Birthdays: What to Count
ACTION TO TAKE
Count your new skills instead of candles.
WHY
For adults, the natural
tendency on birthdays is to think in terms of
what we can’t do anymore and how there are fewer years left.
With black humor we count the candles and see if we can blow them all out.
Think back ten years ago. What could you do on a computer then?
(Did you even have a computer then?) Chances are your computer skills
and sophistication are light years ahead of where you were then. Ten years
ago you probably just used your computer for word processing and a few
primitive games. Now computers are your primary source of getting information
and organizing information at work and home. Your search skills have become
savvy,
you can use dozens of programs, and you know how to avoid spam and viruses.
Who said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks?
Ten years ago you probably didn’t have a “mobile” phone. Now you probably
can do all kind of tricks with your cell phone, e.g., managing an address book,
checking phone logs, choosing the ideal dial tone, and possibly using text
messaging.
There are so many other skills you have acquired in the last ten years—
or even since your last birthday. Chances are you have become wiser as well—
making better decisions for yourself and helping others to make better
decisions.
You can focus on what you can’t do or what you can do.
Which makes you feel better?
QUOTES
The ultimate "computer," our own brain, uses only ten watts
of power
--one-tenth the energy consumed by a hundred-watt bulb.
~Paul Valery
HUMOR
A father complained, "When I was a youngster, I was
disciplined by being sent to my
room without supper. But my son has his own color TV, phone, computer and CD
player."
"So what do you do?" asked his friend”
The father replied, "I send him to MY room."
Email from a friend: "CanYouFixTheSpaceBarOnMyKeyboard?"
This article was from:
THE DEFY
AGING NEWSLETTER
Anti-Aging
Psychology
Holistic Health and Wellness
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"Dr. Michael Brickey, The Anti-Aging
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