Saturday, December 29, 2007

Forget about resolutions and promises — Take care of your new car!

by Richard L. Weaver II

Forget about resolutions and promises because most don’t work, and if they do are short-lived and, thus, of little long-range value. Let’s welcome the New Year on a different level — one not quite as lofty or high-minded.

Like anything new, let’s treat ourselves this New Year as we would treat a new car. How do you treat a brand new car? Right now, imagine the car of your dreams — that car that would fulfill all your desires — sitting picture-perfect in the driveway in front of your home.

Just as you would check over your car, let’s first do a check to make certain everything is working as it should. You can run some simple tests yourself, but if you haven’t recently, a visit to the doctor might assist in your status check. Are you eating healthy, exercising regularly, and getting the proper amount of sleep?

The second thing you would do with a new car is to add a few flourishes to personalize your new acquisition. Would new clothes or jewelry signal a refurbished, spruced up, upgrade? How about filling in the gaps in your wardrobe or simply adding to things you received for Christmas?

The exterior of your new car always needs polishing because it is what people notice first. Polishing your exterior doesn’t require resolutions and promises. You can smile more, use greetings that will encourage and inspire others, and meet more people with an outgoing, effervescent, and attractive personality.

Polishing could include new make-up, a change in aftershave, or a distinctive kind of soap in the shower. If a new car smells new, then you may need to improve your hygiene with more changes of clothes, showers, mouthwash, and cleaning of fingernails. Not only will such changes have an effect on others, but you will be amazed at how it revitalizes your spirit as well.

There are other things you can do too. When you get a new car, you spend time just looking at it — admiring your new acquisition. In the same way, you need to step back and look at yourself as a new acquisition. What can you do to make yourself more admirable and respected? There are numbers of ways, and these can be continued throughout the year. The first way is just show up. Be there and be noticed. You can be counted on, and your presence will be even more obvious if you volunteer, participate in forums and small groups, and introduce yourself to anyone you meet who doesn’t know you.

A second way to become admired and respected is to take an interest in others. Ask questions with genuine concern, and become a student of life and others. Also, develop your writing skills. Use proper grammar and punctuation, capitalization, and spelling even in e-mails. By taking your writing ability to its highest level, you will not only make a good first impression as you prepare reports, send messages, and respond to e-mails, but also you will reveal your competence, proficiency, and intelligence.

There are other ways, too, to become both respected and admired. Demonstrating leadership is important. Not only can you volunteer to be a leader of groups, projects, and committees, but you can help others to become more effective and offer appropriate feedback that will improve others’ efficiency and effectiveness. In addition to leadership, you can work smarter by taking advantage of time-management techniques. Getting more done in less time is an important trait and will quickly gain you both respect and admiration..

One of the most important ways to become respected and admired is to avoid looking like an idiot. For example, stop all your silly habits — whatever they may be. Wear only proper attire, and avoid anything the least bit outlandish or controversial. Do not show up late — ever! Do not tell inappropriate jokes, and avoid anything that could be construed as sexual harassment. Also, avoid incessant talking about yourself. In general, if you exercise good judgment and follow the norms of the organization and society, you are likely to remain in safe territory.

Still another way to become admired and respected is to become a knowledgeable source. Perhaps you need to become better informed. Do you need to keep up with the news or read a news magazine? Do you need to know about current events? Do you need to do your homework? Look up things, read relevant books, take classes, interview authorities, and know what you’re talking about. When people know you’re a “considered source” (one who knows what he or she is talking about), your respect will grow, and admiration will surely follow.

Involvement in community activities or local politics or volunteering at your local hospital, library, retirement center, or Salvation Army is a final way to help you become more admired and respected.

Polishing your new vehicle, too, can involve improving your credentials so you will look good in the eyes of others. Get the college degree you never finished; take the adult education classes you need to fill out your background or prepare you for advancement; learn a foreign language; join a club, or take any action necessary to add depth or breadth to your polished facade. Often, your reputation precedes you; if it does, it is likely to be based on your credentials.

