Sunday, December 2, 2012

Sulat Sa Pader


Mahilig akong magbasa. Ilang milyong beses na rin nakatulong eto para sumaya naman ang boring na buhay ng isang katulad ko. Marami na akong napuntahan mga lugar na hindi ko pa narating sa tanang buhay ko. Salamat sa mga libro,komiks,magazine at ngayon, sa  internet. malaking tulong sa kin yung magbasa. May munting koleksyon ako noon ng Marvel at DC Comics (at iilang local na FUNNY KOMIKS,hehe)  na nagsimula nung grade 4 ako.Kagaya ng iilang adik na katulad ko noong bata ako, di na ako kumakain dati pag recess para lang may maipambili ng comics.Doon ko natutunan maging masinop para makabili ng gusto ko. dun din ako natuto na mang uto ng kaklase para lang maka-arbor ng komiks. :)


Saint Gabriel Academy, Batch '89 here.


Nung grade school din ako  sa St. Gabriel Academy tuwing magsisimula ang school year, laging pumapalag ang bulsa ng erpats ko sa gastusin sa mga school fees, partikular na sa tuiton at school materials. Alam ko yun kaya naman pinahahalagahan ko ung mga libro ko noon. tuwang tuwa ako pag nakita ko na ung set ng libro ko noon. Parang sniper yung mata ko sa pagsipat ng mga titulo nila hanggang sa ma-lock in na ung target ko sa paborito ko: yung mga Literary books. Yung mga world literature. Mahilig ako magbasa ng mga yun pero ewan ko, pinilit ko dati pero talagang di ako nahilig na magbasa ng mga nobela. gusto ko kasi yung mga true-to-life kagaya ng Xerex. Siryoso, mas gusto kong basahin yung mga biographies.


Mistulang mga rare masterpieces at works of art yung hawak ko noon na Superman,Spiderman, Batman,Legion of Superheroes, the Avengers, Justice League of America,Uncanny X-Men at marami pang iba. Tuwang tuwa ako pag may mga malupit na titles akong nakukuha. Di ko ko madiscribe yung nadarama ko nung nabasa ko yung DC's CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS, MAN OF STEEL SERIES NI JOHN BYRNE, yung MARVEL VS DC, Marvel's SECRET WARS at yung DEATH OF SUPERMAN. Feeling ko ang yaman yaman ko. Isang mayamang tao na may-ari ng maraming historically rare possessions !

crisis on the infinite earths(Gisiiiiing Egay !!)

Sa sobrang hilig ko noon pati sa drawing na-addict ako.Walang araw na ginawa ng Diyos na hinde ako nagsayang ng papel sa kakaguhit ng cartoons! Grade One ako nang makilala ko yung pinaka-una kong mga tropa sina Rommel (nalimutan ko na yung apelyido) at Micheal Sevilla. Dun ako natutong magdrawing ng superman na korteng nalantang bulaklak. Basta. Ganun. Pero magaling ako.Hanggang nag-highschool ako sa Notre Dame of Greater Manila, marami rin naman akong pinalanunang art contest.

notre dame de manila




Naalala ko rin noong 2001, naging writer din ako sa local publishing company, sa ATLAS. First script ko noon (title:Telebisyo, isang horror story na napublish sa Hiwaga Komiks, masaya kasi cover story kaagad ! Si Lan Medina yung nagdibuho ng cover.

Ayun.

Hanggang mag-College tuloy-tuloy pa rin yung pagkahilig kong magbasa.

favorite books:

1. Last Days of John Lennon by Frederick Seaman. Sa tingin ko kung meron ka nung THE LOVE YOU MAKE ni Peter Brown, LOVING JOHN ni May Pang at netong librong to, parang alam mo na rin ang kumpletong buhay ni John Lennon at ng The Beatles hanggang sa kahuli-hulihang sandali ng kanyang paghinga. Kung gusto nyo namang malaman yung buhay ng The Beatles pinakamalupit na siguro na mababasa nyo ay yung autobiography nila na The Beatles Anthology Book.

