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#ivesting my time
aleesabella · 1 year
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Fairy quote
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dongtopus · 7 months
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one day i'll see people be as ivested in Marion as they are with [The Pale Elf] Galdurs Bate trois you know the one.
That'd be nice, I think.
Having to participate in capitalism is difficult. One the one hand, i Do enjoy my work, most of the time, and I would likely struggle if i was onlyever at home. Some routine helps me but to be chained to a system that leeches you of your time and energy is just demoralising.
I meant to make a funny tee hee post but i started thinking again. Send tweet
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ultravioletproxy · 2 years
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[OC REF] Ivester
One of my favorite designs I've made recently!!!
Name/ Title: Ivester. See above for each head's name. Pronouns: He/ They/ It Age: Unknown, Older Adult Species: Patchwork Jester Monster Height: 7'4" Voice Type: Each head has it's own voice, however if one head speaks for the entire body all their voices will emanate from it. Moon appears to be the dominant speaker for all the heads. Moon's voice: Baritonous Older Masculine Stout's Voice: Mid Younger masculine Score's Voice: High Squeaky masculine Card's Voice: Androgynous hushed whisper Personalities: -Moon: Forward, aggressive, snarky, playful, greedy, dominate, smooth, and a bully. -Stout: Playful, Cheery, Relaxed, Talks a lot, and apathetic. -Score: Cheeky, Snarky, kluts, obnoxious, silly, and distracted. -Card: Quiet, spooky, ominous, foreboding, creepy, and helpful.    Other Information: -The heads on the neck can rotate to whoever is dominantly talking. -Most of the time the body is controlled by one head, however fights for the control of the body can happen. -They have a uncomfortable obsession with bugs... and are almost certainly infested with the creatures. Hence the name "Ivester"... Infested Jester. The bugs you'll commonly see crawling around on them are "Mealworms & Millipedes" - Moons fav, "Vespa mandarinia" - Stout's fav, "Roaches & Carrion Flies" - Score's fav, "Scorpions & Carrion Beetles" - Card's Fav.
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Art, Concepts, & Characters are © to ConsciousColony <Terms of Use & Service>
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johnsilvajosi · 5 months
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💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲💲
The company that I have a very close relationship with is named:
Infinite Reality, Inc.
They are going public through a SPAC and I am allowed to have family & friends invest into Infinite at a very reduced price as of now. The minimum investment is $50K and your projected returns are 3-5 times on opening day of IPO.
I’ll send information so that you can research the company and let me know your thoughts. If you want to get on the phone with my guy with the company, that can be arranged also. If you information directly from the company, just send me your email address and I will have them forward even more information.
Thanks you time and consideration.
- DeAndre
JOSI CO
NYC, NJ , USA 🇺🇲
Liaisons/Connectors
-BITCOIN BUY & SELL
- MONEY IVESTMENTS see profits in 10 weeks or less
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There are a few possibilities why they can do it. /
reason 1 and 2 are the exact reason why they will stay togheter, be married and stay married. i knew they would get married since he was in lisbon in january 2022. since then i haven't had a moment of peace i just knew deep down, i could feel it in my bone, something big will come. as time went by things escalated, it was one thing on top of the other that keep happenning, others would always said its just all coincidence but i knew better. when the papwalk happen all my fears became reality and i knew without a doubt he would married her. now here we are...the engagement will be officially annonce soon but my nightmare will still continue....
Honey, why did you decide that you knew better? Do you have any psychic abilities?
I’m starting to worry about you. You are way too ivested and kinda obsessed with them. Take care of yourself. You have to pay more attention to your own life. Don’t follow each and every move of them. They aren’t worth it.
Usually, when we are scared of something, it always happens. We give lots of heavy emotions to our fears, that’s why we often manifest the worst case scenarios.
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4, 14, 15, 19, 22, 30, 36, 37, 68
4 - are you insecure?
very 🤘😁
14 - do you miss someone?
i miss my friend i made at grippy sock jail lol, i stopped talking to them bc replying to ppl that knew me irl felt really hm and then next thing i know weeks have passed by (about a month really) and the more time passes the worse i feel about not replying but since feeling bad makes me not reply its just a whole cycle
15 - have any pets?
i do !! i have two dogs (crusty white dogs yes BUT THEY MEAN EVERYTHING TO ME)
19 - would you go back in time?
i think i would... idk if id just observe from afar or maybe like visit little me and tell them it gets so much better, i mean hey maybe ill be able to become myself sooner id be able to try to get the whole transition process started sooner and save myself from this misery lol
22 - do you want to have kids? how many?
well.. yes and no
like sometimes the idea of being a parent is so nice and loving them and like being able to parent them better than my parents did with me is something that warms my heart yk? but then at the same time its like im not all woohoo yes i wanna be a parent!! and i dont want to have a kid and be half assed about it (if thats the right phrasing)
they deserve a parent thatll be there ivested all of the time and then theres also the fear that ill be like my parents lol (so taking all of this into consideration, i think id like to just be uncle des to my friends' kids and to my siblings' kids)
30 - what is irritating you right now?
probably how relieved i feel deep down due to my mom finally talking to me after days of ignoring me
like cmon im angry and hurt and i hate that inner me is happy and fine and willing to forget about the hurt as soon as my lovely mother stops being a jerk
36 - do you give out second chances too easily?
probably... ajjdjs
37 - is it easier to forgive or forget?
