Monday, October 26, 2015

What I’ve learned since moving to D.C. (some of which should be obvious): 0077

3801.  Most people could increase their happiness by devoting less time to making money and more to non-pecuniary goals, such as family life and health;
3802.  According to Orbitz, the best time to book holiday flights is the week of October 5th.  That’s for Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Eve travel;
3803.  When to book Thanksgiving flights: Orbitz says the best day for those who haven’t booked yet will be October 6th;
3804.  When to book Christmas flights: Because it’s the holiday with the greatest number of people taking to the skies, the sweet spot to book cheap Christmas flights is much earlier than the actual travel date: October 9th, to be exact.  You may also get a second chance at a reasonable (though slightly higher) fare if you book on November 6th or 7th;
3805.  When to book New Year’s Eve flights: Solidify your New Year’s Eve plans by October 10th – the best day to book flights averaging in the $362 range for the last holiday of the year.  The latest you can book and still expect to see some savings is December 2nd.  If you end up booking after Thanksgiving, you’ll be competing with half of all travelers;
3806.  Education that is not put into action is a waste.  Knowledge without action is pointless.  To achieve anything, you must take action;
3807.  Education is key, but remember that part of your education should be doing;
3808.  Education doesn't stop at books, you need to take action and apply what you've learned.  That is when the most powerful learning happens;
3809.  That which we persist in doing becomes easier for us to do; not that the nature of the thing itself is changed, but that our power to do it is increased;
3810.  That which we resist in doing becomes harder for us to do; not that the nature of the thing itself is changed, but that our power to do it is decreased;
3811.  We can try to change the system or we can change ourselves;
3812.  The way to win is to learn to play the game a better way.  Better not to worry about trying to change the game – just learn to play it well;
3813.  Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and wisdom to know the difference;
3814.  Ultimately, blaming and complaining will not improve your situation.  You may have a valid point and your complaints may be justified, but complaining will not help fix your problem;
3815.  (The) parking at the Birchmere (Birchmere.com) is weird;
3816.  It’s (kind of) weird going to a concert and sitting at a table next to strangers without any seats between you;
3817.  Some pretty famous musicians (i.e., Johnny Cash, Vince Gill, Merle Haggard, etc.) have sung at the Birchmere;
3818.  Matt Nathanson has 13 guitars. . . . He doesn’t name them;
3819.  Matt Nathanson shops at Whole Foods (Market), including the store in (Old Town) Alexandria;
3820.  Hope is what we stand on when we have no control;
3821.  When you marry, your credit report stays the same.  The only information on both spouses’ reports is joint accounts and accounts where the other spouse is an authorized user;
3822.  How to organize your kitchen: Keep pots and pans in one cabinet and cookie sheets, muffin tins and cake pans in another cabinet.  The pots and pans should be in an area that is more accessible than the bakeware because you use them every day;
3823.  It’s a terrible thing in life to wait until you’re ready.  Actually no one is ever ready to do anything.  There is almost no such thing as ready.  There is only now.  And you may as well do it now.  Now is as good a time as any;
3824.  Fear is just an illusion.  It’s not real;
3825.  Once you figure out what is keeping you in fear, you can take action to produce real results.  Identifying what makes you afraid should help you to release it.  If this is not the case, consider that you may not have identified the root of the fear or it may be layered;
3826.  Once you figure out what is keeping you fearful, the trick is to turn that feeling or emotion into an act of courage.  Think of one step or a series of steps that you can take rather than stay paralyzed in fear.  Make a list.  Ask yourself, if I had no fear, what would it look like?  What would the actions of a brave person be?  Write them down and pick one.  It can be baby steps;
3827.  Without fear, there would be no bravery;
3828.  Allow fear to occur as an opportunity for bravery.  Consciously choose actions that would be brave.  If you’re not totally buying it, just do it anyway.  Fake it until you make it.  Courage is measured in actions.  It all looks the same from the outside;
3829.  Life is a mirror: Things show up based on how you are vibrating.  You cannot attract what you don’t reflect.  Say you find yourself dating a partner who can’t commit to you; I would ask, where in your life are you not all in?  Your job?  Why is this showing up?  You get what you put out in the world;
3830.  In the U.S., 47 percent of women over the age of 50 are single;
3831.  I can say I’ve taken a class taught by the Director of the F.B.I. (i.e., James “Jim” Comey);
3832.  Scientists at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina found women need more sleep than men;
3833.  Professor Jim Horne, director of the Sleep Research Centre at Loughborough University, England found women need 20 minutes more shut-eye because of the “female multi-tasking brain;”
3834.  Women tend to multi-task – they do a lot at once and are flexible – and so they use more of their actual brain than men do.  Because of that, their sleep need is greater;
