Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Suppose  you are on the street. A stranger has handed you a bag in a hurry saying, 'I'll be back shortly.' But they don't return. How long are you supposed to wait? Should you just drop it and walk away? First, you decide to look inside. What you see next is life changing. We will  to deal with today's issue. Where does choice end and obligation begin? If you feel strongly enough that you ought to have a choice - and you need not feel obliged - then that's true. 
Is the bag yours now? And anyway, what does it contain? Suppose you open it up and find that it is stuffed with money. Are you now rich? Or are you in trouble? What if it is stolen? Now what do you do? We will have more of  this dramatic example to show how easy it can be to get drawn into a difficult dilemma that we didn't create yet now feel responsible for. Trust your instinct as life always offer you two or more options and its our own choice-what we choose.
So If a stranger on the street thrusts a bag of money into your hands and then disappears, have you been blessed with wealth or cursed with a part in a drama that is likely to unfold with ever more stress? Perhaps they have stolen the cash and now you are the recipient of their ill-gotten gains. Who will believe your protestations of innocence? Or perhaps you have just been lucky. But how long will that last? The creux is, try to get away from a situation that you neither fully understand nor have any power to control. 
Once you have made up your mind about the need to do something, you rarely let the matter drop. If you cannot immediately take action, you make a strong mental note and refer to this regularly until you can see an opportunity to pursue it. All this makes you very focused but it raises a risk. It means many of your priorities are set according to historic criteria. What was clearly the most appropriate strategy some while ago, may no longer be so relevant and you should review a plan before you implement it.
Many websites offer their returning customers a reminder of purchases that they made on their previous visit. If you needed item X the last time, perhaps you have run out of it and need some more. Sometimes, too, they make helpful suggestions. Customers who bought what you bought last time, also looked at these items.' That's smart marketing. But though  we cannot always refer to the past in this way when we have a to-do list.Be smart while dealing with tempting situations.

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