Another obvious thing that occurs when you get a new car is that you want other people to see and admire what you purchased. Socialize. Get out and meet new people. Break out from the safe, secure, comfort zone you have established, and let others admire the new you.

There is something else you do when you get a new car, too. You check your insurance policy to make sure everything is in order and that it will cover you in case of an accident or injury. The new year, likewise, is a time to examine all your documents: insurance policies, will, financial records, investments, savings and checking accounts, and everything that contributes to your health, safety, security, and happiness. Bring all your records up-to-date.

It is true that we normally think of the New Year as a time for resolutions and promises, but seldom do we look at it as we would a new car. If we treat ourselves as we do any new object when we first get it, we will come into this New Year with a renewed sense of security, a rejuvenated exterior, a reinvigorated interior, and a foundation that will not just propel us through this year but will assure us, as well, the kind of personal infrastructure that will launch us forward for years to come. Forget about resolutions and promises, take care of your new car!





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

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And Then Some: Essays to Entertain, Motivate, & Inspire - Book 1

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

And Then Some News

Happy New Year from everyone at And Then Some Publishing! Cheers to a fun, safe, and happy New Year.

Every year news programs give suggestions and ideas for making and keeping New Year's resolutions. Some programs list their top ten ways to help you increase your chances for success.

--What if you were to forget about resolutions?

--What if you were to approach this whole New Year's resolution concept from a different perspective?


Saturday Essay - December 29, 2007
Forget about resolutions and promises - Take care of your new car!
by Richard L. Weaver II


Excerpt:

The exterior of your new car always needs polishing because it is what people notice first. Polishing your exterior doesn’t require resolutions and promises. You can smile more, use greetings that will encourage and inspire others, and meet more people with an outgoing, effervescent, and attractive personality.

And Then Some - C U Saturday!!


Get the book - Get And Then Some... SIGNED!



andthensomeworks.com

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Gifts that keep on giving

by Richard L. Weaver II

One of the most memorable Christmas gifts my wife and I received last year was a CD a relative put together from his collection of classical music he enjoyed listening to the most. When we played his CD we were not only impressed, but we could easily understand why he liked the music and why he thought others might enjoy it as well. We have played the CD many times since receiving it — truly a gift that keeps on giving.

This time of year causes most everyone to rack his or her brain in search of “the perfect gift” for friends and family. Even when you find a present that seems right, you run the risk of just giving more unwanted clutter. And, if you’re like we are, there is more than enough of that! The other possibility, of course, is that there is someone on your list for whom any run-of-the-mill gift won’t do. Then what?

It doesn’t take much imagination to buy handkerchiefs, ties, and electronic games at the mall or the nearest big-box store. These are the kinds of gifts that fulfill our obligation to exchange presents, but they don’t speak from the heart like some of the gifts of love that follow. There are numerous possibilities.

For those of you reading this who might be concerned about having fewer pretty, wrapped gifts under the tree, there is no reason why any of the following possibilities could not be wrapped just like any other gift, with an appropriate description and explanation boxed within.

I have divided these gift alternatives into three groups: donations, preserving family (or friendship) images, and gift certificates.

Donations

To make a donation on another’s behalf to an organization that helps others all year long is to give a gift that keeps on giving, and here are some possibilities. Architecture for Humanity provides architects around the world with opportunities to create environmentally sustainable temporary shelters in developing and disaster-stricken countries (www.architectureforhumanity. org). America’s Wetland: Campaign to Save Coastal Louisiana seeks to reverse 75 years of wetland deterioration along Louisiana’s coastline and barrier islands. This is a habitat for over 5 million migratory waterfowl (www.americaswetland.com).

Other sources for potential donations include Heifer International. It helps families around the world by providing the tools, supplies, and training to plant trees, keep topsoil in place on farms, grow fruit for food, and provide firewood for cooking and heat in winter. Also, it raises livestock, donates animals to poor families, and educates communities on how to sustain agrarian economies in an effort to alleviate world hunger and promote environmental health and sustainability (www.heifer.org). Trickle Up provides seed capital for start-ups or expansions and business training to women especially, from Niger to the U.S.A. (www.trickleup.org). Throughout Africa, Keep A Child Alive provides HIV/AIDS medications and grants for constructing and staffing medical clinics (www.keepachildalive.org). John Denver’s Plant-It 2020 plants, maintains, and protects indigenous trees in forests and urban areas all over the world (www.plantit2020.org).

