Being Creative


Being Creative& Brand News& School of Marketing20 Aug 2010 07:46 pm

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Being Creative04 Jul 2008 09:16 pm

A few years ago I read a statistic that said that genealogy was the second largest hobby in the United States - second only to gardening. It was no surprise to me as I have been finding and documenting my family tree for almost 30 years. Over that time a lot of people have asked me, “Why genealogy? What do you get out of it?” There are a lot of reasons to find out about your family and I’ll cover just a few hoping that one of them will get you started.

Curiosity: A lot of people are just plain curious about where they came from, what their ancestors did, how they got here - to this time and this place. Lots of people find themselves in this category when they are told that they are adopted. While they have adoptive parents, traditions, and history, they also have another history that calls out to them. Other people have lost touch and are curious about where people are, how they turned out, who they married.

It’s a Great Puzzle: This applies to me in several areas of my life besides genealogy. I have worked with numbers a lot - particularly with market research. I just love understanding what motivates people to buy certain products, where they shop, how much they want to pay, and where they want to hear about those products.
When my wife and I go camping I spend hours working crypto quotes in the sun - fun and challenging puzzles that help me relax.

When it comes to puzzles, I don’t think anything can match the complexity and fun of genealogy. Just think about a jigsaw puzzle that has an almost infinite number of pieces - some of them that don’t fit and some of them missing. Nothing can match the satisfaction I get from finding one of those lost pieces of the puzzle and putting it into place. These are puzzle pieces that lead to long-lost cousins and far-off places.

Hobby: I did a lot of market research before organizing FamilyTrackers, Inc. The company was started out of my belief that Internet searches could be much more accurate than those usually conducted on the Internet. Interestingly, there is a group of genealogists who resist a more accurate way to find information. They are not interested in any tools that make the job faster. “That is the reason I do my family tree - to fill up my time. Looking into page after page of results is the part I like about genealogy. It’s my hobby,” they said. Fortunately for me and for FamilyTrackers those who like the things I find most tedious are not a large portion of the market.

Leave a Legacy: Some people approach middle age or have a traumatic event at any age that prompts them to think about their mortality. “If I never meet my grandchildren, what will they know about me? What will they know about my parents? How will we be remembered?” Those of us who are fortunate enough to have ancestors in this category are indeed lucky. My grandmother wrote a short story about her trip as a young girl in a covered wagon from Illinois to Kansas. Thinking about it now, it must have been a dusty, hot, and miserable trip. The events that she wrote about were ordinary, daily occurrences that were taken for granted in her time - something that she wrote about because the trip was out of the ordinary. Read the same story today and discover something that is unique to our experience - herding cattle, rustlers, camping out every night. If you do nothing else with your family history, you should write down or record your life experiences in your own words in any way that you see fit.

Emotional Satisfaction: This is a huge reason for being involved in genealogy and one that I hear repeated by other people as they talk excitedly about their latest discovery. There are moments that happen during a search that are touching and immensely satisfying. This is the moment that you look at your great grandfather’s signature on your grandparent’s marriage license; put your hand on the baptismal font where your oldest known ancestor was baptized; stand on the ground where your great grandfather from the old country is buried - knowing that your grandmother stood on this spot in front of an open grave grieving her loss. These moments are thrilling, goose-bump producing moments of a life time when you can almost reach across time and touch a person who you finally understand and know. This is a moment you must not miss!

Give Something Back: Lots of people get involved when they volunteer at their local genealogical or historical society. What a wonderful place to meet nice people who are willing to help you discover your roots. These groups are responsible for saving crumbling records all over the world and for making the information available to everybody. People who work in these places are almost always unpaid and give their time and effort on behalf of people like you and me every single day - people they have never even met. This is important work and you can get the satisfaction of helping other people by volunteering yourself. It is easy. Pick up the phone and call.

Whatever your reasons, give genealogy a try. It is a stimulating hobby that will put you in touch with yourself and with a lot of nice people who are ready and willing to help.

Gene Hall is a genealogist with almost 30 years of experience and the CEO of FamilyTrackers, Inc., a world-wide genealogy exchange dedicated to serving the needs of genealogists, genealogical societies, professional genealogists, and transcribers all over the world.

