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    Don't Let Tax Time Stress Wear You Down
    Tips That Make Tax Season EasierApril 15 is not that far away, time to gather your receipts, pay stubs, bills and W2 forms. As the tax return filing stealthily approaches, anxiety over filing our taxes is a certainty in all our lives.Get this years papers in order before you are looking at next year. Here is my annual list of ten tips to alleviate these tax time headaches.1. Create a Checklist: Make a list of everything you need to effectively complete your taxes. Your list should consist of such categories as deductions, business expenses, receipts, W2 forms and any changes made in the tax code from the previous year. Make sure it reflects your spending habits .2. Begin Tax Preparation Early: At the beginning of each new year, get an expandable folder. Label each pocket according to what is in it – receipts, W2s, pay stubs, business expenses, home expenses and other important documents. Pendaflex has a great solution with their Tax Box, it is a perfect tool for filing your tax time records since it comes complete with hanging folders, file folders, index cards, check file and a project organizer inside it’s own plastic box.3. Sort as You Go: File your papers in their respective pockets as you get them. If you organize your papers as you go, the task of doing your taxes will be much simpler. If ev
    s repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the prod

    Motivation at Work Secrets for Good Managers
    Do you ever have those days at your job when everything just seems pointless? It is the same old thing day in and day out, and you wonder why you are doing what you are doing for a living.Well, believe it or not, this happens to everyone at some point or another. Even with the most rewarding careers, life can start to get boring and hum drum after time.So how does a person obtain and maintain motivation at work? Set your goals to get specific jobs and projects done at your workplace. Give yourself deadlines to meet these goals. Sometimes a project is so overwhelming that it is hard to get motivated to do it.The bottom line is, if you value your job, you need to set standards and goals to get your responsibilities completed. Also, a positive attitude is extremely important. It spreads to the other co-workers, too.As a manager, your responsibility is to get specific jobs done through the employees. So the same goes as with the employee. Setting goals is the first step to motivating yourself and your staff.Another issue is rules, regulations and policies. We have to have some rules and guidelines to follow, however, sometimes we have too many rules and some do not even make sense to us. It is a good idea to put into place only rules and policies that are a necessity for the good of the caus
    Your hands shake, and drip with sweat. Your voice cracks. Your legs threaten to collapse. Your mind races. Your heart drowns out all other sounds with its powerful thumping. Any minute now, the audience will break into small groups to discuss what a loser you are!

    You've got stagefright.

    Stagefright in its various forms is the most common phobia in the United States. It's often called "performance anxiety" because it doesn't really have to involve a stage. Anyone whose activity brings them to the attention of an audience, however large or small, can experience stagefright.

    Stagefright is most commonly experienced as a fear of public speaking. However, people whose career or other interests require them to take the "stage" for other purposes, i.e., actors, musicians, athletes, etc, will experience stagefright as an impairment of their own particular activity. A mime, for instance, can experience stagefright even though no speaking is involved. The best man at a wedding can experience it, even though all eyes are on the bride. So can a golfer, especially on the first tee.

    Stagefright is very treatable. However, many people just suffer with it, with all the limitations and negative emotions it imposes. They either don't realize help is available; they fear they can't be helped; or they think it will be too hard.

    While everyone's situation will vary in some ways, I find that there are four general ways in which people experience stagefright.

    Some people go to great extremes to avoid any possibility of being "on stage". I've worked with clients who carefully chose all their college classes to avoid any presentations, and picked a career which wouldn't ever include any public speaking. These people usually succeed in avoiding presentations, but often have regrets about the way this fear controlled their life choices. If you belong to this group, you are probably troubled by both fear and regrets.

    There are others whose fear is less extreme. They don't let the fear dictate their major career and life choices. But they do strive to avoid the occasional presentation at work, the wedding toast, and the leadership of a civic group. They usually keep their fear a secret, and try to find ways around it. As a result, they never feel secure. The problem hangs over their head for lengthy periods of their life, even though they rarely actually give a presentation. If you belong to this group, you probably suffer considerable anticipatory fear and shame.

    Then there are those whose professional success has led them to the necessity of public speaking, even though they would rather avoid it: the attorneys, engineers, architects, authors, doctors, managers, teachers and others who have become so successful that they are increasingly requested and pressed to present their talents and knowledge before an audience. If you belong to this group, you must either develop the ability to face an audience, or cut short the successful arc of your career.

