Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Changes


Papaano mo ba hinaharap ang mga pagbabago sa buhay mo?

Madalas we resist changes.

Hindi madaling e- give up ang mga kinasanayan mo na sa araw-araw.
lalo na kung masaya ka na at comfortably sa kung ano ang meron ka sa kasalukuyan.


After almost 6 years sa kumpanyang pinapasukan saksi ako sa mga kasamahan ko sa trabaho kung papaano sila magpalipat- lipat ng lugar ng bitbit  hindi lang ang kanilang mga kagamitan kundi ang  mabigat at nagpupuyos na  damdamin na kung  may pagpipilian lang ay aayawan .I really thought na talagang mahirap siguro talaga.

Until one day mararanasan ko ang pagbabagong ito. I'm leaving my beloved room in Mafraq for another place dahil sa kinakailangan.

Walang ibang makakatulong sa akin tanggapin ng maluwag sa puso ang pagbabagong ito kundi ang aking sarili kung papaano ko ito haharapin.

Then, I started to enumerates all the good things that I could possibly think of this moving in and I found honestly a lot of things to be excited about na halos hindi ako makatulog at makapag hintay.

Andito ako ngayon sa Al AIN for more than a week now and will last maybe for a month or so.
na parang nagbabakasyon grande lang.


at napatunayan ko na nasa conditioning lang talaga ng isip ang sa kung ano ang gusto mong maramdaman sa kahit na anong nangyayari sa  sa buhay mo ginusto mo or hindi.Ikaw lang ang gagawa nito at wala ng iba.

So bakit mo gagawing burden ang isang bagay na hindi naman talaga.

I love it and discovering new things.

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Saturday, July 21, 2012

The story behind "One Acre of Diamond"

Because someone got interested of my domain name "one acre of diamond" who took it and turned it his own website.Yes!  just like that so I have no choice but  to buy it ?- Nope! never, instead I might just changed it in the near future to become "Two acres of diamonds" and if it happens again you know what comes next.

So what inspires me of this title and turned it into a personal blog aside from the Diamondword.

Read this story and find out.

Acres of Diamonds



In the year 1843, a man was born who was to have a profound effect upon millions of people. His name was Russell Herman Conwell. He became a lawyer, then a newspaper editor, and finally a minister. It was during his church career that an incident occurred that was to change his life and the lives of countless others.

One day a group of young people came to Dr. Conwell at his church and asked him if he’d be willing to instruct them in college courses; they all wanted a college education but lacked the money to pay for it. He told them to let him think about it and come back in a few days.

After they left, an idea began to form in Dr. Conwell’s mind. He asked himself, "Why couldn’t there be a college for poor but deserving young people?" And before very long the idea consumed him. Why not, indeed. It was a project worthy of 100% dedication, complete commitment.

And almost single-handedly, Dr. Conwell raised several million dollars, with which he founded Temple University, today one of the country’s leading schools.

He raised the money by giving more than 6000 lectures all over the country, and in each one of them he told a story which he called "Acres of Diamonds." It was true story which had affected him very deeply and had the same effect on his audiences. The money he needed to build the college came pouring in.

The story was of an African farmer who heard tales of other farmers who had made millions discovering diamond mines. These tales so excited the farmer that he could hardly wait to sell his farm and go prospecting for diamonds himself. So he sold the farm and spent the rest of his life wandering the African continent searching unsuccessfully for the gleaming gems which brought such high prices in the markets of the world. Finally, the story goes, worn out and in a fit of despondency he threw himself into a river and drowned.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch – or farm in this case – the man who had bought his farm happened to be crossing the small stream on the property when suddenly there was a bright flash of blue and red light from the stream bottom. He bent down, picked up the stone – it was a good-sized stone – and, admiring it, later he put it on his fireplace mantle as an interesting curiosity.

Several weeks later a visitor picked up the stone, looked closely at it, hefted it in his hand, and nearly fainted. He asked the farmer if he knew what he’d found. When the farmer said no, that he thought it was a piece of crystal, the visitor told him he had found one of the largest diamonds ever discovered.

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Well, the farmer had trouble believing that. He told the man that his creek was full of such stones, not as large perhaps as the one on the mantle but, well, they were sprinkled generously throughout the creek bottom.

Needless to say, the farm that the first farmer had sold so that he might find a diamond mine turned out to be the most productive diamond mine on the entire African continent.

The first farmer had owned, free and clear, acres of diamonds, but had sold them for practically nothing in order to look for them elsewhere.

Well, the moral is clear. If the first farmer had only taken the time to study and prepare himself to learn what diamonds looked like in their rough state and, since he already owned a piece of the African continent, to thoroughly explore the property he had before looking elsewhere all of his wildest dreams would have come true.

Now the thing about this story that so profoundly affected Dr. Conwell and subsequently millions of others, was the idea that each of us is at this moment standing in the middle of his or her own acres of diamonds.

If we only had the wisdom and patience to intelligently and effectively explore the work in which we are now engaged, to explore ourselves, we’d usually find the riches we seek, whether they be financial or intangible or both.

...and that's how it becomes.

you can buy the book or read the pdf file available on line. Just google it.
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