i think it's complicated bc sometimes it can be easier to forgive someone depending on the offense but then sometimes its so hard to try to find forgiveness in yourself because sometimes that person is just not deserving of it
and then with forgetting, it might be easy to do if its like something minor but if its something much bigger then can your brain really truly forget it? idk i hope this all makes sense my brain is feeling jumbled the more i reread it
68 - whos the last person you had a deep conversation with?
well... i at the beginning of this i was gonna say my sister... but now that im almost done answering these im thinking probably you :0
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jessiebanethedragon · 3 years
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Hi all so I’ve been working on stuff to post for the blog recently and I just wanted to post an update so of thing
I’ve got one bigger story in the works as well as something with another writer
I am also hoping to get back to one shots in April when I have more free time
Thank you all for all the love and everything
Also personal mini rant here. Sh*t just hit the fan with my university. Long story short I feel blindsided and lost because of the money and time I ivested with this institution who I feel has left me lost and potentially unable to finish my degree with the courses they offer. So if I’m inactive for a while it’s becasue I’m working full time and now dealing with this utter BS
Either way, I love all y’all
❤️❤️❤️❤️
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crossdreamers · 5 years
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Gender affirming parenting can save a child's life
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Jo Ivester, writes over at NBC News:
Today, my son is almost 30. When we welcomed him into the world nearly three decades ago, we thought he was our daughter, but we were wrong. While still in pre-school, he preferred the toys and games that our society traditionally thinks of as masculine. He wore his hair short and preferred his big brother’s hand-me-downs to those of his big sister. No princesses or ballerinas for him at Halloween; he wanted to be Aladdin or Frankenstein.
Later, reaching puberty made Jeremy miserable, because it worsened his gender dysphoria. He knew inside that he was a boy, even though his reproductive anatomy didn’t match. He was a normal kid: He had friends. He played sports — football, baseball, and basketball. He marched in the school band and was president of his middle school art club.
When he was 24, Jeremy acknowledged to both himself and the world that he is transgender. He told everyone to use his new name and male pronouns. He began taking the hormones that would lower his voice and allow him to grow a beard. He had what is called "top surgery," to remove his breasts and create the masculine chest he’d always wanted. A year after that, he changed his name legally. Today, he is happier than he’s ever been before.
As Ivester points out, the current attempts by transphobes to stop transgender kids from being themselves, and from using puberty blockers that can give them time needed to decide on what to do, is not based on a compassion for these kids. 
Instead, it is part of a larger campaign aimed at excluding, invalidating and harassing transgender people, using trans people as scape goats in a larger war against a more open, diverse and tolerant society.
Let us beat them with compassion, wisdom and facts!
Photo of Jo and Jon Ivester and their son Jeremy Ivester (Susan Risdon).
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oto-bonus · 2 years
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ivester-spy · 3 years
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heyo! i’m ives (or ivester, either work) and this is my art blog!
- there’s my carrd, and my art tag is #ivesdraws
- dms and asks are always open
- my main is in my carrd, feel free to go check it out
- i post pretty infrequently and about whatever i‘m fixated on at the time
- don’t be weird
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chiseler · 6 years
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THE TRUTH IS UGLY
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What troubles me most about Democrats is the standing consciousness they're able to manifest, as their champions in government commit war crimes while undercutting rights and liberties at home. The flip side of this psychotic ability to muster mental equilibrium and tolerance comes out of hiding when a Republican wins the White House. Now begins the evangelical tent revival, speaking in tongues, bodies spasming on the tent's wet grass floor: "RUSSIA! CHILDREN SEPARATED FROM THEIR PARENTS! RACISM!"
When these fundamentalists do their best to outstrip Birther hysteria, just remember that their own political conscience is a resilient lawn, manicured to weed out the children of Gaza, the seven Muslim countries they voted to bomb and torture chambers they excused under Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. With the help of Bernie Sanders, whose powers of equipoise are so great that he yawns at martyrdom, the Democratic Party fakes left then moves right. Sanders' record on Israel is, admittedly, no worse than you'll find elsewhere in Congress, a Zionist cheerleading squad through and through.   
And yet, under an umbrella he fancies “socialist,” Sanders accommodates Israel's illegal blockade, which, according to Sarah Roy of Harvard, is slow-poisoning 1,000,000 Palestinian children -- I prefer "sociopathic." If anyone asks why Gaza is unique, you can say this (paraphrasing Dr. Norman Finkelstein): Gaza is the only place on earth where people cannot flee disaster. Gaza is not Syria’s man-made inferno producing refugee flows; it is not the site of an earthquake, after which survivors can move elsewhere. Gaza’s children are systematically poisoned, their parents unable to help them. 
The world’s largest and oldest concentration camp brought to you by America and the Holy Land. Here, I ought to apologize in advance for my own (momentary, I promise) hysteria. It’s not easy watching peaceful protesters slaughtered at the perimeter of the cage financed with my tax dollars...
Something is wrong with us.
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Our thin mental epiderm has managed to resist the true meaning of historical events like the Holocaust. It simply does not penetrate, the universal value of human beings, the folly of believing in "God's Chosen People" or "The Body Folk" as the particular case may dictate -- Zionism has a tough skin indeed, following a preordained plan that never acknowledges Hitler's Dream as its inspiration. God, Hitler -- is there any meaningful distinction in the presence of this monstrous ethno-state, experimenting on the bodies of 1,000,000 kids, shooting a thousand Gandhis with a Mengele look in its eye?
