Archive for the ‘Anger-Management’ Category

Forgiveness - It Works!

Have you ever traveled standing on your feet in a crowded bus or train? You are most likely to step onto someone’s toe soon or later, right? Marriage is like that! Because you are in close proximity and spend so much time with each other, sooner or later you will step on your spouse’s toe and, “ouch!”… does it hurt!

Chances are that you have stepped on your spouse’s toes multiple times the longer you have been married. And some of the hurts are serious and deep. Many couples carry scars from past experiences that seem totally beyond repair. Yet, in most cases, I believe you can move on and end up BETTER than ever before!

I know what you are thinking! Harold is crazy!!! Better? It will never be as good as it was before we hurt each other so badly! It will never be like BEFORE! Twenty years of pain? BETTER? Like it was before the twenty years of repeated injuries?

YES! It CAN be better! It CAN be better than your last 30 years of marriage. It CAN be better than your honeymoon! It CAN be better than anything you have ever known! I promise! I give you my word.

It CAN be better! You just have to forgive and be forgiven.

What does it REALLY mean to forgive?

I heard Cristina say, “I forgive him.” But I knew from the tone of her voice and her body language that she continued to harbor anger in her heart and mind. I probed my perception by asking her a question, “What do you feel now that you have said, ‘I forgive him’?” She looked at me with contained anger in her eyes and said, “It means I forgive him. I don’t want to talk about this anymore.” She had forgiven in words, but her heart was still harboring anger and resentment.

There is a difference between FORGIVING and REALLY FORGIVING.

When we FORGIVE, we usually shut down the barrage of accusations and hurtful behavior against the offender. The popular advice of “forgive and forget” completely misses the point. Forgetting, in psychological language is called “repression.” When something is “repressed,” it just lingers in the dark shadows of the unconscious along with all the emotions associated with it. As long as those emotions, such as anger, are brewing secretly in the unconscious, genuine forgiveness remains impossible.

When we REALLY FORGIVE we acknowledge the hurt. We acknowledge the human condition as being imperfect. We deal with the anger and the resentment. We then let go, by an act of the will, of all the negative, toxic emotions, the judgment and the guilt against the offender. Then, we reconnect and restore what is lost!

There is a huge difference between FORGIVING and REALLY FORGIVING. “No-sweat-forgiveness” tries to forget and move on. True forgiveness chooses to let go of the toxicity created by the offense-offender and RESTORES the connection with the offender.

Look at the word “FORGIVE”… The word actually tells you what it means to FORGIVE. “For-Give”… It means to “GIVE” as you did “beFORE.” It means to restore the flow of GIVING as you did BEFORE the hurt. A profound spiritual transaction happens between two people that really forgive each other. Giving is not natural after someone hurt us. Anger and revenge is. Forgiving is not natural!

That’s the meaning of true forgiveness! When you GIVE of yourself like you did before you were hurt, then you know you have forgiven. When you stand as close to your spouse as you stood the day he/she stepped on your toe and hurt you badly; that’s REAL FORGIVENESS!

It’s not easy to REALLY FORGIVE! I know! Sometimes it feels like it’s next to impossible. But it’s possible when you choose to do what’s right for the relationship and yourself.

When you choose to REALLY FORGIVE, you become stronger! The marriage becomes better than it was before. You almost become happy (in a twisted way), because you realize that you would have never achieved the love you experience now without the hurt as your catalyst.

Did you know that when a broken bone heals, it’s stronger than it was before it was broken? You too can be STRONGER than before things broke down between you and your spouse IF you forgive.

Here is the “LIFE ZONE” formula to REAL FORGIVENESS…

• FORGIVENESS IS NOT A FEELING. IT’S A CHOICE. When your spouse hurts you and you feel the pain of that hurt, you can CHOOSE to forgive as an act of the will. It’s simple, but it may take time! Your mind is powerful when you use your freedom of choice. You may experience relapses time after time. Be patient with yourself. Keep making the choice!

• When you CHOOSE to forgive you are also free to CHANGE your BEHAVIOR. You are able to let go of your anger progressively and also feel free to show affection to your spouse.

• When you change your BEHAVIOR, the ENVIRONMENT of your relationship changes and you suddenly UNDERSTAND how vulnerable you and your spouse are.