3835.  Women’s health is compromised more than men from lack of sleep too.  They have a higher risk of heart disease, depression and psychological problems, including extra clotting factors in their blood, which can lead to stroke;
3836.  If you find it impossible to get enough sleep at night, then sleep expert, Dr. Mchael Breus suggests taking strategic naps of either 25 minutes or 90 minutes long; anything longer than this will make you feel worse when you wake up;
3837.  Some experts estimate that the average American consumes 350 to 440 calories of added sugars – the equivalent of 22 to 28 teaspoons – every day.  And pretty much every medical professional agrees that it’s contributing to our weight gain, high blood-sugar levels and record-high diabetes rates;
3838.  According to recent research published in JAMA Internal Medicine, a sugar-filled diet can increase your risk of death by heart disease – even if you aren’t overweight;
3839.  Eating significant amounts of sugar from any source – be it table sugar, honey or orange juice, can compromise your immune system’s ability to fight viruses, bacteria and parasites, according to Debra Nessel, R.D.N., C.D.E., a registered dietitian nutritionist and certified diabetes educator with the Torrance Memorial Medical Center in California;
3840.  A 2015 study from the U.S.D.A. Agricultural Research Service (funded by National Honey Board) found that honey, table sugar and high-fructose corn syrup all have similar effects on the body;
3841.  Some research has linked high sugar intake to cancer;
3842.  In one Journal of Behavioral Neuroscience study, rats that consumed the popular artificial sweetener saccharine for 14 days ate more food and gained more weight than rats that ate sugar.  Plus, their core body temperatures actually dropped and their metabolisms slowed. That may be because artificial sweeteners are up to 13,000 times sweeter than sugar, which cannot only trigger your body to crave more of the sweet stuff, but also damage your body’s ability to gauge how many calories you’ve consumed – and how many more you should crave, according to the Harvard School of Public Health;
3843.  Current research published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine shows that people who consume two or more diet drinks daily are 30 percent more likely to suffer heart attacks and strokes and are 50 percent more likely to die from heart disease compared to those who never or rarely drink diet drinks.  The bottom line is that even small amounts of artificial sweeteners can play tricks on your body, causing it to over respond to signals from your taste buds, in many cases leading to weight gain;
3844.  Apparently beet juice contains a molecule that provides a “dramatic boost” to your muscle power. . . . . Nine people with heart failure were recruited for a recent study, which appeared in the September issue of Circulation: Heart Failure journal.  Each subject was given 140 milliliters or about two thirds of a cup of concentrated beet juice.  The upshot was that the subjects’ muscle power was boosted by an average of 13 percent almost immediately after drinking it.  According to Andrew Coggan, a study coauthor and assistant professor of radiology at Washington University, this improvement is equivalent to what a person can expect after two to three months of resistance training.  The magic element is nitrate, also found in high densities in spinach, which is converted into nitric oxide when ingested;
3845.  Your thoughts control your feelings, and in order to become a happier person, you need to think happier thoughts.  While it seems simple, it actually takes a lot of practice because you need to retrain your brain.  A good example that a lot of people can relate to is the thought or idea of not being enough – not skinny enough, rich enough, smart enough and the list goes on. When you begin to tell yourself – and realize – that you are enough, you can experience abundance;
3846.  Whether you need to forgive yourself or someone else, it’s important to recognize that until you can forgive, you’ll never be fully liberated and able to live life to its fullest;
3847.  Money is going to come and go your entire life.  You’ll make it, spend it, lose it and invest it.  What is the thing in your life that’s only going to go?  Time.  When you’re retired and looking back on your life, you’ll wish you spent your brief time on this Earth as preciously as you’ve spent your money.  Be responsible in preparing for the future, but don’t overlook the importance of enjoying the present while you’re at it;
3848.  Not only is traveling physically harder as you age, but logistically it becomes more difficult the older you get.  Growing more established in your career, buying a home and starting a family are all things that won’t make travel impossible, but will certainly make it more complicated than it is when you are young and untethered;
3849.  Apparently, they do give out gift cards for filling out (restaurant) customer surveys;
3850.  A recent study published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition found that athletes who consumed 4.5 milligrams of caffeine per kilogram of body weight before exercise burned about 15 percent more calories for three hours post-exercise than those who ingested a placebo.  For a 185-pound man, that comes out to about 378 mg of caffeine – roughly the amount in about 16 ounces of brewed coffee;

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