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Seducing a Woman - Do You Know What to Do?

January 10th, 2010
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A lot of men are FAR from experienced when it comes to seducing a woman. So, if you feel as though you are unsure of what you should do to seduce a woman, take it easy. You are just like most guys out there. In fact, most of the guys that are successful at seducing a woman started out exactly where you are right now. The trick is, they did not let it keep them from learning what works and they didn’t allow a little rejection here and there keep them sitting on the sidelines, either.

So, if you are unsure of what you should do to seduce a woman, take a peek at these three tips. The seduction of a woman is something that I am confident any man can learn how to do.

Here are some female seduction tips you should know:

1. Never move too fast. While you also don’t want to move WAY too slow, you don’t want to move too fast into seduction with a woman. One average, women are used to being approached by guys that want to be able to get them into bed. So, they are reluctant to listen to the next man that comes across the same way. When you take your time, you can focus more on building attraction with her, which will be more beneficial to YOU in the long run.

2. Make her feel secure when she is with YOU. A woman that feels secure when she is around you is going to be less apprehensive when you make your move. You’ve already demonstrated to her that she can feel comfortable being with you and this is a HUGE plus for you. Being able to make a woman feel secure with you also goes a long way to prove your “alpha male” status, which also helps a great deal.

3. When you do make your move, be smooth about it. A little clumsy is okay, actually, as it makes you seem more like a normal guy than a seducer. But, you don’t want to be too awkward or clumsy as this will easily put her off and take away some of that secure feeling that she has when she is around you. Just make sure that you don’t become one of those guys that NEVER makes the move, as this will put you right in the friend zone with no get out of jail card.

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A Brief History of the Hearing Aid

January 10th, 2010
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The first modern version of a hearing aid is usually considered the hearing trumpet or ear trumpet. This was an awkward, oversized devise that was shaped vaguely like a horn or saxophone. The small end was held up the ear canal while the wide opening at the other end funneled sound into the curved tube and up to the ear canal. Someone who was hard of hearing had to either hold the ear trumpet up to his ear, and the other person would have talk into it. This simply amplified the sound waves, and there was usually a fair amount of distortion.

Alexander Bell’s Contributions to the Hearing Aid
When Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, he was actually working on ways to amplify sound of the hearing impaired. His use of a receiver and phone was translated in the early 1900’s into a form of carbon microphone. This hearing aid included a receiver in or over the ear that had multiple wires running to the amplifier, which was worn around the neck.
Although these were a great step forward, they were still cumbersome. They also used up batteries quickly. In fact, most people had to replace the batteries daily.

Fortunately, in the 1920’s, battery life was extended as newer, more efficient forms of batteries were developed. Hearing aids, however, were still fairly large. Some of them were still as big as breadboxes with wires running into the earpiece.

Throughout the 1930’s and 1940’s, new advances rapidly shrank the size of individual hearing aids. Vacuum tubes enabled hearing aids to amplify sound without needing as much equipment. Smaller batteries meant that by the close of the 1940’s, hearing aids had been developed that could fit over and behind the ear. Some were small enough that they could be creatively hidden with the right hairstyle.

The Transistor Revolutionizes Hearing Aids

In the 1950’s, the transistor enabled vast advancements in hearing aid technology. The transistor, using simple on and off switches with no moving parts, changed the entire premise of how hearing aids worked. Multiple, tiny transistors in individual units provided incremental adjustment capability. Transistors also have a high level of conductivity, making the units not only smaller but much more efficient.

Lithium batteries and integrated circuits were first put into hearing aids in the 1970’s. These smaller hearing aids soon became widely available. For the first time, hearing aids were virtually hidden in the ear, and sound quality improved dramatically.

The Next Great Leap

In the 1990’s, digital technology again revolutionized the hearing aid industry. It allowed hearing aid manufacturers to develop fully customizable hearing aids that could be adjusted to the specific hearing parameters of each person. New advances such as adaptive dynamic range optimization (sometimes called ADRO) allowed hearing aids to make continual adjustments as circumstances and the wearer’s needs changed.

It’s clear that the future of hearing aid technology will mean that individuals with hearing loss will have even more options in the future.

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admin Health

Your Time is Yours!

January 10th, 2010
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Your time is your own. The 24 hours in your day belong to you?no one else. With your busy schedule and all the priorities competing for your time?including the priorities of others?it takes skill and practice to retain control of those 24 hours and keep them yours. You must be deliberate about protecting it from potential time-wasters who interrupt and demand your time.

Let’s discuss two of them:

Crises that are externally initiated, i.e., initiated by other people and situations and procrastination, which is internally initiated, i.e., by you. Of course, we’ll save procrastination for last!

Crisis is defined as “an unexpected interruption of major impact, above and beyond the normal day’s events, requiring immediate response. Makes you nervous just to read it, doesn’t it? The problem is not the definition. The problem is that we label events crises that are not crises at all, and then we throw our priorities up for grabs and run off to handle the supposed crises.

Examples:

The supervisor who labels crisis the report due every Friday. Not a crisis. The tip-off? Every Friday is expected, so it’s not a crisis.

A salesperson late for a sales meeting because she stopped to handle someone else’s crisis. Not a crisis. It did not “require” her immediate response. She chose to help someone and shoved aside her own priority in the process.

All these people were duly stressed out, so they used the word crisis to describe the panic they felt. But before you take on something as a crisis and let it dictate your priorities, remember the title of this article. And remember these simple guidelines:

If it’s not your crisis, return it to its proper owner.

Determine the priority in your life of the event you label crisis. Do you respond or delegate?

Plan for crisis. You can’t if they’re really unexpected, but very few events are totally unexpected. You can plan to avoid them or anticipate them.

A crisis planned is an event managed.

Positive Procrastination

Now for procrastination. The definition: To put off intentionally and habitually. Nothing negative or panic stricken in that one. It’s a positive word that’s gotten bad press. Even the prefix pro is positive. Professional, proactive, procreate, prolong, profess, and protrude all aggressive, positive words that are quite deliberate.

To put off intentionally means you meant to put it off, and habitually means you put it off more than once. Procrastination is not the word of a helpless victim; yet we use it to feel that way. We beat ourselves up for procrastinating. However, when we look at it truthfully, we must admit that the thing we procrastinate is usually something we don’t want to do. Two actions are possible:

Cross it off your list and stop thinking you should do it.

Or delegate it.

But what if it’s important to do it? What if it’s a priority? Break the task down into smaller, doable tasks and do these. Reward yourself after each one. For some of us, drawing a line through it is satisfying enough; others must promise themselves a coffee break. Be a proud procrastinator of the unimportant, unloved tasks. Put them off and stop beating yourself up about it. And stop reacting in a panic mode to events you mistakenly label crisis.

Remember: Your time is yours. When you become a master of your time, you become a master of your life.

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