• It stimulates our central nervous system

    It stimulates our central nervous system which increases our heart beat rate and blood pressure invariably decreasing our appetite.

    This diet pill may not give you the shape you want but accept the fact that it can really decrease your weight in a significant manner and make you fit for survival. But it is mandatory that your doctor should know about your health history and prescribed you a dose that is required.

    Clinical trails failed to prove any serious side effects till date. But of course mild side affects like headache, constipation dizziness are common but reversible too.

    Joseph Jones received training as a healthcare scientist.
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  • Be conversational, be excited, be sincere. Know the

    Be conversational, be excited, be sincere.

    Know the hot emotional buttons of your prospect and make sure you use those in your communications. What is the one thing that your prospect wants more than anything? What is the one thing they would like to change about their life? Find out what your prospect wants and give it to them!

    Have a brainstorming session with your teammates. Ask what made them sign up for the business. Think about what made YOU sign up. Your answers will give you the top benefits you need to highlight.

    Use power words such as:

    Free, Exclusive, Amazing, Fast, Results, Guarantee, Step-by-Step, BENEFITS, Effective, Genuine, Powerful, Simple, Now, Discover, Secret, Solution, Easy, Value, Money, Gain, Proud, YOU

    These are such strong motivators because they touch a prospect emotionally.

    Talk directly to your prospect.
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  • We are acutely

    We are acutely aware that men can and often do choose younger women for mates. However, not

    ALL

    men choose someone younger, and for those men who are only looking for youth, you don’t want them. Breeze on by this type of person. Focus on what you can do, on whom you can find, and let go of what is never going to be.

    *Role Models. Somewhere, you absorbed a role model and a belief that says men are in charge of your life and your happiness. The reality is, you can be in charge of your destiny if you shift this thought.

    *Choices. If you felt you had more choices in men, would you want this man in your life? When we shrink our life down to zero possibilities, we obsess over trying to make something work with someone unsuitable. A perceived lack of choices can make you hold on.

    Why cling to a relationship that makes you feel bad when there is a world of opportunity waiting for you? You can’t get boxed into a corner thinking you only have one hand to play.
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  • Ah, though how many of

    Ah, though how many of us place baskets on the light of our testimony for God–the basket of cruel speech! Of ill-temper! Of a discontented and querulous spirit! These as well as more obvious failings will prevent us from shining out as light in a dark world. It is not for us to ignite the flame or even to supply the oil. All we have to do is to keep our lamps clean and bright, to guard against anything that may obstruct the out-shining of the Love and Life of God through our soul. If we are careful to see that anything which might hinder the effect of our testimony and mar our influence is put away, Christ will see to it that our light will affect the full measure of His purpose.

    In contrast to the basket is the stand or candlestick.
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  • Anne and Maggie grew up

    Anne and Maggie grew up in the same Chicago suburb, went to the same high school, and then went to the same junior college. They also went to work for the same insurance company, and both were hired to work in its billing department.

    Although the two women had similiar socioeconomic and educational backgrounds, there was an obvious difference, which affected their careers. Anne was extroverted and friendly, while Maggie was introverted and reserved. In the company cafeteria, for example, Anne would always talk to the people who shared their table, while Maggie would read the newspaper or poke the food around her plate.

    Since the company was huge, most people were strangers. Anne made many new friends. Maggie made only a few. Anne enjoyed talking to strangers and finding out about their lives. She also enjoyed exchanging ideas. Humanity fascinated her. Maggie seldom joined the conversation unless an attractive man joined their table. Usually
    Maggie sat quietly, frequently bored, while her friend, gesturing animatedly next to her, engaged in conversations.

