Tag Archives: habit

Holly Robinson Peete Lights it Up Blue For Autism Awareness Month

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Today begins Autism Awareness Month.  Autism is a developmental disorder that appears in the first 3 years of life, and affects the brain’s normal development of social and communication skills.  Actress, talk show host and mother of four, Holly Robinson-Peete recently shared on CBS afternoon show, THE TALK about her family’s journey with son RJ who has the condition.  Holly and Rodney’s Story Part 1 Related Article:  Join Holly Robinson-Peete and support “Genius of Autism” [Video] Holly and Rodney’s Story Part 2 Related Article: Holly Robinson Peete’s Son RJ is Honoree For “Genius of Autism” [Video] Click here for CBS “The Talk” website For more information go to: HollyRod Foundation Autism Society Autism Speaks follow me on twitter- @elev8_Kelly

Holly Robinson Peete Lights it Up Blue For Autism Awareness Month

10 Tips To Create New Family Habits For A Fresh Start

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Spring is a wonderful time to create new family habits for a fresh start.  Some people consider spring time the real new year.  Here are some tips for creating new habits for your family: 1. Commit to Thirty Days – Three to four weeks is all the time you need to make a habit automatic. If your family can make it through the initial conditioning phase, it becomes much easier to sustain. A month is a good block of time to commit to a change since it easily fits in the family calendar. 2. Make it Daily – Consistency is critical if you want to make a habit stick. If the family wants to start exercising, go for a walk or an play an active family Wii game day for your family’s first thirty days. Going a couple times a week will make it harder to form the habit. Activities you do once every few days are trickier to lock in as habits. 3. Start Simple – Don’t try to completely change your family life in one day. It is easy to get over-motivated and take on too much. If you wanted to study two hours a day, first make the habit to go for thirty minutes and build on that. 4. Stay Consistent – The more consistent your habit the easier it will be to stick. If you want to start exercising, try going at the same time, to the same place for your thirty days. When cues like time of day, place and circumstances are the same in each case it is easier to stick. 5. Replace Lost Needs – If you are giving up something in your habit, make sure you are adequately replacing any needs you’ve lost. If watching television gave you a way to relax, you could take up meditation or reading as a way to replace that same need. 6. Be Imperfect – Don’t expect all your attempts to change habits to be successful immediately. It took me four independent tries before I started exercising regularly. Now I love it. Try your best, but expect a few bumps along the way. 7. Use “But” – A prominent habit changing therapist once told me this great technique for changing bad thought patterns. When you start to think negative thoughts, use the word “but” to interrupt it. “I’m no good at this, but, if I work at it I might get better later.” 8. Remove Temptation – Restructure your environment so it won’t tempt you in the first thirty days. Remove junk food from your house, cancel your cable subscription, throw out the cigarettes so you won’t need to struggle with willpower later. 9. Run it as an Experiment – Withhold judgment until after a month has past and use it as an experiment in behavior. Experiments can’t fail, they just have different results so it will give you a different perspective on changing your habit. 10. Write it Down – A piece of paper with a resolution on it isn’t that important. Writing that resolution is. Writing makes your family goal ideas more clear and focuses you on your end result. Related article: Affirmation: “I am going to relax and have fun with this, no matter what” 10 Tips To Prepare To Spring Into Action 3 Financial Habits To Break In 2011 Minute Meditation: Prayer For Family

10 Tips To Create New Family Habits For A Fresh Start

This is What It’s Like to Interview Cheryl Hines About the New Season of Curb Your Enthusiasm

The season finale of Curb Your Enthusiasm left Cheryl Hines in an interesting position: Would her character rekindle a relationship with her estranged husband Larry David, or was her habit of not using a coaster too much for him to bear? When I ran into Hines at an Emmy party recently, I tried to pry her for information about how involved she’ll be in the upcoming eighth season, but as you’ll see, she had a spoiler policy even Matthew Weiner would be impressed by .

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This is What It’s Like to Interview Cheryl Hines About the New Season of Curb Your Enthusiasm

Does Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Rank Among Their All-Time Best?