Israeli scholar Ilan Pappé has coined the term “incremental genocide” to describe the horror. My own suggestion is that we put Palestinian suffering – whether in Gaza, the West Bank or East Jerusalem – at the center of our program. Norman Finkelstein touts Bernie Sanders. We should, it seems to me, focus our attention elsewhere, and rediscover a tradition of legitimate socialism, one that never felt the need to tack “democratic” onto its agenda.
Socialism and democracy are identical concepts. 
Until Palestine is free, the same centralized system of mass incarceration here at home (buttressed by Bernie Sanders who signed the infamous “Crime Bill,” thereby linking arms with the Clintons) will triumph in a Palestinian genocide. Black Lives Matter espouses solidarity with the children of Gaza, as do I.  I’ll end by respectfully disagreeing one last time with Dr. Finkelstein, whose venom for BDS (the international movement to Boycott, Divest-from, and Sanction Israel) harms the cause to which he has dedicated himself for over 30 years.
No more compromises with the Dems. No more rationalizing our own tacit collusion. Opposing Israel’s human rights violations – both economically and politically – is up to us. Join BDS. Yes, the truth is ugly and painful -- who wants to acknowledge that our leading “experts” are wrong, that jurists, international human rights lawyers and trusted politicians have universally failed across the seemingly endless march of decades?  
Here are some numbers that cut through the rhetoric of Israeli talking points, which assert democracy and religious statehood – two distinct conditions that never mesh: 97% of Gaza’s water is contaminated; electricity in Gaza has been cut to 4 hours per day; Israeli courts convict 99.74% of Palestinian defendants; 85% of Israel’s “security fence” AKA “The Apartheid Wall” is on Palestinian land. These hideous truths are nothing more than a snapshot of Zionism’s practical ethic, its Jewish Supremacy model. Despite such grim data, I’ll offer one microscopic tittle of hope. 
It's no longer fashionable for young American Jews to support Israel.  How much of this alienation will translate into action and commitment against Zionism -- i.e. systematic racist attacks on Palestinians as a people, skulking under the rotten cloak of "self-defense" -- who can say?  Jewishness may yet liberate itself from the thugs who stole it. 
by Daniel Riccuito
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johnsilvajosi · 5 months
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The company that I have a very close relationship with is named:
Infinite Reality, Inc.
They are going public through a SPAC and I am allowed to have family & friends invest into Infinite at a very reduced price as of now. The minimum investment is $50K and your projected returns are 3-5 times on opening day of IPO.
I’ll send information so that you can research the company and let me know your thoughts. If you want to get on the phone with my guy with the company, that can be arranged also. If you information directly from the company, just send me your email address and I will have them forward even more information.
Thanks you time and consideration.
- DeAndre
JOSI CO
NYC, NJ , USA 🇺🇲
Liaisons/Connectors
-BITCOIN BUY & SELL
- MONEY IVESTMENTS see profits in 10 weeks or less
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mustafa-el-fats · 3 years
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in: Featured, Heading Out On Your Own, Money & Career, Networking, Professional Skills
Brett & Kate McKay • August 9, 2012 • Last updated: September 23, 2020
Managing Your Online Reputation
This article series is now available as a professionally formatted, distraction free paperback or ebook to read offline at your leisure.
All the basic life skills we’ve covered so far in this series have been things that your dad, and even your granddad, had to learn when he left home for the first time too.
But today’s young man faces a new challenge that Pops never encountered: managing his online reputation.
Despite the nascent nature of this skill, I truly believe it’s one of the most important things we’ll talk about in this series. As the line between the offline and online world gets increasingly blurry, your online reputation is your reputation. Before you meet your freshman roommate, before you pick up a date, before you shake the hand of a potential employer…you better believe they’ve already Googled you, already formed a first, first impression about you, your interests, and what kind of person you are. Thus, if you’re not careful and conscious about the content you create online, you can end up shooting yourself in the foot in all areas of your life.
Heading Out on Your Own…And Into a Fishbowl World
Leaving for college or another kind of adventure after high school has long been an exciting and heady time. It’s an age where you’re experimenting with ideas and values, testing new freedoms, meeting new people, and often changing your mind about who you are and what you want out of life. One week you feel one way, and the next you feel another. During this process you often make mistakes, and do bone-headed things that twenty years later will still make you wonder, “What was I thinking?”
Just a decade ago, only you, and a few of your closest friends, would have held the memory of those crazy and sometimes cringe-worthy moments. The only record of them could be found by digging up a private photo album or journal.
Today…it’s a whole new ball game.
Now, everything you do and say can potentially become part of your permanent and public record. Everybody’s got a smartphone and can snap a picture of you anywhere, anytime and post it online. And things that go up online about you and from you can remain there forever. Mistakes you made when you were just 19 can haunt you for the rest of your life. Being a young man used to mean you could entirely reinvent yourself by moving to a new place and making new friends, but now your online reputation will follow you wherever you go.
I don’t mean to sound all doom and gloom about it. But that’s the sobering reality of living in the Internet Age, and it doesn’t help to bury one’s head in the sand and try to whatever that reality away. It absolutely doesn’t mean that college can’t still be the fun, spontaneous experience it’s always been; it just means you need to take a conscious, proactive approach to taking responsibility for what parts of that experience end up online and in the public eye.
Why Is Proactively Managing Your Online Reputation So Important?
