The point is to keep yourself calm.

Finding alternatives: If your daily commute through traffic leaves you in a state of rage and frustration, give yourself a project—learn or map out a different route, one that's less congested
or more scenic. Or find another alternative, such as a bus or commuter train.

Do You Need Counseling?

If you feel that your anger is really out of control, if it is having an impact on your relationships and on important parts of your life, you might consider counseling to learn how to handle it better. A psychologist or other licensed mental health professional can work with you in developing a range of techniques for changing your thinking and your behavior.

When you talk to a prospective therapist, tell her or him that you have problems with anger that you want to work on, and ask about his or her approach to anger management. Make sure this isn't only a course of action designed to "put you in touch with your feelings and express them"—that may be precisely what your problem is. With counseling, psychologists say, a highly angry person can move closer to a middle range of anger in about 8 to 10 weeks, depending on the circumstances and the techniques used.

What about Assertiveness Training?

It's true that angry people need to learn to become assertive (rather than aggressive), but most books and courses on developing assertiveness are aimed at people who don't feel enough anger. These people are more passive and acquiescent than the average person; they tend to let others walk all over them. That isn't something that most angry people do. Still, these books can contain some useful tactics to use in frustrating situations.

Remember, you can't eliminate anger—and it wouldn't be a good idea if you could. In spite of all your efforts, things will happen that will cause you anger; and sometimes it will be justifiable anger. Life will be filled with frustration, pain, loss, and the unpredictable actions of others. You can't change that; but you can change the way you let such events affect you. Controlling your angry responses can keep them from making you even unhappy in the long run.


Controlling your temper isn't always easy. But these effective anger management techniques will help give you the upper hand.

If your outbursts, rages or bullying are negatively affecting relationships with family, friends, and co-workers and even complete strangers, it's time to change the way you express your anger. You can take steps on your own to improve your anger management.

Anger management tips

Here are some anger management tips to help get your anger under control:

§ Take a "time out." Although it may seem cliché, counting to 10 before reacting, or leaving the situation altogether, really can defuse your temper.

§ Do something physically exerting. Physical activity can provide an outlet for your emotions, especially if you're about to erupt. Go for a brisk walk or a run, swim, lift weights or shoot baskets.

§ Find ways to calm and soothe yourself. Practice deep-breathing exercises, visualize a relaxing scene, or repeat a calming word or phrase to yourself, such as "take it easy." You can also listen to music, paint, journal or do yoga.

§ Once you're calm, express your anger as soon as possible so that you aren't left stewing. If you simply can't express your anger in a controlled manner to the person who angered you, try talking to a family member, friend, counselor or another trusted person.

§ Think carefully before you say anything so that you don't end up saying something you'll regret. Write a script and rehearse it so that you can stick to the issues.

§ Work with the person who angered you to identify solutions to the situation.

§ Use "I" statements when describing the problem to avoid criticizing or placing blame. For instance, say "I'm upset you didn't help with the housework this evening," instead of, "You should have helped with the housework." To do otherwise will likely upset the other person and escalate tensions.

§ Don't hold a grudge. Forgive the other person. It's unrealistic to expect everyone to behave exactly as you want.

§ Use humor to release tensions, such as imagining yourself or the other person in silly situations. Don't use sarcasm, though — it's just another form of unhealthy expression.

§ Keep an anger log to identify the kinds of situations that set you off and to monitor your reactions.

§ Practice relaxation skills. Learning skills to relax and de-stress can also help control your temper when it may flare up.