    One day Anne chatted with an old man who worked in the personnel department.
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  • THREE WAYS TO … have a great first holiday with your baby

    THREE WAYS TO … have a great first holiday with your baby

    0 Comments | Daily Mirror, The; London (UK), Jul 27, 2010 | by Coleen Nolan

    Catherine Cooper, author of Travelling with Children: The Essential Guide, says:

    (1) Change your expectations. A holiday with a baby won’t be the same as when you went child-free. Don’t expect lie-ins and long lunches
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  • Carbon manager CADmeleon launches online software spin-off

    Carbon manager CADmeleon launches online software spin-off

    0 Comments | Scotland on Sunday (Edinburgh, Scotland), July 25, 2010

    Byline: Erikka Askeland Business Correspondent

    CARBON management firm CADmeleon has launched a company to commercialise its online software product as it prepares to sign a deal with Scottish and Southern Energy.

    Bernard McKeown, managing director of CADmeleon, said the joint venture deal due to be agreed with SSE will give it a platform to target institutional property managers and utilities firms in Europe and eventually the US.

    CADmeleon has launched Environmental Building Index and recruited a chief executive from the United States to run the business. Fred Seigele, formerly of Austin, Texas, is a legal expert with experience of running growing technology firms and joined EBI as chief executive last week.

    “Fred has come on board. He led stock-market flotation in 1999 and he is successful on the legal side for software,” said McKeown.

    The software product, Carbon Estates, uses a unique database of details on thousands of large buildings which allows users to benchmark their carbon emissions in order to meet legislation that came into force in April. The Carbon Reduction Commitment (which was recently renamed the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme) is a mandatory carbon-emissions trading scheme to cover all organisations spending more than GBP500,000 on gas or electricity a year.

    The scheme, a method of evaluating and driving down energy usage, is estimated to affect 5,000 large public and private-sector firms while a further 15,000 will be required to produce carbon reduction reports.

    “We are working closely with SSE, we are in discussion with SSE Ventures at the moment to taking a stake in a company. It is closely linked to their policy on energy efficiency,” said McKeown.

    He has been developing the software with Scottish local authorities, including Highland Council, Inverclyde, North Lanarkshire and Edinburgh City councils, which have been testing the CRC scheme since 2008.

    Other clients involved with the development of the software include investment funds with property portfolios such as Pruprim.

    “Property investors use it because there is a tangible link between sustainability and investment performance. When that link is realised there is an opportunity to increase the yield on the properties they run,” said McKeown.

    He also envisages the firm expanding its product to include Europe, as well as residential property which is not subject to legislation to control carbon emissions from energy use at present.

    A shareholder in both, McKeown said the two companies would continue to work together.

    “A software company needs a completely different strategy and allows us to bring in investors,” said McKeown
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  • Depression, either situational or

    Depression, either situational or clinical, is a diagnosable condition. There are a few simple steps to the diagnosis. The first is to decide why you think you are depressed. Do you no longer enjoy your hobbies? Do you find it hard to get out of bed in the morning, or to leave the house? Other symptoms include being tired all of the time, loss of appetite, crying for no reason and an inability to focus.

    If these symptoms are present, then the next step is to take the Beck Depression Inventory. This simple exam is a series of statements that you rate from a scale of 1-5. It gives you a final score that then rates you from no depression to severe clinical depression. While this test is not perfect and should not be the sole element used in diagnosis, it can lead to one.

    With symptoms in mind, and Beck Depression Inventory score in hand, the next step is to go to your primary care physician.
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  • How disaster overtook Maggie’s right-to-buy pioneer council tenant; As council house sales are axed, what happened to the owner of the [pounds sterling]8,000 house now worth [pounds sterling]130,000

    How disaster overtook Maggie’s right-to-buy pioneer council tenant; As council house sales are axed, what happened to the owner of the [pounds sterling]8,000 house now worth [pounds sterling]130,000

    0 Comments | Mail on Sunday (London, England), The, August 4, 2002 | by Sarah Oliver

    Byline: SARAH OLIVER

    THROUGH sheer graft and guts, Maureen Patterson made herself a homeowner. And so it was that Margaret Thatcher, who admired these qualities, personally presented her with her council house deeds.

    That was 22 years ago when the Tory Prime Minister – determined to make us all owneroccupiers – launched her flagship right-to-buy policy.

    She even had tea with Maureen in the kitchen of her newly mortgaged home, 39 Amersham Road, Harold Hill, near Romford, Essex. And Lady Thatcher’s cherished picture of the two women crystalising a moment in British economic history was to be seen all over the world.

