Sunday, August 2, 2009

Time by Lady G

To realize the value of ONE YEAR, ask a student who failed a grade.
To realize the value of ONE MONTH, ask a mother who gave birth to a premature baby.
To realize the value of ONE WEEK, ask the editor of a weekly newspaper.
To realize the value of ONE HOUR, ask the lovers who are waiting to meet.
To realize the value of ONE MINUTE, ask a person who missed the train.
To realize the value of ONE SECOND, ask a person who just avoided an accident.
To realize the value of ONE MILLISECOND, ask the person who won a silver medal in the Olympics. ~Unknown~

Treasure every moment that you have! And treasure it more because you shared it with someone special, special enough to spend your time. And remember that time waits for no one.

Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is mystery. Today is a gift. That's why it's called the present!!! ~Unknown~

Imagine there is a bank that credits your account each morning with $86,400. It carries over no balance from day to day. Every evening deletes whatever part of the balance you failed to use during the day. What would you do? Draw out every cent? Of course!!!!

Each of us has such a bank. Its name is TIME. Every morning, it credits you with 86,400 seconds. Every night it writes off, as lost, whatever of this you have failed to invest to good purpose.

It carries over no balance. It allows no overdraft. Each day it opens a new account for you. Each night it burns the remains of the day. If you fail to use the day's deposits, the loss is yours. There is no going back. There is no drawing against the "tomorrow".

You must live in the present on today's deposits. Invest it so as to get from it the utmost in health, happiness, and success! The clock is running. Make the most of today.

12 Relationship Red Flags by Michael Shnayerson

Not long ago, I met a very attractive single mother of two at a dinner party in Sag Harbor, New York. We were seated next to each other—a "soft" setup—and by dessert, we were punctuating our stories with little touches: her hand on my forearm, mine on hers. Good signs. Read: Blind Dates For Beginners

Then the first of her two children, a boy of about ten, descended from an upstairs TV room. In each hand he clutched an action figure. This in itself was not disconcerting. It was the way he slammed the action figures into each other, his upper lip curled in a sneer, that gave me pause—that, and the adoring look his mother chose to bestow on him as he did.

Still, D—, the boy's mother, was definitely worth a follow-up. A few days later, I drove over to the waterfront inn where she had encamped with her children for a brief summer vacation. The plan was a swim in the inn's pool, then lunch at a nearby restaurant: a little ersatz family outing. D— ushered me into her room and announced the obvious fact of my arrival to her children. Read: Babies in the Theater, on Date Night?

Neither the boy nor his sister, two years older, looked over from the droning television. Not a word emanated from either one's lips. D— told them to turn off the television and change into their swimsuits. They ignored her. So D— pretended she hadn't asked them, and went into the bedroom to change. Only when the grownups started to leave did the children drag themselves, sluglike, behind us.

The swim was bad enough, with both children glowering at the grownups from their pool chairs. But lunch was worse. No sooner had the waiter taken our order than the girl seized one of the action figures from her brother's fist and threw it across the restaurant.

The boy screamed in outrage, hit his sister with the other action figure, then ran over to get the first one so he could hit her with that, too. As the sister returned fire with her fists, I turned to see what D— would do. "Now, come on, children," she said gently, lovingly, pleadingly. "Now, come on ... ."

Ten years (and one marriage) ago, I would have excused all this somehow, put it aside, and pressed on with a next date, because the mother, after all, was hot. No more. Well, all right, to be perfectly honest, I did ask her out on one more date, hoping her demon children would be more agreeable in their city home. They weren't.

So that was that. After decades of ignoring red flags, only to sail into disaster each time, I've finally realized that no matter how gorgeous and alluring the new stranger is, you have to quit when a red flag goes up. As soon as it goes up.

This isn't as easy it sounds. For starters, you have to learn how to distinguish red flags from mere quirks and annoyances. If a woman on her first date with you wears an orange-striped top and you hate orange or stripes, this is not a reason to bail.

If her cell phone rings during dinner and she takes the call at the table, this is annoying—to me, very annoying—and will need to be addressed at some opportune point (not the first date). But it's not a dealbreaker.

