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How Wildcats Face the Conformity Trap

Wildcats lead simple, but fulfilled lives. When they go hunting, usually at night, they just have to decide on the menu. Mice, birds, and rabbits are specially tasty, but failing those, frogs and bugs are equally fine.

In many ways, wildcats live in the face of danger and this is why many people react with surprise when they learn that, in some areas of the world, the number of undomesticated felines is growing by leaps and bounds.

When a cat turns five months old, it must make a decision that will determine the course of its entire life: to choose freedom or to become a pet, two alternatives that none can evade.

Each option has its bright side, but positive traits make no one upset. It is the drawbacks, the problems you’ll get, those are the nightmares that make young cats sweat.

When they make their choice, cats already know what kind of future they can expect. Neither wilderness nor domestication are without threat. For a young cat, the essential question is taking the path that will bring less regret.

Conformity has so many advantages that, nowadays, it has become the choice by default. Few are told that its short-term sweetness must be counterbalanced by long-term blindness. Seldom is the fact mentioned that domestication makes individuals lose their capacity for invention.

Change remains possible, although never easy, and it is often fraught with unintended consequences. This is why tales of horror about the wilderness are conveniently circulated when faith is about to default. “Quitting is not an option,” has been written on every wall. Fear of freedom is the only wisdom that pets can recall.

What explains then the call of the wild? Why is an increasing number of individuals reassessing past choices and exploring new options? What are the reasons behind this newly-found willingness to join the renegade cats?

Without a doubt, the following two motives play a major role:

1.- MASSIVE REDUCTION OF START-UP COSTS. These days, affordable telecommunication services are allowing entrepreneurs to outsource their non-essential business processes around the world at highly competitive prices. The cost of leasing brick-and-mortar retail space has also plummeted in some cities due to the economic recession.

2.- IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITY OF STANDARD SOLUTIONS. Sophisticated software applications for electronic commerce are now available at low monthly fees. Merchant accounts and professional-looking websites can be set up in less than an hour. A few years ago, this sort of infrastructure would have eaten up most of the capital of a new venture and would have taken months to develop. Now it is immediately available on the web.

Technology has brought the entrepreneurial wilderness within the reach of everyone. At any age and in any circumstances, individuals can now change their life and choose the way of the wildcat.

When you go hunting, you just have to decide on the menu. Global markets and internet businesses are specially tasty, but failing those, local malls are equally fine.

JOHN VESPASIAN writes about rational living. He has resided in New York, Madrid, Paris, and Munich. His stories reflect the values of entrepreneurship, tolerance, and self-reliance. See John Vespasian’s blog about rational living.

http://johnvespasian.blogspot.com/

The Info Trap: Break Free by Taking Action

Beware of falling into the information trap! There are such vast amounts of information available to us nowadays – in books, in trusted friends, in community groups, and, of course, online. Yet one of the biggest mistakes I see people making is assuming that getting more information alone is going to solve all of their problems.

Information, tips, strategies and new resources are a wonderful thing to be sure. But collecting tidbits of information, much like a squirrel gathers nuts for the winter, is absolutely useless until you put it into action.

Information without action makes your growth and transformation an academic exercise. It’s only when you take action upon the information you’ve learned, so that you get real-life experience is when you transform information into true wisdom. We learn by DOING, not by reading books or attending a workshop now and then. Lasting change and the ability to make conscious and empowered choices comes from taking consistent, inspired action.

Here are a few tips you can put into action so you can transform information into wisdom!

Create a structure

To road-test your newly acquired knowledge into your life, you need to create some kind of new structure. You get to decide what structure is most needed for you. Block off time in your day to reflect and journal. Make a list of the insights you’ve received and how you will incorporate them into your life. Find an accountability buddy you can work with so you can share your new goals and have them ask you about your progress towards them on a regular basis.

Find a Tribe

Moving through challenging times is much easier if you can do it with the support of like-minded and like-spirited people. Find your tribe, who understand where you’re coming from and are willing to hold the highest vision for you.