Preserving Family Images

Scan photos, negatives, and slides to create CDs and DVDs of everyone’s favorites. You can do this yourself, or you can have professionals complete the process for you. If you package up your photographs, negatives, and slides, you can send them off to ScanCafe (www.ScanCafe.com) where technicians will manually scan and retouch all of your photos and post them in a secure online library for you to view. You don’t even have to pre-sort the images. ScanCafe will charge you only for the images you wish to keep (with a minimum fifty percent commitment). After selecting the images you wish to keep, you will be returned all the original photos along with a CD or DVD of your digital images.

ScanCafe will perform touch ups like color correction, cropping, and dust and stain removal. Additional services include black and white negative and slide scanning and more extensive restoration for severely damaged images. This is a great way to preserve your family or friendship images forever, and not only does it make a memorable holiday gift, it is a gift that keeps on giving.

Gift Certificates

Buy a set number of sessions at a local massage therapist, and arrange with the therapist to have prepaid “relaxation reminders” sent throughout the year. Another possibility is to award a “good for one free massage” certificate with yourself as the hands-on healer.

Another gift certificate possibility is to arrange with your favorite florist to send a fresh bouquet on a preselected occasion every month. Even mix in balloons, fruit baskets, and stuffed toys.

Mystery “surprise” gift certificates might ask recipients to clear their calendar for one day or weekend every month. Anticipation, of course, can work magic. One day, or weekend, each month plan a surprise that might include tickets to see an entertainer or theatrical production, a balloon ride, a surprise weekend getaway at Lake Tahoe or Branson, Missouri, or a sunset, dinner cruise on a local lake or river.

There could be “Good Health Gift Certificates” as well which would include pre-paid visits to a family physician, dentist, dermatologist, podiatrist, gynecologist, or other health professional. It could be, too, to pay for insulin, high blood pressure medication, or other life-saving drugs.

Gift certificates could be given for a free day at the spa, for the full treatment at a local beauty salon, for a trial membership at the local gym, or to purchase groceries at the local health food store. How about adding a personal touch for someone you love, and give them a gift certificate for a mammogram, eye exam, or prostate screening that you will attend with them?

It is true that all of these are practical, utilitarian suggestions. We cannot give gifts of inner joy or lifelong peace, but we can wish others a lifetime filled with joy and peace and whether wrapped in gold-leaf paper and tied up in bows or not, these may be the real gifts that keep on giving.





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

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And Then Some: Essays to Entertain, Motivate, & Inspire - Book 1

CHRISTMAS SALE: Signed copy of Book 1 for $16.47 while supplies last!



Thursday, December 20, 2007

And Then Some News

Happy Holidays from everyone at And Then Some Publishing! We wish you a great holiday and hope you get everything you asked for.

During this season you have many options for gifts. Whether it's a memorable gift that lasts a lifetime or simply showing you care this week's Saturday Essay discusses some options and suggestions for the holiday.


Saturday Essay - December 22, 2007
Gifts that keep on giving
by Richard L. Weaver II


Excerpt:

This time of year causes most everyone to rack his or her brain in search of “the perfect gift” for friends and family. Even when you find a present that seems right, you run the risk of just giving more unwanted clutter. And, if you’re like we are, there is more than enough of that! The other possibility, of course, is that there is someone on your list for whom any run-of-the-mill gift won’t do. Then what?

And Then Some - C U Saturday!!


Get the book - Get And Then Some... SIGNED!



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Saturday, December 15, 2007

A Beginners Guide to Writing a Book

How to take what you don't have and make it work

by Richard L. Weaver II

A reader of my Dec. 8th Saturday Essay blog post entitled, “So you want to write a book?” raised an important question in the “comment” section under the post: “What if I don’t have anything that you’re talking about?” I could have responded with a brief comment: “Then don’t attempt it.” But, the question is both thoughtful and provocative, and it deserves a longer response. After all, everyone has to start somewhere. “A Beginners Guide to Writing a Book" is specifically designed to get you started.


