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Own up to your faults, no one is perfect!

Those who judge should look in their own closet of ghosts, first!

Be the best you can be and don't let anyone make you feel you don't matter enough!

Trust and love those who stand behind you through rough times, don't let others bring you down!

Don't ever let others place blaim on your shoulders, when it's theirs to own up to!

If you need to cry for others offending comments.. do it freely and be done with it. 

Get over it and move on!!But above all else, be true and love yourself... no one else is forever!

Enjoy life to the fullest, you never know when you're gonna take that last breath!

 

MyTeddies2000 aka Chrissie

An Opportunity

It is better to be prepared for an opportunity and not have one then to have an opportunity and not be prepared for it.

I THINK I CAN!

I THINK I CAN! Whether you think you can or think you can not... You're Right!
Learning is finding out what you already know. Doing is demonstrating that you know it. Teaching is reminding others that they know it just as well as you. We are all Learners, Doer's, & Teachers.

A Very Simple Secret

Here is a very simple secret; it is only with the heart that one can see rightly, what is essential is inivisible to the eye.

Live Your Dream

People who say it can not be done should no interupt those who are doing it.
1. You will receive a body. You may like it or hate it, but it will be yours for the entire period of this time around. 2. You will learn lessons. You are enrolled in a full-time informal school called Life. Each day in this school you will have the opprotunity to learn lessons. You may like the lessons of think them irrelevant and stupid. 3. There are no mistakes, only lessons. Growth is a process of trial and errors: Experimentation. The "failed" experiments are as much a part of the process as the experiment that ultimately "works." 4. A lesson is repeated until learned. A lesson will be presented to you in various forms until you have learned it. When you have learned it, you can then go on to the next lesson. 5. Learning lessons does not end. There is no part of life that does not contain its lessons. If you are alove, there are lessons to be learned. 6. "There" is no better than "here." When your "there" has become a "here," you will simply obtain another "there" that will again look better than "here." 7. Others are merely mirrors of you. You can not love or hate something about another person unless it refelcts something you love or hate about yourself. 8. What you make of you life is up to you. You have all the tools and resources you need. What you do with them is up to you. The choice is yours alone. 9. Your answers lie inside you. The answers to Life's questions lie inside you. All you need to do it look, listen and trust. 10. You will forget all this. By: Cherie Carter-Scott
Donna's fourth-grade classroom looked like many others I had seen in the past. Students sat in five rows of six desks. The teacher's desk was in the front and faced the students. The bulletin board featured the student work. In most respect it appeared to be a typically tradional elementary classroom. Yet something seemed different that day I entered it for the first time. There seemed to be an undercurrent of excitement. Donna was a veteran small-town Michigan school-teacher only two years away from retirement. In addition, she was a volunteer participant in a country-wide staff development project I had organized and facilitated. The training focused on language arts ideas that would empower students to feel good about themselves and take charge of their lives. Donna's job was to attend training sessions and implement the concepts being presented. My job was to make classroom visitations and encourage implementation. I took an empty seat in the back of the room and watched. All the students were working on a task, filling a sheet of notebook paper with thoughts and ideas. The ten-year-old student closest to me was filling her page with "I Can'ts." "I can't kick the soccer ball past second base." "I can't do long division with more than three numerals." "I can't get Debbie to like me." Her page was half full and she showed no signs of letting up. She worked on with determination and persistence. I walked down the row glancing at students' papers. Everyone was writing sentences describing things they couldn't do. "I can't do 10 push-ups." "I can't hit one over the left-field fence." "I can't eat only one cookie." By this time, the activity engaged my curiosity, so I decided to check with the teacher to see what was going on. As I approached her, I noticed that she too was busy writing. I felt it best not to interupt. "I can't get John's mother to come in for a teacher conference." "I can't get my daughter to put gas in the car." "I can't get Alan to use words instead of fists." Thwarted in my efforts to determine why students and teacher dwelling on the negative instead of writing the more positive "I Can" statements, I returned to my seat and continued my observations. Students wrote for another ten minutes. Most filled their page. Some started another. "Finish the one you're on and don't start a new one," were the instructions Donna used to signal the end of the activity. Students were then instructed to fold their papers in half and bring them to the front. When students reached the teacher's desk, they placed their " I Can't" statements into an empty shoe box. When all the students papers were collected, Donna added hers. She put the lid on the box, tucked it under her arm and headed out the door and down the hall. Students followed the teacher. I followed the students. Halfway down the hall the procession stopped. Donna entered the custodian's room, rummaged around and came out with a shovel. Shovel in one hand, shoe box in the other, Donna marched the students out of the school to the farthest corner of the playground. There they began to dig. They were going to bury their "I Can'ts"! The digging took over ten minutes because most of the fourth graders wanted a turn. When the hole approached three-feet deep, the digging ended. The box of "I Can'ts" was placed in position at the bottome of the hole and quickly covered with dirt. Thirty-one 10 and 11 year-olds stood around the freshly dug grave site. Each had at least one page full of "I Can'ts" in the shoe box, four-feet under. So did their teacher. At this point Donna announced, "Boys and girls, please join hands and bow your heads." The students complied. They quickly formed a circle around the grave, creating a bond with their hands. They lowered their heads and waited. Donna delivered the eulogy. "Friends, we gather today to honor the memory of 'I Can't.' While he was with us on earth, he touched the lives of everyone. some more than others. His name, unfortunately, has been spoken in every public building - schools, city halls, state capitols and yes, even The White House. "We have provided "I Can't', with a final resting place and a headstone that contains his epitaph. He is survived by his brothers and sister, 'I Can', 'I Will', and 'I'm Going to Right Away'. They are not as well known as their famous relative and are certainly not as strong and powerful yet. Perhaps some day, with your help, they will make an even bigger mark on the world. "May 'I Can't' rest in peace and may everyone present pick up their lives and move forward in his absence. Amen." As I listened to the eulogy I realized that these students would never forget this day. The activity was symbolic, a metaphor for life. It was a right-brain experience that would stick in the unconscious and conscious mind forever. Writing "I Can'ts," burying them and hearing the eulogy. That was a major effort on the part of this teacher. And she wasn't done yet. At the conclusion of the eulogy she turned the students around, marched them back into the classroom and held a wake. They celebrated the passing of "I Can't" with cookies, popcorn and fruit jiuces. As part of the celbration, Donna cut out a large tombstone from butcher paper. She wrote the words "I Can't" at the top and put RIP in the middle. The date was added at the bottom. The paper tombstone hung in Donna's classroom for the remainder of the year. On those rare occasions when a student forgot and said, "I Can't, Donna simply pointed to the RIP sign. The student then remembered that "I Can't" was dead and chose to rephrase the statement. I wasn't one of Donna's students. She was one of mine. Yet that day I learned an enduring lesson from her. Now, years later, whenever I hear the phrase, "I Can't", I see images of that fourth-grade funeral. Like the students, I remember that "I Can't" is dead. By: Chick Moorman
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