segunda-feira, 31 de dezembro de 2018

Great career advice

Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself. George Bernard Shaw

Great career advice

You change the world by being yourself. Yoko Ono

Great career advice

That which does not kill us makes us stronger. Friedrich Nietzsche

Great career advice

Don’t let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do. John Wooden

Great career advice

Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. Jesus Christ

Great career advice

Learn to sell. Learn to build. If you can do both, you will be unstoppable. Naval Ravikant

Great career advice

We did not come to fear the future. We came here to shape it. Barack Obama

Great career advice

Your labor is your contribution to the miracle. Elizabeth Gilbert

Great career advice

If you want something you never had, you have to do something you’ve never done. Thomas Jefferson

Great career advice

When you have confidence, you can have a lot of fun. And when you have fun, you can do amazing things. Joe Namath

Coach phrase

I have the choice of being constantly active and happy or introspectively passive and sad. Or I can go mad by ricocheting in between. Sylvia Plath

Coach phrase

Great things never came from comfort zones. Neil Strauss

Coach phrase

Magic is believing in yourself, if you can do that, you can make anything happen. 
 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Coach phrase

Don't tell me about your effort. Show me your results.
Tim Fargo

Great career advice

Tips to boost business charisma:
Prepare Deeply.
One of the most powerful ways to come across as charismatic is to really, really know your stuff. Too many intelligent and talented people wing it in meetings and major presentations. Sure they know the basics, but question them a little further and you often find their knowledge is shallow.
When you have truly prepared for a presentation well, knowing the issues better than anyone else in the room, you exude confidence. You speak up. You are not afraid to differ and make your point. You therefore are far more likely to be perceived as a dynamic, charismatic individual.

Great career advice

Any time you meet someone for the first time, you always want to start on the right foot. Here are a few ways you can make sure people’s first impression of you is a good one:

1. Set an intention. The most important thing to do for giving a good impression is to set your intention. This is especially important before any kind of big event where you would be meeting a lot of people — i.e. conferences, networking events or friend’s parties. As you get ready or when you are driving over think about what kind of people you want to meet and what kind of interactions you want to have. This can be an incredibly grounding experience and works very well to focus on what kind of energy you want to have for your event.
2. Think about your ornaments. Clothes, make-up, jewelry, watches and shoes are all types of ornamentation and people definitely take these into account when making initial judgments. I highly recommend getting some of your favorite outfits or ornaments together and asking friends you trust what they think of when they see them. For many men, they do not realize that their watch can say a lot about them. For women, purses and large earrings or jewelry can also indicate a lot to a new person they are meeting. Make sure that what you are wearing and how you do your hair or make-up says what you want it to say to the people you are meeting for the first time.
3. Be Conscious of Your Body Language. Body language is a crucial part of first impressions. Everything from your posture to how you carry yourself to the way you’re angling your body. Often, simply being aware of your body language can result in immediate improvements. Another way to examine your body language is to look at yourself on a video walking around a room. Subconscious cues to keep in mind include noticing where you point your feet, the position of your shoulders, and the way you shake hands.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/yec/2011/11/02/5-ways-to-make-a-killer-first-impression/#7e78a5e92ab7

domingo, 30 de dezembro de 2018

Coach

Every next level of your life will demand a different you.

Coach

Success isn’t complicated.But like financially illiterate  time, energy, humility, and study.

Evolving means constantly becoming a child again. You must become a young, teachable student again, over and over.

You must constantly be admitting, “I don’t know.”

There is so much you don’t know that will be revealed to you over the course of your studies and self-discovery. And the most helpful way to “grease the wheels” of this journey is to remain humble and open to correction and teaching.

The worst thing you can do is insist you already know everything.

Caoch

When you think positive, optimistic, loving, and successful thoughts, you create a force field of magnetism that attracts, like iron
filings to a magnet, the very things you are thinking about.

Coach

Eat the Frog: Do your most unpleasant task first. Based on the saying that if the first thing you do in the morning is eat a frog, the day can only get better from then on.

