Learn Where To Begin Speaking Through Having An American Accent

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Révision datée du 8 septembre 2017 à 20:43 par ScottBurnside (discussion | contributions) (Page créée avec « Why did I speak up instead? Both these people did something I found very trying. I had ongoing deliberations with them that seemed to be ongoing on my side alone. In other... »)
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Why did I speak up instead? Both these people did something I found very trying. I had ongoing deliberations with them that seemed to be ongoing on my side alone. In other words, I had correspondences that seemed very one-sided when I needed them to be more two-sided. In the first instance, I needed to finalize a lease for a property after agreeing to rent it to an executive. However, after I accepted his proposal, I had a lot of trouble pinning him down. He disregarded many of my emails, leaving me feeling a bit off balance about our impending deal.

With no prospects for the future, is it any wonder that so many college grads feel lost. This isn't the way it was supposed to be. Higher education was supposed to be the best investment one could make to guarantee a solid future. Any wonder that they feel cheated?

When we are preparing our next speech, we need to pretend like we're getting ready to give a TED talk. Make sure that your speech starts with a though provoking idea. Share stories with your audience so that they get to know the real you. Make sure that you end with a takeaway - what do you want your audience to do?



Check out the hyperlinking to the TED chats, short talks from leading innovators. This American Life is excellent. WNYC Radio Lab is eclectic and fun. Terry Gross' Fresh Aire series is great. The Long Now Foundation has some very interesting programs... kind of egg-heady, but they will put you to sleep pretty fast and truly make you smarter. Want to learn about the history of the Roman Empire? I thought not, but consider this: listening to it will put you to sleep nearly instantly, so search for those kinds of things. Really, the variety is endless, and is infinitely customizable to fit your tastes.

She committed to seeking out and creating room for those kinds of conversations in her life, because in the lack of them, she found it hard to keep her momentum going. It's easy to get in a rut with your coworkers, family members and friends of talking about the mundane. It's easy to get in the mode of the six o'clock news and to see only what isn't working in the world. And, it's really easy to talk about what's going wrong.

Check out the many TEDx videos on the YouTube site such as: Change the Work to Fit the People: Allen Fahden at TEDxSacramento and The game theory/ultra running connection: Lisa Donchak at TEDxSacramento. Or see the videos, Redefining the Support Group: Liz Salmi at TEDxSacramentoSalon and Redefining the Support Group: Liz Salmi at TEDxSacramentoSalon. Eventually, videos of some of the TEDx Sacramento speakers get uploaded to YouTube, usually from previous years.

Replace: If with How: Example: "If I can do this, I can get X." Instead, ask "How should I do this?" (The word How is more positive, confident, faithful, proactive, and solution-based).

Stacy and Clinton get Jessica in front of the dreaded What Not to Wear 360 mirror. She's wearing one of her trademark outfits, with mounds of faux dreadlocks on top of her white blonde hair, rocker tee, black skirt with pink crinoline edging, skull patterned tights and black lace up boots. Asked if the look says "pretty, sexy, mom, hot young wife," etc., Jessica says no to all. It's basically just a way to distract people from looking at her.

4) What would you say if you had no fear? Of course, part of social media is a focus on getting readers, traffic, and subscribers. But, just for instance- what would you say if you had no fear? If you did not care about what people thought, what would you say? Of course, your direct self-expression may turn people off. But were they really the right people anyway?