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Monday, December 17, 2012

Don't Act Like a Squirrel - nike free run womens




It is a narrow,  winding, two lane roadway, that climbs into the opulent mountains that cheap nike free...Al SecundaI was recently driving up Bel Air Road in Los Angeles.

It is a narrow,  winding, two lane roadway, that climbs into the opulent mountains that overlook  the city Luxe boots uk. As I got half-way up the mountain, I looked up ahead and in the  distance I spotted a squirrel crossing the road.

He began his journey on my  side of Bel Air Road (the right side) and had almost arrived on the other  side when something weird happened Nike Lebron 10. Just as my car was about to pass him  safely, he apparently got startled, panicked, and sprinted back across 95% of the  road that he had just crossed.

I jammed on the brakes a little late and if it  werent for his desperate last second leap into the thick vegetation, he  would have been a goner foamposites galaxy.   After celebrating the fact that I didnt destroy the little critter, I  began thinking about how foolish the squirrel was and why he needlessly endangered  his life.

After all, before he changed his mind he was just a few feet from  success and safety. Why in the world would he change course at the last  second and head back to the other side of the road where more of the noise and  danger was My guess was that he initially crossed the road to visit a less  familiar area of Bel Air. When he heard my car he felt danger, abandoned his  exploration, and decided to seek refuge in the environment he felt safest and  most comfortable in.  His unproductive action seemed silly until I realized that we as humans  probably behave in a similar manner. First, we commit to a passionate and  challenging project (writing a novel, inventing a product, looking for a new  job, developing a one person show, going for an educational degree, writing songs  for our own CD). We even begin developing momentum and making progress with  our dream project. Then, before we complete, sell, or declare our creative  journey a success, something interferes with and interrupts our advancement.  Perhaps: a knowledgeable friend or expert gives us a negative critique  (and we believe it); an agent, publisher, manufacturer, or producer does not buy  or resonate with our creation; we get overwhelmed by the enormity of our  commitment; we prematurely run out of money.    We then take the interruption or negative critique personally, make it  extremely signficant by treating it as the truth, and let this unexpected obstacle  dishearten and paralyze us. The result is that we permanently put our  project on a shelf, bury it in the computer, store it in the garage, or stop the  refining and selling process.    The tragedy here is two fold. First, we have stopped doing something that we  were passionate about and that fulfilled many of our self-expressive and  creative needs. Secondly, there is an excellent chance that we were closer to  success than we realized. Maybe it would have taken just one more: phone  call, revision, meeting, or audition, to move us forward and rekindle our  excitement and feelings of possibililty.

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