4101.
Apparently, antiperspirant with aluminum chloride causes those
(unsightly,) yellow, underarm stains on white t-shirts;
4102. It’s nice
to be important, but more important to be nice;
4103. 48% of
mortgage foreclosures are caused by disability;
4104. 3% of
mortgage foreclosures are caused by death;
4105. Men have
a 43% chance of becoming seriously disabled during their working years;
4106. Women
have a 54% chance of becoming seriously disabled during their working years;
4107. At age
42, it is 4 times more likely that you will become seriously disabled than that
you will die during your working years;
4108. Many
people focus on low deductibles when purchasing insurance, but then only file
claims that are well above their deductible and don’t file claims that are
smaller because they are trying to keep their premiums low. If you aren’t going to file claims below or
at the lower deductible, save yourself some money and get a higher deductible;
4109. If your
investment in an insurance policy keeps you thinking productively, indemnifies
you against loss and provides a return on your investment, you have increased
the productivity of your assets;
4110. Many
at-risk products or investments, such as Variable Universal Life, mutual funds,
IRAs or 401(k)s, may work out great in hindsight, but people will not feel safe
making significant, bold choices in other areas of their lives based on the
expected performance of these assets because there is little certainty ahead of
time. They will be in a cautious,
wait-and-see mode through most of their lives;
4111. The real
economic value of permanent life insurance is not in the rate of return on the
cash value, nor in the ability to borrow at low rates, nor in the estate
created for charity or heirs upon death, nor in the tax treatment of the
policy. Rather it lies within the world
of economic possibility that opens up to the insured during her/his own
lifetime because of the certainty s/he now has because of the contract
guarantees and the resulting choices s/he can now make in other areas of life
without fear, worry or doubt. The
insured quite literally becomes the beneficiary of her/his own life insurance
policy during her/his own lifetime;
4112.
Transferring risk opens up possibilities that are unavailable to us when
we retain them. When we create certainty
in our lives, we act much differently than we do when we’re operating in a
risky environment;
4113. Certainty
dramatically increases our productivity;
4114. The more
certainty we can create in our lives, the more likely we will be to produce and
to take on projects that we otherwise wouldn’t even consider. Conversely, the less certainty in our lives,
the more fear; and the more fear, the less productivity;
4115. One
critical way to remove fear and to increase certainty in our life is to
transfer our risks through the proper use of insurance;
4116. Many people
focus on which doctors are available under their medical insurance while
ignoring the lifetime maximum benefit of the insurance. This should be a primary consideration
because if your lifetime max is low, it can be eliminated by a single
catastrophic event and then you would be unprotected;
4117. The more
assets you have, the more insurance you should have because the more risk you
have of lost production;
4118.
Understand the difference between debt and liabilities and wisely incur
and leverage the right liabilities to increase your prosperity;
4119. Companies
need to have rules – that’s a given – but they don’t have to be shortsighted
and lazy attempts at creating order.
Whether it’s an overzealous attendance policy or taking employees’
frequent flier miles, even a couple of unnecessary rules can drive people
crazy. When good employees feel like big
brother is watching, they’ll find someplace else to work;
4120. Treating
everyone equally shows your top performers that no matter how high they perform
(and, typically, top performers are work horses), they will be treated the same
as the bozo who does nothing more than punch the clock;
4121. It’s said
that in jazz bands, the band is only as good as the worst player; no matter how
great some members may be, everyone hears the worst player. The same goes for a company. When you permit weak links to exist without
consequence, they drag everyone else down, especially your top performers;
4122. It’s easy
to underestimate the power of a pat on the back, especially with top performers
who are intrinsically motivated.
Everyone likes kudos, none more so than those who work hard and give
their all. Rewarding individual
accomplishments shows that you’re paying attention. Managers need to communicate with their
people to find out what makes them feel good (for some, it’s a raise; for
others, it’s public recognition) and then to reward them for a job well
done. With top performers, this will
happen often if you’re doing it right;
4123. More than
half the people who leave their jobs do so because of their relationship with
their boss. Smart companies make certain
that their managers know how to balance being professional with being human. These are the bosses who celebrate their
employees’ successes, empathize with those going through hard times and
challenge them, even when it hurts.
Bosses who fail to really care will always have high turnover
rates. It’s impossible to work for
someone for eight-plus hours a day when they aren’t personally involved and don’t
care about anything other than your output;
4124. It may
seem efficient to simply send employees assignments and move on, but leaving
out the big picture is a deal breaker for star performers. Star performers shoulder heavier loads
because they genuinely care about their work, so their work must have a
purpose. When they don’t know what that
is, they feel alienated and aimless.