    And finally, there are people with a passion for creative expression. In this group we find performing artists such as musicians, singers, actors and comedians. None of them are immune to stagefright. If you belong to this group and develop stagefright, you face a dilemma which cannot be avoided. Your spirit urges you to seek out the audience, even as your body warns you to stand back.

    The good news is that stagefright is common and treatable. If you want to overcome this problem, you can! But in order to overcome it, you must first understand how it works.

    The hallmark of stagefright is, of course, the panic symptoms you experience during a presentation or performance. But there is more to stagefright, and if you’re going to overcome it, you need to become aware of all its parts. Stagefright actually consists of four components, and you have to work with each of them if you’re going to overcome the problem. The four components of stagefright are:

    Anticipation: the nervous, negative, and largely unrealistic thoughts and mental images you experience in the minutes, hours, days and weeks (sometimes months!) before a scheduled performance.

    Avoidance: when you avoid performance situations because of fear, you unfortunately strengthen and maintain the stagefright. It prevents you from having the helpful experience of coping with the anxiety, and leaves you instead with the impression that you would have experienced a horrible disaster if you had actually tried to perform.

    Anxiety and Panic: the fearful symptoms you experience during your performance before an audience. These symptoms may include physical sensations such as labored breathing, sweating, racing heart and dizziness, as well as numerous fearful thoughts about how poorly you are doing and how the audience is repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the produ

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    negative emotions it imposes. They either don't realize help is available; they fear they can't be helped; or they think it will be too hard.

    While everyone's situation will vary in some ways, I find that there are four general ways in which people experience stagefright.

    Some people go to great extremes to avoid any possibility of being "on stage". I've worked with clients who carefully chose all their college classes to avoid any presentations, and picked a career which wouldn't ever include any public speaking. These people usually succeed in avoiding presentations, but often have regrets about the way this fear controlled their life choices. If you belong to this group, you are probably troubled by both fear and regrets.

    There are others whose fear is less extreme. They don't let the fear dictate their major career and life choices. But they do strive to avoid the occasional presentation at work, the wedding toast, and the leadership of a civic group. They usually keep their fear a secret, and try to find ways around it. As a result, they never feel secure. The problem hangs over their head for lengthy periods of their life, even though they rarely actually give a presentation. If you belong to this group, you probably suffer considerable anticipatory fear and shame.

    Then there are those whose professional success has led them to the necessity of public speaking, even though they would rather avoid it: the attorneys, engineers, architects, authors, doctors, managers, teachers and others who have become so successful that they are increasingly requested and pressed to present their talents and knowledge before an audience. If you belong to this group, you must either develop the ability to face an audience, or cut short the successful arc of your career.

    And finally, there are people with a passion for creative expression. In this group we find performing artists such as musicians, singers, actors and comedians. None of them are immune to stagefright. If you belong to this group and develop stagefright, you face a dilemma which cannot be avoided. Your spirit urges you to seek out the audience, even as your body warns you to stand back.

    The good news is that stagefright is common and treatable. If you want to overcome this problem, you can! But in order to overcome it, you must first understand how it works.

    The hallmark of stagefright is, of course, the panic symptoms you experience during a presentation or performance. But there is more to stagefright, and if you’re going to overcome it, you need to become aware of all its parts. Stagefright actually consists of four components, and you have to work with each of them if you’re going to overcome the problem. The four components of stagefright are:

    Anticipation: the nervous, negative, and largely unrealistic thoughts and mental images you experience in the minutes, hours, days and weeks (sometimes months!) before a scheduled performance.

    Avoidance: when you avoid performance situations because of fear, you unfortunately strengthen and maintain the stagefright. It prevents you from having the helpful experience of coping with the anxiety, and leaves you instead with the impression that you would have experienced a horrible disaster if you had actually tried to perform.

    Anxiety and Panic: the fearful symptoms you experience during your performance before an audience. These symptoms may include physical sensations such as labored breathing, sweating, racing heart and dizziness, as well as numerous fearful thoughts about how poorly you are doing and how the audience is repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the prod

    Avoid Common Real Estate Investment Mistakes
    No matter if you are a seasoned real estate investor or a first-time buyer, there are some mistakes that you should watch out for.Buying a home is a true investment. You hope that you buy low, gain value and sell high. But like any investment, there is risk. Market conditions, mortgage terms and property location will factor into how much risk you will face. Here are some common mistakes that people make when buying properties.1. Leaping with your eyes shutYou shouldn't ever put your money into something without knowing what you are getting, where you are going and what you want out of it. You need to know what you are buying, why you are buying and what you are going to do with it. Too many people set out to "flip" a home without any idea where they are going with it.Look to the long term, not just tomorrow. Figure out what you want to buy. Decide how long you want to own the property. Set goals and make plans. If you are investing, you better know what rate of return you want and when you will exit.2. Thinking that investments are for the richInvestments aren't limited to those with endless reserves of money. If you have five dollars, you can invest in something. You can buy a home without much money. You can buy an investment property without much money. There are many good loans out there
    ion. If you belong to this group, you probably suffer considerable anticipatory fear and shame.

