Alvin Toffler, a writer about modern technologies who died in June, said, "It is better to err on the side of daring than the side of caution."
You've probably already seen a lot of tricks and tips about the "what" and "how" of success (how to lose weight; what to say to your boss to get a pay increase, etc). "What" and "how" are excellent and necessary questions - but there is another crucial question that must be addressed in order to make fast, dramatic, lasting improvements in the quality of your life across the board.
Robert Benchley, a humorous newspaper columnist and actor who died in 1945, said, "I can't bring myself to say, 'Well, I guess I'll be toddling along.' ... It isn't that I can't toddle. It's that I can't guess I'll toddle."
Urgh, jobs. Such a pain aren't they? Always getting in the way of the fun things in life. But then those pesky bills keep mounting up and what's an impoverished young person to do but join the working masses?
A 71-year-old woman has become the oldest ballerina in Britain to pass the Royal Academy of Dance's Grade 6 exam, joining classes in later life being unable to afford them as a child.
It's a long-held division often dismissed as a lazy stereotype: dog people are friendly, outgoing and popular, while cat-owners tend to prefer their own company.
"Recording treasure, inheriting civilization" - Guanzhong Shehuo Exhibition
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