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Tuesday, October 23, 2007

The Secret So How Does It Work?

When the Secret was shown to the world, it stirred up many questions. However this Secret "the law of Attraction" has been around since time began. It is written in verse throughout the Bilble with many statements quoted by Jesus, arch angels, prophets and even God himself.

This law was and still is to this day an unstoppable force of the universe. No matter if you hate it, love it, are confused by it, you are using it every minute of everyday 24/7, good, bad ugly whatever.

Do you think that if you get mad at gravity it will say "oh I'm sorry let me stop for you" somehow I don't think so, and that is the same with the law of attraction. It cant stop and i wont.....so how do we use it?

Well Budda says "as a man thinketh so is he" referring to your thoughts In the Bible it says "what you so you reap" again referring to your thoughts

So the most important part is to first watch our thoughts and think about what we are thinking about. By the way this is the hardest thing to do on the planet. This is not as easy at it may seem.

Here is a quick guide to help you with this new but old universal law

1 To start using the law of attraction you must first find out what your beliefs are. You cant become wealthy if you have limiting beliefs. " I cant afford that" that cost too much" etc...

2 Once you find a belief you don't like you must change it instantly as soon as you think it change its energy to the opposite. "I cant afford it" becomes "I can afford it and I pay for it effortlessly". Even though at first you may not believe it, it will take time and you will FEEL much better about the belief.

3 Get in touch with how your feeling about what you are thinking and saying to yourself. If it feels good than keep it going, if it feels negative than you must change the thought instantly. Release it bless it with love and send it on its way.

4 Feel wonderful about anything right now. Go ahead feel great about something. Congratulations you have just started to manifest a whole new you.

THINK IT - FEEL IT- SAY IT - DO IT "for the word became flesh"

Perry is a normal everyday person who has been through the rough patches in life, but now (last 5 years) understands the universal laws that are available to everyone. He understands that taking responsibility is a key component in life. Through his personal experiences he is helping groups of people in a small town in New Zealand., understand and use these laws and principles. His aim is to spread the message of just being and then allowing to all in his group.

http://thesecretpays.com/100kpm

Geeks Guide To SEO

How to Write a Nursing Resume

Recent labor studies have predicted that nursing positions will continue to grow faster than the national average for at least the next five years. Though this trend is good news for nurses on the job market, it does not diminish the fact that competition will remain tough for the most desirable nursing positions. Nurses need to pay close attention to the presentation of their credentials, as detailed in their resume, in order to ensure that they can compete in the tough medical profession.

To write a solid resume tailored specifically to the nursing profession, consider the following guidelines:

Highlight your Educational and Licensure Qualifications

In addition to including the details of your nursing degree (school name, when you graduated, your degree), you should mention any academic honors, grants, scholarships, or fellowships awarded during the course of your studies.

If you are an experienced nurse, you may wish to make reference to any completed clinical rotations in this section. This tactic is especially beneficial if one or more of these rotations is in line with your current career objective.

If you are a newer nursing graduate or have limited nursing experience, a list of related courses and clinical rotations will provide detail of your medical knowledge to prospective employers. Graduates who completed their degree with an impressive grade point average should highlight this fact by including their GPA in the Educational section of their resume.

All nurses who have completed the process to get licensed will need to provide details of their license(s) in this section. Include the state(s) in which you are licensed and the date that your license went in effect. Since your employer will ask for a copy of your license once you are made an offer, you do not include your licensing number on your resume.

Emphasize your Nursing Expertise and Key Skills

A quick 10-second scan of your resume should reveal important keywords that summarize your nursing experience and give managers an overview of your qualifications. The most effective way to do this is to incorporate a section of your resume dedicated to nursing expertise and key skills. Include a bulleted list of your nursing specializations (such as pediatrics, cardiology, oncology) and any pertinent nursing skills, such as JCAHO standards/compliance or medication administration, that will enhance your resume presentation.

If you have several years of nursing experience, it may beneficial to list your years of experience in each area.

Entry-level nurses and nurses with limited experience should also include this section in their resume, highlighting those areas and schools acquired from schooling, clinical rotations, and nursing mentorships.

Detail Your Nursing Experience

Since most manager hire nurses based on their previous experience in (or knowledge of if you are a new nurse) a particular area of nursing, employers need to know the details of your nursing experience.

If you are an experienced nurse, you should detail your specialization, the type of facility you work in (acute care, outpatient, rehabilitation), and your average caseload for each of your previous employers.

If you are an entry-level nurse just out of school or a nurse with limited work experience, you should detail any clinical rotations, mentorships, or other unpaid work you were involved in during your schooling.

Demonstrate You're a Top Performer

Employers love to hire top performers. Your resume will be more memorable and better received if you can detail specific contributions you made to each of your previous employers. What have you done that was above and beyond your basic responsibilities? How have you helped make a positive impact on your patients and their families, your co-workers, your employer, or even your community?

Consider your possible involvement in:

* Committees or review boards

* Patient or family health education

* Mentorship programs

* Training of coworkers on advanced topics of interest to nursing

* The launch of a new facility or program

* Community health screens

* Outside education

The more details you can provide about your involvement in the medical community and your accomplishments, the better job you will do at impressing your value as a team member to potential employers.

Laura Adams is a qualified careers advisor with 11 years experience. Nursing Job Information - Resources, News, Tips and Views to help Nurses find their dream jobs. http://www.Nurses-Jobs.info

This article may be reproduced as long as the resource box and live links remain intact.

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Blogging a Local Blog

Probably the single most import thing in making a local community blog work is the fact that you and/or the people who write and/or contribute to the local blog care about the community that is being blogged about.

Blogs started out as personal diaries, and the most effect local community blogs are written from a personal point of view by people who care deeply about the place and people that are the subject of their blog.

This usually means that as a blogger you know the issues involved, the politics involved on personal and human level. And also, that you know and care about the people in the community; you know their stories, their concerns, their worries, their history--all of that matters to you as a blogger, and to you as a human being.

Your style could be combative and strident or your style could be more muted. What is important is that you care. The more passionately you care, the more effective your local blog would be.

And readers can sense this immediately.

It is one of the reasons, in my opinion, why trained journalist have such a difficult time blogging. Journalist have been trained to be impartial, and tell both sides of the story.

Local blogging is not like that at all. A local blog is your own personal and often passionate diary about the place and people that inhabit that place.

And what makes your personal local blog compelling, is that people can sense right away that you are personally involved in the place that you are blogging about; it is not a job, it is not for the money, it is not so that you can sell more newspapers, it is not so that you can rank well in the search engines. It is because the place and the people that you are blogging about are important to you; that the place and the people matter. And that gives meaning to the lives of the people who read your blog.

And if your care about the place that you blog about, people could well start caring about you. And that could win you some very loyal readers for your local blog.

Mary Baker Eaton 2007

Mary Baker Eaton is the editor of the Newburyport Blog a local blog covering a variety of subjects about the small seacoast city of Newburyport, MA. Newburyport, Massachusetts is full of interesting people and compelling stories. The Newburyport Blog is universal enough to be of interest to any reader. Written up in the Boston Globe.

Mary Baker Eaton is also an artist. Mary paints under the name of Mary Baker. You can visit her art website at Mary Baker Art as well as visit Mary's Art Blog

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