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    Found my website of the day! http://tinybuddha.com/

    So at times you feel like even on the up, there are some that just want to bring u down… It’s hard being a mom, wife, boss, women owner of a buiness that is dominated by men but I always got to sit and think!
    I got this far due to being me! Real! I make mistakes (real) I laugh (real) and work my duppa off (real) but sometimes you just can’t win: thought I would read on thoughts to see what I can find and I am not alone… But found this and wanted to share

    1. Resist the urge to judge or assume.It’s hard to offer someone compassion when you assume you have them pegged. He’s a jerk. She’s a malcontent. He’s an–insert other choice adjective. Even if it seems unlikely someone will wake up one day and act differently we have to remember it is possible.

    When you think negative thoughts, it comes out in your body language. Someone prone to negativity may feel all too tempted to mirror that. Try coming at them with the positive mindset you wish they had. Expect the best in them. You never know when you might be pleasantly surprised.

    2. Dig deeper, but stay out of the hole.

    It’s always easier to offer someone compassion if you try to understand where they’re coming from. But that can’t completely excuse their behavior. If you show negative people you condone the way they act, you give them no real incentive to make a change (which they may actually want deep down).

    It may help to repeat this in your head when you deal with them: “I understand your pain. But I’m most helpful if I don’t feed into it.” This might help you approach them with both kindness and firmness so they don’t manipulate you.

    3. Maintain a positive boundary

    Some people might tell you to visualize a bright white light around you. This doesn’t actually work for me because I respond better to ideas in words than visualizations. So I tell myself this, “I can only control the positive space I create around myself.”

    Then when I interact with this person, I try to do three things, in this order of importance:

    Protect the positive space around me. When their negativity is too strong to protect it, I need to walk away.
    Diffuse their negativity.
    Help them feel more positive, not act more positive–which is more likely to create the desired result.

    4. Disarm their negativity, even if just for now.

    This goes back to the ideas I mentioned above. I know my depressed friend will rant about life’s injustices as long as I let her. Part of me feels tempted to play amateur psychiatrist–get her talking, and then try to help her reframe situations into a more positive light.

    Then I remind myself I can’t change her whole way of being in one phone call. She has to want that. But I can help her focus on something positive right now, in this moment. I can ask about her upcoming birthday. I can remind her it’s a beautiful day for a walk. Don’t try to solve or fix them. Just aim to help them now.

    5. Temper your emotional response.

    Negativity loves getting a rise out of people. Someone to feel for the sob story. Someone to get outraged over the injustice. Someone to get offended by the racist joke. I suspect this gives them a little light in the darkness of their inner world–a sense that they’re not floating alone in their own anger or sadness.

    People remember and learn from what you do more than what you say. If you feed into the situation with emotions, you’ll teach them they can depend on you for a reaction. It’s tough not to react because we’re human, but it’s worth practicing. Respond as calmly as you can with a simple line of fact, even if it’s unrelated. “Dancing with the Stars is on tonight. Planning to watch it?”

    6. Question what you’re getting out of it.

    Like I mentioned above, we often get something out of relationships with negative people. Get real honest with yourself: have you fallen into a caretaker role because it makes you feel needed? Have you gossiped in a holier-than-thou way? Do you have some sort of stake in keeping the things the way they are?

    Questioning yourself helps you change the way you respond–which is really all you can control. You can’t make someone think, feel, or act differently. You can be as kind as possible or as combative as possible, and still not change reality for someone else. All you can control is what you think and do–and then do your best to help them without hurting yourself.

    7. Remember the numbers.

    Research shows that people with bad attitudes have significantly higher rates of stress and disease. Someone’s mental state plays a huge role in their physical health. If someone’s making life miserable for people around them, you can be sure they’re doing worse for themselves.

    What a sad reality. That someone has so much pain inside them they have to act out, like a kid in a tantrum, just to feel some sense of relief–even if that relief comes from getting a rise out of people. When you remember how much a difficult person is suffering, it’s easier to stay focused on minimizing negativity, as opposed to defending yourself or making it worse.

    8. Don’t take it personally–but know sometimes it is personal.

    Conventional wisdom suggests you should never take it personally when you deal with a negative person. I think it’s a little more complicated than that. You can’t write off everything someone says because they’re insensitive or untactful. An abrasive person can come at you in the worst possible way with a valid point.

    Accept that you don’t deserve the excessive emotions in someone’s tone, but weigh their ideas with a willingness to learn. Some of the most useful lessons I’ve learned came from people I wished weren’t right. When you give someone credit who deep down doesn’t think they deserve it, you may inspire a profound shift in how they interpret the world.