One of the greatest things about the internet is that it is a giant pot that people can both add to and take from. This puts the most enormous wealth of knowledge in human history right at our fingertips and provides an endless amount of inspiration that can be added onto and “remixed.”
The downside of the big internet pot, is that the moment you put something into the pot, you pretty much lose all control over it. Many viral embarrassments have started out as something someone just wanted to share with a few good friends. But those friends shared it with their friends, who shared it with their friends…on and on until it ended up on Tosh.O.
There are essentially no guaranteed take backs when it comes to what you put online. You can erase your Facebook status, blog post, comment, tweet, or video, but someone else may very well have already shared it, copied it, taken a screenshot of it, or downloaded the video and reposted it somewhere else. How websites looked on a certain date in time are captured and archived on sites like the WayBack Machine (take a look at AoM circa 2008!). Emails that you thought you deleted forever can still sometimes be retrieved, and just because you deleted an email doesn’t mean the person you sent it to didn’t archive it. If someone else wants to post something of yours, you may not be able to get them to take it down without suing.
All of which is to say, pretty every piece of digital content you create can potentially exist forever. And this digital record can be accessed by any of the 250 million internet users in the US, not to mention the 2 billion online all over the world.
What’s on that record can have a big impact on both your personal and professional life.
Your college’s admissions office may have Googled you when they looked over your application. As soon as your freshman roommate knew you’d be bunking with him, he Googled you. When you network with someone at a party and tell them about your great idea, they’ll Google you later. And 81% of singles say they Google or check the Facebook page of someone before meeting him or her for a date.
Even though only 7% of Americans think their online reputation influences hiring decisions, in reality, 75% of US companies have made an online screening a formal part of the hiring process, 85% of recruiters and HR professionals say that having a positive online reputation influences their hiring decisions, and 70% of recruiters say they have rejected candidates based on something they found about them online. And since those numbers come from a study done in 2009, they’re undoubtedly even higher now.
What kinds of online discoveries cause recruiters and HR personnel to push your resume to the trash? This chart shows the most common red flags employers look for:
As you can see, it’s not just content you create that employers are checking out, it’s stuff your friends and colleagues post too. Be careful who you associate with.
Some young folks may be tempted to respond by saying, “Well, if a company is going to reject me for posting pictures of my drunken revelry, I wouldn’t want to work for them anyway.” But that’s pretty short-sighted. I’d venture to say that these companies aren’t rejecting candidates so much because they like to drink or swear, but rather that their willingness to show off these behaviors publicly shows a lack of judgment and wisdom. Not at all an unreasonable assumption.
The information that new friends and potential employers can find about you online may not even be true. Some people will try to verify it, some will not. And what they see will often come without any context – maybe you were being funny, maybe it’s an inside joke, but they won’t know that, they’ll simply make immediate judgments about what they find. This is why when it comes to managing your online reputation, you must be both proactive and defensive — deleting anything inappropriate,  wisely choosing the digital content you create, and purposefully creating positive content about yourself.
Self-Reflect Before You Self-Reveal
“Young people in particular often self-reveal before they self-reflect. There is no eraser button today for youthful indiscretion.” –James Steyer
There are some practical ways to manage your online reputation, and we’ll get to them in a moment. But the first step in taking responsibility for your online presence is creating a mindset for how you want to approach your online life.
Matt Ivester, the author of lol..OMG! (despite the silly-sounding title, this is actually a great book, with solid advice from the guy who learned about online reputation management firsthand from his misadventures in founding Juicycampus.com), suggests three questions to ask yourself before you put something online:
1. Why are you doing this?
Why? This is the most important question of all, and one that unfortunately usually goes unasked and uncontemplated.
Today’s colleges are welcoming the first “digital natives:” they’ve never known a time when the internet wasn’t a huge part of their lives. And even for those who are old enough to have used encyclopedias for elementary-school research papers, interacting and participating online has become so ubiquitous that it’s hard to imagine that life was ever any other way. This is just how things are, and we do what everyone else is doing, so much so that we hardly ever ask why we are doing those things.  Once we do start asking why, the answers are surprisingly hard to come up with and articulate.
Why do you update your status or share a link on Facebook? Do you want to share news? Are you bored? Do you want to be thought clever? Are you trying to make someone else jealous? Do you want to see if people feel the same way as you? Why?
Why do you care how many likes or upvotes something you submit on Facebook or Reddit gets? Is it confirmation that you shared something with value? Why?
Why do you leave comments on blog posts? Do you want the author of the blog to know that you appreciated the article? Do you think you have the insight to add that might help another reader? Do you want the author to know how and why they are wrong? Why? What do you hope to accomplish? Do you think it will change their mind? Is it because the psychological angst you feel when you think someone is wrong needs to be discharged? Why?
Why do you participate in online forums? Does it provide a feeling of camaraderie? Do you like to hear others’ opinions? Why do you respond when you think those opinions are wrong? Why do you care what a stranger thinks about you? Why?
When you ponder the why behind creating any kind of online content, from a status update to a YouTube video, you may come up with a reason that you find satisfactory and worthwhile. Or you may find that your motivation is hard to make sense of and decide it’s not worth your time. Either way, by asking why, you’ll become what Ivester calls “a conscious creator of content.”
2. Is now the right time?
The internet creates a perfect storm for impulse control: at the same time that it actively solicits impulsive communication and make satisfying those impulses incredibly easy, it makes taking back the results of those impulses incredibly difficult; it’s easy to hit “send” or “submit,” and quite hard to un-send and un-submit something.