Practice Makes Perfect

Put the information you’ve gathered into action right away. Implement that new time management system. Practice the powerful conversation tips you learned. Consistent, daily baby steps will get you better, long-lasting results than going on a binge every now and then with new activity. You learn by doing – so get doing!

Less Input, More Output

If you’re still wanting to grab that next book or sign up for yet another seminar, stop. Try on this mantra that I learned from one of my mentors: “Less input, more output.” Reduce the amount of incoming information clutter so you feel less overwhelm. Focus on using and implementing what you already have, before you go hunting for more.

Old hunting trap.


Old hunting trap for fox. Prohibited to use today. RUTH IP ruthip.wordpress.com

Overcoming Writer?s Block: Avoiding the Trap

I may as well just say it. Writer’s block, I’m convinced, doesn’t exist. Mostly, I think, authors use writer’s block as an excuse to explain to themselves, an editor, or a concerned spouse why the book isn’t done or the chapter hasn’t been turned in.

Writing is talking on paper. Sometimes literally. And you never hear someone say, “I can’t talk anymore. I’ve got talker’s block. There just aren’t words there that can come out.”

That said, there are several common traps that new writers especially stumble into—and these traps stop writing progress.

Size Matters

One of the easiest traps is letting the sheer size of book stop writing, as mentioned earlier. The prospect of writing 300 pages is daunting. Especially that first day you sit down. It’s easy, especially if you’re inexperienced or emotionally worn out, to collapse under the mental burden of all that work.

The mental trick, I suggest, is to not think about those sorts of numbers when you’re writing. You need to bite off reasonably sized chunks and focus your energy and anxiety on just today’s chunk.

If you’re writing in the morning before you have to go to standard job, maybe you should do a thousand words a day. A thousand words is a bit of stretch but still a manageable goal. And if you pace yourself and write, for example, a thousand words a day, at the end of the week, you’ve maybe got a chapter done. And at the end of four months, your book is done. That’s how it works.

Don’t sit down each day with the burden of writing 80,000 words or 300 pages. Sit down to your very manageable goal of writing a few hundred words. It makes all the difference.

Bad Metrics

A second stumbling block relates to the first. While writers, editors and publishers commonly use measurements like words or pages to specify how big a book should be, you don’t really build a book with words or pages. Books require more concrete building blocks. And so, especially as you’re trying to slog your way through the first chapters of a book (always the hardest for me, quite truthfully) you can’t think things like, well, so I now I need to write a thousand words. Instead, you need to sit down and write a book building block or two or three.

Let me provide an example here. When I write some book about computers or technology, in essence, all I do is string together descriptions of facts, instructions for using some tool, and real-life examples. And these are the building blocks I use to create a book.

If I’m writing about how to use, for example, a word processor’s grammar checking tool, I might start by writing a paragraph that explains what the tool does. Then, I might go on by providing descriptions of, say, the six steps you take to use the tool. Finally, I might wrap up the discussion by showing how the tool works on some example text. And when I finish writing up these three building blocks, I’ve got my thousand words.

Do you see how that’s different from saying that you’re going to write a thousand words? A thousand words is the goal. But that goal really doesn’t help you grind through your writing. In comparison, saying that you’re going to briefly describe the thing, provide some step-by-step instructions and give an example is concrete. That concreteness helps you plod through the writing.

You’re probably not going to write how-to books about technology. But you’ll find that you too build your book using a pretty small set of specific-to-your-genre building blocks.

Don’t fiction writers do this, for example? The novelist describes scenes, records actions, crafts dialog and so on. And what this means again—remember that we’re talking about the myth of writer’s block—is that if you’re writing a mystery novel you don’t sit down with only the plan to write your thousand words. That’s too abstract.

You need to sit down planning to write some set of building blocks. Maybe today you describe the hunting lodge as it looks when Petra and Michael discover the old man’s body. Maybe tomorrow, you craft the dialog that occurs when the police interrogate Langston about the missing oil paintings.

Especially if you’re having trouble achieving your daily word counts—and probably even if you aren’t—you need to use standard building blocks to construct your book. The building blocks let you get the content onto the page.