2. Rich Dad Poor Dad ni Robert Kiyosaki - magandang i-analyse ung mga principles neto sa paghawak ng pera. Kung pano eto pwedeng magtrabaho para sa akin at di yung the other way around. Di na importante kung totoong may rich dad nga siya na ama ng kaibigan nya na kino-compare niya sa  biological father niya, ang importante eh yung mga lessons na ibinahagi ni Kiyosaki sa akin.

3. How to Win Friends and Influence People at How to Stop Worrying and Start Living  ni Dale Carnegie. Tama. Pinatos ko din yung mga self-help books partikular na tong Dalawang libro na to ni Pareng Dale.

4. Art of War ni Sun Tzu. di ko pa tapos basahin pero mukhang ok to. malupit at walang awa. Basta.

5. Flashbacks ni Timothy Leary. Nabili ko sa  thrift shop sa Cubao. Sarap basahin pag wala akong ginagawa at di ko alam ang gagawin ko sa buhay.Para saken Mad Genius si Leary.

6. Soul on Ice ni Eldridge Cleaver.Parang kabisado ko na yung Folsom Prison matapos kong basahin to at yung Flashbacks ni Leary.

7. Holy Blood,Holy Grail - Unti-unti kong binasa to. Basahin nyo rin. Hirap i-explain e. Marami nang nagpatayan dahil sa religion. Pero ano nga ba ang katotohanan?

8. Trump: Art of the Deal - Parang Art of War,pero yung laban eh sa business strategies. Kinuwento ni Trump kung pano niya inumpisahan yung Trump Empire niya.

9. The Doors of Perception/Heaven and Hell ni Aldous Huxley. There's more than meets the eye, nuff said.

Joey "Pepe" Smith : Papa was a Rolling Stone

pepe smith
Papa was a Rolling Stone

Joey Pepe Smith, godfather of Pinoy rock, on surviving his abusive alcoholic dad and being the father to five children from three different mothers

By Rome Jorge, Lifestyle Editor

These are dysfunctional times. Today’s young couples strive to be better parents by being nothing like their fathers or their mothers. Work overseas sunders thousands of families. Migration dislocates cultural identities. Yet countless single parents raise exemplary children nonetheless.

The unattainable myth of the ideal Filipino family—long kept artificially intact by church, family and society through guilt and shame at the cost of unhappy spouses enduring abuse, lies and lovelessness—no longer resonates with today’s generation. Those whose stories now ring true are antiheroes—unabashedly flawed and all-too-human. Welcome then for Father’s Day the anti-dad—Joey Pepe Smith.

Known as the godfather of Pinoy rock to today’s generation—thanks to a commercial for extra strong beer and a decades-long rock revival that has youths exploring the genre’s roots—Smith is currently enjoying a renaissance. But what few realize is that the man is also a father who begot five children from three different mothers and a son who survived the abuses of his alcoholic old man.



He is both spawn and sire of rock n’ roll. He had a dysfunctional childhood, just like his children and just like many of us. We too are children of rock—the spiritual descendants of Pepe Smith.

The man is the first to admit he is no poster boy for parenthood: “I’m a loud far cry from being a ‘wholesome’ father. I’m a ‘rock-some’ father. You know, ‘rock-some n’ roll-some.’”

Much of his troubles are the legacy of his own sweet dad.

A boy named Joseph

Smith recalls, “During the 50s and 60s, the all-Filipino family was having its first experiences of broken homes.”

Since time immemorial, there have always been deadbeat dads, wife-beaters and lotharios. But spouses that had once resigned themselves to maltreatment then began to rebel, experiment and find their own ways to happiness. The rock n’ roll era had arrived and it was more than just music. But it was a painful transition and there were casualties. One of them was the young Smith.

“I got teased in school. ‘You don’t have a family cause mom and dad, they split and let you out in the rain,’ they said. All I could do was shrug it off. And one way to shrug it off was to give them the finger,” says the prototypical punk.