• That state of VULNERABILITY allows for a tremendous flow of FEELINGS; positive feelings that are way better than the feelings of “new love.”

My son Hansel is 13. It was time to take the Christmas decorations down. The plan had been set in motion. He would be a part of the “dismantling” team. At the last minute he thought no one would miss him, so he disappeared. I called him twice. He came downstairs with an “attitude.” I talked to him firmly, and I also raised my voice. A minute later I caught myself! “Not a good role model for my boy,” I said to myself. I went looking for him. I stood by his side and I said, “Hey, Hansel… I raised my voice when I told you to help and that was wrong. Would you forgive me?” He said, “Yes.” We embraced and I saw our relationship restored. He forgave me! How did I know it? Because he was willing to hug me. He restored his connection with me by the simple act of forgiveness. I know!

How do you compare that experience with 15, 20 or 30 years of hurt and conflict? The same way! Except it may take longer, and you may need the intervention of someone that understands how to help you find resolution. But the process is the same. The results are the same. Forgiveness: It works! It always works! It makes you a better person even if you don’t accomplish what you want.

Harold J. Duarte-Bernhardt is co-founder of the “LIFE ZONE.” Harold is a consultant, a seminar speaker and a LIFE Motivational Coach. The “LIFE ZONE” is a resource and a coaching center for personal and spiritual growth committed to providing sound strategies for dynamic living and LIFE FITNESS. Harold believes that PAIN is the greatest window into best life has to offer! PAIN is never pleasant, it’s never fun; but great people have always faced PAIN and difficult times before they found the key to a great life. Harold resides in Southern California and is the father of four wonderful human beings! For more information and coaching visit: http://www.lifezonelive.com

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The Annihilation of Anger in Western Civilization

This article will address cultural and psychospiritual issues regarding the ability to express anger. An understanding of man’s search for “self” and “meaning” will be explored, including what this might mean, how these views might vary, how individuals try to achieve this insight, and how ancient cultures used different avenues to understand the “self” and the daimonic. This paper will also explore early attachments and “fight or flight” mechanisms that form affect, cognitive models, and social constructs. The meaning of entertainment and how that might provide a cathartic release will be elucidated. There will be questions asked throughout the paper to elicit thoughts from the reader and for him or her to come up with his or her own hypothesis.

As the culture in the United States becomes technologically advanced, man’s need for meaning remains primitive and ambiguous. Violence is at a record high. Anthropologists have discovered that the more advanced (e.g., government, socio-economic classes) cultures are, the more cultures are predisposed to violence, crime, and war. However, more advanced countries view these primitive cultures as being uncivilized and barbaric. We need to diminish our ethnocentric beliefs regarding primitive cultures.

Less crime has been demonstrated in many of these primitive cultures for various reasons. Could this because many indigenous people provide rituals such as rites of passage to puberty or adulthood? Do smaller communities provide healthier attachments to foster stronger bonds between caregivers and their children? Could sharing tasks within the community such as taking care of the young, preparing foods, or making political choices, create less tension and equal opportunities? Are there fewer rapes because sexuality is not tabooed?

In our culture today, individuals are either controlled by the daimonic or using it to transform themselves in constructive ways. When an individual is out of control, they can become either neurotic or psychotic. Being able to tap into the daimonic could allow an individual to access his demons, anger, or confusion. This process could be conscious and/or unconscious. The more repressed/oppressed a culture is, the more daimonic possession seems to lurk. What is this encapsulated psychic energy that becomes blocked and repressed? Does an individual’s dualistic belief about himself (e.g., I am good or bad) produce splitting of the personality causing character traits such as devaluation, idealization, and denial?

When I was growing up, I witnessed my father going through rage, pain, and confusion. He would become disoriented and become verbally and physically abusive. Even at a young age, I could depict helplessness and loneliness in him when he would become remorseful and apologetic. My father is a very passionate, dramatic, and angry man. As I became more erudite in the world of clinical psychology, my father appeared to me to act more like an impetuous child rather than a functional adult. His father died when he was two and his mother died when he was fifteen. He entered the Marines at seventeen and fought in World War ll, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. He did not experience flashbacks or any signs of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Three years ago, I asked him why he was always so angry. He said that he had demons that I would not understand and that he was going to take the demons to his grave. My father preferred to isolate himself in his own nebulous labyrinth. There was a possible chance that he feared unleashing the beast within.