Small Ideas Mean Big Problems

Let me also revisit something else I often saw when I was a book publisher. Sometimes the real problem a writer is having is trying to turn a little idea into a big book. Yet this problem is misdiagnosed as writer’s block. Some topics don’t merit a book. They may be great topics, but optimal treatment maybe requires ten page or fifty pages. But a book needs to be bigger than that.

I suggest that you can test your idea by writing a couple of example chapters and then making sure there’s not redundancy in those chapters and that there’s still good content available for two or three more unique chapters. That technique should work. But let’s say you didn’t know that when you agreed to write a book. Or that my suggested technique, unfortunately, didn’t work in your special situation. What can you do?

You’re in a tough spot in this case. You need to expand the scope of your book without screwing up the book’s original purpose and justification. If I were you and found myself in this position, I’d try to figure out how short I was coming up. Like, am I fifty pages short? A hundred pages short? Once I had this information, I’d brainstorm to develop a list of related topics that I could use to pad the book or beef it up. Finally, If the book had already been sold, well, I’d probably swallow my pride and have an honest conversation with the editor.

If you’re only a little bit short, the fix is usually pretty easy. Publishers can make a book seem larger by putting less text on a page or by using thicker paper. If you’re writing a nonfiction book, maybe you can throw in an appendix that covers some tangentially related topic or some extended bibliography or a glossary. If you’re writing fiction, I’m actually not sure what you do. That’s not my area of expertise. Do you add characters? A subplot? I don’t know. You better talk with your editor.

How To: Make a Horn Trap


In this video I show an easy way to find sheds by setting up a horn trap.

Beware the Value Trap

By Louis Basenese
Contributing Writer
Money Morning

Consider this your warning…

With thousands of stocks down 50% (or more), investors are salivating over the bargains. But for every true deal, there are at least three “value traps” – stocks destined to languish at depressed levels indefinitely. Or worse, get cheaper still.

Think Kmart Corp. here. In late 2001, it became the poster child for value investors. They argued it was dirt cheap based on countless metrics like book value and sales. And it was destined for a historic turnaround.

Sure enough, the stock went from the bargain bin to the trash heap, as the company filed bankruptcy in early 2002.

So, before you go bargain hunting in this market, arm yourself with this list. It could be your only chance to avoid getting snared by the countless “Kmarts” begging for your investment…

10 Questions You Should Be Asking

In theory, a value stock is a beaten-down company that’s 1) cheap compared to its earnings, its competitors and/or some other relevant benchmark and 2) poised for a turnaround.

In contrast, a value-trap is simply a beaten-down company that’s cheap compared to its earnings, its competitors and/or some other relevant benchmark, but never quite turns it around.

Unfortunately, no formula exists to calculate when, or if, a turnaround will ever occur. But, these 10 questions should help. And ultimately, keep you out of most value traps…

Is there a near-term catalyst?
First things first, if there’s nothing on the horizon – like a new product launch, key marketing arrangement, a shake-up of the executives, the conversion of a massive order backlog, etc. – we shouldn’t bother. Companies and stocks need catalysts in order to advance. If none exist in the next 12 to 18 months, chances are the stock will be stuck in neutral, or worse, reverse.

What are insiders doing?
Nobody knows the company – and its future prospects – better than the insiders. If they’re not salivating over the “cheap” prices and backing up the truck, we shouldn’t either.

Is the company addicted to debt?
Too much debt magnifies the impact of tough times. As sales decrease, interest payments take up more and more of the company’s earnings. Not to mention, unwinding leverage is a time-consuming process. So, even if the company boasts new, fiscally responsible management, beware. Or as Warren Buffett observes, “When a management with a reputation for brilliance takes on a business with a reputation for bad economics, it’s the reputation of the business that remains intact.”

Does the dividend yield seem too good to be true?
Value investors love to tout they “get paid to wait” for a turnaround. Granted, many stocks do maintain their dividends through a downturn. But countless others don’t. They slash or cancel them altogether, just to stay in business. No matter how tempting, tread carefully when the dividend yield hits double-digit levels.