If, however, you take a woman to a restaurant that serves fancy pizza, as I did once, and she eats the pizza by scraping the cheese and tomato off the crust, leaves the crust on her plate, then lights a cigarette, smokes it, and grinds the butt out on the crust, this is a red flag.

This really happened, by the way, and if you work for a fashion magazine, you know who this was, so I'd better not say more.

A thoughtful reader may have already concluded that the greater challenge of red flags is their subjectivity. Another man, that is, might have yearned to provide the fathering that D—'s children so clearly needed. Or have been charmed—even turned on!—by the grinding of that cigarette butt onto the pizza crust.

So what can one do but act on one's instincts and hope for the best? Not true, not true, not true. Happily, I can report after three decades of romantic misadventures that there are, in fact, 12 red flags that everyone should watch for: clear, specific dating warningsthat mean Danger Ahead, Turn Back—no matter who you are or what you find charming. Read them here, then clip this page and carry it in your wallet or pocketbook for the rest of your single life, to be unfolded and re-read by the light of a public bathroom stall on every date that gives you doubts.

As clear as all this ought to be, I have to admit that sometimes—very occasionally—a red flag turns out not to be what you thought it was at all. It's still a red flag, that is, but somehow it's become ... part of the appeal.

In the heat of last year's election season, I would have said, as a fervent Democrat, that a woman's being a Republican was the biggest red flag of all. I haven't changed my political views, but I did recently meet a very smart, very attractive journalist who came with a warning: She's an ardent neocon. The flag is still waving, but we're having a lot of fun, so I'm just ignoring it.

Will this end up as another object lesson in my own theory? Or does love mean never having to pay attention to a red flag? I'll have to get back to you on that one.

The Dirty Dozen
Watch out for the Fling-o-matic, the Parent Trap, the Anger Hum, and these other stop signs.

Chronic lateness.
For clarity,"chronic" here means "three dates in a row." If your date arrives more than ten minutes late each time, don't wait for his (or her) fourth arrival. Be gone. No doubt your date will have wonderful excuses, and one or two may even be sound. But three in a row is a pattern, and what the pattern says is: I don't want to get into this. So neither do you.

Ketchup on eggs.
If one of those first dates is brunch, and your new friend reaches for the ketchup to put on her eggs, RED FLAG! I realize this may seem arbitrary or fussy. Or perhaps you think I'm making a class judgment here. Well, maybe I am! What's wrong with that? All I know is: Nothing good ever comes of ketchup on eggs. And it's really gross.

Rudeness to waiters.
And taxi drivers, and any-one else in a service job. I shouldn't even have to explain why this is a dealbreaker. Just remember that it is.

Scary divorce stories.
It's amazing how much a new prospect will tell you about her life on a first or second date—much more than she knows she's saying. The question is: Do you hear it? If she launches into the story of her messy divorce, is her ex the villain in every respect? To me, that's a red flag right there. Anyone who's emotionally grounded should be able to see that two people, not one, contributed to a divorce.

A deep attachment to disturbing pets.
A golden retriever is fine, and cats are all right if they don't do much. But I'm still haunted by the memory of an ancient, hairless dachshund that would manage to jump up on the bed during inopportune moments and bay. Not until the dog-owner chose to disengage herself from me and comfort the dog instead did I know that this was trouble.

Fling-o-matics.
During a first, incredibly romantic lunch with a new prospect some time ago, I mentioned that my most recent relationship had ended after a year. "A year," my new friend marveled. "That's so impressive! All of my relationships end after three months." Of course I resolved to be the exception. Over the next weeks, which happened to include Christmas and New Year's, we had an amazing time, both in New York City, where she had a charming Hell's Kitchen walk-up, and at my house in the Hamptons.

One Sunday, after I'd put her on the train home, I came back to find the most tenderly romantic note on my pillow, something about soul mates joined. The next week, for no outward cause, she called to break up with me. No argument, no terrible time, just end of story. Only later did I realize it was week 12. Lesson: When a woman over 35 tells you all her relationships have ended after a few months, RED FLAG.