First, do not be intimidated after reading “So you want to write a book?” — the first of the two essays in this series. Sure, there are some very accurate conditions laid out in that essay, but they are suggestions only. They are presented as prerequisites for making the process easier and more comfortable. Remember, there are exceptions to everything, and it may be that you are just such a person. You have the ideas; you just need to write the book.

In addition to intimidation, many beginning writers fear failure. It is a reasonable concern. You are entering a competitive business (writing), and you are competing with experienced writers. What you have, however, no other writers have! You have a unique perspective, an exclusive point of view, and a distinctive way of looking at things that nobody else in the world possesses. Even the way you will put your ideas together and the words you select to express them will be totally idiosyncratic — unmatched by anyone else.

Often the reason beginning writers fear failure is because they set their initial goals too high. They want perfection right out of the starting gate. This is as unreasonable as expecting a beginning cook to prepare a perfect souffl , a beginning pianist to play a perfect concerto, or a beginning sports person to know how to play well without instruction or practice. Be reasonable. When you are wise, sensible, and fair-minded about what you can expect from yourself — and especially from a first project — you will remove much of the pressure and stress.


Let’s say, then, that you have some “great” ideas. I put “great” in quotation marks because we all think we have “great” ideas! One of the purposes of writing, of course, is to get your ideas out there to let others be the judge of “greatness.” We all have biases when it comes to judging our own ideas.


Look at what Joanne “Jo” Murray, better known as J. K. Rowling, faced in writing her first novel, “Harry Potter.” In 1995, separated from her husband, unemployed, living on state benefits, and writing the novel on an old manual typewriter in numerous caf s whenever she could get her daughter, Jessica, to fall asleep, she completed the first book in the series. The reason she wrote in caf s, she said on the TV program, A&E Biography, was because taking her baby out for a walk was the best way to make her fall asleep. She then found an agent willing to represent her; however, the book was rejected by the first twelve publishing houses to which it was sent. Can you imagine how those rejections would make you feel?


So where do you start? Buy an old manual typewriter and find some caf s willing to let you type at one of their tables? No, of course not. There are better ways.

By whatever means you choose to use — and a computer would be the best means, providing you can find one to use (local libraries are a great resource) — you must begin by composing an overall organizational scheme. Start broad and narrow as you go along. This can be changed during the process of writing or even after writing is finished. Organizing your ideas can save you time and make your writing more efficient. Few people sit down and write a book from start to finish without an outline. Even experienced writers use them. Outlines help by forcing you to think through the stages of the writing process, create a graphic scheme of your book or project, construct both the main topics and subtopics, and group ideas to prevent duplication and unnecessary repetition. Not having an organizational scheme is like not choosing a guide to lead you through an unknown and unchartered wilderness.

Once you have an overall organizational approach, begin writing your ideas on note cards or on pieces of paper that you will be able to arrange later under each of your topics or subtopics. Put just single ideas on the note cards or pieces of paper or you will have to cut ideas apart to get them organized. Don’t worry about writing things in any order. When you get a thought, write it down — wherever you are, whatever you’re doing. Carry cards or pieces of paper with you. “Great ideas” occur at all times throughout your day and night, and not to write an idea down promptly when it strikes, is to lose that thought. Sometimes an idea will occur to you and just the right words to express that idea will be there at the same time. If not, don’t worry. Capture what you have — you can always hone and polish ideas later. Also, don’t worry at this early stage about transitions or connections between ideas. They can be assembled later. Even grammar and spelling should not be a concern here.


Now you are writing, and the beauty of the process is that some writing prompts more writing. Once your mind is engaged, the subconscious takes over. That is why thoughts occur at all times during the day and night. Your mind cannot be turned off. You must be ready to capture what your mind produces.


