September 2011

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For most of my life, I have struggled like many others with cultivating self discipline.  This  bothered me a great deal for years because I am a big dreamer and a lack of discipline will hinder and stop all progress towards any goal.  For years I tried everything from self judgment to prayer only to find myself back into the same old habits.

When you lack self discipline, you always have good intentions, you might even get started on a project or a diet or exercise but then fall off at some point.  And of course, we always have reasons or explanations for why we aren’t doing what we need to do to make our dreams come true.  Without self discipline dreams will always remain just that, a dream.

Eventually, I decided to do a daily affirmation to change this behavior.  Daily I affirm, “I am disciplined and I am focused”.   I am now growing stronger in self discipline then ever before; completely without struggle.   Daily affirmations are not a magic pill.  However, I do believe that our thoughts create our reality.  Over time, what we feed our subconscious becomes the manifestation of our reality.    I have proven this theory to myself many times over the years using daily affirmations and yet I am still amazed.

I guess that’s why I was so thrilled to have found, “The Master Key System”, by Charles F. Haanel.  My gift to you when you sign up for “The Negro Queen” Newsletter.  This book has changed my life.  Each time a read a passage from this book, I feel empowered.  The Master Key System was written c. 1912-1917 and has been said to be the inspiration behind the movie, The Secret.

I no longer struggle to change things that I don’t want in my life.  I choose to believe in the power of my thoughts, therefore, I am creating the life I want by purposely choosing my thoughts and eliminating those thoughts that do not serve me.  If you have read the “Master Key System”, please comment on this wonderful treasure.

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Ambassador Susan E. Rice serves as the U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations. She was unanimously confirmed to this position by the U.S. Senate on January 22, 2009.  Ambassador Rice believes that the United Nations has a vital role in advancing international peace and security and is committed to working to make the United Nations a more perfect forum to address the most pressing global challenges: to promote peace, to support development and democracy, and to strengthen respect for human rights. She has outlined four primary areas of focus: strengthening the capacity of the UN to undertake complex peace operations effectively; addressing climate change; preventing the spread or use of nuclear weapons and working to meet the goals of the Nonproliferation Treaty; and combating poverty, disease, violence and genocide.

Rice attended National Cathedral School, a prep academy in Washington, D.C. She excelled in academics, becoming her class valedictorian, and showed her aptitude in the politic realm as president of the student council. She also loved athletics, competing in three different sports, and became a star point guard on the basketball team.  After graduation, Rice attended Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. In college, she pushed herself to excel. She not only earned Departmental Honors and University Distinction, but also became a Harry S. Truman scholar, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and earned a Rhodes scholarship. She turned the heads of top administrators when she created a fund that withheld alumni donations until the university either stopped their investments in companies doing business in South Africa, or the country ended apartheid.

After she received her bachelor’s degree in history in 1986, she went on to attend University of Oxford in Oxfordshire, England. Here she earned her M.Phil and D.Phil in international relations, and wrote a dissertation that examined Rhodesia’s transition from white rule. Her paper won the Royal Commonwealth Society’s Walter Frewen Lord Prize for outstanding research in the field of Commonwealth History, as well as the Chatham House-British International Studies Association Prize for the most distinguished doctoral dissertation in the United Kingdom in the field of International Relations.

She finished her schooling in 1990, and started work as an international management consultant at McKinsey & Company in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. On Septmber 12, 1992, she married her Stanford romantic interest, Ian Cameron, who was working as a television producer in Toronto for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The couple lived in Canada until 1993, when Rice took a job with the National Security Council in Washington, D.C., under President Clinton.

Courtesy of Biography.com

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You Are What You Think

I remember growing up, always hearing the phrase, “You are what you eat”.  That makes sense, right?  I mean, what we put into our bodies, we know, becomes a part of us.  I’ve also come to believe that our metabolizing of food starts before we begin eating since what we think about what we eat [...]

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Sy Smith – The Art of You

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