Demon children.
Children with an issue or two? Maybe. Children who hate you? Watch out. Hopelessly spoiled or angry children, like D—'s? Head for the door.

Money matters.
Money stirs up so many issues, conscious and unconscious, far more than any magazine article can cover. For now, let's just list two red fiags you can spot early on. One: If a man suggests splitting the tab on a flrst date, the woman should pay—then bolt. I don't say this is fair, especially if, for instance, the woman is a CEO and the man is a freelance writer.

But it's the way it is, and any man who tries to worm out of his society-given role as tab-picker-upper on the first (or second or third) date for the sake of saving a few bucks is a creep to be ditched. For men, an early red flag about money may not start waving until the third or fourth date. A lot of women begin life as daddy's girls; a few stay that way. They feel men should provide them with the lifestyle to which they've grown accustomed from other men who did just that. If you're a sugar daddy yourself, have fun. If not, back off. Over time you'll only be despised—and dropped.

The Parent Trap.
Powerful emotions about one's parents—positive or negative—are a huge red flag. For men, mother-worship is relationship death. One 50-year-old man I know has dated every single woman in New York and found, to his bafflement, that none is good enough—for his mother, that is. (She's still calling the shots at age 85.) One of this guy's many castoffs is a very attractive, successful woman of 42, whom I later dated myself.

Now that I know both, I can only wonder who was the first to reject the other. It must have been like two gunfighters at the O.K. Corral. N— rejected me after three really nice dates because she decided my eight-year-old daughter, whom she hadn't yet met, would be an "encumbrance" to our relationship. (Since she hadn't met her, she couldn't claim my daughter was a demon child.) Only after we became friends did I learn how much she resents both her parents. Coincidence? I don't think so.

Bad sex.
I don't need to go into detail here, do I? Except to say that bad sex may get better after a first, fumbling time, but bad sex two or three times in a row is sex that only gets worse. Don't fool yourself into thinking that sex is just one part of a relationship, that laughter and shared values are as important, etc., etc. They're not. Red flag. BIG red flag.

Dirty underwear and socks.
Your mother was right. They have to be clean. Dirty underwear is the hallmark of a secret slob, and every secret slob has many worse habits you don't even want to think about—but will all too soon get to know if you don't leave now.

The Anger Hum.
As he or she talks, not just about past romantic relationships but about work, friends, and family, listen for a low hum of anger, like a third rail running along the tracks of your new prospect's life. For reasons I never quite figured out, I used to be attracted to women who had that vibe. Maybe it seemed sexy; maybe it reminded me of my mother. But I now know how to recognize anger—not shows of temper, which may be healthy in moderation, but the deeper, more destructive hum—and to back off when I hear it.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

I Am Who I Am by Lady G

And who am I, you ask? I am a dreamer and a wonderer. I love life with all the joys and heartache it brings. I love being around positive people and people whose interests are different from mine. I love to travel and going the scenic route whenever possible. I love children because they keep me young. I am in love with love and those who truly know how to love. At times, I am a lonely and misunderstood soul. Only those I love and care about can truly hurt me…and a few have at some point in the relationship.

I must remember that I shouldn’t spend too much time questioning people motives, and keep the line of communication open with those closest to me about what is going on with me so they can keep me lifted up when situations bring me down, and then I need to learn from the experience and move on.

I must always be true to myself and then to others. I like me for who I am and if people don’t like me, then they need to move on. I am not going to change who I am so someone will like me or accept me or love me.

It is said that love is blind, but friendship is clairvoyant! When dating people put their best attributes front and center and sometimes some positive lies to look good or impress someone they are attractive to. How soon they forget that the truth about who they really are will leave the darkness and go to the light.

A real friend is one who walks in when the rest of the world walks out. Remember, strangers are just friends waiting to happen. Just be mindful that not everyone who claims friendship actually wants to be your friend (occasionally I forget that), sometimes they have other motives for being in your life. Just learn to recognize.
It is the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary. It does not take a whole lot of money to enjoy life and have fun. Sitting around the house all the time is not me-unless I am sick or working on projects. I’ve always envision myself with a husband who love to enjoy life and have fun, going for long drives on the scenic route, spending time doing something positive with the family, and romantic getaways to keep life interesting and uplifted. I miss that.

