Monday, November 5, 2007 

Outdoor Displays and Outdoor Banner Graphics

Many companies are moving their branding efforts outdoors using outdoor displays and banners. There is only one rule for displaying your company image outdoors: Bigger is always better. If you plan to host a corporate event outdoors, we are able to provide signage that will make a big impact on the people attending your event.

Outdoor banner stands are a very common choice because they are easy to set up and take down, and they are inexpensive in relation to other options. Most outdoor banner stands can withstand almost any weather conditions, including wind and rain. Outdoor banner stands can also be grouped together to form interesting shapes and patterns, which will make your display even more visually appealing.

Billboards are also a common form of outdoor brand advertising. We offer a number of affordable and portable billboards which can be used to grab the attention of passing cars and pedestrians. Like outdoor banner stands, these portable billboards are very resistant to extreme weather conditions including wind and rain.

Outdoor banner graphics are printed on weather resistant material. Not only does this material withstand wind and rain, it also is guaranteed to remain vibrant even under the strain of UV light from the sun. This feature is not common in all graphic materials. In fact, most materials will fade within a matter of hours when placed in sunny conditions. The heat and harmful UV rays generated create a scenario that you want your trade show graphics to avoid in normal conditions.

We sell affordable trade show displays at Mod Displays. Every trade show booth we sell is durable, and comes with a lifetime guarantee. We think it is important to take as much worry and stress as possible out of purchasing trade show displays. Our experienced account executives will guide you through the process from start to finish. We also offer banner stands and tabletop displays, so be sure to check out our trade show display store for more information or to request a quote on trade show products.

Hot Power Yoga Cl In Ct

 

9 Surefire Ways to Increase Your Retirement Income

The old saying 'money can't buy happiness' is not necessarily true. My contention is that money can absolutely contribute to a higher quality of life, which in turn can contribute to a higher level of happiness. And at no time in our lives is this more important than retirement, because it's unlikely most of us will be able to increase our income by going back to work in our 70's or 80's.

Whether you're approaching retirement, or have been retired for many years, income is crucial to your financial security, and even to your very health. Many studies have shown insufficient income during our working years, but particularly during retirement, can cause worry and insecurity in our day to day living, which can lead to ill health over time.

I hope the following will give you some ideas about how you can increase your retirement income, enhance your quality of life, and contribute to your happiness now, and in the future. So without further ado, here they are.

1. Tax Reduction Where to start? How about at the beginning? Almost everyone can save significant amounts of tax just by making a few modest tweaks and adjustments to their financial strategies. For example, are your stock dividends and CD interest earnings being taxed even though you're not spending it all? What if you could receive interest income and save a bundle in taxes at the same time? This and other tax saving strategies could go a long way toward increasing the amount of money you have to spend each month.

2. Income Annuities Buy an income annuity, designed to pay you a tax advantaged lifetime income at a higher rate than many conservative investments, even if you live to be older than Methuselah.

3. Structured Life Settlements Are you insurance rich and cash poor? Convert your life policy into a living benefit, enabling you to access cash long before your final ride off into the sunset.

4. Conservative and Moderate Allocation Mutual Funds Invest a portion of your assets in the rock solid world of No-Load Conservative and Moderate Allocation mutual funds, some of which posted positive returns during even the darkest days of the recent 'Bear' market.

5. Reverse Mortgage Convert 'lazy' money trapped in your home equity into an excellent long term cash flow, enabling you to enjoy greater income and financial security without putting your cash in any high risk investments.

6. Real Estate Lending Be a real estate lender, generating potentially double digit cash flow to you. You can even use your IRA to accomplish this.

7. Real Estate Ownership Own real estate properties generating 6% to 7% cash flow to you, with the very real potential of increasing over time as rents increase. An additional benefit is the aches and pains of property management could be transferred to a professional while you stretch out in the hammock, walk the greens of your favorite golf course, or cruise the worlds oceans, all the while receiving those nice checks directly to your bank account.

8. TIC's Tenants in Common Transfer the headaches of real estate management and generate a significant income for you. This can work particularly well if you own appreciated real estate, i.e. rental houses, commercial properties, land etc.

9. Separate Asset Baskets Maintain separate accounts for specific purposes. For example, place money for emergency needs in liquid money market accounts and short term bank CD's.

Use another account like income annuities for regular monthly income. An additional account with a brokerage firm could be used to purchase Conservative and Moderate Allocation mutual funds for growth and future income needs.

The purpose of developing and managing your financial affairs in the above manner is to maintain your financial independence and a high quality of life throughout your retirement years. By following these steps you can accomplish many objectives.

First, you will always have sufficient cash reserves at your fingertips if and when needed with your money market account and bank CD's.

Second, you will have sufficient retirement income and be able to avoid withdrawing income from variable accounts during market declines. And finally, your variable accounts have the potential to grow for future use to handle the ever rising cost of living.