Facebook asks, “What’s on your mind?” while Twitter wants to know “What’s happening?” They owe their existence to people’s desire to share their thoughts, videos, and photographs – and they need to be constantly fed to survive and grow and make money. And blogs (including ours) want to engage readers and build community and so ask for comments. The internet is set up to encourage you to share whatever thought crosses your mind, and taking that thought from your cranium to the walls and screens of the digital world only takes a few clicks.
But just because you can share your thoughts on impulse doesn’t mean you should. Not only because you probably haven’t thought through the why behind wanting to share first, but because strong impulses are usually born from strong emotions: anger, depression, and grief, or from chemically-altered states (like being drunk). When you spout off and share personal feelings while emotional or trashed, you will likely come to regret it once those strong emotions fade or you sober up.
The best thing to do when you feel you’re dealing with an impulse to put something online that you might regret later, is just to sit on it. The internet creates a false sense of immediacy, giving you an overwhelming feeling that you have to respond now. But what you’ll find is that something that felt super urgent and mega important to say in the moment, will seem totally pointless when you wake up the next morning.
One method I use to thwart impulsive responses is to imagine myself living before the internet. If I feel a burning urge to tell the author of an article what a chucklehead he is, I think of reading a magazine in the 80s, and how I would have had no outlet to express my opinion about it besides writing up a letter to the editor or talking to my wife or close friends about it. Or if something annoys me and I want to rant about it on Facebook, I think of a time before Facebook when I would have had no choice but to keep my rant to myself. It makes me realize that just as sharing whatever crosses your mind wasn’t necessary then, it’s not necessary now. The fine-folks of the 80s, while they made some questionable fashion-choices, weren’t any less happy than we are now that we’re able to shout what we’re feeling and thinking to everyone 24/7.
3. How controversial do you want to be?
The younger generation  (including those my age) was raised with a lot of rhetoric about how special and unique they are, how important it is to be “authentic,” and that it’s good to be “transparent.” This can lead folks to throw caution to wind about what they share online because, “I’m just trying to be me! And if other people don’t like it, they can bite me!”
But just because you can now display your opinions and personality to a greater number of people than ever before, doesn’t mean you should, or that the more you share, the more authentic you are. Going back to my suggestion of thinking about life before the internet, people used to only be able to share their quirks with a close circle of family and friends, and they weren’t any less themselves than we are (actually they were probably more themselves since they didn’t get instant feedback on all of their quirks).
Examining the meaning of authenticity isn’t within the purview of this post (although it will be a future series), but suffice it to say for now that the ideal for many of the great men of the past was not transparency, but sprezzatura – only revealing themselves to others slowly as a relationship of trust developed. You may want to “be yourself” by trumpeting your religious, social, and political beliefs online every chance you get, but if those meme’s you keep flooding Facebook with is the only thing new acquaintances know about you, they may decide they don’t want to get to know you before they even do — they’ll miss the complexity of your character that would have shown through over time…that you’re both a liberal and a rabid gun owner, or a fervent Christian and a scientist, or a zealous vegetarian and a Marine.
The three questions above can go a long way to helping you judiciously choose what and what not to post online. A final question to consider is what the general public might think of the content if for some reason what you post went viral or you were suddenly thrust into national prominence. Would it embarrass your family? What impression would a stranger have of it? You and your friends might think it’s funny, but would others find it offensive? You never know who’s going to see your post, what’s going to be dug up on you later, and who might be looking at your phone.
How to Manage Your Online Reputation
Managing your online reputation involves both deleting content you don’t want out there and creating content you do. Follow the steps below that Ivester and others have suggested, and complete each step right after you read it. This is the kind of thing that’s easy to put off indefinitely. Do it now.
1. Google yourself.
Before you can know what actions to take to manage your online reputation, you need to know what’s already out there. To do this, first deactivate Google’s customized search – when you typically do a Google search, the results Google brings up are based on things like your location, what you’ve clicked on before, and things your friends like. But you want to see what would come up if someone else searched for you. Here’s how to take off the customized search feature.
If you have a common name like “Rob Smith,” then search for your name with a qualifier like, “Rob Smith St. Louis,” or “Rob Smith Tulane University.”
After you look at Google’s results for you, check out other search engines like Bing and Yahoo as well.
When you look at the results that come up for your name, try to imagine what conclusions someone might reach about you if they had no other context for that content, and knew nothing else about you.
2. Try to remove content that you don’t want showing up in search results anymore.
After you do a search for yourself, it’s time to try to delete things that showed up that you’d rather not have out there anymore. Maybe you signed up for an internet forum with your real name. Maybe you left a comment on a blog post under your real name. Maybe you wrote a review or a blog post that you now feel is too controversial. Some of these things you can delete yourself.
If you can’t delete something yourself, like a blog post comment on another person’s blog, then try to contact the owner of the site to see if they will remove it for you. They may or may not, but the nicer you are about it, the greater the chance of them helping you, so make your request as civil and appreciative as possible.
If you can’t find the contact information for the site owner, try the site WHOis. Website registrars are required to publish the contact information for the person who registered the domain. Oftentimes when you look up a site on WHOis, you’ll find that the owner has decided to keep their direct contact information private and have instead given a proxy email address. Either way, your email will end up in the same place.
Understand that even if you’re successful at removing the offending content from a site, it may take a few days or even weeks before it’s reflected in search engine results. Also, understand that the offending item really hasn’t “gone away.” There’s a chance that it has been archived on the WayBack Machine. Remember, what’s put on the internet stays on the internet forever.