What arrested development precipitated my father’s inability to let out his demons from his psychic reservoir? Does our culture provide support for boys to be able to cry or to express themselves so they do not feel emasculated? Because we are so influenced by our culture and peers, do we sacrifice our internal integrity in order not to be ostracized? How do we find ways to transcend our human experiences fully and to be able to cradle our plethora of emotions? Maybe if our culture was not so fixated on dualistic perspectives and could judge experiences as just “is”, rather than good or bad, this might foster avenues of healthy expression.

What I am proposing here is that if we are raised in a culture where a person were shunned for being different, on a primal level, would he both unconsciously and consciously fear annihilation, isolation, and alienation? Imagine being a little infant and being dependant on your parent’s attunement for the care of your basic needs: food, shelter, and protection. However, our emotional needs and intelligence help sooth and comfort us during stressful life experiences. We depend on the affect of our caregivers to help comfort us and self-regulate. The capriciousness of a parent’s mood could determine whether or not we receive love, food, or support. We experience love and attunement when mommy is happy. When mommy is happy we are happy. When mommy is not happy we are not happy. Repetitive interactions of miscommunication could form defense and survival mechanisms where we might suppress our true internal needs to prevent future feelings of alienation and isolation.

In our innate process of demarcation, wanting something different or disagreeing with our caregivers creates a possible injurious risk in us feeling invalidated or misunderstood. If we upset our caregivers that we depend upon for survival, we might experience alienation, vulnerability, and helplessness. By compromising and bargaining our needs because of our fear of alienation, what happens to the energy that is associated to our unmet expectation? If we are denied hydration after an arduous walk in the Sahara Desert because someone does not believe we are thirsty, we might agree with our minds but thirst and frustration in our bodies narrate a different story. We are left feeling stranded with dry throats and suffering from heat exhaustion.

What about our unmet emotional needs? These invalidations deter our natural expression and feelings because we will more than likely choose the scenario that fosters the feelings of connectiveness rather than separateness. Even the village idiot would prostitute his internal needs to not be thrown into the fire pit. How much are we willing to sacrifice to be fed, sheltered, and loved. What anger, madness, and daimonia fester in our bodies waiting to be discharged or transformed into meaning and understanding? What spiritual container do we have in a fast paced, technological society that values perfectionism and performance? When we experience inescapable stress because of job security, driving in traffic, health problems, and interpersonal relationship issues, what happens to our bodies biochemically? If our brain senses potential danger just like a caged animal, would our innate response be to fight or retreat?

Our reptilian brain (the limbic system) still performs functions in order for us to survive much as it did for earlier primates and other creatures that preceded us millions of years ago. Our primal security system is neither concerned nor discriminating with what incoming stimuli or experience is life threatening and that which is benign. If we live in a militant, oppressed culture or a sexually repressed society, what demons lurk inside us only wanting to be liberated? Violence and rape would be seemingly inevitable. “Rage, in its purest and most primitive form, is an instinctual, defensive reaction to severe stress or physical threat, an autonomic reflex which we humans share with common “lower” animals” (Diamond, 1996, p. 9).

The ancient Greeks used tragedies to teach morals, ethics, and as a form of psychodrama. Human drama was acted out with the attempt to stage “right from wrong” and for the audience to experience catharsis. There were tensions amongst the people for many factors such as drastic socio-economic differences. Tragedies were an attempt to control the tension between masters, servants, and family members. In these plays, if a boy were to be insubordinate toward his father or master, he might be punished or executed. This was to instill in the minds of the laypeople, ” this is what happens to you when you speak up against authority or display deviant behavior”.