Born Joseph William Smith on December 25, 1947 to an American military serviceman and a Filipino mother, he spent his early years in US military bases in the Philippines.

His papa was a rolling stone. “We got to live together for quite some time. He was a good father. But aside from that, he was a drunkard. And he was really violent when he got pissed—very violent. He beat up my mom. They’d get into terrible fights.” It wasn’t just his mother who suffered at father’s hands.

“I’d get a really bad beating every time I did something. I would always get the bad end of a buckled belt. And when he hit, it was bad. Sometimes he said, ‘Go to bed, no supper.’ Our maid had to crawl to bring me food. Because, if by chance, he went out of his room to get a bottle of whisky or beer and saw her sneaking into my room, he’d kick her. ‘Didn’t you hear what I said? My son doesn’t need any dinner,’ he’d say. All I could do was stay in bed ‘til the morrow morning.”

“I thought it was normal. I was naïve then. I was busy with my toys,” he says. Until today, Smith collects model fighter jets. There’s a gleam in his eye when he talks about his collection.

His parent separated when he was about eight years of age. He recalls, “The only time I found out that they were broken up was when my mom had to take me to my grandmother in Kamuning, Quezon City.” Smith never was able to talk to his father as an adult, who went back to the US after the breakup. Up to this day, and despite many tours as musician all over the world through the decades, Smith has never been to America.

“Through the years, as I grew up, sometimes my friends’ dads would be my father figure. But, it’s funny though, I never really missed having a dad,” he assesses. But then he adds, “There are days I reminisce the good times.”

“He always brought me to the flight line—that was in the airbase in Clark—and he’d bring me there early morning before he went to work and me sit right up front and enjoy all the jets that pass through all afternoon.” he recalls, adding, “That’s what I wanted to be when I grew up—a jet fighter pilot.” Smith’s father fought as naval aviator in the Second World War piloting a F8F Bearcat or a F4U Corsair.

It was also his father who let the airwaves get the better of Smith. “Around 1956-1957, I was already old enough to listen to my first transistor radio that my dad bought me. The first songs I was really were able to listen and groove to were by Chuck Berry, Freddy King and Buddy Holly.”

The man has fond memories of walking to school every morning with the sound of rock n’ roll deejay Johnny de Leon wafting through the open windows of his neighbors’ houses. They all listened to the same station, Far East Network of the US military, thus forming a wall of sound on both sides of his street—a stereophonic high for the young Smith as he walked the line.

Smith bursts into song and as he distinctly recalls the moment he first heard Chuck Berry’s “Reeling and Rocking.” “There were times I was walking faster or skipping along to the rock n’ roll beat. I didn’t even notice it at first. I’d hit the end of the song just as I was in front of the classroom,” remembers the man who would later famously sing “Titser’s Enemi No. 1.” The cacophony of his childhood memories continues to reverberate.

Scar tissue

Smith does not believe that his father’s alcoholism had any bearing on his past bouts with chemical dependency. “I was still too young. There were a few times he had friends over drinking. But my mom would pick me up and bring me back to bed. She didn’t want me to get entangled with all those drunkards.” He adds, “I remember, whenever I got drunk. I never seemed to remember him with that.”

In a recent performance in Malolos, Bulacan, Smith is repeatedly offered brandy by an unruly fan who hugs him onstage. He suffers the fool patiently and takes the glass. He pretends to take a sip for the benefit of his fans—lips pursed and dunked into the brandy but unopened—and puts the glass down behind him with its load of alcohol unconsumed. Real or imagined, the sex, drugs and rock n’ roll imagery is part of his lore and Smith does nothing to diminish that. It’s part of the act.

Despite setting a precedent for substance abuse and violence, Smith’s father receives incredulous credit from his son: “One thing he really taught me clear was not to hurt women.”