Moving forward, be extremely judicious when using your real name online.
3. Proactively create a positive first impression online.
Your best bet in managing your online reputation is proactively creating positive content about yourself that pushes the bad stuff off of the first few pages of search engines. Set up accounts with large social networking sites that typically rank high on Google and other search engines. Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Google+ profiles are often on the first page when you look up someone’s name. Set up accounts with them and post stuff that you’d be proud to have your name associated with.
The best thing you can do to ensure positive stuff associated with your name is at the top of search results is to start a blog and update it regularly. If you can, try to secure a domain name with your given name for your blog. What should you write about on your blog? You can publish your resume (redacting phone numbers and addresses, of course), write posts sharing insights in an expertise you might have, or use it to create a portfolio of your work if you’re a freelancer. Whatever it is, make sure it’s stuff you want associated with your name.
Cross-link your blog and all your social networking profiles together: put your link to Facebook and Twitter on your blog, a link to your LinkedIn profile and blog on your Facebook account, and so on.
Even if you don’t plan on using Twitter or Google+ or even putting anything on your blog, it doesn’t hurt to have your name registered with those accounts and domain. You don’t want some Joe Schmo mucking up your good name with a bunch of crazy online antics.
4. Adjust privacy settings on Facebook and clean up your Facebook Profile.
To ensure that potential employers or love interests only see the best of you when they look you up on Facebook, make the following adjustments:
First, take a look at how your profile page looks to the public. If you see any information visible that you don’t want strangers to see, make a note of it.
To change what’s visible on your profile page, click “About.”
Click “Edit” on the next page.  On each segment select “Friends” if you don’t want anybody who’s not your FB friend to see a particular piece of information. For networking reasons, I’ve left my job and school information visible to the public.
Visit the Facebook Privacy Settings page and adjust all your privacy settings so only your friends can see photos and status updates you make.
On the privacy settings page, update what your friends can share about you under “Timeline and Tagging.” Enable the ability to review and approve posts or photos that you are tagged in before they’re published on your Timeline. You can also disable Facebook’s tag suggestion when your friends upload photos that look like you. You don’t want your name tagged in an unflattering photo or post.
While you’re on the privacy settings page, limit who can see posts from the past. Even if you used to post everything publicly, this will retroactively make those posts private.
Review the photos that you’re tagged in and untag yourself from any unflattering photos. While you’re at it, you might ask your friend to remove the photo if it’s something you don’t want out there. Even if you’re not tagged in the pic, it could come back to haunt you.
Leave groups and unlike pages that may be seen as controversial…or just dumb. At least set the privacy settings on them so only your FB friends can see the pages you like.  how.
5. Be more conscious of what you share and whom you share it with on Facebook.
Ask the three questions we covered above before posting something on Facebook. That will save you a lot of grief.
Also, take into account if what you’re about to share is appropriate and relevant to ALL your Facebook friends. You don’t need to share your weekend plans with your old boss and former professors. In real life, you adjust what you talk about depending on your company — do the same on Facebook. Create lists on Facebook for close family/friends, acquaintances, professional colleagues, people that are the same religion as you, people you enjoy talking politics with, etc. Before posting something, ask yourself if this is something all your friends would be interested in or is better for a specific list of your friends. And even if you’re only posting for a list of close friends, still keep in mind what others would think if that status or photo got shared with people outside the list. It could happen.
6. Create strong passwords for your accounts.
If the recent story of tech writer Mat Honan’s online life being completely demolished by hackers doesn’t motivate you to strengthen your online security, then I don’t know what will. Create strong passwords for all your accounts and change them every six months. A strong password is at least 8 characters long and includes at least one special character (&!#) and both upper and lower case letters. Your passwords shouldn’t be the same for all your accounts. To manage all your passwords, use an app like LastPass.
To reduce the chance of getting hacked, enable two step authentication. Here’s how to do it on Google (if you use Gmail) and Facebook.
7. Use passwords on your laptop and mobile devices. 
An unattended laptop or mobile device provides a devilish opportunity for friends or random strangers to mess with your online life. I know several people who had to do a lot of scrambling to recover from an offensive tweet sent from an unattended iPhone by a mischievous friend. Avoid that. Enable password protection on all your mobile devices.
8. Set up a Google Alert for your name. 
Keep your finger on the pulse of what’s said about you on the web by setting up a Google Alert for yor name.  Just enter your name as a search query and Google Alert will email you a digest once a week (or daily if you want) of all the new content that’s hit the web with your name in it.
Conclusion
The internet is an amazing educational, social, and networking tool — you just need to use it wisely. Using it too little can be just as damaging to your personal and professional life as using it too much. Be a “conscious content creator” and use sound wisdom and judgement in deciding where you personally want to draw the line between your public and private life.
Any other tips on managing your online reputation? Share them with us in the comments (only after asking yourself why you’re commenting and making sure it’s the right time, of course)!
 
Related Articles
Going Undercover: How to Protect Your Privacy Online
Being a Gentleman in the Age of the Internet: 6 Ways to Bring Civility Online
Escape the Algorithm!
3 Ways You Should Never Start an Online Comment
16 Ways to Support the Art of Manliness in 2016
How to Support and Follow the Art of Manliness
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envy-catwalk · 7 years
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Water weight or not that all takes effort and you're trying really hard. It's okay to fail once in awhile when it comes to weight loss. Hell its okay to fail all the time because you do keep trying. Also, please do be careful throughout your weight loss and dieting, doing it wrong can be really dangerous and I wouldn't want you or anybody else trying to lose weight to get hurt or get serious health problems! Be careful and be easier or yourself.
