Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Facebook | SMITH BUSINESS CONSULTANTS, INC.

Dear FAMILY & FRIENDS,

Smith Business Consultants, Inc. is currently working with "Operation Smile," which is a medical charity that provides cleft lip and palate surgery to children worldwide. To date, Operation Smile has provided reconstructive surgery to over 150,000 children and young adults, in more than 50 countries. Please, help us raise donations to help change the life of a child. All donations are appreciated.

Thank you,
SBC, Inc.

Facebook SMITH BUSINESS CONSULTANTS, INC.: "http://www.facebook.com/pages/Operation-Smile/112225058788948?ref=ts"

The Happiness of Choosing Wisely

by Laura Rowley

Posted on Friday, June 18, 2010, 12:00AM

I stopped at my local bookstore last weekend to meet Columbia University psychologist Sheena Iyengar, whose book -- "The Art of Choosing" -- I reviewed in a recent column. A petite brunette with a lyrical voice, she signed the hardcover for me, and next to her signature, wrote: "Choose when to choose."

I thought about that statement later when I received a letter from my bank stamped "ACTION REQUIRED." It explained that under new federal rules, banks can no longer automatically cover overdrafts and charge (exorbitant) fees for the privilege. After July 1, consumers must opt in and agree to overdraft protection, otherwise the ATM or vendor may deny the transaction for insufficient funds.

"If you're like most consumers, you rely on your ATM or debit card to save the day," the letter stated. "However, what do you do if you do not have sufficient funds in your checking account?"

Apparently I'm not like most consumers (at least in the bank's view) because I don't rely on my ATM card to "save the day." I rely on a budgeting program that helps me balance the money that flows in and out, so my financial boat is pretty steady. Despite the screaming caps, no action was required.

The Necessary Work

But building wealth usually does demand action, and conscious, consistent discipline. It's the culmination of decisions made over and over every day -- to uphold a set of values, live within one's means, save and invest, and strike that delicate balance between carpe diem (seizing the day) and robbing from tomorrow. Some people approach their finances casually, carelessly and unconsciously with regard to every offer that might be thrilling at the moment -- but that ultimately can shatter the things one values most.

"The beauty of choice is it gives you the power to think of your future as changeable," says Iyengar. "It's the only tool you have that enables you to think about and act upon how you're going to go from who you are today to whom you want to be tomorrow. Framing your life in terms of choice is both empowering and burdensome."

The changeable future was on the mind of a young bank manager I met last week when I went to close an account and shift the money to one that offered higher interest. When he found out I write about personal finance, he asked for advice. He lives with his fiance; both were a few years out of college with student loan and credit card debt. He felt he had a handle on his money, and he wanted to set up a joint account for shared expenses. She resisted, and he suspected that her spending outstripped her income. When she returned from the mall, he said, she would try to hide the shopping bags.

After we talked about which debts to tackle first, I suggested he and his fiance sit down separately and make a list of the things they wanted most in life. What did they value, what were their fervent hopes and dreams for their lives, their biggest aspirations? Then come together and identify where the lists overlap, I said, and answer three questions: When do we want to achieve these goals? What will they cost in money, time and energy? How much do we need to save in 10 years, five years, next month, next week and today to reach them?

Earning Success

When we drill down deeply into values and priorities, we might be lucky enough to hit something that's true and authentic, that's a reflection of who we really are and how we want to show up in the world. Connecting to what is most meaningful and purposeful becomes a source of conviction in a world of ubiquitous temptation. It provides the energy and the inspiration to choose when to choose.

A few weeks ago a friend told me that her daughter and son-in-law were thinking about starting a family. The daughter told her mother that even if she wanted to quit work and stay home with her kids, she couldn't afford to, because they had created "a certain lifestyle." Having a parent stay home with children is indeed a luxury in a world of stagnating wages and rising costs. But for a high-earner to sacrifice the choice, before the fact, on the altar of a certain lifestyle, struck me as a form of economic Stockholm syndrome: Emotionally bound to a material status, the captive becomes one with the captor.