    But now Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott has signalled an end to right-to-buy – saying it has fuelled the current house boom and priced key workers out of the market.

    He says many former tenants who bought homes at knockdown prices have exploited the scheme by selling them swiftly to reap a windfall profit or renting them at inflated prices.

    So what happened to Maureen and her house?

    With desperate irony, the financial burden of home ownership contributed to the breakdown of her 30-year-marriage to husband James . . . and after six years of trying to maintain her home alone she was forced out.

    Today Maureen, 62, lives in a mobile home in Essex, five minutes’ drive from the house she’d hoped to leave to daughter Leisa, 39, and twin sons Martin and Vernon, 32.

    No39, which cost Maureen pound sterling8,315 in 1980, is now worth pound sterling130,000 – an amazing 1,560 per cent rise.

    ‘If I’d foreseen the end of my marriage I’d never have bought,’ she says. ‘I got trapped there without enough cash to cover bills. The mortgage was about pound sterling250 a month and after my husband left I survived only because my sons gave me board-and-lodging.

    ‘The maintenance factor terrified me. I couldn’t sleep at night worrying about money. I could afford the heating on only a few hours at night and kept fearing the roof or something would need replacing.

    ‘I was desperate in a house I couldn’t manage and wished I’d never bought.

    It broke my heart when I had to sell. It went for pound sterling57,000 and when I’d paid off the mortgage I had only enough left to buy a mobile home so I’m back down the property ladder.

    ‘But I don’t blame anyone. It was my decision to make that investment. I still remember the day Mrs Thatcher came to tea. I am still committed to right-to-buy.

    ‘We were chosen because we were just the kind of people the scheme was aimed at,’ she says. ‘And because she is a mother of twins, like me, I suppose her advisers thought that would give us something in common.

    ‘She was an icon to me. She was a lovely guest. I gave her a guided tour and she said, “This is not just a house – it’s a home.”

    ‘I was so proud. She had Downing Street and Chequers but No39 was just as special to me. We were entitled to a 47 per cent discount because we’d lived in that house since 1962. The deposit was just pound sterling5.

    ‘The mortgage was a huge struggle at first, almost double the rent. I worked in an old people’s home so we had enough money for the children’s school uniform – I wouldn’t let my husband pay for everything.

    ‘But gradually the rents rose and the mortgage came down and we worked hard to increase its value.

    We put our hearts into it because we owned it. We put in a wood kitchen, stone floor, a bathroom, double glazing, fitted wardrobes and landscaped the garden. Then a pond, fountain and a crazy-paved patio.’ Inside went ceiling roses and an ornate fireplace in the front room.

    Maureen had propelled her family a long way from their first home – a single room in a condemned house in London’s East End. Yet after all her experiences she says: ‘I think it’s disgraceful that the Government may scrap right-to-buy.

    ‘Millions of families can’t scrape together a huge deposit. They’re not greedy – they just need a leg-up.

    Right-to-buy has given a new generation, like my son, an incentive to buy a home of their own. It set an example and made ownership ordinary-not extraordinary
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  • You would think he was the

    You would think he was the luckiest man on earth. But you would be wrong. Unfortunately for him, he had gotten the attention of four ruthless aging millionaires that called themselves the December Club. These elderly men decided that this mysterious man held the key to the fountain of youth. Therefore, with all the money and resources at their disposal, they attempted to snare the man they nicknamed the ?Phoenix.? A cross-country adventure unfolded as Bergman attempted to elude the Club?s detective. Then finally, with nowhere left to hide, the Phoenix was forced to take a defiant stand against the wealthy pursuers.

    Was it fact or fiction? You get to decide by reading all about this amazing tale in the adventure novel titled, ?Pursuit of the Phoenix,? available from www.amazon.com or learn more by visiting the author?s site at www.jeffreyhauser.com and you?ll see what happens when an someone gets a chance to live a second lifetime.

    Jeffrey Hauser was a sales consultant for the Bell System Yellow Pages for nearly 25 years.
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