Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Acoustic Solutions Tv Manual

"NEED FOR SPEED" MONOPOLY

Interestingly as many children "lost" literally the head with many games consoles or applied to your computer. However, this Christmas past, and distant, something happened that, somehow, I was surprised as to their results.

My mother, grandmother course of my three children, gave the smaller a board game, namely the "Monopoly." Game that many of you will bring fond memories of times when whole streets bought and sold them without thinking of the dire consequences of our actions in relation to the Treasury.

Initially, I imagined that the little eight year old, would gather the gesture a little disappointed not to receive the latest version of "Need for speed" he had long coveted, especially after seeing it advertised at almost every stop bus. The first moments

were somewhat curious. The box, you will recall, is full of attractions tickets and tokens colors representing each player. We meet his brothers and myself, around the game and started the first game of courtesy. So imagine my surprise when I witnessed how the silences full of electronic sounds of the consoles themselves are being replaced by laughter and shouts when someone robbed a property to one of his brothers. Moreover, the console game, rested on a chair with his "bytes" ready to fill the processor memory, but nothing: the cup with dice stirring constantly.

The first idea that came to me the head was "how successful the game!". But the truth is that we were having fun because we played together. The game was just the vehicle to have a good time in the company of others. Not only that, but had to have enough time to share a complete game giving up work, phone calls, write emails, etc..

How many times do we complain that our children when, in fact, have many choices in front of our noses? Do we have the courage to abandon our "important" meeting (and the "important" I mean it) to go to play a starting with our son?. Could be appealing to many, but the guy left out the "Play", the computer and TV to play a game. Is not that what we wanted? And when we do, are we able to keep? Ah, the "Need for Speed" only used it one day.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Patricia Nimock Acrylic Sealer

AGAINST FAILURE IS THERE?

Depending on how we know ourselves that we react to the environment around.

Depending on this perception we will embark on various tasks that will test what we thought we are in relation to what can truly perform. If a person has a poor idea of \u200b\u200bitself prove that you can not companies undertaking for which, paradoxically, if it could be trained. That is, their self-image becomes your worst enemy. On the contrary, have a magnified idea itself is likely to take you to suffer unnecessary failures throughout his life.

But what is failure? First, is life experience that should serve to improve ourselves and learn not to make the same mistake. Yes, we all know that saying so English that " man is the only animal that stumbles on the same stone ." But even in this situation is that learning is apparent other, parallel to the stone in question. Perhaps in relation to oneself " I should not have relationships with certain people "or, for example, conduct such business.

Those that sink are people with problems with lack of self-knowledge, recklessness, victimization and a certain amount of rebellion useless. On the contrary, that not only do mature age but in compliance using the setbacks to learn. In short: you "educate yourself."

From all this we can draw a good useful experience for our children:
• In those situations we do not get the expected result should be constituted as a problem to solve and not a "failure." We focus on how to overcome this difficulty analyzing the mistakes made and this time, helping you achieve your accomplishments.
Do not make you feel inferior to others when obtaining optimal results. Or by contrast make you feel superior for having achieved success.

So there is a failure or we're just learning?
;-) There is open debate.


José Miguel Gaona
Director, "Teaching Well"