    9. Act instead of just reacting.

    Oftentimes we wait until someone gets angry or depressed to address their persistently negative way of being. If you know someone who seems to deal with difficult thoughts or feelings (as demonstrated in their behavior) don’t wait for a situation to be part of the solution.

    Give them a compliment for something they did well. Remind them of a moment when they were happy–as in Remember when you scored that touchdown during the company picnic? That was awesome! You’re more apt to want to boost them up when they haven’t brought you down. This may help mitigate that later, and also give them a little relief from their pain.

    10. Maintain the right relationship based on reality as it is.

    With my friend, I’m always wishing she could be more positive. I consistently put myself in situations where I feel bad because I want to help. Because I want her to be happy. I’ve recently realized the best I can do is accept her as she is, let her know I believe in her ability to be happy, and then give her space to make the choice.

    That means hanging up after I’ve made an effort to help. Or cutting a night short if I’ve done all I can and it’s draining me. Hopefully she’ll want to change some day. Until then, all I can do is love her, while loving myself enough to take care of my needs. Which often means putting them first.

    I’ve learned you can’t always saved the world. But you can make the world a better place by working on yourself–by becoming self-aware, tapping into your compassion, and protecting your positive space. You may even help negative people by fostering a sense of peace their negativity can’t pierce.

    Found Here: http://tinybuddha.com/blog/how-to-deal-with-negative-people-or-difficult-people/


    Cute little read on C7!

    Wading through cyberspace
    Mankato’s SEOwhat.com helps clients gain visibility in the online arena

    Margaret Steck
    By Margaret Steck

    Published: Thursday, October 28, 2010

    Updated: Thursday, October 28, 2010 11:10

    SEO Katie Erickson, MSU Reporter
    Catherine Seven, middle, sits with two employees at the SEOwhat.com offices in downtown Mankato. The small company offers a full online public relations service from behind a short bank of computers.

    If you aren’t already aware, the Age of the Internet is upon us. As students graduate every semester and go on to bigger and better things with their professional careers, it is important that they know a thing or two about marketing online. Very few know this better than CEO of SEOwhat.com, Catherine Seven.

    Seven, a Mankato native, got her start in the dot com business 12 years ago in Seattle while working with a start-up company that was selling advertising online. That was when her dream became a reality, but the dream became a nightmare after the dot com bust. Despite the fall, Seven didn’t give up on the Internet world. She took her knowledge and experience and created SEOwhat.com, located on South Front Street, in 2003.

    SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization and is the practice that makes websites search-engine friendly. The search engines pick up keywords by using a series of complicated algorithms, which allow their robots to “crawl” or “sweep” through the Internet and arrange search results according to relevance. It is Seven’s job to figure out how all of the search engine engineers think and how they want to optimize their sites.

    “Google’s algorithms just changed about two weeks ago and I’m watching my Twitter feeds and I’m watching everyone flip out, but I’m not because the way we do things,” Seven said. “I do things the way Google wants them. At the end of the day, I am going by their rules and making sure we have links and good and fresh content and all the different anchor texts and variables that make up Google’s algorithms that make you have better rankings.”

    Unlike some who conduct mass spams, have link farms (a group of websites that hyperlink to other sites in the group) and use other black hat SEO techniques, Seven and her staff only go by white hat methods that don’t try to deceive the system.

    “Our rankings are going to take anywhere between three and six months before you start seeing results instead of three weeks because what we are doing is going to work and it is going to stick,” Seven said. “So when Google’s algorithm does change, you may drop a little bit because everyone drops when they shuffle their database, but you’re not going to see yourself completely gone all the way out. That’s the big difference between what I do and everybody else.”

    SEOwhat.com’s business does not stop at search engine optimization. It also offers search engine marketing (SEM), social media optimization (SMO), press releases, consulting, web design and graphic design, making the business a one-stop-shop for marketing and public relations on the Internet.

    “What we have been doing for the last seven years is taking a marketing firm or a public relations firm or agency and putting it online,” Seven said. “We do everything a PR agency would do for you here, but online.”

    In this ever-evolving world, what we learn in class may not be what is being rolled out in today’s market. The key is to stay informed and continue to educate oneself in order to stay competitive.

    “Use the knowledge that you learn in college, but still use reality as how you are going to get your career, because a textbook is only going to get you so far,” Seven said. “It’s going to give you the basics, it’s going to teach you how to take a left turn and use your turn signal, but it’s going to take your brain to be able to turn the wheel. You have to go forward in life with a mind that is open to change.”


    Werking hard….

    So I am trying to test and test more…. for the new Page Rank change that happend with Google, so please ya all that read my blog relize you may see some strange things, since I use this blog as a test…. but yes I am odd but bare with me on some posts.

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