Steve Hood develops quality investment and insurance programs for his clients, and builds and manages "All Weather" investment portfolios.

"All Weather" => Consistent performance through good markets and bad, resistant to market declines.

Find more ideas about lifetime financial security at => http://www.allweatherinvestors.com

Holistic Network Rodney Yee Yoga Videos

 

Flying Lessons

The first time that I saw Jet Lis film Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (in a little theatre in Boulder, Colorado) I wept, fairly continuously, for about the first thirty minutes, and after that sat enraptured, amazed & deeply grateful for the beauty, power & truth that I felt being emanated from the film. Two days later I returned, for my second viewing. By the third time (all week-day matinees: cheaper & less crowded), the theatre clerks & I exchanged amused glances of recognition. By about the fifth time I was definitely feeling sheepish, if not downright embarrassed, by what I imagined was being perceived as clearly-addictive behavior. But I didnt care! I saw the film, over the course of about a month, no fewer than seven times. Each viewing revealed some new wonder, some previously-unnoticed level of meaning, or just an exquisite detail, that my eyes, ears & heart hungrily consumed.

And what was the cause, in this film (and later also in the re-made Hero) for my tears & rapture? For drawing someone who doesnt even really watch many movies, back like this, again & again, almost magnetically? Its a bit hard to articulate, though what I can say is that there was something being portrayed ~ in both of these films ~ with which I resonated so deeply, that at a soul- & cell-level I recognized, which so rarely, in this culture, is portrayed. It felt like coming home. Particularly powerful for me were the fight scenes: not for the conflict that was being enacted (I actually have an aversion to violence, per se), but rather for the fluidity & lightness ~ the Mastery of physical movement ~ that was being so beautifully demonstrated. Some who I spoke to about the film considered these scenes merely fanciful, a kind of science fiction that perhaps had been taken to an extreme ... but for me those scenes were ~ at long last ~ portraying a reality, something the very fibers of my being understood to be not only a possible, but also in many ways a preferable way of being-in-a-human-body. There was and is a knowing that: Yes ~ Flying is possible!

Now this love affair with movement-as-flight, with enlightenment expressed as human form & movement, has been with me for a while: As a child I adored the graceful connections between Terry Bradshaw & Lynn Swann; Later, Michael Jordan became my all-time hero. Then it was Bruce Lee. On a number of occasions Ive felt my life to be transformed by the performance of dancers: Mikhail Baryshnikov (who I saw in person for the first time when he was in his fifties, and stunning!), David Parsons (whose magical piece Caught still resonates inside of me), diego Pinon (a Butoh Master, whose sensual & organic explorations of human movement opened within me whole new realms of possibility re: intimacy & empowered vulnerability). Each year that Ive lived in Boulder Ive watched the world-class runners in the Bolder Boulder 10k race, and noticed how the winners (in recent years, Kenyans) most often have broken through their intense effort into a level of ease, of rapture, of something clearly beyond the physical ... In the realm of yoga asana, Richard Freeman has expressed this same level of power, grace & fluidity. Among the Tibetan Lamas that Ive encountered, it has been Mingyur Rinpoche whose light-filled physical presence has inspired this same level of appreciation for the kind of intelligence (genius, really) that can be manifest through & as a human body. To all of these beings (and countless others whove accomplished something similar): a deep bow of gratitude.

So how does this happen? This appearance and/or experience of flight? This transformation of a seemingly-dense human body into something capable of such magical displays?

As a starting-point for this exploration, it might be useful to learn a bit about the principles of fluid mechanics which create the aerodynamic force of lift in an airplane ... for perhaps the key to our own flight as yoga or qigong practitioners lies in the emulation of these physical characteristics. First, know that air, just like water, is ~ in terms of the (Newtonian) physical & mathematical principles to which it adheres ~ considered to be a fluid. Know also that lift can only be generated when a fluid is in motion. So, for instance, a wing must be passing through the air or the air must be moving around a stationary wing (or both) in order for lift to happen.

Most of the lift in an airplane is generated by its wings, and specifically by the way air flows around wings of a particular shape. What we notice about most airplane wings is that, when viewed edge-on, their upper surfaces are curved (convex) and their lower surfaces are flatter. As air moves around a wing of this shape, the air that goes over the curved upper surface undergoes two important changes: (1) it is reduced in pressure (by the centrifugal force of flowing across the curved surface); and (2) it is accelerated downward (as it leaves the trailing edge of the wing). The wing is then forced into the region of reduced air pressure above the upper surface of the wing by the higher air pressure beneath the wing; and the downward acceleration of the air at the trailing edge also forces the wing upward. Since lift is dependant on the motion of the air, it increases as the speed of the air increases. Lift also increases, to a point, as the angle that the wing makes with the airflow increases (past a certain point, however, an increased angle will cause the wing to suddenly lose its lifting ability).

