DECISION MAKING
Making decision sometimes can be the last thing people want to do. The fear of making the wrong decision will always haunt you when you have to make certain decisions. What i personally realized is that faking and decision making somehow can work hand in hand.
Lets take for example, Guy A has to decide whether he should get attached with Girl A or not. If he were to get attached, then he might upset other girls who love him too. But if he choose not to then it would upset Girl A. Decisions will and can affect others.
So how does faking actually work hand in hand with decision making? Easy, Before you put yourselve in a situation you have to make decision... you just fake the feelings you have over someone. Tell yourselve that you ain't got any feelings for any girls. Smile when you're telling this to yourselve. Trust me, it works. The smiling action is an essential one. Just like a sandwich, you need the bread to make a sandwich right... and in this case, the smile is the Bread...
For more tips on how you can be more successful in faking, just drop me an email.
Anyway, if anyone were to come across a book titled... 'Faking Smart' by Dwight Shrewd, do inform me. I'm searching for that book.
trivias
How did the practice of tipping begin?
The practice probably goes back to the first time one Neanderthal held a rock open for another Neanderthal. Or at least, as some evidence suggests, to the Roman Empire. The term has also been linked (though not by all word historians) to 18th-century England, where eating and drinking establishments put out brass urns inscribed with the phrase "To Insure Promptitude" (T.I.P.) for customers to leave money in.
According to this article by The New Yorker's James Surowiecki, tipping spread widely in the U.S. after the Civil War, despite those "who considered it a toxic vestige of Old World patronage." Back then, the practice was actually banned by six states.
Not so today. Last week we spotted a tip jar sitting on the counter at our dry cleaners. What's next? Sending in a little something to underpaid web writers who pen useful daily editorial features?
Nahhh.
Sunday, January 21, 2007
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