I'm super obese (like try 40 pounds overweight) so it really doesn't matter what I do to lose weight because I literally don't need to eat and SHOULDN'T be eating because anything I eat will make me gain weight. What I do eat are healthy fats and proteins and Im gonna ivest in a multivitamin, so my body is getting all the nutrients it needs to functionThanks but I can't be easy on myself, I have to punish myself for eating and spend all day obsessing over my calories because if not I binge like a fucking pig. It's not like I'm fasting or purging so im really not doing any harm to my body except to my mental healthBut thanks.. Ill just keep trying even if it is water weight :(
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marcusssanderson · 5 years
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Good Morning Quotes Celebrating The Start Of Your Day
Looking for beautiful, inspirational good morning quotes that will help you start the day the right way?
I was inspired by reading a piece that had quotes that wanted to help people start their day on the right note.
How we begin our day sets a tone for how our entire day will go – we want it to be on a positive note.
What better way to do that than with an encouraging thought or quote.
Below is a list of over 100 inspirational, wise, and positive good morning quotes to start your morning off right.
Thank you to Motivational Quote of the Day for helping to provide these, so that you can have a jump start on coming up with exciting thoughts!
Best Good Morning Quotes To Get You Started
1.) “Success is going from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.” – Winston Churchill
2.) “If you can dream it, you can achieve it.” – Zig Ziglar
3.) “The only way to do great work is to love what you do.” – Steve Jobs
4.) “When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind, not with it.” – Henry Ford
5.) “Life is what we make it, always has been, always will be.” – Grandma Moses
6.) “You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don’t try.” – Beverly Sills
7.) “Dream big and dare to fail.” – Norman Vaughan
8.) “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius
9.) “Build your own dreams, or someone else will hire you to build theirs.” – Farrah Gray
10.) “I would rather die of passion than of boredom.” – Vincent van Gogh
11.) “I didn’t fail the test. I just found 100 ways to do it wrong.” – Benjamin Franklin
12.) “Limitations live only in our minds. But if we use our imaginations, our possibilities become limitless.” – Jamie Paolinetti
Good Morning Quotes for Everyone
13.) “Challenges are what make life interesting and overcoming them is what makes life meaningful.” – Joshua J. Marine
14.) “Too many of us are not living our dreams because we are living our fears.” – Les Brown
15.) “If you’re offered a seat on a rocket ship, don’t ask what seat! Just get on.” – Sheryl Sandberg
16.) “Happiness is not something readymade. It comes from your own actions.” – Dalai Lama
17.) “When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be.” – Lao Tzu
18.) “Everything has beauty, but not everyone can see.” – Confucius
19.) “Few things can help an individual more than to place responsibility on him, and to let him know that you trust him.” – Booker T. Washington
20.) “There is only one way to avoid criticism: do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing.” – Aristotle
21.) “The best revenge is massive success.” – Frank Sinatra
22.) Winning isn’t everything, but wanting to win is. – Vince Lombardi
23.) “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life.” – Steve Jobs
Good morning quotes to inspire positivity
24.) “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans.” – John Lennon
25.) “Just know, when you truly want success, you’ll never give up on it. No matter how bad the situation may get.” – Unknown
26.) “Happiness cannot be traveled to, owned, earned, or worn. It is the spiritual experience of living every minute with love, grace and gratitude.”– Denis Waitley
27.) “I am thankful for all of those who said NO to me. Its because of them I’m doing it myself.”– Albert Einstein
28.) “Don’t worry about failures, worry about the chances you miss when you don’t even try.” – Jack Canfield
29.) “Nobody ever wrote down a plan to be broke, fat, lazy, or stupid. Those things are what happen when you don’t have a plan.” – Larry Winget
30.) “Though no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending.” – Carl Bard
31.) “I don’t regret the things I’ve done, I regret the things I didn’t do.” – Lucas (Rory Cochrane, Empire Records)
32.) “Never give up on something that you can’t go a day without thinking about.” – Unknown
33.) “When you feel like giving up, remember why you held on for so long in the first place.” – Unknown
34.) “Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else.” – Judy Garland
35.) “What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.” – Henry S. Haskins
Inspirational Good Morning Quotes
36.) “Challenge yourself with something you know you could never do, and what you’ll find is that you can overcome anything.” – Unknown
37.) “It is never too late to be what you might have been.” – George Eliot
38.) “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” – Alan Kay
39.) “If you cannot do great things, do small things in a great way.” – Napoleon Hill
40.) “An obstacle is often a stepping stone.” – William Prescott
41.) “You make a living by what you get; you make a life by what you give.” – Winston Churchill
42.) “The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.” – Lao Tzu
43.) “What you do speaks so loudly that I cannot hear what you say.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
44.) “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” – Gandhi
45.) “Keep your face to the sunshine and you can never see the shadow.” – Helen Keller
46.) “The best way out is always through.” – Robert Frost
47.) “Make each day your masterpiece.” – John Wooden
48.) “The difference between ordinary and extraordinary is that little extra.” – Jimmy Johnson
49.) “You must not only aim right, but draw the bow with all your might.” – Henry David Thoreau
50.) “Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there.” – Will Rogers
Inspirational Good Morning Quotes about success
51.) “Every strike brings me closer to the next home run.” – Babe Ruth