Coach

10+2*5: Work in short spurts of 10 minutes, interrupted by 2 minute breaks.  Use a timer. Do this 5 times an hour to stay on target without over-taxing your physical and mental resources. Spend those 2 minutes getting a drink, going to the bathroom, or staring out a window

Coach

One In, One Out: Avoid clutter by adopting a replacement-only standard.  Every time you but something new, you throw out or donate something old.  For example, you buy a new shirt, you get rid of an old one. (Variation: One in, Two Out — useful when you begin to feel overwhelmed by your possessions.)

Coach

Wake up earlier: Add a productive hour to your day by getting up an hour earlier — before everyone else starts imposing on your time.

Coach

Pictures and images, from your imagination or from the external influences, produce ideas, emotions, and attitudes that correspond to them.
They then trigger actions that bring about certainresults and outcomes.
The thought of a person or situation can cause you to instantly feel happy or sad, elated or angry, loving or lonely.

Coach

Your thoughts trigger images and pictures, and the emotions that go with them. These images and emotions trigger attitudes and actions.Your actions then have consequences and results that determine what happens to you.

sábado, 29 de dezembro de 2018

Coach

If you think about success and confidence, you will feel strong and competent, and you will perform better at whatever you attempt.
If you think about making mistakes or being embarrassed, you will perform poorly, no matter how good you really are.

domingo, 7 de outubro de 2018

Vocabulary: set out


Vocabulary: meek


Vocabulary: epoch


Vocabulary: ineffable


Vocabulary: illicit


Vocabulary: petrichor


Vocabulary: epiphany


Vocabulary: eloquence


Vocabulary: crutch


Vocabulary: grain


Vocabulary: gram


Vocabulary: dough


Vocabulary: doughnut


sexta-feira, 7 de setembro de 2018

Vocabulary: illicit


Vocabulary: petrichor


Vocabulary: epiphany


Vocabulary: eloquence


Vocabulary: crutch


Vocabulary: grain


Vocabulary: gram


Vocabulary: grammar


Vocabulary: gracious


terça-feira, 28 de agosto de 2018

Quote

“Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Wishing is not enough; we must do.” – Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

sábado, 25 de agosto de 2018

Vocabulary: back-breaking

(used about physical work) very hard and tiring

Vocabulary: backache

a pain in your back

Vocabulary: baby

very young child

Vocabulary: awesome

very good; excellent

Vocabulary: busk

to sing or play music in the street so that people will give you money

Vocabulary: but

used for introducing an idea which contrasts whit or is different from what has just been said

Vocabulary: busy

having a lot of work or tasks to do

segunda-feira, 20 de agosto de 2018

Vocabulary: sculptor

a person who makes sculptures

Vocabulary: sea

the salt water that covers larg parts of the surface of the earth.

Vocabulary: scruples

a feeling that stops you from doing sth that you think is morally wrong.

Vocabulary: sculpture

the art of making figures or objects from stone, wood, etc

Vocabulary: disproportion

- between A and B - the state of two things not being at an equally high or low level

Vocabulary: disposition

the natural qualities of a person's character

Vocabulary: distance

the amount of space between two places or things

Vocabulary: distraction

something that takes your attention away from what you were doing or thinking about

Vocabulary: distort

to change the shape or sound of something so that it seems strange or is not clear.
His face was distorced with grief.

Vocabulary: distinguish

-between A and B - to recognize the difference between two things or people

Vocabulary: cushy

too easy, needing little effort (in a way that seems unfair to others : a cushy job.

Vocabulary: cyclist

a person who rides a bicycle.

Vocabulary: cynic

a person who believes that people only do things for themselves, rather than to help others.

Vocabulary: cut

an injury or opeopening in the skin made with a knife, etc.

Vocabulary: customer

a person who buys goods or services in a shop, restaurant, etc

sábado, 18 de agosto de 2018

domingo, 15 de julho de 2018

Temper

Control your temper. Remember, you can mesuare the size of a person by what makes him or her angry. 

sábado, 14 de julho de 2018

quinta-feira, 31 de maio de 2018