FamilyTrackers is located at http://www.familytrackers.com/

This article comes with reprint rights. You are free to reprint and distribute it as you like. All that I ask is that you reprint it in its entirety without any changes including this text and the link above.

Being Creative16 May 2008 05:49 am

What happens to everything unwanted and unneeded, but too good to discard? On the first Saturday in May, garage sales sprout like dandelions in the lawn. The terrible signs only hint at their whereabouts and serve only to feed your anticipation. You must time your arrival fifteen minutes before the advertised start. Earlier and they won’t let you in - later and all the goodies will be gone.

I look for anything of value that promises some enjoyable hours in the shop to make it look and work like new. Once I found a
three-quarter sized violin for $5.00; a low price because of
numerous scratches in the finish, a missing bridge and broken
strings. Twenty shop hours later (over a period of three weeks) this German-made copy of a Stradivarius sported a new hand rubbed finish and all the parts necessary for it to play like new. A music teacher gladly paid $50.00 for it so her daughter could start violin lessons. With several selections on your arm, don’t be afraid to bargain with the owner whose priorities include clearing the place as quickly as possible.

I look for unwanted vacuums (often just jammed with dirt), European-made toys, designer handbags, old sheet music, better cut
crystal, top-of-the-line hi-fi speakers with blown or rotted cones and small pieces of furniture. A 1940 luxury tricycle priced at $4.00made a wonderful prop for children’s portraits. A barely visiblemanufacturer’s badge bowed to the magic of a digital restoration. Sprayed with lacquer paint in its original colors, it glowed with new life. After appearing in dozens of portraits, a neighbor paid me
twenty dollars for this collectible. The possibility of finding real gold can’t be ignored. My wife once bought a solid gold bracelet for $2.00.

One spring, after partially retiring, I decided to take up golf after a thirty year golf break. Of course, I owned no clubs, bag, or
shoes. A new outfit would cost $400.00 so I went garage sale
hunting. Another guy and I spotted a ten year old set of clubs at the same time but I walked swiftly to get there first. I paid $15.00 for the set. Complete except for a putter and shoes. The next day I found a pair of new golf shoes in my size set out for pick-up.

Talk about luck. A new putter was a birthday gift from my wife.
People discard their old bicycles by the dozens. Daughters go to college, rich kids upgrade and families move. Five reconditioned bikes later, I saved enough for the bike I wanted — a hybrid cruiser 18 speed. If I had to set a value on garage sale hunting, I’d give ten per cent to saving money on needed items and ninety per cent to the joy of fixing them up.

Retired portrait photographer. Did you ever find something good?

Being Creative11 May 2008 12:32 am

What is die casting? Sure, you have heard about it but do you really know what it is? It is a process that uses fluid that is injected into a mold at very high pressures. Probably the most popular type of this type of casting is that which is used to make model, toy cars. For example, Matchbox cars are widely known as they are made from this process.

The processing time for most castings of this type is between one and two months. Production rates can be anywhere from 20 to 200 units per hour. The machinery used in the process is huge, heavy and expensive. They work at very high pressures of upwards of 100 megapascals or higher. The main materials that are cast ten to be copper based alloys, zinc based, magnesium based or aluminum based.

Of course, toy cars are far from the only use of this process. Die casting does work in a number of industries in fact. A great source of information about these processes comes from the North American Die Casting Association itself. At their website, they teach about the process, about the industry and how this type of casting can work well in virtually any need that is out there. The product generated is high in quality, lasting quite a long time. It is innovative and offers dynamics that are unique and useful to the buyers.

On their website, you will also find a great deal of information on locating engineers and designers for your specific product needs. You will find that there are all sorts of opportunities to take your business to the next level when you contact this organization to help you with your die casting needs. Some of the world’s best products are those that are cast in this way. Are yours, yet?

For more information please see http://www.die-casting-info.co.uk

Being Creative01 Apr 2008 02:46 pm

Many have answers
They can pontificate and preach
They come from all walks of life
And every side of the street
Whether in the ghetto
Or the suburbs
All want to be heard

Everybody has something to say
But many are not hearing
Because they are not caring
Because they have no understanding
Because they have not
Walked in their shoes
Sat where they’ve sat
Experienced life as the other
Thus they are at arm’s length
And not a brother
This is quite common
Many are aloof
Unable to relate
They’re hard hearted and uncouth
Pharasidical and reprobate.

