What Has A Portable MP3 Player Have To Do With Your Business

Written by Lynette Chandler


Plenty! When we maderepparttar decision to be our own bosses, we gave uprepparttar 142753 luxury of having our employers sending us to us seminars, workshops or conferences that help improve our skills and gain knowledge related to our work. All this became our initiative. We have to look for and invest in our own education. But as busy entreprenuers, taking time off to learn can be quite a feat.

Onrepparttar 142754 other hand, it need not be that way especially if you have a portable MP3 player. The Internet has opened up a whole new learning avenue we can take advantage of, right fromrepparttar 142755 comfort of our own home offices. A majority of courses online are in MP3 format or can be extracted to MP3. Withrepparttar 142756 popularity of podcasts, teleseminars and web conferences, you will find no shortage of audio learning material. In factrepparttar 142757 opposite is true - you may find yourself not havingrepparttar 142758 opportunity to listen to all these great information. What an ironic twist of fate huh?

But this is whererepparttar 142759 portable MP3 player can becomerepparttar 142760 entreprenuer's best friend. You can download MP3 files directly into your portable player and begin to listen and learn while you do other tasks away fromrepparttar 142761 computer.

I know this has helped me tremendously. I used to have piles of MP3 files clogging up my computer hard drive. I'd download them, start to listen but never finish because of other duties away fromrepparttar 142762 computer. It got to a point I didn't even bother trying to listen because if ofrepparttar 142763 constant interruptions.

The First Pagoda

Written by Dr. Maxine Thompson


The First Pagoda

By Dr. Maxine Thompson http://www.maxineshow.com http://www.maxinethompson.com

(Dedicated torepparttar Memory of My Father, Mervin Vann)

"Impossibilities are merely things of which we have not learned, or which we do not wish to happen." -- Charles W. Chesnutt, American Writer

In 1998, when my father was seventy-eight, he flew for eighteen hours to visit my younger sister Sonya who lived in Japan.

Atrepparttar 142752 time, I remember thinking that he was too old. What had gotten into Daddy? My mother had been dead for about five years and, unlike my six siblings’ and my dire predictions that he wouldn’t live one year without her, he was appearing to have a new lease on life. Our father had become this bossa-nova-ing, cavorting world traveler. Although he still had crippling arthritis, he got around, hobbling, limping, but still moving.

He stayed in Japan for two months and came back a changed man. He even wrote us letters, which was a first for him, because he was not a letter writer. (He always counted on my mother to writerepparttar 142753 letters to us.)

Well, like that old saying goes, “Until you walk in my shoes, you can’t sing my blues.

Now, as a grandmother of five, I just returned from a nine-day trip to Beijing, China. I went with a group of 40 business persons from different minorities.We also visited Shanghai, Suzhou and Hangzhou all modern, progressive cities inrepparttar 142754 south of China. For a modest price,repparttar 142755 trip included round-trip air tickets, local tour bus transportation, accommodations at 5 star hotels, meals throughoutrepparttar 142756 trip, business matching, factory touring and networking during governmental banquets.

I even climbedrepparttar 142757 famous Great Wall of China. Although I only made it torepparttar 142758 first Pagoda, I saw that as being symbolic ofrepparttar 142759 steps I’ve had to take to go from being an employee to being a business owner to now being an International Trade Business person.

For others who would like to try new things, I say, "Go for it." I have a saying, “The last time I checked, you’re going to be dead a long time, so why keep putting off what you want to do? (This includes writing a book, if that's your desire.)

I speak from experience. Inrepparttar 142760 past, with my writer’s overactive imagination, I envisioned all types of future disasters that never happened. This kept me from enjoying life fully, but now I find, as I get older, I am throwing my caution torepparttar 142761 wind and going forrepparttar 142762 gusto of life—whatever it has to offer. I can’t recount how many things I held back on while I raised three children. (I only flew once every other year because if there was a plane crash who would raiserepparttar 142763 children and other such foolishness I concocted) At any rate, now everyone is grown and asrepparttar 142764 young folks say, “It’s on.”

I want to taste all that is good and different about life. I want to come outside my backyard and experiencerepparttar 142765 world. I want to see things from a new perspective. For example, I have now eaten bird’s nest soup, learned a few words in Chinese, and learned how to haggle with street vendors over nice gifts such as real pearls. Needless to say, I hadrepparttar 142766 time of my life.

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