    Then there are those whose professional success has led them to the necessity of public speaking, even though they would rather avoid it: the attorneys, engineers, architects, authors, doctors, managers, teachers and others who have become so successful that they are increasingly requested and pressed to present their talents and knowledge before an audience. If you belong to this group, you must either develop the ability to face an audience, or cut short the successful arc of your career.

    And finally, there are people with a passion for creative expression. In this group we find performing artists such as musicians, singers, actors and comedians. None of them are immune to stagefright. If you belong to this group and develop stagefright, you face a dilemma which cannot be avoided. Your spirit urges you to seek out the audience, even as your body warns you to stand back.

    The good news is that stagefright is common and treatable. If you want to overcome this problem, you can! But in order to overcome it, you must first understand how it works.

    The hallmark of stagefright is, of course, the panic symptoms you experience during a presentation or performance. But there is more to stagefright, and if you’re going to overcome it, you need to become aware of all its parts. Stagefright actually consists of four components, and you have to work with each of them if you’re going to overcome the problem. The four components of stagefright are:

    Anticipation: the nervous, negative, and largely unrealistic thoughts and mental images you experience in the minutes, hours, days and weeks (sometimes months!) before a scheduled performance.

    Avoidance: when you avoid performance situations because of fear, you unfortunately strengthen and maintain the stagefright. It prevents you from having the helpful experience of coping with the anxiety, and leaves you instead with the impression that you would have experienced a horrible disaster if you had actually tried to perform.

    Anxiety and Panic: the fearful symptoms you experience during your performance before an audience. These symptoms may include physical sensations such as labored breathing, sweating, racing heart and dizziness, as well as numerous fearful thoughts about how poorly you are doing and how the audience is repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the prod

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    f course, the panic symptoms you experience during a presentation or performance. But there is more to stagefright, and if you’re going to overcome it, you need to become aware of all its parts. Stagefright actually consists of four components, and you have to work with each of them if you’re going to overcome the problem. The four components of stagefright are:

    Anticipation: the nervous, negative, and largely unrealistic thoughts and mental images you experience in the minutes, hours, days and weeks (sometimes months!) before a scheduled performance.

    Avoidance: when you avoid performance situations because of fear, you unfortunately strengthen and maintain the stagefright. It prevents you from having the helpful experience of coping with the anxiety, and leaves you instead with the impression that you would have experienced a horrible disaster if you had actually tried to perform.

    Anxiety and Panic: the fearful symptoms you experience during your performance before an audience. These symptoms may include physical sensations such as labored breathing, sweating, racing heart and dizziness, as well as numerous fearful thoughts about how poorly you are doing and how the audience is repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the prod

    Strategies For Winning A Personal Injury Claim
    When you file a personal injury claim you are more than likely doing so because you are injured and want compensation for those injuries. A personal injury settlement is very important to you because you have more than likely lost income due to your injury not to mention future income because you are no longer able to work as you once did. This is important and you need to find a Boston personal injury attorney who will help you win your personal injury settlement. Remember that there are many Boston personal injury lawyers in the area and you should consult with the best ones in order to have the best strategy for winning your personal injury claim.There are many strategies for winning a personal injury claim, but one of the most important is to win the accident solicitor over. When he/she talks with you about your injuries don’t just mention what injury or injuries you have and be done. Instead, really talk to the accident solicitor and inform them of what happened to you. Make it a narrative and express how you feel about your injuries. Tell the solicitor how now you feel like less of a person because you can’t even walk around and do things for yourself. Or, say that you feel helpless and guilty because your spouse now has full responsibility of the income and taking care of the family. Really get the emotions out and show
    s repelled by your nervousness and incompetence.

    Appraisal: the period after a performance, when you come to some conclusions about how you did.

    Let's consider the nature of stagefright.