Enjoying life and being around positive people goes a long way in keeping individuals and marriages healthy. Lately, I have been sick, either with my feet and legs swelling, migraine headaches, or my heart racing. And I know that it is due to stress and being home bound. I woke up this morning feeling down and disappointed about a lot of things that are going on in my life and after I got to work, it hit me, I give advice but when it is happening to me; I don’t take my own advice.

A change is going to come. I am who I am and I really like being Gina. Being a wife, mother, friend, daughter, sister, aunt, cousin, co-worker is all a part of me. I co-exist with many different people and personalities, you don’t have to like or love me, but you must respect me for me or leave me alone. It is that simple.

I too, have to stop expecting people to do and be what I think they should be doing or being the kind of person that I want them to be. If I can’t deal with who you are and how you treat me, then it is time for me to leave you alone also. But if the people around me can’t get along in harmony then what is the use of wasting precious time. The last two weeks ought to make us think and see how precious life and time is with all the death that has taken place with celebrities and close friends and relatives.

I feel that we as parents should support our children in pursuit of their dreams. I don’t think we should dream for our children. If your dreams as a child didn’t come to be, please don’t force your dreams on your children. Children will be children and we as adults should be more understanding and forgiving. We all make mistakes, and as adults, we want people to give us a second chance, so why can’t you do the same for the children in our life.

Who are you to think that because a child is angry and says things out of angry that he or she can’t be forgiven? An adult should have enough compassion and love in their heart to be understanding and forgiving and be a parent to that child. Bottom line, a child is a child with a lot of emotions, pain, peer pressure, and they need guidance. If we are not there for our children, then who will be? Let’s put our pride aside and be the parents that our children need and spend time with them and support them.

Life is not always a picnic, be thankful of the good times and learn from the bad times. Live life forward looking back every once in a while is ok, but don’t live in the past (I have to remember that).

Try to live on the sunny side of life. There seems to be two types of people in the world: those who try to enjoy life (working on that one) and those who just like to complain about it.

I believe happiness is a choice you make in almost every situation. You can’t be happy all the time, but there are moments you can take pleasure and feel happy and when those moments arise – choose happiness!

There is more to who I am but a lot has been weighing on me lately and I just had to write it down and share it.

Life is temporary. We are only on this earth for a very short period of time. Make sure you enjoy its many pleasures and treasures! Live, love, be kind, and enjoy life!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Good Friends Make Life So Much Better

I am dedicating this to: Sandra Gaddis, Teresa Wash, Janet Wilson, Kim Catchings, Dana Reid, Jackay Steele, & Pamela Gilmore. You guys are my closest and dearest friends!


~ FRIENDS ~

As we walk our path of life,
We meet people everyday.
Most are simply met by chance.
But, some are sent our way.

These become special friends
Whose bond we can't explain;
The ones who understand us
And share our joy and pain.

Their love contains no boundaries.
So, even when we are apart.
Their presence enhances us
With a warmth felt in the heart.

This love becomes a passageway,
When even the miles disappear.
And so, these friends, God sends our way,
Remain forever near.

~Author Lisa Pelzer Vetter~

Life Is A Gift Never Take It For Granted by Lady G

Gratefulness is the key to a happy life that we hold in our hands, because if we are not grateful, then no matter how much we have we will not be happy -- because we will always want to have something else or something more.

Happiness is a choice. Happy people understand this, while unhappy people struggle with judging themselves for not being able to easily shift to a happy state of mind. Always remember that you have options in everything you do, think or feel, and that you choose the things that are best for you.

Never take someone for granted, hold each and every person close to your heart because you may wake one morning and realize that you have lost a true diamond while collecting stones. Remember the grass always look greener on the other side of the fence. Never satisfied with what you have in a relationship, you go after what you think is better and you end up with nothing.