The Romans built gigantic coliseums to contain and entertain the people. Prisoners of war, slaves, thieves, and the innocent were exploited as examples in order to control the people and to possibly entertain their shadows of sin and guilt. This could be viewed in the same way as our modern day Super bowl, selling beer, hotdogs, violence, and provocative cheerleaders. Men can become extremely emotional watching sports. Our culture might not be as oppressed as some other cultures or ancient Rome. However, Americans thrive off of watching violence, drama, gore, and sex scandals as a means to be entertained, to connect, to release, to fantasize, to avoid, and to feel better about themselves. Reality TV is not really reality but is dominating the television networks because it supposedly portrays true blood, sweat, and tears. The television show “Survivor” and “Fear Factor” push individuals to test their limits, strengths, and affect tolerance by presenting them with excruciating tasks. Television viewers might resonate with the participants and feel the opportunity to awake the hero within – having the ability to break constraints, fears, frustration, alienation, and isolation by winning the prize money and receiving recognition. Becoming the warrior to slay dragons and rescue damsels in distress might be an attempt to liberate ourselves from the vicissitudes of life.

Deida, (2004) believes that there are darker and lighter sides to masculine and feminine energy. There is a spectrum of energy (libido) that creates tension and the search for freedom or a release. On the lighter side of this energy, a person might experience freedom through meditation. The death of his/her ego and the ability to break constraints of the mind and to surrender boundaries of the “self” might alleviate tensions that engender the feelings of enslavement and pressure. On the darker side of the spectrum, a woman might act out by being sexually promiscuous. A man might commit a crime such as rape. The darker side of this energy is not considered to be bad or negative. However, it needs to be released in constructive and creative ways so the energy is not destructive or pathological.

War can be transformed into love and positive energy through martial arts. Underneath many wars, the unconscious desire might be to seek freedom. Whether it is to liberate people for religious and political rights, or to reclaim their land, the existential and intrapsychic goal is to breakdown boundaries and constraints so they can feel liberated and free. This psychological and intrapsychic experience could happen when individuals think that their lives will improve, or when they experience the freedom from more money, a better job, an intimate partner, the resolution of a perpetual problem, the recovery from a chronic health issue, or a move to a new location. However, when expectations are unmet and an individual does not have healthy outlets to channel his frustration, anger and rage can develop by this static and repressed energy.

The words of Nietzesche, “He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how” was possibly the mantra that kept Viktor Frankl alive in the several Nazi prisons, including Auschwitz. Frankl felt that man’s search for “self” and “meaning” is what keeps our species alive. Through his suffering and degradations in the Nazi prisons, Frankl resurrected himself to experience enlightenment in the grimmest hell and in the face of death. It was common amongst Native Americans to perform religious rituals that involved inflicting intentional pain through forms of self-flagellation, barefoot pilgrimages, extreme fasting, sleepless nights in prayer vigils, piercing the body, and wearing coarse and irritating garments for the sake of the soul. Through these excruciating rituals, an individual might experience insight, epiphanies, the relief of sorrow or pain; they might hallucinate and be guided by a sacred animal or be spoken to by a deceased ancestor.

Many Individuals have had spontaneous epiphanies through existential suffering and life experiences such as losing a loved one, breaking an addiction, surviving a car accident, battling cancer, and going through a divorce. Do we have to experience arduous tasks, abusive relationships, insidious addictions, chronic pain, or perpetual feelings of betrayal to test our psychic muscles in order for our souls to evolve? When our natural states of being and feeling in this world become stagnant, do we unconsciously create sickness, distractions, or constraints to find meaning and freedom from the experiences? Are neurotic and psychotic forms of anxiety, hostility, and aggression due to an individual not being able to accept “his” way of being and feeling in his world? Are anger, rage, and violence a byproduct of repressed energy that has not found a healthy conduit to be released?

Maybe what we need to understand is that inappropriate or ignorant behaviors do not make us bad or unlovable. Our differences simply make us more human. Our culture is deluded with religious idealism and perfectionism that no human being could ever live up to. When we see and sell ourselves as commodities in this performance driven culture, how much of our soul do we compromise? Sacrificing our “selves” in order to be loved, to fit in, and to survive has destructive repercussions. Many individuals who were considered outcasts and did not live up to the “norm” have acted out most heinous, violent crimes. Maybe we need to reevaluate our values and provide more spiritual containers. Taking time to explore the indigenous peoples and their customs might teach us how to treat each other better. If we found constructive, creative, and ritualistic forms to welcome and transmute the daimonic, we might experience more peace in our lives or understanding even in the face of adversaries. Psychologist’s offices are filled with successful men and women who feel depressed, isolated, and disconnected from the meaning of life and spirit.