Dark and murky clip premiered this week. Find out if it ranks in our top 5 list of LP videos. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s “breaking the habit” Photo: Warner Bros. At 12:01 a.m. on Thursday (August 26), Linkin Park premiered their brand-new video for “The Catalyst,” the first single off their upcoming A Thousand Suns album. It’s a dark, moody, abstract affair , full of swirling smoke, charred earth and rising tides, and, judging from the comments we got on MTVNews.com, Linkin Park fans totally love it. So that got us thinking: Is it good enough to rank among their all-time best videos? Even though “The Catalyst” is barely 13 hours old at this point, it’s clear the clip takes the band to places they’ve never gone before. But the short answer is … no, not just yet. Sure, the video would probably land in the LP top 10, but we’re talking about the best of the best here. So while it’s undoubtedly good, it’s not quite good enough to crack the band’s top 5. But give it some time. We’re sure its impact will be measured in weeks and months, not hours. That’s how Linkin Park videos tend to go. At least, judging by the ones we’ve selected as their five best: #5: “Somewhere I Belong” The greatest Linkin Park videos also tend to be the biggest, and while “Somewhere I Belong” is definitely massive — the burning bed, the creeping, long-legged mammoths, the mech-like archway the band performs beneath — it’s the minimal touches that make it one of their all-time best. Joseph Hahn deftly uses macro focus to take us deep inside Chester Bennington’s subconscious, and from there, he fills the void with items taken from his bedroom: the Dali-esque painting on the wall, the Gundam figures on the dresser, etc. The end result is a stirring, powerful piece — one that matches the punch of the song — proof that sometimes the smallest things also pack the biggest wallop. #4: “Faint” Sort of a left-field choice (it’s by no means one of their best-known clips), “Faint” is little more than a live clip … and while Linkin Park have made more than their fair share of those, none can match the live-wire energy and emotional outpouring on display here. In a genius move, director Mark Romanek puts his cameras behind the band, which not only gives the viewer a new perspective on LP’s stage show, but somehow makes the explosion of angst and aggression all the more palpable. The closest thing we can find to capturing the band’s thunderous live performances. #3: “Crawling” A video that tackles heady themes (abuse, suicide, judgment and despair, to name just a few), “Crawling” goes deep — into the mind, behind the mirror, into a rapidly crumbling world — and somehow manages to come out the other side. It never feels heavy-handed, rather, the Brothers Strause were smart enough to harness the cathartic power of the song’s chorus, and set the main character’s road to redemption against it. Powerful stuff, with a happy ending. #2: “Breaking the Habit” Animated by the legendary Kazuto Nakazawa, “Breaking the Habit” is based around a simple story: the suicide of an unknown man in some foreboding future city. But as things progress, the story becomes increasingly complex … a ghost haunts the skyscrapers, a girl slowly bleeds, a man struggles with his demons. And at clip’s end, we learn that it was Bennington who leapt to his death. All the while, you’re marveling at the unraveling narrative — and the dazzling animation too. Dramatic, doomy, filled with dread: It’s the kind of thing that most bands only aspire to make. Linkin Park pull it off with style to spare. #1: “What I’ve Done” The biggest, baddest and best Linkin Park video of all time, “What I’ve Done” is full of wide-screen visuals (the band performs in a barren desert, surrounded by walls of speakers and lighting rigs, mountains peaking on the horizon), but it’s hardly a summer blockbuster. Rather, Hahn was smart — or brave — enough to inject a message here: the destructive power of man versus the unyielding beauty of nature, and where it all will undoubtedly end (hint: we lose). It also marks Linkin Park’s first time wading into political waters, as Hahn filled the video with images of the collapsing Twin Towers, a Katrina-ravaged New Orleans and oil-soaked wildlife. A shot of a starved African man is intercut with an engorged American eating a cheeseburger. An atomic bomb is detonated, followed by time-lapse footage of blades of grass peaking through the soil. “We are living in the end times,” the band seems to be saying. “Repent while you still can.” Not exactly the most uplifting of messages, but certainly the most vital. What’s your favorite Linkin Park video of all time? Does “The Catalyst” rank in your top 5? Tell us in the comments! Related Videos The 5 Best Linkin Park Music Videos Related Artists Linkin Park

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Does Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Rank Among Their All-Time Best?

Candyland Down Lombard Street

People are playing a life-size version of Candyland down Lombard Street in San Francisco RIGHT NOW! Lombard Street is the famous twisty road that everyone sees when they visit San Francisco. If you've been there, you probably have a picture of it

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Candyland Down Lombard Street

Ryan Kwanten

Here's a nice young man who plays Anna Paquin's brother on True Blood . He is also in the habit of posing for GQ and other publications with his shirt off

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Ryan Kwanten

Katherine Heigl Caught In Smoking’s Vice And Hates It

Katherine Heigl is desperate to quit smoking. The Grey’s Anatomy star picked up the habit six years ago and says it quickly got a hold of her and now influences every decision she makes. Heigl said: “I started smoking when I was 24, because I’m an idiot

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Katherine Heigl Caught In Smoking’s Vice And Hates It