วันเสาร์ที่ 17 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2552

The Cure for Despair

By Joe Vitale

During dinner the other night, one of the people in our group looked at me and asked the question I didn't want to hear -

"How did you become homeless?"

By now most people have heard my story of being on the streets of Dallas in the late 1970s and struggling in poverty in Houston for many years after that. Some of it is explained in my new audioprogram, The Awakening Course.

But I had never explained exactly how I ended up in such dire circumstances.

When I answered the question at dinner, everyone at the table stared at me.

The woman who asked the question sat there with her mouth open and eyes un-blinking.

She asked, "Why have you never said this before?"

My friend Mark Ryan was sitting there, also staring, and said, "As long as I've known you, you've never told this story before. It's riveting. This changes everything."

Changes everything?

Riveting?

They all said I had to tell the story now.

"Given the current financial crisis and with people losing their homes and their jobs, this story needs to be told more than ever before," Mark said.

I heard them and realized I agreed.

So here's the story...

I knew I wanted to be an author when I was a teenager. I wanted to write books and plays that made people happy. Everywhere I looked I saw un-happy people. I believed I could help them with humor and stories.

During that time of the mid-1970s, I watched sports. I don't today but back then the Dallas Cowboys were the rage. Roger Staubach and Tom Landry were heroes. I got caught up in the excitement and felt the place for me to make my name was in Dallas, Texas.

I lived in Ohio at the time. Born and raised there. I worked on the railroad as a trackman, doing heavy labor all day long, working weekends and summers since the age of five.

I saved my money, packed up my bag, and took a bus to Dallas. It took three days to get there.

I was lost in the big city, of course. Being born in a small town in Ohio didn't prep me for the hustle and bustle of a city the size of Dallas.

Before long, I wanted out.

But I still wanted to be an author.

At that time major companies were building oil and gas pipelines in Alaska and the Middle East, and offering to pay big bucks if you were willing to go to either place.

I wasn't keen on going to a foreign country and doing more labor, but I saw a chance to make money, save it, and then go on a sabbatical where I could write for a few months or even a year.

It seemed like a brilliant strategy.

I answered one of the newspaper ads that promised to get me pipeline work at a extraordinary hourly wage. I went in their office, met an upbeat sales person, and ended up giving him all of my money - my entire savings, about a thousand dollars at the time - based on his promise that I'd have overseas pipeline work in a week or two.

You might guess part of what happened next - but you won't guess all of it.

Within a week or so, the company that took all of my money went out of business.

Their doors were closed, no one answered the phone, and no forwarding addresses could be found.

Shortly after that, the company went bankrupt.

And not long after that, the owner of the company committed suicide.

There was no one left to try to get my money back.

I was alone.

I was broke.

I was in Dallas, far from home.

I confess that my ego got in the way here. My family back in Ohio would have taken me back in and welcomed me back home. But I was head strong and determined to somehow survive.

Well, I did survive - by sleeping in church pews, on the steps of a post office, in a bus station.

It wasn't an easy time, as you can imagine, and I never used to talk about it. It was too embarrassing.

When I told this story at dinner, everyone agreed I had to share it with you.

They said that people are finding themselves in the same situation - they trusted a government, or a corporation, or a person, or a bank, and now they are losing their homes and their jobs.

Hearing that I went through the same thing three decades ago and not only survived but prospered to a level that the Joe Vitale of thirty years ago could hardly imagine, ought to be inspiring to you, too.

I got off the streets and out of poverty by constantly working on myself - reading self-help books, taking action, scrambling at times by taking whatever work I could find, but always always always focusing on my vision: to one day be an author of books that helped people be happy and stay inspired.

If you're in a place right now that doesn't feel so good or seem too safe, I urge you to remind yourself that this is only temporary.

This is the cure for despair.

As I say in my book, The Attractor Factor, this is simply current reality, and current reality can change.

You can help it along by doing what you know and need to do.

But remember, the sun will shine again.

It always does.

Your job right now is to focus on what you want and keep it in sight.

Yes, keep taking action;

yes, stay positive and surround yourself with positive people;

yes, be of support to others.

But remember, if I or anyone else can survive homelessness, poverty, job loss, or any other hard time, then you can survive it, too.

Please hang in there.

One last thing:

I admit that there were times I wanted to throw in the towel and get myself out of this life.

Thank God I stuck around. Had I left early, I would have missed a life of magic and wonder, success and fame I never dreamed of before, priceless relationships and experiences, and more.