A Dakota Indian once told me that “white men” are never satisfied. They are always wanting more for their bellies or their minds but never for their heart. They never enjoy the simple things of life such as nature, a good meal, great conversation, or the tranquility of silence. The Indian was not a shaman or sage. Nonetheless, he seemed to be insightful about the core of our culture’s problems, including ethnocentrism.

Ray Doktor is a clinical hypnotherapist, past-life therapist, spiritual counselor, and life coach. Other training and education includes: eye movement desensitization reprocessing (EMDR), marriage, family & couples relationships, communication skills, pre and perinatal psychology, gestalt, rational-emotive, neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), regression therapy, cranial sacral healing, meditation, tantric yoga, qi gong, feng shui, and thought field therapy (TFT). He has a Bachelors degree in human behavior and a Masters degree in counseling psychology. Currently, he is a pre-doctorate candidate in clinical psychology.

Ray has lectured and at workshops on stress management, sexual abuse recovery, trauma, addictions, health issues and surgeries, the law of attraction, prenatal period and birth, past-lives, and spirituality. Please his website @ http://www.wholeminds.com

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Eight Tips to Deal With Explosive Persons

Eight tips to deal with explosive persons who confront you: defusing potentially dangerous situations

1. Do not respond in kind. Hostility often begets more hostility.

Respond instead with a non-hostile message to defuse people who are behaving in a hostile manner toward you. The classic example of this is in when simple inconsiderate driving or even aggressive driving suddenly escalates into road rage due to two drivers ratcheting up hostility in response to the other’s hostile acts, words, or gestures. Please remember that in these and other hostile situations, you contribute somewhat to the outcome by your decision to return hostility or not.

2. Take their upset seriously and validate their feelings

Listen to what they have to say and hear them out; ignoring them or minimizing their feelings will tend to escalate their anger further. There have been untold numbers of workplace violence incidents that could have been averted had supervisors or managers listened with empathy to disgruntled employees rather than responding in an insensitive or uncaring manner.

3. Never argue with someone when they are intoxicated

When someone is drinking or intoxicated, this is no time to try to solve relationship or other problems (especially if you too have had a few drinks). A high percentage of angry confrontations as well spousal abuse arrests occur when drinking is involved by one or both partners. Drinking often impairs judgment, decreases inhibitions (resulting in saying things we don’t mean), and distorts your normally astute reasoning ability.

4. Respond to the feelings they are having – not the content of what they are saying

Try to hear and respond to the underlying hurt or pain the person is experiencing underneath the angry words. Use statements such as “I can appreciate why you feel that way,” It sounds like you are very angry right now,” Many people feel the way you do.”

5. On roadway, don’t make eye contact with an aggressive driver

This is the secret signal in the animal world to engage in combat and will frequently escalate things, sometimes into “road rage.” Just ignore aggressive drivers and stay out of their way.

6. Allow angry people to physically escape the situation

Don’t block their way or prevent access, or you may be putting yourself in a dangerous situation. Take off the heat rather than increasing the pressure! Don’t insist on solving the problem “now” when the other person is in an agitated state.

7. Don’t defend yourself by attacking back at them or their character flaws

Defensiveness often escalates anger in the other person and, in fact, is one of the predictors of divorce, according to recent marital research. There is a time to present your side, but not when your partner is unable to hear it due to his or her anger.

8. Don’t try to solve an emotional issue with logical arguments.

Trying to diffuse an angry person with overwhelming evidence of their thinking errors or mistakes in logic, or facts to the contrary, or reasons for why they shouldn’t feel the way they do, or why they should feel differently - usually makes the situation worse.

Ari Novick, Ph.D. is Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and a certified anger management provider for both adults and adolescents. Dr. Novick is also an adjunct professor of psychology at Pepperdine University’s Graduate School of Education and Psychology. His corporate website is http://www.ajnovickgroup.com and his innovative online anger management class is available at http://www.angerclassonline.com

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Road Rage - When Your Car Can Work For You or Against You

It is easy to take driving for granted, a skill once learned and then repeated and repeated and repeated. It becomes a habit, and habits are hard to change and impossible to change unless you notice that something is not working for you. How aware of your driving are you? Check this list and see how comfortable you are with your car and changes that may have occurred in your life:

Have you gotten shorter as you have gotten older and not added a boost to your seat?