Is the company just as “cheap” based on the future?
At first glance Eastman Kodak Co. (EK) appears dirt cheap, trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 2.96. But don’t be fooled. Or get too easily excited. Remember, the P/E ratios cited on most financial websites are historical. And as investors, we don’t care what a company was worth… we care about what it will be worth. So before you buy, make sure the stocks forward P/E ratio is similarly attractive. (FYI – Eastman’s is not. It trades at 27 times forward earnings. Hardly cheap.)

Which direction is the company’s market share headed?
A general economic slowdown is one thing. But when a company’s losing market share, too, that’s an indication that a competitor has a better mousetrap. And while economic growth is cyclical, market share is not. Even if the economy or industry turns around, chances are the company’s market share won’t.

Does the company operate in a highly cyclical or moribund industry?
If you go hunting in a highly cyclical industry (like semiconductors) you’re asking for trouble. Same goes for industries destined for obsolescence (like print media). To win with these stocks, you need both the company’s misfortunes and the industry’s to reverse course.

How’s the free cash flow?
Earnings can be massaged, manipulated or completely fabricated. But cash cannot. So, make sure free cash flow is stable, or growing. If nothing less, it provides management with a little wiggle room, or margin of error when considering ways to speed up a turnaround.

Is the stock liquid enough?
Just like insiders provide support to share prices, so do institutions (mutual funds, pension plans, hedge funds, etc). Both groups can move stocks prices quickly and significantly. However, many institutions can’t or won’t buy stocks trading for less than $10, with a market cap below $1 billion and/or that don’t trade several million dollars worth of shares each day. Without the potential for institutional ownership, a quick rebound in prices becomes less likely.

Does the company have a sustainable competitive advantage?
For a stock to turnaround we need the company to thrive, not survive. That’s not possible without a sustainable competitive advantage. So stick to companies like Apple Inc. (AAPL) that are light-years ahead of the competition in terms of design, market share, new product offerings and/or technology.

In the end, don’t kid yourself. Detecting a value trap is no easy task. Even the best investors occasionally get snared. Think Bill Miller (with Countrywide and Freddie Mac (FRE)) and Carl Icahn (with Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)).

But at the very least, these 10 questions will ensure you never buy blindly, or on price alone.

[Editor’s Note: For additional insights on value investing, check out Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald’s recent special investment research report on the same topic: The Five Keys to Value Investing Profits.]

To continue reading click here.

Investment News

Alternative Job Search Alert for Grads . . . Avoid the Resume Trap!

If you’re graduating this year, this alternative job search alert is for YOU! You must avoid the resume trap!

What’s the resume trap?

Well, we’ve all been brought up to think that the success of our job campaign depends on our resume. So we spend an extraordinary amount of time trying to get it just right. There are a thousand websites that show you how to write an award-winning resume . . . each one has their own formula. But this is a resume trap!

The fact is your resume is the least important part of your job search. And for a couple very specific reasons.

First, no one is going to offer you a job based on your resume. Employers make hiring decisions based on person-to-person contact. This is where you establish your credibility by coming to the table ready to demonstrate that you’ve taken the time to learn something about the decision-maker and his/her organization. And you have a proposal for addressing needs.

Secondly, if you make your resume the focus of your job campaign, you’re creating an enormous amount of competition. Just think how many others just like you are throwing their hat in the ring via their resume. You want to be in a position where you can bypass the competition instead of contributing to it.

And this is where the alternative job search alert comes in. You need to focus your attention on something else to avoid this resume trap. And that something else is the hiring decision-maker. You want to spend all the time you can researching information about each organization you want to be part of. And further, you want background information about the decision-maker you’ll be meeting with.

These days, doing this kind of research is a piece of cake. You have fabulous online tools like Google as well as online access to most of the trade association and product literature. You have the Chamber of Commerce and other business-related organizations like service clubs.