At various points now you will want to stop and organize what you have written. This will help you determine where you are and where you need to go. There will be gaps to be filled, topics to be added or dropped, and adjustments to be made. Take the time to carefully examine your notes so you don’t waste valuable time writing about ideas already developed.


Don’t ever think of the writing process as ending. It should continue right up to the time of publication. It may mean polishing, further development, or clarification. Take the time to make it right.


Only when the gaps are filled, the organization looks tight, the ideas are bound together in a cogent, cohesive, well-constructed narrative, and spelling and grammar problems are solved, are you ready to have the entire manuscript typed. Once typed, it will require careful proofreading and further changes. Nothing looks the same piecemeal as it does in a coherent package. Have objective people not tied to you read the manuscript to detect any problems. Correct the problems, and have an error-free electronic manuscript typed.


When you really want to write, you will find the time. Now that you understand the process, you will realize that you can do it, and you will succeed. So, you want to write a book? Now, you can!
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

The best resource I’ve discovered online for beginning writers is the Purdue OWL (Online Writing Lab) at
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/ Here, you can get information on the writing process (creating a thesis, developing an outline, starting the writing process, writer’s block, writer’s anxiety), grammar and mechanics, and creative writing. The beauty of this website is that all the information is free.




Contact Richard L. Weaver II

-----------------------------------------

And Then Some: Essays to Entertain, Motivate, & Inspire - Book 1

CHRISTMAS SALE: Signed copy of Book 1 for $16.47 while supplies last!



Thursday, December 13, 2007

And Then Some News

This week's Saturday Essay was inspired by a comment posted by Maizer B. in response to Dec. 8th essay "So you want to write a book?". "What if I don't have anything that you're talking about?"

Great questions lead to inspiration!

-- What if I don't have everything?

-- Where do I start and what do I do?


Saturday Essay - December 15, 2007

A Beginners Guide to Writing a Book

How to take what you don't have and make it work

by Richard L. Weaver II


Excerpt:

In addition to intimidation, many beginning writers fear failure. It is a reasonable concern. You are entering a competitive business (writing), and you are competing with experienced writers. What you have, however, no other writers have! You have a unique perspective, an exclusive point of view, and a distinctive way of looking at things that nobody else in the world possesses. Even the way you will put your ideas together and the words you select to express them will be totally idiosyncratic — unmatched by anyone else.

And Then Some - C U Saturday!!


Grab the book, Get And Then Some... SIGNED!



andthensomeworks.com

Saturday, December 8, 2007

So you want to write a book?

by Richard L. Weaver II

The age-old adage that “everyone has at least one good book in them,” is as true today as when first stated. With the Internet, not only are more writers online, there are Web sites for writers, and writing markets that accept queries and submissions by e-mail. There is gold lurking in the Internet hills that is just waiting to be mined, and hundreds of authors have bypassed traditional editorial channels of print publishing to mine that gold. Makes writing that book even more tempting.

But writing is more than having an Internet connection, marketing your book, or making the big bucks. Sure, a book will help establish you as an expert, create confidence in your ideas, attract readers to your other services, provide a marketing tool, make a great gift, offer you a platform to expose your mind and heart, and, of course, supply an income stream. As attractive as these benefits are, they overlook the task of the writing itself. A major oversight.

As a writer for over thirty years, let me offer a short test to see if you have what it takes to be a writer. The ideas here are presented in no particular order, and I am certain there would be as many suggestions as there are writers to make them. My first concern is: Do you have the time? Writing is an enormously time-intensive process, and depending on the topic, size of the book, or approach you plan to take, you need to have time set aside for writing. Dabbling here and there reflects a lack of serious commitment and is unlikely to produce the product you desire.

Do words come easily, naturally, and comfortably? Words form the thread on which you string your experiences. When you don’t have to struggle finding words, the job of writing is easier. You are not expected, of course, to possess all the words you need. Next to me as I write is a dictionary and writer’s thesaurus. Across the room lies an unabridged dictionary, and I have the invaluable, absolutely essential, 85-page book, The Elements of Style by Strunk and White.