    In the first place, you should know that stagefright, like most anxiety disorders, is believed to stem from a genetic predisposition. This simply means that some people are good candidates to develop stagefright, by virtue of their physiology, and others are very unlikely to ever experience it.

    But for those who do have such a predisposition, stagefright is the product of a particular way of thinking about the performance situation, and a particular way of trying to handle it as well.

    It’s the product of thinking of the performance situation as a threat, rather than a challenge. Thinking of it as a threat sets off primitive “fight or flight” responses which would ordinarily help you fight off a predator, such as a rush of adrenaline, diversion of blood to your major muscles, faster heartbeat, and so on.. If you really were getting into a fight, all those changes would be helpful. But if you’re trying to give a speech, they tend to get in your way!

    Stagefright is also the product of focusing on yourself, and your anxiety, rather than on your presentation or performance. When you’re focused on yourself to an excessive degree, you’re unable to immerse yourself in the role of the performer. Instead, you worry about how you look and sound; you imagine all the most critical thoughts, and attribute them to the audience; and then you try to control your anxiety by a variety of means. For instance, people will: cut short their presentation; rush through it; hand it over to a co-presenter; read it word for word; and avoid any interaction, including eye contact, with the audience.

    The unfortunate aspect of these efforts is that they usually make the stagefright worse. They make the presentation less interesting, and create a barrier between the speaker and the audience. They lead the speaker to feel more alone, and therefore more self conscious and fearful.

    If instead, the speaker could turn her focus to the task at hand, and get fully immersed in that, the process of communicating with the audience would flow more smoothly.

    Why don’t people do that? Why don’t they just turn their focus to their performance?

    It’s because they have the idea that it’s not okay to feel anxious up there, and they think they have to get rid of that anxiety. They think that, if they could get rid of the anxiety, then they could perform.

    For a lot of people, it’s because they tend to think that the anxiety they have beforehand, the anticipatory anxiety, is only the start of the problem. They’re plagued by this thought: “If I’m this nervous now, how much worse will it be when I start talking?”. They assume that their anticipation is the low point of the anxiety, and that it will increase terribly once they get on stage.

    The truth is, for most people, it’s exactly the reverse. The anticipation is the worst part of the anxiety. Once they get involved in the performance, they start to feel better, not worse.

    But just hearing that isn’t usually enough to allow someone to manage the fear. A person with stagefright is driven to struggle against their fear.

    That’s the problem.

    A successful treatment for stagefright will help a person to accept, and work with, the fear, while they give their main focus to the performance.

    Here, by way of example, are a few coping techniques for stagefright.

    TIPS FOR COPING WITH STAGEFRIGHT

    1. If you want to talk (or sing, act, etc.), you have to breathe. And if you want to do these things calmly, you'll need to breathe diaphragmatically. This won't always come naturally, and you'll probably need to practice. You can find everything you need to learn how to do this at DIAPHRAGMATIC BREATHING.

    2. Remind yourself that the audience isn’t there to see or hear you, unless you're a very famous person (or your mom is in the audience). They're just here to see the person who's talking about this topic (or playing this piece, etc.). Today that happens to be you. That's not really important to them.

    3. Expect, and accept, that you will feel anxious, especially at first. That's OK. If you allow yourself to work WITH the anxiety, not against it, you'll be able to calm down and proceed. If you resist the anxiety, you'll make more trouble for yourself.

    4. Establish the right focus for your task. What do I mean by focus? I mean what you pay attention to as you engage in your performance. This, unlike the other three tips above, will vary depending on what kind of performance you're engaged in.

    * If you are giving a talk, your focus should be your material and the audience reaction to it, because your task is to inform or persuade them. You therefore want to be aware of how they are responding, so that you can connect with them in various ways.

    *Establish contact with the audience through eye contact and talking directly to them. Ask them questions to get them involved in your talk (i.e., How many of you here have ever had this experience...?) While your natural instinct will probably be to avoid the audience as much as possible, you will actually feel LESS anxiety once you get the audience involved with you.

    *If your task is a performance art, your focus will be different. It's not your job to persuade or inform the audience. You want to perform a piece for their enjoyment. In this case, you can ignore the audience, and turn your focus to your music, or your character, and leave the audience to enjoy your performance on their own.

    *Where you don't want your focus to be is on yourself and your anxiety. This is why it's so useful to develop an accepting attitude toward the anxiety, to take a few steps to calm yourself a little, and then shift your focus to the task at hand.

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