Are you driving with less than half a tank of gas?

Are your windows clear and the wipers in good condition?

Are you using corrective lenses?

Are you aware of the weather/road conditions in your area?

Are you comfortable with directions for your trip?

Do you periodically check tire pressure?

Are you carrying a cell phone for emergencies?

Do you have a AAA or other roadside service card and phone number handy?

Are you aware of convenient restroom facilities on the route?

Is your neck in flexible condition?

Can you hear well?

The more awareness you have of yourself and of your car, the less the likelihood that road rage will raise its ugly head.

How is your physical condition? A stiff neck can cause you to pull over in front of someone you had not been able to see. If you do not react with fear that is translated into, the other driver might.

If your hearing is impaired and uncorrected, you may become an obstruction in the path of a blaring ambulance. Imagine rage in the mind of that driver; imagine your own fear.

Road rage springs from so many different situations and emotions. Fear of being unprepared for travel in an area without handy roadside services can lead to panic and then rage at anyone or anything that interferes with your ability to get to a restroom when the need it.

Or you may be running low on fuel and find yourself fearful of running out of gas on a dark, poorly traveled road. Fear can lead to rage directed against yourself or innocent passengers. Blaming yourself for bad decision-making puts you on edge, and any bump in the road can fuel the rage.

Not having clear vision (car seat too low, dirty windshield streaked by worn out wipers, or lack of prescription glasses) can lead to anxiety and road rage. How many incidents like this have led to bad decisions and traffic accidents?

On the other hand, if you allot yourself plenty of time for the journey, if you are armed with a AAA or other road assistance, a cell phone, a good map or map quest directions which you have studied ahead of time, you can handle unexpected circumstances, like detours, rush hour traffic, and flat tires. You can remain calm and in control. It all sounds like good sense, and it is, but failure to remedy the little things about the car is not uncommon. The expense, however, of neglect, in terms of negative emotions and wrecked cars and lives as a result, cannot be overlooked. Make simple corrections to your car and your driving habits, stay physically fit and alert, and you will not find yourself the victim of road rage.

LILLIAN SWANSON lives in Southern Maine, soaking up the flavor of the seacost. Much of her life has been spent in teaching and counseling, enlarging and enhancing the quality of life for her students. Through her website, http://www.tametherage.com Lillian intends to use driving as a metaphor to pass along an understanding of how to take control of the emotions that lead to road rage. She is committed to saving lives and making driving an enjoyable experience again

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How To Have A Fulfilling, Abundant Life Filled With Joy, Peace, Happiness, And Good Health

How to be in harmony with the The Universal Laws? … How to understand them and use them to our advantage?

You might have heard of the universal laws all along, but you have never really understood their importance nor power. These laws are the very factors that can give you fame, financial freedom, and supreme happiness in life, if used appropriately!

Your can be rich, well loved, famous, and very satisfied in life! With the power of universal laws lying in your hands, you have the ability to alter your mindset and mold your thoughts and emotions to bring you the very thing you desire!

All people, regardless of their race, age, gender, or nationality instinctively follow the universal laws, whether or not they knew these laws existed at all. These laws have brought forth prosperity, contentment, happiness, and freedom to those who knew how to apply them properly. These laws are the unlisted, unstated, and underestimated laws that govern humankind.

The Universal Laws = Law of Attraction + Law of Vibration + Law of Karma + Law of Gratitude + Law of Allowing + Law of Love.

These laws are very powerful and infinite. They are occurring all over the world, regardless of how people differ in race, ethnicity, gender, and age.

The Universal Laws are obeyed both consciously and unconsciously. This means that they are there and everybody is already experiencing their effects. You can definitely use these laws to gain the power in achieving all your goals and aspirations.

You can make these laws as tools to advance your way towards the life that you really wanted for yourself and your family. But you have to stop the process of thinking negatively. And try to produce high energy positive vibrations of thought that produce great achievements.

It is important that you know how to utilize these laws correctly. Studying and understanding them deeply is the key to make them work for you.