Today, wisened and weatherworn, Smith still clearly remembers the beating he got during his Second Grade when he stabbed with his pencil the palm of a neighbor’s incorrigible four-year-old daughter nicknamed Ginger. “He yanked me and, bam, he really tore me. I could feel his whole belt and that nasty buckle wrapping around my legs,” he says with a chuckle, telling his stories with animated gestures, onomatopoeic sound effects, character voices and facial expressions.

“Whatever he did to me then, I always look back and say, ‘Hey, that was my proper training from an American GI.’ I was always joking to myself that I could take it all,” he says.

However, the vividness with which he recalls the past betrays wounds that never heal and beatings that still sting. He admits, “The thing that really bothered me was when he spanked or hit me. He really clobbered me.”

Father of mine

The names Smith gave his children hint at the stages in his life. The eldest, 31-year-old Queenie, bears a typical Filipino name befitting an oldest daughter. Twenty-three-year-old Sanya—named after the Sanyasi, devotees of Hinduism—reflects her dad’s flirtation with exotic spiritual movements such as Ananda Marga and Hare Krishna. Born in 1989, Bebop—named after Gene Vincent’s seminal rock hit “Be-Bop-A-Lula”—reveals one of his father’s earliest musical influences. Born two years later, Desiderata—named after the 1920s inspirational prose poem—reflects her father’s effort at wisdom and maturity. The youngest of his children, 16-year-old Delta—named after the Mississippi River Delta, home of the blues—indicates a return to the roots for the old man. “I look at them like a stairwell,” he says. All his children carry the Smith surname.

Smith attests that he gets along with all his children: “No problem at all. I’m so lucky. I’m blessed to have them. I gave them all my love. They, in return, have given me all the respect that I was hoping for.”

As a father, Smith professes having been there for all of them throughout their childhood, save Sanya, who recently has gained fame as a host for a music video show as well as model and host. He explains: “Her mom and I, after she was born, almost a year after, got into a hassle. One day, I went to Clark to play—I was with the Airwaves with Jun Lupito and a couple of other guys. When I got home, they were gone. A few days later, I learned that she had flown to Singapore with Sanya. The next time I saw her again, she was 16 or 17. I flipped out, man. I couldn’t hold back the tears.” Sanya herself only discovered her true genealogy at age 14 when her Swedish stepfather and her mother’s marriage crumbled. Her mother took her back to Baguio for that fateful reunion.

“That’s when I started calling her Panda. She was a fuzzy wuzzy bear. She was happy to see me too,” Smith confides. The two keep in touch regularly, with Sanya often inviting her father to her hosting events.

On raising several children from different mothers, Smith confesses, “I never really thought that would happen to me—collecting women, I mean. But as I went along, you meet someone, she’d swoon over you… and later on you’re dating her. Next thing you know, you open your eyes one morning and you have a baby crying beside you.” It’s still fresh on the man’s mind how it was to change diapers at three in the morning. “Every one of them, from Queenie the eldest to the youngest, I did my share,” he attests. He opines, “That’s probably why they respect me and love me that much.”

But Smith, known as much for his candor as for his graciousness, soon opens up: “When me and my last wife separated, it really hurt, because I was used to having all those kids around me.” He explains, “Those were the days that rock n’ roll seemed to have died down.”

He admits, “Probably, I just became a coward. I couldn’t face all the facts, all the things shoved down my throat. I just decided to run away from home. I tried to find a job so I could bring home something. But of course that didn’t happen. Not after three, four or five years. I was getting the bad end of a the deal.”

Then he finally confesses, “I get violent sometimes, when I get pissed.”

“There was nothing I could do. During their formative years, they sometimes got spoiled by their aunts and uncles. All the bad things fall on me,” he reasons away.

“Right in front of everyone, I started pulling out my belt and hitting ‘em [Delta at around 5-years of age]. Right after, I didn’t want to show her, tears came down my eyes. After I did it, I felt very sorry for myself and for the kid. I had to hug ‘em. Never did it again. I didn’t say sorry, just asked, ‘Why did you want me to do this to you?’” Smith recalls.

After all that reeling and rolling, this strange fruit called Pepe Smith didn’t fall far from his family tree after all.