So how, in the context of a physical practice such as yoga asana or qigong, might we emulate the qualities that give lift to an airplane? Lets explore ... Creating or energizing physical structures which have the same shape as an airplane wing is something we certainly can play with: If I extend my arms out from my shoulders, like wings, I can cup my palms slightly, away from the floor, and at the same time deepen my armpits, while allowing my shoulders, biceps & the top part of my hands to feel puffed upward. In this way Ive created a shape similar to the shape of an airplane wing. And as it turns out, there are many other places in my body where Im able to create suction-cup-like structures, which will act to generate lift in this same way, when met with flow: the soles of my feet; my pelvic floor, my thoracic diaphragm, & the roof of my mouth, to name just a few.

Now that Ive created these structures which have the potential to give me lift when met with a flow of air, the next question becomes: how do I create a flow of air? I could, of course, go outside in a high wind, and see what happens ... But as yoga practitioners we like at least at times to practice indoors, and at all times for the practice to be moving in the direction of being internal, of being something that doesnt depend too heavily on external conditions. Luckily, our pranic bodies, like air and water, operate in many ways like fluids. Whats even more fortunate is that we can utilize the basic yoga/qigong principle prana follows citta (qi follows mind/intention) to create the high wind (high vibration) conditions that will ~ in combination with our wing-like structures ~ give us lift (transform matter into light, structure into flow). To do this, I simply imagine that Im facing a high wind (or standing waist-high in a fast-moving creek, facing up-stream) ... Its as simple as that. Then tilt your wings (and all those little suction-cups) slightly upward (into the on-coming wind or water), feel the upper surfaces of your body being drawn into the low-pressure areas above you, and feel yourself becoming lighter: little by little (or perhaps all at once) taking flight! (At this level of practice, what youll also discover is that remaining heavy in your heels, sitting-bones & coccyx actually supports the feeling of lightness of the body as a whole, particularly along its central axis ... Its kind of a paradox!)

So thats a way of working in the direction of flying which takes as starting-points: (1) our conventionally-perceived bodies (a collection of muscles, bones, organs, etc.); as well as (2) our habitual identification with our bodies (I am my body so what it means for me to fly is for this physical body to do more-or-less what an airplane does). And this can be an interesting and useful exploration.

What can also be interesting is to begin by challenging these basic assumptions, for instance by thinking: To the extent that Im currently perceiving my body as something solid, to this extent Im still caught in wrong views, in delusion. (And creating my yoga practice on the foundation of these wrong views is the equivalent, say, of building a philosophical argument upon a set of faulty axioms/assumptions.) What might happen if I begin instead with the assumption (adopt the view) that my body is of the nature of light, color & sound (like a rainbow)? Or that my body is of the nature of space, like the sky itself (am I then always already flying)? That instead of being continuous through time, my body is being created anew in each second (pulsing in & out of existence)? Or wondering: If the belief that I am this body is the basis of all suffering, and I somehow now let go of or at least soften around that belief ... If I am no longer identified with this physical body, then what might it mean for me to fly? (Who or what is it thats flying, if not this physical body?) I dont have the answers to any of these questions, but do feel very curious ...

What I do know is that many of us have had dreams of flying. In my own dreams of this sort, Im almost always flying in/as a body which looks just like my waking-state body. (There are Tibetan dream yoga practices in which we train in transforming our body into many different shapes ... so, for instance, we might choose to assume the form of a bird, or an airplane, to do our flying ... or might transform our body into the body of a particular deity, and simply hover in space in that form, or fly around with our consorts ...) What I notice in these flying dreams is that it is my intention (mind, will) that is the pilot, i.e. its via my thoughts (or mental body) that I choose the course of my flight. And how this takes a certain relaxed focus, which at times is quite precise & effective, and at other times less so. (Sometimes I crash-land.) And then I wake, and think: Ive just been dreaming of flying!

Now there is the story ~ perhaps youve heard it already ~ of the Taoist sage Chuang Tzu, who dreamed he was a butterfly, but then woke to discover again that he was a man. But then he wondered: now is it true that Im a man who has just dreamt that he was a butterfly, or am I really a butterfly who is now dreaming that Im a man?

Just something to consider, as you continue your research & practice of (yogic and/or mechanical) flying ... Om Shanti.

Elizabeth Reninger holds Masters degrees in Sociology & Chinese medicine, is a published poet, and has been exploring yoga - in its Taoist, Buddhist & Hindu varieties - for more than twenty years. Her practice has been inspired by Mingyur Rinpoche, Richard Freeman & Eva Wong. For more yoga-related writing & resources, please visit her website "Alchemy Of The East" at: http://www.writingup.com/blog/elizabeth_reninger

Exercise On Yoga Ball

 

Outdoor Decks - Understanding Seven Elements of Good Deck Design

Youre all comfortable in your favorite lounge chair, reading your latest novel with a cool beverage nearby...the aroma of your favorite BBQ drifting from the grill teases everyone...catching a few rays of sunshine never felt better. Warm weather calls us outdoors, and what better place to enjoy life than your deck!