When they aren’t given a purpose, they find one elsewhere;
4125. Talented
employees are passionate. Providing
opportunities for them to pursue their passions improves their productivity and
job satisfaction, but many managers want people to work within a little
box. These managers fear that
productivity will decline if they let people expand their focus and pursue
their passions. This fear is
unfounded. Studies have shown that
people who are able to pursue their passions at work experience flow, a
euphoric state of mind that is five times more productive than the norm;
4126. If people
aren’t having fun at work then you’re doing it wrong. People don’t give their all if they aren’t
having fun. The idea is simple: if work
is fun, you’ll not only perform better, but you’ll stick around for longer hours
and an even longer career;
4127. Managers
tend to blame their turnover problems on everything under the sun while
ignoring the crux of the matter: people don’t leave jobs; they leave managers;
4128. We do
want to avoid true debt (i.e., having more liabilities than assets), but we
don’t want to avoid incurring liabilities (i.e., owing something to someone
else) that can be beneficial to our productivity, value creation and
prosperity;
4129. In many
instances, the way to increase our prosperity and wealth is to increase – not
decrease – our liabilities;
4130. The name
of the game of wealth is not to focus on ridding our lives of as many
liabilities as possible. Rather, it’s to
identify which liabilities are consumptive (i.e., take more value from our
lives than they put into it) and which are productive (i.e., provide more value
to our lives than they take from it) and then focus on increasing our
productive liabilities;
4131. A
productive liability always creates a corresponding asset – an asset that we
never would have had access to had we not incurred the liability;
4132. Every
asset comes with a corresponding liability, at least in some form;
4133. To me, (Aunt
Rosie’s) loganberry drink tastes like a melted, cherry slushy;
4134. Alexander
Ovechkin is (only) the 3rd player in NHL history to score (at least)
30 goals in each of his first 11 seasons in the league (joining Wayne Gretzky
and Mike Gartner);
4135. Say what
you mean and do what you say;
4136. The
Rolling Stones are (huge) blues fans;
4137. Keith
Richards (from “The Rolling Stones”) seems like a pretty interesting (and cool)
dude;
4138. The
Rolling Stones are named after Muddy Waters’s song of the same name;
4139. Keith
Richards thinks he’s a better bass player than he is a guitarist;
4140. The
average American spends more on coffee and soda than they do on post formal
education;
4141. If you’re
not receiving the love you desire, it seems like a pretty good idea to explore
what’s creating this. Most of us want to
place the blame for lovelessness on something external to ourselves. That’s a waste of time and energy, but it
often feels good because blame seems to alleviate the pain, even if only
briefly. However, blame energy only
helps you remain out of balance, whether you’re blaming yourself or someone
else. Being in balance is centered on
the premise that you receive in life what you’re aligned with. You get what you think about!
4142. While you
may justify your loveless state with thoughts of being unappreciated or choose
to see the whole world as an unloving place, the fact remains that you’re
experiencing the imbalance of not feeling good because you don’t have enough
love in your life. Waiting for others to
change or for some kind of shift to take place in the world to restore you to
balance won’t work without your commitment to take responsibility for changing
your way of thinking. If that’s left to
others, you’ll turn the controls of your life over to someone or something
outside of you. And that’s a
prescription for disaster;
4143. If
feelings of being shortchanged in the love dimension are a part of your life
then it’s because you’ve aligned your thoughts and behaviors with
lovelessness. By failing to match your
desire for love with thoughts that harmonize with this powerful desire – for
example: I’ve never been able to sustain a loving relationship. I’m not really attractive enough to have
someone love me in the way I want to be loved.
People are cruel and take advantage of me. I see hostility and anger everywhere. This is an uncaring world with a shortage of
love. All of these thoughts (and others
like them) create a point of attraction that’s way out of balance with a desire
to receive abundant love. You attract
into your life precisely what you’re thinking about and you’ve inadvertently
joined “Club Loveless” with a membership that includes a majority of the entire
population – that is, people who feel shortchanged about the amount of love
that’s failing to pour into their empty hearts.
All of this is reversible by shifting your alignment and removing the
resistance to the fulfillment of your desire for love. You begin by ending your search for love;
4144. To
balance your life with more lovingness, you need to match your thoughts and
behaviors with love. This means noticing
when you’re inclined to judge yourself or others as though you or they are
unworthy of love. This means suspending
your need to be right in favor of being kind toward yourself and others and
deliberately extending kindness everywhere.
This means giving love to yourself and others rather than demanding
love. This means your loving gesture of
kindness is heartfelt because you feel love flowing from within – not because
you want something in return. A tall
order? Not really, unless you believe
that it’s going to be difficult;
4145. Embrace
the love from within. Don’t doubt or
judge your love or the love you receive.
You can be in a loving state just by looking from within. Once you remove judgment and love yourself,
you’ll find that you receive love from many places;
4146. The first
step in true happiness in life or any situation is letting go. Don’t hold on to anger, grief, sadness or
hate. Once you forgive and let go, you
can live a rich, fulfilling life;
4147. Living by
letting go means releasing worry, stress and fear. When you promote your sense of well-being in
the face of what appears as danger to others, your alignment frees you from
pushing yourself to act in a forceful manner;
4148. Rather
than telling yourself: With my luck things aren’t going to work out for me,
affirm: I am open to allowing what needs to happen. I trust luck to guide me. This change in your thinking will serve you
by guiding you to live in the flow.
Peace will replace stress, harmony will replace effort, acceptance will
replace interference and force and good luck will replace fear. You’ll become what you think about, so even
things that you previously believed were evidence of bad luck will now be
viewed as what helps you move toward greater harmony;
4149. A person,
who becomes conscious of the responsibility s/he bears toward a human being who
affectionately waits for her/him or to an unfinished work, will never be able
to throw away her/his life. S/he knows the “why” for his/his existence and will
be able to bear almost any “how;”
4150. We create
power in our lives when we create a context to live into and up to;