Many of Smith’s children have taken up careers in music. Besides Sanya’s work as a veejay, his eldest daughter has been singing for hotels and restaurants in Bangkok and Vietnam and his son Bebop is making his first forays into the music world. Today, Smith resides in Baguio with his long time companion Maela who herself has four children from a previous relationship.

The man still does his best to keep in touch with all his children. This year, Smith’s three youngest children came over to Baguio for a reunion. And then of course there’s the rest of us—the children of rock. All we have to do is turn on the radio to connect with our spiritual patriarch for these dysfunctional times. That’s Joey Pepe Smith, man, godfather of us all.

Notre Damer Ako

notre dame of greater manila
Thank God for the imaginative mind. Great films were created. My boredom thrown into the abyss. It's not a problem if I don't have money as long as I have a couple of dvds, i'll be ok. Or cds. Again thank the imaginative minds for great music created with creative thoughts. Arigato and gracias to brilliantness. Let there be sound!

I was surfing the net one day and as rock music filled my ears, i searched for long lost classmates and/or batchmates in my highschool, Notre Dame of Greater Manila.

And what a surprise i got! All i had to do was to search for a former classmates name and wolla, everyone was linked to each other. As I invite every found faces to my account to be my online buddy, a sudden rush of my highschool days floated like endless rain in my kaleidoscope-like memory.A lot has changed,obviously.

Some Damers looked a lot older than the others. Others didn't aged much and looked ridiculously young. Others migrated and looked for fortune in foreign lands. Some married foreigners. Others got fat. Others got thin. Others got h-o-t. Some-- i hardly recognize at all.

But ofcourse everyone grew their own lives. And im happy for us all. I think its safe to say that
we survive and continue to live life in love and war. There are problems and more problems but with each other's support (classmates and friends alike) we stand still loud and proud, for we are Notre Damers.

Mga Wasak Na Terminong Pinoy Na hindi Mo Pa Alam



1. sprikitik - libag na naipon sa relo
2. burnik - buhok sa puwet
3. bultokachi - tubig na bumabalik sa puwet pag nalaglag ang isang malaking ebak
4. urmot - matubig na tae (akala mo utot lang)
5. weneklek - buhok sa utong
6. tripoktik - huling droplets ng ihi
7. iskabru - libag sa ilalim ng boobs
8. baktol - baho galing sa katawan dahil pawisin
9. chikchak - kainin
10. kuntil - sobrang balat sa tenga
11. kuyukot - tumbong
12. chup chup - halikan, sipsipin, lalong gamit ng bakla
13. puyukot - maliliit / mabibilog na piraso ng tae (parang sa pusa)
14. buris - matubig na tae / parang gripo ang puwet
15. tubol - malalaking piraso ng tae
16. tipoktik - huling droplets ng ihe
17. askal - asong kalye
18. asogue - buhok sa kili-kili
19. baktung - bakat utong
20. balakubak - malalaking clumps ng dandruff sa ulo
21. bukengkeng - ewan ko
22. butuytuy - pagkalalaki ang isang bata
23. cuscusin - tangang tao na walang kwenta
24. haliparot - malanding bakla
25. jabarr - pawis ng katawan
26. jabongga - sex
27. jolog - sqwater
28. kaboodle kulangkot
29. kalamantutay - mabahong pangalan
30. kangkungkhernitzz - album ng parokya ni edgar
31. kukarikabu - libag sa ilalim ng boobs
32. mcarthur - taeng bumabalik after mong i-flush
33. ngotngot - spiral cord sa phone
34. pugak - ewan ko
35. sprikitik - libag na naipon sa relos
36. takne - ewan ko
37. tang - burorot na tae na tumalis sa pwet mo
38. tarugo - maitim na "ari"
39. tigidig - pimples sa mukha
40. toneng - sex
41. tutsang - buhok sa butas ng ilong
42. syota - "short time"
43. ulupong - ahas (yata)
44. ulyanin - matandang makalimutin

Pahabol na video mula sa Wasak na show ni Lourd De Veyra at Jun Sabayton, panayam kay idol Rico J Puno sa TV5



Saturday, December 1, 2012

Heirarchy of Thoughts ( Changing Someone's Mind? )

Originally Posted by Marshall

Are those Muslims evil people, or are they people who's good intentions run very different from our own?