As an extension of your home, a deck can provide an attractive outdoor area that you can enjoy every time the weather allows. Whether just hanging out and lounging, entertaining or playing with your kids or pet, a well-designed deck can be a favorite part of your home. Understanding important deck design and planning considerations will help your deck become a successful project.

Here are some considerations for having the deck thats right for your home:

1. Where should your deck be placed? A characteristic of good deck design is when the deck can merge into the environment of your backyard without being obtrusive and highly visible. If youre fortunate and have a great view, take advantage of the view and locate the deck to enjoy it. If you don't have a spectacular view, perhaps your deck could be located near a beautiful garden tree. Maybe you want your deck in a shady area or with a sunny southern exposure. Is privacy from neighbors an issue? Are you near a busy street and is noise a problem? If so and if your space is limited, consider the use of shrubbery, walls or fences to resolve the problem.

2. Will the deck be connected to your home? If you are considering placing your deck near the living room, doing so could be a problem if foot traffic will soil your carpets and disrupt anyone that is watching TV or talking. Placing the deck next to the kitchen will make it easier to move food and dishes back and forth when eating outside on the deck. Use sliding glass doors to make the outdoors look even more inviting from the kitchen. Would having two doors connecting different rooms to the deck be a possibility? Having two doors accessing the deck will be the most efficient and best solution for easy foot traffic flow.

3. Do you want a destination deck? The deck doesnt have to be built connected to your house; it can be a place to go all by itself. If your backyard extends to woods, maybe locating the deck near some beautiful trees makes sense. If your property fronts a pond or lake, what about locating your deck so that it reaches out into the water? If you have a flat roof, say, over a garage -- what about a roof deck? The possibilities are endless!

4. How will your deck be used? If your property is small and you're not expecting to entertain large groups, you likely don't need a huge deck. Your deck should maintain a reasonable scale between your home and property size, size of your family and the deck size. You should not have a small house, small property and a very large deck. The elements should be proportional. You should not build a small deck if you have a large house on large property.

5. Are you considering dividing your deck into different areas? For example, you could have an area for lounging, sunning or reading and another area for dining, entertaining and cooking. Involve your family and make a list of the activities you would like to have. You may want to include a section for children's games and playtime. Have a good idea of how traffic will flow on the deck and in your backyard. Understand how family, friends and pets will be walking from the front of the house to the backyard, from the garage to the kitchen, from the greenhouse or tool shed to the garden and so on. If you are going to have a deck area for relaxation, you don't want all the traffic coming out of the house to merge into this area.

6. What shape deck is best for your home? When designing your deck, consider using a variety of shapes. Keep it simple, but don't be afraid to add an angle or two to the deck design. For example, add curves or diagonal lines to connect two rectangular or square spaces for the deck plan. Connect the different sections with paths, paving surfaces, stairways, arbors, gazebos or perhaps a water pond. Consider using planters or flower pots with attractive plants, overhead structures or trellises, benches and steps to create a transition between areas in the backyard. If you're not a good gardener, you can still create a low maintenance landscape by using shrubs and other easy-to-care-for plants. Formal landscapes are more symmetrical and use geometric patterns and straight lines. Informal styles use more asymmetry and more curves -- wooden decks are often associated with an informal setting.

7. Do you hire a deck designer, do you use deck plans or do you design the deck yourself? Consider using deck plans if you can find plans that you like. One of the best ways to simplify deck building is to use deck plans that have been successfully built before. If you need to make some modifications to suit your needs and home, doing so will likely be cheaper than creating deck plans from the beginning. Unless you live in a very rural area, you will need to check with your local building department to find out what requirements and restrictions exist in your area, especially if you are designing and building the deck yourself. If youre not comfortable with the process, consider hiring a professional deck designer and a deck contractor.

Done correctly, building a deck will provide countless hours of enjoyment for you, your family and friends as well as increase the value of your home. After all, isnt enjoying our time off why we work so hard? Visit Building Wooden Decks and learn more about creating the perfect deck for you and your home.

Copyright 2005 InfoSearch Publishing

David Buster is Vice-President of InfoSearch Publishing and webmaster of http://www.yourdreamloghome.com - visit the website to learn more about home decorating and remodeling, backyard living, home plans, kitchen and bathroom design and dcor tips, home storage, fireplaces, log cabin rentals and more. Receive the free online newsletter by going to Better Home Ideas Newsletter to subscribe.

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