"Modern individuals are not merely 'free to choose,' but obliged to be free, to understand and enact their lives in terms of choice," writes Nikolas Rose in his book, "Powers of Freedom."

"They must interpret their past and dream their future as outcomes of choices made or choices still to make. Their choices are, in their turn, seen as realizations of the attributes of the choosing person -- expressions of personality -- and reflect back on the person who has made them."

It takes courage and imagination to be the architects of our lives, to choose when to choose and be accountable for the sum of our efforts. But there is no happiness that compares with earned success, as Arthur Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute, wrote in a recent essay:"

"Earned success is the creation of value in our lives or the lives of others. It is what drives entrepreneurs to take risks, work hard and make sacrifices. It is what parents get from raising happy children who are good people. It is the reward we enjoy when our time, money and energy go to improving our world."

In other words, ACTION REQUIRED.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Positive Thinking Your Key to Success

Positive Thinking Your Key to Success
by Remez Sasson

Positive thinking brings inner peace, success, improved relationships, better health, happiness and satisfaction. It also helps the daily affairs of life move more smoothly, and makes life look bright and promising.

Positive thinking is contagious. People around you pick your mental moods and are affected accordingly. Think about happiness, good health and success, and you will cause people to like you and desire to help you, because they enjoy the vibrations that a positive mind emits.

In order to make positive thinking yield results, you need to develop a positive attitude toward life, expect a successful outcome of whatever you do, but also take any necessary actions to ensure your success.

Effective positive thinking that brings results is much more than just repeating a few positive words, or telling yourself that everything is going to be all right. It has to be your predominant mental attitude. It is not enough to think positively for a few moments, and then letting fears and lack of belief enter your mind. Some effort and inner work are necessary.
Are you willing to make a real inner change?
Are you willing to change the way you think?
Are you willing to develop a mental power that can positively affect you, your environment and the people around you?

Here are a few actions and tips to help you develop the power of positive thinking:

Always use only positive words while thinking and while talking. Use words such as, 'I can', 'I am able', 'it is possible', 'it can be done', etc.

Allow into your awareness only feelings of happiness, strength and success.

Try to disregard and ignore negative thoughts. Refuse to think such thoughts, and substitute them with constructive happy thoughts.

In your conversation use words that evoke feelings and mental images of strength, happiness and success.

Before starting with any plan or action, visualize clearly in your mind its successful outcome. If you visualize with concentration and faith, you will be amazed at the results.

Read at least one page of inspiring book every day.

Watch movies that make you feel happy.

Minimize the time you listen to the news and read the papers.

Associate yourself with people who think positively.

Always sit and walk with your back straight. This will strengthen your confidence and inner strength.

Walk, swim or engage in some other physical activity. This helps to develop a more positive attitude.

Think positive and expect only favorable results and situations, even if your current circumstances are not as you wish them to be. In time, your mental attitude will affect your life and circumstances and change them accordingly.

Follow the tips and suggestions in this article, and prove to yourself the reality the power of positive thinking. More advanced and powerful techniques, instructions and exercises can be found in the following books:

Visualize and Achieve
Affirmations - Words of Power

When you expect success and say "I can", you fill yourself with confidence and joy.

Fill your mind with light, hope and feelings of strength, and soon your life will reflect these qualities.









Affirmations
Learn how positive words can transform your life and bring you happiness and success.

Visualize and Achieve

Creative Visualization

Learn how to use the powers of your mind and creative visualization to achieve your dreams and goals. A book with a wealth of information, instructions and guidance.
Visualize and Achieve

Peace of Mind in Daily Life
Learn how to enjoy inner peace and freedom from restless thinking in your daily life, and how to remain calm, focused and not disturbed by circumstances and people.

Full guidance, advice, exercises and meditations for gaining peace of mind and freedom from anxieties, worries and fears.
The Guide to Inner Peace