I know a lot of Christians who are determined to convert me to Christianity.
There are a lot of Christians who somehow think we can or should convert Iraq to Christianity. I have met these people. They are people who's good intentions are very different from my own.

Think about it. Maybe most of those guys are good inside, with no way to reach an understanding with us.

Marshall, it is supremely difficult (some would say impossible), to get some people to look at things from a different point of view. Personally, I have to try VERY hard to maintain this ability, and even so I do not always succeed. It is human nature to be resistant to change, and this is especially true of one's beliefs. I don't remember where I heard it, or if I have mentioned it before, but there is a hierarchy of thought that I think is prudent to mention here. When you are talking about changing what people think, keep this in mind. I always find it useful.

1) Knowledge (things we know). This is the easiest of thoughts to change. People can know a fact, and very easily change their point of view when presented with new data. Example: A few years ago, I knew that eggs were bad for me. Recently, new studies showed that while egg yolks are bad for me, egg whites are actually very healthy. My knowledge of that fact changed quite easily.

2) Understanding (things we understand). I understand that Carbon Dioxide, as a greenhouse gas, will lead to global warming as its concentration increases in the atmosphere. I have studied this extensively in college. Any attempt to challenge this understanding is met with instant skepticism, since this is data that I have spent a great deal of thought and work on. This understanding can be changed, but it would take a great deal of proof and evidence to overcome my initial hesitation to do so.

3) Belief (things we believe). These are almost impossible to change. I believe that murder is wrong. I believe that human beings should treat each other with respect and compassion. Beliefs form the core of everything that makes us who we are. To change someone's belief is almost impossible and it usually requires very drastic circunstances for this to happen.

The problem facing us (Americans) is that our beliefs are different than those of the people in the Middle East. Very VERY different. And we are trying to get those people to change their beliefs to more closely match our own. This is the most difficult of tasks, and some would argue that it is completely impossible. Our attempts to do so thus far have been met with defiance and violence. To some, their beliefs are so important, that they see violence as the only defense left to them to protect those beliefs.

So to Xnarg and the others here who point to acts of violence and terrorism to disparage all (or a majority) of Muslims in the Middle East, please try to keep this in mind. And also try to put the shoe on the other foot. If the countries in the Middle East were the ones with the power and we the ones without it... how would you react if the Muslims tried to instill their culture in America? Would you react with violence to defend your most cherished beliefs?
__________________

Trying to change someone's mind? Consult the hierarchy of thought. Are you trying to change knowledge. understanding, or belief? Once you figure that out, you'll know how hard of a time you're going to have.

Stupid people don't learn from their mistakes. Smart people learn from their mistakes. Truely intelligent people learn from the mistakes of others. 

Warren Buffet's Advice on How to Get Rich

warren buffet tips on how to get rich 
1. Reinvest Your Profits: When you first make money, you may be tempted to spend it. Don't. Instead, reinvest the profits. Warren Buffett learned this early on. In high school, he and a pal bought a pinball machine to pun in a barbershop. With the money they earned, they bought more machines until they had eight in different shops. When the friends sold the venture, Warren Buffett used the proceeds to buy stocks and to start another small business. By age 26, he'd amassed $174,000 -- or $1.4 million in today's money. Even a small sum can turn into great wealth.

2. Be Willing To Be Different: Don't base your decisions upon what everyone is saying or doing. When Warren Buffett began managing money in 1956 with $100,000 cobbled together from a handful of investors, he was dubbed an oddball. He worked in Omaha, not Wall Street, and he refused to tell his parents where he was putting their money. People predicted that he'd fail, but when he closed his partnership 14 years later, it was worth more than $100 million. Instead of following the crowd, he looked for undervalued investments and ended up vastly beating the market average every single year. To Warren Buffett, the average is just that -- what everybody else is doing. to be above average, you need to measure yourself by what he calls the Inner Scorecard, judging yourself by your own standards and not the world's.