What a terrible thing
To think you know all the answers
It’s amazing how much you learn
After you already know it all
When it’s all said and done
More is said than done
At that point of discovery
The academic unveils a mystery

Such is the time
When the teacher
Goes back to school
It’s a moment when
The teacher appears the fool
The fool for not understanding
For not relating
For not anticipating
All the intricacies of the student
The difficulties of the day
Is it any wonder
The students are dismayed
At the flimsy logic
Being purported
At the rebuttals
Being retorted
“Do as I say
And not as I do”
This is enough for you
So say many
Who teach the masses
Yet they themselves
Must go back to classes
Classes not necessarily academic you see
Because what the instructor needs
Is to bleed
To feel peoples pain
To hurt within
To empathize and be sympathetic
Once again
It’s oh so easy
To get in a rut
Of telling people what to do
And become a nut
Shelled in by theory
Deceived by dogma
Encased in scripts
Fossilized
To the point that humanity
You’ve dehumanized

Each teacher must feel
Each orator be real
The only way
This can be
Is for trouble and problems
To come upon thee
This is a part
Of God’s grand design
To get to you
In the knick of time
Before you become arrogant
Distant and cruel
Before you start thinking
There’s none better than you
The ground at the foot of the cross
Is always level
That’s where God does business
With human hearts
When they are on bended knee
Not behind a pulpit
Throwing darts
Practicing what you prech
Is still not enough
Because by it alone
You just become self-righteous
Tribulation produces experience
And it a teacher like no other
Experience gives birth to hope
While you try to cope
Try to carry on
Despite the dilemma
Try not to lose your mind
When you’re running out of time
To pay your bills
Save your marriage
Care for the crying baby
In the carriage
Life’s problems are many and real
Yet only by experiencing them ourselves
Do we feel
Thus God would not have us
To be alone in a cave
In a monastery
Or a theological grave

No, far better for us
Is it to experience life
With all its complexities
Turmoil and strife
Sorrow and death
Seasons and years
Anger and rage
Rejoicing and tears
For only then
Can we fully understand
Only then
Can we be in the band
The human procession
Marching on through life
Enduring the pain
Loneliness and darkness at night
At such moments we feel
Therein we care
Relating ourselves
Being equitable and fair

Forgive me dear God
For being callous and hard
So calculating and cruel
An educated retard
Soften my heart once again
As I sit and observe
People and situations
As I myself encounter
Being stretched beyond limitations
Enlarge my capacity to feel
To listen, love and be real
To sit with the folks
And not hastily render answers
Or arrogantly make jokes
Until I first have felt
And with myself dealt
The important question
Do I know what they know?
Have I experienced their pain?
If not then perhaps I
Should try to refrain
From running off at the mouth
And trying to size up the situation
Help me God be quiet
And practice compassion

Ironic is it
That we who teach
Must be taught again
Taught in a different fashion
Taught to ask questions
And do self-examination
As to the condition
Of our own heart
The readiness of our own soul
Before we begin
To police and patrol
To criticize and cajole
To sneer and to steer
We must first
Sincerely feel and hear.

Paul Davis is author of Breakthrough for a Broken Heart, Passionate Poems to Propel the Planet, God versus Religion, The Next Wave and Holy Fire.

He is a minister,life coach (relational & professional),dating expert, popular worldwide keynote speaker, creative consultant, humor being, adventurer, explorer, mediator, liberator and dream-maker.

Paul’s compassion for people & passion to travel has taken him to over 50 countries of the world where he has had a tremendous impact. Paul has also brought revival to many in war-torn, impoverished and tsunami stricken regions of the earth. His nonprofit organization Dream-Maker Ministries is building dreams and breaking limitations.

Paul’s Breakthrough Seminars inspire, revive, awaken, impregnate with purpose, impart the fire of desire, catapult people into a new level of self-awareness, facilitate destiny discovery and dream fulfillment.

Paul can be contacted at: RevivingNations@yahoo.com - 407-967-7553 or 407-282-1745.

For additional info:
http://www.CreativeCommunications.TV
http://www.BreakthroughSeminars.org
http://www.DreamMakerMinistries.com