Relationships are worth fighting for but sometimes you can’t be the only one fighting. Sometimes people need to fight for you. Sometimes you have to be strong for yourself. You are a good person and you are a good friend and you should realize that whatever is meant to happen will happen whether it is good or bad.

We are all taken for granted once in a while. And sometimes we don't even mind it, if it is done by someone whom we love and is really close to us. But if it is a regular thing that keeps on repeating itself, it surely hurts and irritates. This world is full of people who are complaining about been taken for granted by their bosses, colleagues, spouse, friends, siblings and even by their own children. They hate it, but never really are able to change it.

If observed carefully, one can easily see that these people are nice and decent; in fact at times too nice and decent. They are soft spoken, willing to please, helpful, sincere and hardworking. In general other people like them and even praise them, behind their back. But they some how never manage to get the type of recognition and reward from where it really matters.

Obviously everyone will take you for granted if they develop a feeling that you are stuck with them and you are not going anywhere. So, keep growing. Make continuous improvement in yourself. Develop better attitude, work on your self image. Show the preparedness to move on and see the people's attitude towards yourself change.

My advice to enjoying life and never take it for granted is: to always smile a lot, sing even if it is to yourself, hang around positive people, laughter is good, be active, be creative, give hugs, when feeling down or troubled recite this phrase, “and this too shall pass”, be kind, be grateful, and meditate!

Monday, April 20, 2009

Thoughts On Real Friendship by Lady G

"I have heard there are troubles of more than one kind. Some come from ahead and some come from behind. But I've bought a big bat. I'm all ready you see. Now my troubles are going to have troubles with me!"
~ Dr. Seuss


One of the primary ingredients in a positive friendship is that one or both friends feel that they can be "themselves" and that they don't have to put on airs or impress one another.

Recently, I have become aware that someone I trusted as a friend has gone behind my back, digging up information and spreading it among people that we both know. If she had come to me with these allegations (concerns), then I would have thought that she was a friend that was looking out for me.

But she didn’t come to me. She thought so little of me as a friend that she just decided to tell everyone but me. And it came back to me. It hurt me to hear this and more than one person has warned me about her.

People that spread rumors seem not to understand that there are three sides to a story: there is each person side and the truth. "What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us."
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

Although there should be an assumption of confidentiality and trust between friends, some people can’t help themselves when they get some information and can’t wait to tell anyone who will listen.

A real friend will listen and be there for you in life. But a fake friend will help the masses talk negative of you and put you down and smile in your face. I call these types of friends “backstabbers” and when I personally find “a friend” like that, I just have to let go and the feelings are never the same.

So now I have one less “friend” to think of. Here today and gone tomorrow. I am hurt and disappointed and I have talked to a few close friends and I prayed about it and now I am letting it go.

Friendship if you can find it is a wonderful thing. It takes time to cultivate and grow and when it does, it is good. Many friendships grow over time in terms of trust and intimacy. You can wind up being friends with someone that may not register when you first meet them.


SIDE BY SIDE OR MILES APART, DEAR FRIENDS ARE ALWAYS CLOSE TO THE HEART!

Friendship can sneak up on you, surprise you after years of acquaintance, and become much more than you ever expected. Others are almost instantaneous bond. There’s no set pattern, but if take the time to learn what you need to get and give in friendships, your chances of cultivating positive and lasting ones are all the stronger.

There are many different types of friends that we might have in the course of a lifetime. Each holds the potential to enhance our lives and allow us to enhance theirs. Above all else, friends of every sort and level are cultivated with communication of some kind.

There are more and better tools for meeting people, sharing interests, and making friends of all sorts than ever before. Whatever shape our friendships take, they’re brought to life and sustained with communication.

It may take only a few words, a good deed, or single shared grimace to bring a friendship into being that will last a lifetime. Or it may be the work of many years and conversations, and countless hours over equally countless cups of coffee. The method is much less important than the quality of that communication. There are as many ways to make friends and keep them as there are people in this world. Your mileage will vary.

We do take a risk when we trust, whether it’s in person or via technology. There are always going to be those who would take advantage of our generosity and capacity for friendship. Still, it’s a risk that I consider well worth the gamble.