3. Never Suck Your Thumb: Gather in advance any information you need to make a decision, and ask a friend or relative to make sure that you stick to a deadline. Warren Buffett prides himself on swiftly making up his mind and acting on it. He calls any unnecessary sitting and thinking "thumb sucking." When people offer him a business or an investment, he says, "I won't talk unless they bring me a price." He gives them an answer on the spot.

4. Spell Out The Deal Before You Start: Your bargaining leverage is always greatest before you begin a job -- that's when you have something to offer that the other party wants. Warren Buffett learned this lesson the hard way as a kid, when his grandfather Ernest hired him and a friend to dig out the family grocery store after a blizzard. The boys spent five hours shoveling until they could barely straighten their frozen hands. Afterward, his grandfather gave the pair less than 90 cents to split. Warren Buffett was horrified that he performed such backbreaking work only to earn pennies an hour. Always nail down the specifics of a deal in advance -- even with your friends and relatives.

5. Watch Small Expenses: Warren Buffett invests in businesses run by managers who obsess over the tiniest costs. He one acquired a company whose owner counted the sheets in rolls of 500-sheet toilet paper to see if he was being cheated (he was). He also admired a friend who painted only on the side of his office building that faced the road. Exercising vigilance over every expense can make your profits -- and your paycheck -- go much further.

6. Limit What You Borrow: Living on credit cards and loans won't make you rich. Warren Buffett has never borrowed a significant amount -- not to invest, not for a mortgage. He has gotten many heart-rendering letters from people who thought their borrowing was manageable but became overwhelmed by debt. His advice: Negotiate with creditors to pay what you can. Then, when you're debt-free, work on saving some money that you can use to invest.

7. Be Persistent: With tenacity and ingenuity, you can win against a more established competitor. Warren Buffett acquired the Nebraska Furniture Mart in 1983 because he liked the way its founder, Rose Blumkin, did business. A Russian immigrant, she built the mart from a pawnshop into the largest furniture store in North America. Her strategy was to undersell the big shots, and she was a merciless negotiator. To Warren Buffett, Rose embodied the unwavering courage that makes a winner out of an underdog.

8. Know When To Quit: Once, when Warren Buffett was a teen, he went to the racetrack. He bet on a race and lost. To recoup his funds, he bet on another race. He lost again, leaving him with close to nothing. He felt sick -- he had squandered nearly a week's earnings. Warren Buffett never repeated that mistake. Know when to walk away from a loss, and don't let anxiety fool you into trying again.

9. Assess The Risk: In 1995, the employer of Warren Buffett's son, Howie, was accused by the FBI of price-fixing. Warren Buffett advised Howie to imagine the worst-and-bast-case scenarios if he stayed with the company. His son quickly realized that the risks of staying far outweighed any potential gains, and he quit the next day. Asking yourself "and then what?" can help you see all of the possible consequences when you're struggling to make a decision -- and can guide you to the smartest choice.

10. Know What Success Really Means: Despite his wealth, Warren Buffett does not measure success by dollars. In 2006, he pledged to give away almost his entire fortune to charities, primarily the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He's adamant about not funding monuments to himself -- no Warren Buffett buildings or halls. "I know people who have a lot of money," he says, "and they get testimonial dinners and hospital wings named after them. But the truth is that nobody in the world loves them. When you get to my age, you'll measure your success in life by how many of the people you want to have love you actually do love you. That's the ultimate test of how you've lived your life."

5 Ways to Stay Happy


I have a note in my bedroom about five simple ways to be happy. They work well for me and perhaps they may give you some insight about getting unstuck on your path to happiness.
  1. Free your heart from hatred
  2. Free your mind from worries
  3. Live simply
  4. Give more
  5. Expect less