Once you know how to apply these laws correctly, you are on your way to living an entirely different life - a life that is full of greatness and fulfillment! You can unleash the hidden power of the universal laws to realize all your goals and attain unparalleled success!

Take the advantage of learning about them and of discovering how they work. You can surely prosper and advance in life. And it will happen all because you are a person who knew how to properly utilize the universal laws to get anything you want! Adapt these laws properly in your life and see the difference that it can make and living in harmony with these universal laws. These universal laws can make your life better and fuller.

Feel what it is like to have the world revolving around you. Wake up each day feeling well rested and ready to take on life’s challenges easily. Get rid of your depression, anxiety, insecurities, and fears. Make the world go out of its way to please you, and not the other way around!

Choose wisely! And be patient, be persistent, be creative! Even if you only acquire one third of peace, happiness, good health, and abundant life you pursue, your efforts will be well-rewarded.

Achieve your aspirations and vision! Start seeing life differently! And Think Like a Winner!

Anne-Marie Ronsen is the author of many wealth and self development books for women. Download FREE e-books and software from http://www.e-bestsellers.com , http://www.PLRbestsellers.com or http://www.UniversalPublishingltd.com … You will learn about the best tips and recommendations to improve your health, weight and wealth. You’ll also discover how you can get a top position that will mean loads of traffic, recognition and sales for you and your business.

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A Day in The Life of a Button

I’ve written about my sister as well the “struggle” we have on agreeing where the middle ground exists where our lives meet.

Today I couldn’t see it and she didn’t even bother looking for it.

It take a great amount to annoy me, piss me off or get me to react…if you don’t know what my buttons are.

She knows all of them.

I look at the roads I have traveled to arrive momentarily at the “here and now” destination of where my life is currently situated. I know that who I am, who I want to be, what I have gone through; all that I have experienced, be it good bad or indifferent has all provided me with the opportunity to choose to be a better person on a daily basis.

Fortunately life has creatively cracked an opening into my mind allowing me to discover there was a better way of life…for me.

My sister has not had this experience. She is very grounded in her life as well as her perceptions of reality. Her beliefs systems and the lies she swallows only serve to continue perpetuating the idea she holds that in someway, shape or form her life is better then my own….that she is better then me.

This pushes my buttons.

Her snide comments… push my buttons.

Her false support…push my buttons.

Her ignorance of her own life…push my buttons.

She may push my buttons…but I hold the directions in how they work today.

They no longer produce anger, insults or defensive justification tactics.

The no longer result in self-pity, disappointment or lost energy.

I never really understood the part I would play in regards to the emotional energy I would expend into the universe. I was too consumed reacting to the injustice of all those that surrounded me, pointing the fingers of blame and justifying my verbal actions as something that I had no control over….holding onto the belief,

“We’ll they pissed me off, if they didn’t say or act like an idiot then I wouldn’t have had to react!”

In life I have learned that sometimes I have to be who I don’t want to be in order to make the decision of who I want to be.

It was when I was a Bagel girl that I started to see that certain situations and certain people always seemed to trigger off a series of actions on my part. I started to become aware of the role I was playing within my own life. It also began the path leading me to the painful awareness that once again all the fingers of blame I pointed at others, sadly pointed back at me.

Yet again I had come to understand I was creating the problems I sat in and stewed about hours after a situation had past. I could no longer blame people, places, things or circumstances for the actions I displayed in my life. I had to take a stand and take responsibility…for me.

Personal responsibility opens the door of possibilities onto the many paths of the life that lead me closer to who I am.

I listened to my sister today..and felt the familiar stirrings of emotional havoc boiling up to the surface of my consciousness. I heard the anger in her voice, the hurt in her words…and felt the sadness and disappointment of her own life that hid beneath it all.

I have done a lot of work in re-wiring my buttons. At times, when pushed it seems as if I’m going to react…but then the new reality receptors I have implemented take over to lead me to perceive the situation safely removed from the sparks that threaten to set me ablaze in rage.

I stopped what I was doing, cocked my head to the side and I looked at my sister, really looked at my sister….

I smiled, took a breath and slowly released it, wishing her well in my mind. I didn’t respond, for there