I have no idea what wonderful good is headed your way - and neither do you.

What you have to do is stay the course and follow your heart.

And remember -

Expect Miracles.

Ao Akua,

Dr. Joe Vitale

About the Author:

Corgi Steps Down while Capita Steps Up

By Tal Potishman

Residents of the United Kingdom have grown to recognize the Corgi certificate as a sort of "certificate of approval" for gas plumbers and now that certification is going to change hands. A few months from now the gas certifications will be issued to gas plumbers and monitored by a company called Capita and Corgi will no longer be involved in the process.

During the last two decades, Corgi has been responsible for issuing certifications and making sure homes that used natural gas met local safety codes. The Corgi Company will cease its reign over gas standards in April 2009 and the Capita Company will take over as the standards monitor for the office of the Health and Safety Executive.

For the most part, the day to day operations of the gas plumbing industry will remain much as they were before the switch in regimes. Both companies stress that operations for Corgi employees will continue to operate on a "business as usual" basis until the end of business on March 31st. As of April 1, 2009, Capita will be in charge. As of yet there is no word as to how the transition will take place or what the affects will be for natural gas consumers. Both companies are working very hard to ensure that there are no major hiccups in operations.

Natural Gas customers do not need to worry about their protection coverage once Corgi ceases its management and Capita starts to take over. The reason that Corgi is being replaced, according to the Health and Safety Executive is that Capita has proven that it is better prepared to ensure that natural gas customers will be educated about both the benefits and risks involved with using natural gas to power a home.

Corgi's contract went up for bid after a 2006 survey of homeowners in the United Kingdom proved that more than fifty percent of the homes serviced by Corgi professionals were unaware of the dangers posed by carbon monoxide. Natural gas customers will find a number of benefits involved with Capita taking over for Corgi, especially in terms of natural gas education.

Gas regulations and plumber registrations will continue as usual, with Corgi in charge of operations until March 31st 2009. The natural gas plumbers and inspectors in the United Kingdom will start reporting to Capita on April 1st 2009.

Capita will probably directly hire 250 Corgi employees to make sure that the transition goes smoothly. Both companies decided that a definite start and end date would be more beneficial than a confusing transition. Consumers can expect their changes to be few and far between.

About the Author:

A Bit About Oracle ERP

By Dave Bern

There are many different systems now available that internet based businesses can use to help organize their various processes much more effectively, one of these being Oracle ERP. In fact of all the systems used today for helping a business to run more smoothly ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) ones are the most commonly and widely used of them all.

Through the use of a ERP software packages as that produced by Oracle one will be able to actually improve the performance of ones business. A good ERP system will help to not only plan how resources within the business are used, but also to manage and control these resources as well.

Each of the various ERP software programs that you can purchase today have several different modules within them which allow to you run various areas of your business together smoothly. These programs are designed to help with product planning, along with keeping track of all inventory and parts or products that you acquire. Plus through a program like this one is able to track orders that are placed and when they were distributed.

During the 1960's when manufacturing was becoming extremely productive many businesses elected to use a management and control system to help keep track of all their inventory. Although it was effective, if records were not maintained by the staff then mistakes could be made and over ordering of certain products could occur.

However, over time things begun to change and by the 1980's a new form of batch manufacturing software begun to appear known as MRP (Manufacturing Requirements Planning). This proved to be more effective than the systems being used during the 1960's and 1970's and is the system developed before ERP evolved. This just like ERP offered the users many benefits.

1. When it comes to ERP this software program has been found to help improve the way in which various sectors of a business integrate with each other. This makes them not only more productive but actually ends up saving the business money as well.

2. Secondly, an ERP system like the one developed by Oracle is one that can help you to manage your day to day business matters more effectively. Again this not only saves you time, but will end up saving you money and possibly increase your revenue levels as well.

3. A further benefit to be gained from having Oracle ERP is that this program provides you with being able to access crucial data very quickly and then transferring it to another section of your business just as quickly. The quicker you are able to retrieve such information then the more quickly and effectively you are able to respond.

4. The final benefit to be gained from having Oracle ERP software is that because you are able to easily access important data very quickly, you can then make much better informed decisions on just how your business should be progressing.

However which Oracle ERP system you select will depend on a number of different factors including whether you have implemented such a software program before. The type of business you run and how big it is. Only after you have taken these factors into consideration can you then decide which the best ERP system for your business is.

About the Author:

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