Best of all you have your contacts–people you know–from friends, neighbors and relatives to religious, business and political leaders. They’re all available to answer your questions and even make introductions or referrals to hiring decision-makers.

This kind of proven alternative job search alert strategy is just part of the whole alternative job search and non-traditional career advancement movement. The bible of this job hunting revolution is “The World’s Fastest Alternative Job Search System.”

Armed with this amazing plan of action, you can count on meeting face-to-face with a hiring decision-maker of your choice in a matter of days. And you could lock up a high-paying job in as little as two weeks! It’s the alternative job search alert that virtually guarantees your success!

Figure four dead fall trap


Figure four dead fall trap

Trap Thrower Comment

Trap throwers that are set to shoot clay pigeons from the ground and some that you hold and shoot in the air. The trap throwers are specifically made for throwing the clay pigeon far because it can be hard for the hunter to do that on his own. These trap shooter can be good if you want to improve your skills in hunting birds or if you just want to be a better marksman. Some people like to buy parts of the trap thrower and assemble it themselves,I do not recommend building your own trap thrower because it would be cheaper if you just bought it from a store. Assembling all the parts can be really difficult because you need to make sure the trap thrower spins the clay disks as it is being shot out of the thrower. You can buy a trap thrower from any store like wall-mart or a sporting good store in your local area. If you are looking to buy one online it can be expensive but from your local store you can get one under 100 bucks. To construct a trap thrower you will need to dig four holes to stand you posts in. Next you place the beams in and cement it. once the beams are put in saw them off a foot from the ground and once that is done put the ply board panel on the beams so it will be the platform of your thrower. I hope this article was useful to you i hope this article was useful to anyone wants to learn more about trap throwers. Have fun and be safe when shooting those pigeons.

Why Go For Mosquito Trap?

Whether you live in a posh locality in a suburban town or in a small 1 room apartment, chances are that you must have come across pests while you moved in to you present house. Pests are of different kinds and varieties, from termites to ants to mosquitoes. They are numerous and often a huge problem to deal with. Apart from damaging furniture and expensive decorative items at home, pests are also harmful as they trigger allergic reactions on many people.

Interestingly, it has been found that contrary to popular beliefs, our indoors and the dust inside our houses are more harmful than the external environment.

One of the most common pests that have led to serious health problems in a large number of people is mosquito. Mosquitoes thrive and multiply quickly in marshy and swampy areas. What’s indeed worrying is the fact that they can easily breed in places where water is stored. Therefore, any beautiful looking flower vase whose water remains unchanged for a few days can become the breeding ground for these pests.

Mosquitoes spread serious and fatal diseases such as malaria and dengue. Initially, these diseases are characterized by fever, nausea, weakness and loss of appetite. With time, it becomes clear that these diseases are far more severe than they appear and may have serious consequences on the patient. Notably, these diseases are quite common in the South East Asian and African countries, where each year millions of people die due to these ailments.   

Considering the magnanimity of these serious diseases, a number of companies have devised and introduced several varieties of mosquito trap. These traps may be traditional or modern but the common aspect that is seen in case of all such traps is that they are meant to provide a simple solution to get rid of mosquitoes.

A common type of mosquito trap is the mosquito repellent. This mosquito trap is a rather new concept which is gaining gradual precedence in areas where mosquitoes are a recurrent problem. These are easily available in liquid form and in some cases in a spray bottle whose nozzle needs to be pressed to spray the liquid throughout the room. Alternately, these are also available in the cream form that can be applied over the body and get rid of mosquitoes for at least seven to eight hours.

Although one can ask how a cream or a spray be termed as a mosquito trap? The answer is quite simple. Unlike other apparatuses, the new unconventional mosquito trap does not set up a trap to hunt for the mosquitoes; instead the mosquitoes are found and killed instantly to prevent transmission of deadly diseases. This kind of mosquito trap is thus best suited for people on a camping or safari trip.  

The popularity of such unique kind of mosquito trap is increasing at a fast pace and experts believe that if used properly this new form of mosquito trap can prove to be more effective than the other types. However, the product has to be efficient, non allergic and reputable.