52.) “Don’t wait. The time will never be just right.” – Napoleon Hill
53.) “It is never too late to be what you might have been.” – George Eliot
54.) “If there is no struggle, there is no progress.” – Frederick Douglass
55.) “What we fear doing most is usually what we most need to do.” – Tim Ferriss
56.) “The more I want to get something done, the less I call it work.” – Richard Bach
57.) “Your imagination is your preview of life’s coming attractions.” – Albert Einstein
58.) “Do what you love and the money will follow.” – Marsha Sinetar
59.) “The harder I work, the luckier I get.” – Gary Player
60.) “Even if you fall on your face, you’re still moving forward.” – Victor Kiam
61.) “The purpose of our lives is to be happy.” – Dalai Lama
62.) “The dreamers are the saviors of the world.” – James Allen
63.) “Obsessed is just a word the lazy use to describe the dedicated.” – Russell Warren
64.) “If you can’t outplay them, outwork them.” – Ben Hogan
    Beautiful Good Morning Quotes
65.) “Champions keep playing until they get it right.” – Billie Jean King
66.) “Change your thoughts and you change your world.” – Norman Vincent Peale
67.) “Action is the foundational key to all success.” – Pablo Picasso
68.) “If you aren’t going all the way, why go at all?” – Joe Namath
69.) “Just keep going. Everybody gets better if they keep at it.” – Ted Williams
70.) “Don’t wish it were easier, wish you were better.” – Jim Rohn
71.) “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
72.) “It wasn’t raining when Noah built the ark.” – Howard Ruff
Inspirational Good Morning Quotes about dreams
73.) “Never let your memories be greater than your dreams.” – Doug Ivester
74.) “If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.” – Henry David Thoreau
75.) “There are two primary choices in life: to accept conditions as they exist, or accept the responsibility for changing them.” – Denis Waitley
76.) “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.” – Aristotle
77.) “The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can alter his life by altering the attitudes of his mind.” – William James
78.) “In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: It goes on.” – Robert Frost
79.) “The aim of an argument or discussion should not be victory, but progress.”– Joseph Joubert
80.) “Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go.” – T.S. Eliot
81.) “To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all.” – Oscar Wilde
82.) “Freedom is not the absence of commitments, but the ability to choose yours.” – Paulo Coelho
83.) “Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth.” – John F. Kennedy
Inspirational Good Morning about greatness
84.) “I am tomorrow, or some future day, what I establish today. I am today what I established yesterday or some previous day.” – James Joyce
85.) “It’s time to start living the life you’ve imagined.” – Henry James
86.) “Every man dies. Not every man really lives.” – William Wallace
87.) “Don’t be pushed by your problems. Be led by your dreams.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
88.) “Action is the foundational key to all success.” – Pablo Picasso
89.) “Nothing important was ever achieved without someone taking a chance.” – H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
90.) “Write it on your heart that every day is the best day in the year.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
Good morning quotes that will enrich your day
91.) “The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you. Don’t go back to sleep.” – Rumi
92.) “Some people dream of success, while other people get up every morning and make it happen.” – Wayne Huizenga
93.) “Morning is when I am awake and there is a dawn in me.” – Henry David Thoreau
94.) “When I wake up every morning, I thank God for the new day.” – F. Sionil Jose
95.) “I wake up every morning thinking…this is my last day. And I jam everything into it. There’s no time for mediocrity. This is no damned dress rehearsal.” – Anita Roddick
96.) “Nothing is more beautiful than the loveliness of the woods before sunrise.” – George Washington Carver
97.) “Give every day the chance to become the most beautiful day of your life.” – Mark Twain
98.) “Each day is a little life: every waking and rising a little birth, every fresh morning a little youth, every going to rest and sleep a little death.” – Arthur Schopenhauer
99.) “Life laughs at you when you are unhappy. Life smiles at you when you are happy. But, Life salutes you when you make others happy.” – Charlie Chaplin
100.) “Waking up this morning, I smile. 24 brand new hours are before me. I vow to live fully in each moment.” – Thich Nhat Hanh
More good morning quotes to give you inspiration
101.) “I get up every morning and it’s going to be a great day. You never know when it’s going to be over so I refuse to have a bad day.”– Paul Henderson
102.) “I remind myself every morning: Nothing I say this day will teach me anything. So if I’m going to learn, I must do it by listening.” – Larry King
103.) “When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive – to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love.” – Marcus Aurelius
104.) “Every morning, leave your worries outside your gate, because that’s where they pick up the garbage! Have a worry free day! Rise and shine.” – Bar Refaeli
105.) “To simply wake up every morning a better person than when I went to bed.” – Sidney Poitier
  106.) “The morning wind spreads its fresh smell. We must get up and take that in, that wind that lets us live.
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dragmojoent · 6 years
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Olympic Swimmer Nathan Adrian Marries Hallie Ivester: 'Best Day of My Life'
Olympic Swimmer Nathan Adrian Marries Hallie Ivester: 'Best Day of My Life'
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Going for romance gold!
On Saturday, Olympian Nathan Adrian married his longtime love Hallie Ivester.
In a romantic outdoor ceremony, the couple said “I do” surrounded by their friends and family in Napa Valley, California.
The eight-time Olympic gold medalist and his now-wife posted a number of stunning photographs from their special day captured by photographer Bre Hurston.
The…
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