Monday, October 31, 2011

Small business step by step tutorials | "I've Got a Golden Ticket!"

Small business step by step tutorials | "I've Got a Golden Ticket!": "outsourcing, small business accounting, website creation… check out this video for more details…

My passion for business began when I was 4 years old and would walk with my father into Westwood Village to see a movie and pass by empty office buildings.  I’d share with him the businesses I would start to fill those vacant offices from cartoon companies to movie reviewers to parent child relationship centers. Yes, I can’t believe these thoughts crossed my mind so young either, but I am grateful they did.

Before my teens I hung out on Prodigy in my father’s home office.  My parents couldn’t part me from the PC green neon display so they made up “office police” who would arrest daddies who let their kids hang out too long. Ha! It didn’t work. I was glued and chat rooms, turned into new friends around the country which turned into understanding code and how these machines worked whi"

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Monday, October 10, 2011

Language Lessons For The Less Fortunate. - Gary Misner:Responsibly Being Irresponsible 

Language Lessons For The Less Fortunate. - Gary Misner:Responsibly Being Irresponsible : " "What language do you speek he told me 6, Georgian , French , Arabic , English, German and russian". This homeless man now had my attention maybe I can get lessons from him in the park right in front of my house, it would be perfect for both of us, i learn he makes money it's a win win. So I finished my coffee and returned upstairs. Still thinking if i should ask him for lessons. The next day i woke up and got my coffee, there he was again. So i asked "TJ" hey do you remember me from yesterday, in his shape you never know. Sure goodmorning gary he said, i said hey last night i went home and i was thinking maybe in exchange for some money you can teach me arabic. "

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Language Lessons For The Less Fortunate. - Gary Misner:Responsibly Being Irresponsible 

Language Lessons For The Less Fortunate. - Gary Misner:Responsibly Being Irresponsible : " "What language do you speek he told me 6, Georgian , French , Arabic , English, German and russian". This homeless man now had my attention maybe I can get lessons from him in the park right in front of my house, it would be perfect for both of us, i learn he makes money it's a win win. So I finished my coffee and returned upstairs. Still thinking if i should ask him for lessons. The next day i woke up and got my coffee, there he was again. So i asked "TJ" hey do you remember me from yesterday, in his shape you never know. Sure goodmorning gary he said, i said hey last night i went home and i was thinking maybe in exchange for some money you can teach me arabic. "

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Sunday, October 2, 2011

Tzom Gedaliah | | Orthodox Union

Tzom Gedaliah | | Orthodox Union: "The King of Ammon however - hostile and envious of the Judean remnant sent a loyal Jew, Yishmael Ben Netaniah, to assassinate Gedaliah. In the seventh month (Tishrei) Yishmael came to Gedaliah in the town of Mitzpa, and was received cordially. Gedaliah had been warned of his guest's murderous intent, but refused to believe his informants in the belief that their report was mere slander. Yishmael murdered Gedaliah, together with most of the Jews who had joined him and numbers of Babylonians whom the Babylonian King had left with Gedaliah. The remaining Jews feared the vengeance of the Babylonian King and fled to Egypt.

The surviving remnant of Jews was thus dispersed and the land remained desolate. In remembrance of these tribulations, our Sages instituted the 'Fast of the Seventh' on the day of Gedaliah's assassination in the seventh month."

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Rabbi Buchwald's Weekly Torah Message

Rabbi Buchwald's Weekly Torah Message: "introduced a most profound principle. It is not fear that stimulates praying harder and results in being exonerated by the Great Judge. Some pious Jews enter Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur fully confident that they will be exonerated. Although they experience no fear, they are forgiven because of their piety. But those who approach the High Holidays in fear, will merit an even more profound exoneration and a greater sense of intimacy with the Al-mighty.

Rabbi Pincus offers the following cogent parable: A child and his father walk together in the crowded city, deeply engrossed in conversation. Suddenly the child vanishes. Perhaps he’s been kidnaped, perhaps he has lost his way. The longer the absence, the greater the fear. But suddenly, the father is informed that his child has been found. He rushes to the lad. The child, who sees his father coming toward him, runs and hugs him mightily."

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