There are basic precautions to be taken with any new relationship—or even existing ones. A good dose of sensibility goes a long way, but that being said—there’s a whole world of people to discover. And you never can tell where the friends you just haven’t met yet are going to be found. A bend in the road is not the end of the road... unless you fail to make the turn.

Please don’t become bitter or resentful “fake friends”. That is wasted energy. If it is someone you truly felt close to vent, grieve, pray, and move on. Remember you can’t change people. If a person is happy or content or in denial about themselves then you will be fighting a losing battle to try and continue this friendship. Life is too short to dwell on the negatives just move on with the positives.

FRIENDS: I ROLL WITH THE BEST AND NOTHING LESS!

Friday, March 20, 2009

Don't Put Off...

I received this in an email and wanted to share it with you. This really makes you think:

A friend of mine who knows how much I "put off" doing things sent this to me today. Do you see yourself in this:

READ VERY SLOWLY..... IT'S SIMPLE AND PROFOUND.

Too many people put off something that brings them joy just because they haven't thought about it, don't have it on their schedule, didn't know it was coming or are too rigid to depart from their routine.

I got to thinking one day about all those women on the Titanic who passed up dessert at dinner that fateful night in an effort to cut back. From then on, I've tried to be a little more flexible.

How many women out there will eat at home because their husband didn't suggest going out to dinner until after something had been thawed? Does the word 'refrigeration' mean nothing to you?

How often have your kids dropped in to talk and sat in silence while you watched 'Jeopardy' on television? I cannot count the times I called my sister and said, 'How about going to lunch in a half hour?' She would gas up and stammer, 'I can't. I have clothes on the line. My hair is dirty. I wish I had known yesterday, I had a late breakfast, It looks like rain.' And my personal favorite: 'It's Monday.' She died a few years ago. We never did have lunch together...

Because Americans cram so much into their lives, we tend to schedule our headaches. We live on a sparse diet of promises we make to ourselves when all the conditions are perfect!

We'll go back and visit the grandparents when we get Steve toilet-trained.. We'll entertain when we replace the living-room carpet... We'll go on a second honeymoon when we get two more kids out of college.

Life has a way of accelerating as we get older. The days get shorter, and the list of promises to ourselves gets longer. One morning, we awaken, and all we have to show for our lives is a litany of 'I'm going to,' 'I plan on,' and 'Someday, when things are settled down a bit.'

When anyone calls my 'seize the moment' friend, she is open to adventure and available for trips. She keeps an open mind on new ideas. Her enthusiasm for life is contagious. You talk with her for five minutes, and you're ready to trade your bad feet for a pair of Roller blades and skip an elevator for a bungee cord..

My lips have not touched ice cream in 10 years. I love ice cream. It's just that I might as well apply it directly to my stomach with a spatula and eliminate the digestive process. The other day, I stopped the car and bought a triple-decker. If my car had hit an iceberg on the way home, I would have died happy.

Now...go on and have a nice day. Do something you WANT to . . . . . . not something on your SHOULD DO list. If you were going to die soon and had only one phone call you could make, who would you call and what would you say? And why are you waiting?
Make sure you read this to the end; you will understand why I sent this to you.

Have you ever watched kids playing on a merry go round or listened to the rain lapping on the ground? Ever followed a butterfly's erratic flight or gazed at the sun into the fading night? Do you run through each day on the fly? When you ask ' How are you?' Do you hear the reply?

When the day is done, do you lie in your bed with the next hundred chores running through your head? Ever told your child, 'We'll do it tomorrow .' And in your haste, not see his sorrow? Ever lost touch? Let a good friendship die? Just call to say 'Hi?
When you worry and hurry through your day, it is like an unopened gift....Thrown away ...... Life is not a race. Take it slower. Hear the music before the song is over...

It's National Friendship Week.. Show your friends how much you care. Send this to everyone you consider a FRIEND.

If it comes back to you, then you'll know you have a circle of friends.
I cherish our friendship and appreciate all you do, but mostly just you being you.
'Life may not be the party we hoped for.... but while we are here we might as well dance!