Can you truly immerse yourself in your writing? It is easy to get sucked up into the universe of writing (a black hole from which ideas and words come with no trumpet voluntary), but when the flow begins, you need to be there as the channel or conduit. This, indeed, is when the prizes are distributed, the bonuses gets paid in full, and the trophies are awarded.

Do you have other available sources to consult for ideas, help gain clarity and precision, determine the accuracy of your ideas, and assist in sustaining your enthusiasm and motivation?

Do you know how to start? Some will tell you, “Just sit down at your computer, and begin writing.” I say, “Nonsense.” You waste valuable time that way. If you don’t know where you’re going, how will you know when you get there? To write in a clear style, you must first be clear in your thoughts. Get organized; seek direction; establish an outline. When you write with purpose, you make good use of your time. When you write with purpose you have a clear starting point and the direction needed to proceed.

Can you stand being isolated and alone? You need time to think, deliberate, and ponder. Writing is a relationship between your ideas, the words you use to express those ideas, and your computer, where those ideas take shape and reveal form.

Do you agonize over writing, toil with proper grammar, struggle with sentence structure, and grapple with punctuation? If so, writing will be torture, and the anguish you feel at the keyboard will drive you away in pain and suffering. When it comes easily, not only do ideas flow, but capturing ideas when they flow becomes gratifying, amusing, and enjoyable. It’s play not work.

On-the-other-hand, I have never let grammar, sentence structure, or punctuation hinder the flow of ideas. I would rather capture the products of my imagination when they are fresh, active, and alive. Spend time polishing words at a later time.

Let nothing stand in the way of “flow.”

Do you know what you want to say, but you just can’t put it into written form without losing clarity and impact? Imagine that your computer is another person, and simply begin a conversation. Writing that truly reveals who you are comes from your heart without artifice or contrivance. The secret of style is to have something to say, and say it as clearly as you can. When it comes easily, your heart will be encased in the words you select like precious stones in a ring.

Can you write with the goal of sharing your ideas, insights, and knowledge with others? Never write with the goal of making big bucks or becoming famous. Write with the goal of enlightening, instructing, illuminating, or entertaining, for it is how others see, absorb, understand, enjoy, and (perhaps) use your ideas, insights, and knowledge that determines your effectiveness.

Can you remain focused and complete your project? As you write, do not worry about getting your information formatted or the marketing of your book. Sometimes it is as difficult to finish what you have started as it is to start it in the first place.

Once the formatting, submitting of the manuscript, and marketing processes begin, your mind will be so encumbered with ideas that have little or nothing to do with the content of what you have written, that you will be distracted, diverted, sidetracked, and, thus, pulled away from your essential task like a young bird leaving its nest. Remaining focused throughout a project will help keep the content consistent, coherent, and clear. There is less need, then, for you to retrace developmental steps, reread previous passages, or get back into the mood of what you were writing. Resurrecting a state of mind now passed is like trying to undunk a donut.

Having completed the writing, there is information in excess to inform you of succeeding steps—the preparation of a prospectus and the examination of your publication options. The hardest part is the writing, and only when the writing is complete can you have a book.




Contact Richard L. Weaver II

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Thursday, December 6, 2007

And Then Some News

This week's Saturday Essay is taken from And Then Some Book 1: Essays to Entertain, Motivate, & Inspire. Chapter 23 asks the question "So you want to write a book?" covering questions ranging from time and resources including suggestions on organizing your approach to writing.

Signed copies of And Then Some Book 1 are available from And Then Some Publishing, LLC through Amazon.com for the low-price leading $16.47. Get your signed copy of And Then Some Book 1 during our Christmas Sale - while supplies last. Order by December 12th and make sure you get your book in time for Christmas!

And Then Some Saturday Essay - December 8, 2007
So you want to write a book?
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:
Do you know what you want to say, but you just can’t put it into written form without losing clarity and impact? Imagine that your computer is another person, and simply begin a conversation. Writing that truly reveals who you are comes from your heart without artifice or contrivance. The secret of style is to have something to say, and say it as clearly as you can. When it comes easily, your heart will be encased in the words you select like precious stones in a ring.

And Then Some - see you Saturday!

andthensomeworks.com