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Rancul Ratha

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Jun 11, 2024, 12:15:28 PM6/11/24
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Distracted driving is any activity that takes your attention away from driving. Distractions can include anything from texting and talking on a mobile phone to eating and drinking, putting on makeup, shaving, reading, programming a navigation system, watching a video, and even adjusting the radio.

crasy talk 4 .rar


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Research shows that regardless of whether you use a voice-to-text program, hands-free device or a handheld one, the distraction will affect your driving. TxDOT offers these tips to prevent distracted driving that can lead to a ticket, or worse, a crash:

The Talk. Text. Crash.distracted driving campaign is a key component of #EndTheStreakTX, a broader social media and word-of-mouth effort that encourages drivers to make safer choices while behind the wheel, like wearing a seatbelt, driving the speed limit, never texting and driving, and never driving under the influence of alcohol or other drugs.

May McNeil was born in Beardstown, Ill., in 1898. Her brother was a patient of the Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane [aka Jacksonville State Hospital). Interviewed by the Oral History Office, Sangamon State University, Springfield, Ill., Oct. 10, 1987.

The hospital was nearly empty by then, with fewer than 600 patients in a facility that had once housed over 3,600. My sister and I often wondered where all the crazy people had gone. She believed they had escaped. They kicked through the sagging doors and stepped into the light. They were no longer patients, but nuns, maybe, or students at the Flamingo School of Beauty downtown. They fooled everybody but us.

Mamie Cole was an attendant who joined the staff of Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane in 1911. She later became a nurse and night supervisor. Interviewed by the Oral History Office, Sangamon State University, Springfield, Ill.,Oct. 13,1972.

He laughs again and tries to pull me out of the car. He is a little crazy, this first love of mine, this 17-year-old kid, his dad a former drunk who still slaps him around, his mom a woman who cleans the floor on her knees every day but Sunday.

Oscar Gronseth: They had patient dances prior to my coming to this hospital. When the patients would go to the dance, they were escorted in large groups. Then, when the music started, they would come together like the coming together of the Red Sea (laughter). And as the last note would end on the dance set, they parted again, like the parting of the Red Sea. And woe to any of them who were caught even standing around talking to one another.

Oscar Gronseth joined the staff of the Central Illinois Center for the Insane in 1951 as a supervising therapist. He later became the Activity Therapy Supervisor. Interviewed by the Oral History Office, Sangarnon State University, Springfield, I11., Oct. 12, 1972.

We are a family that believes in the unseen, the unknown, the unspoken words that startle us awake. We do not spend a lot of time worrying if others believe as we do. We befriend these doubters. We seek them out, marry them even, and all the while, we secretly think of them as a bit barbaric, so intent on surviving that they never scrape beneath the surface to find what throbs within them. And yet, perhaps, our own survival instincts pale next to these skeptics we keep close to us. They are the sort of people who guard the gates of The Bughouse. We are the sort who roam its halls.

Eleanor DeLong: Yes. [One patient] says I cured him. He was having trouble with his mother and his mother-in-law. He had a wife and five children, and I said, Move as damn far away from both of them as you can get. He had a dealership from an implement company that was bugging him. I said, Get rid of it; work for somebody else. Get out of this situation. Get away from your people; get away from hers. Stand on those two feet yourself And he did it. And he is doing well, really well.

Eleanor PeLong began working at the Illinois Central Hospital for the Insane in 1929 as a ward attendant. In 1953, she became manager of the hospital laundry, where she managed patient workers. Interviewed by the Oral History Office, Sangamon State University, Springfield, I11., Oct. 1 1, 1972.

CrAzY tAlK you just just don\u2019t know know how I I love you so so so

I am writing this in London, it is very loud. London is the city of crazy talk. Sweet baby lamb it\u2019s loud.

I am essentially sitting in the middle of a street I may as well be sharing this writing with the young lady walking to work just below me. I may as well genuinely be sitting in the middle of the road in whitechapel, I am sure there is a bus in the kitchen.

I don\u2019t really want to be too crazy today, I did have some crazy thoughts but I have forgotten them.

Thanks for the encouragement with Jack the lad. I am writing it. Bridget Jones\u2019s Diary for Men.

The Mayor of Crazy Town.

Tackling these three areas of thought are important to address before you pick any class, financial process, or company. They are absolutely paramount to debt-free success. It is what will keep you debt free for the long haul.

We will be starting to share a practical process to put into place. Now is the time to get serious about your level of readiness. Money talk or lack of it from our childhood can mean we just need a little help to get started. Counselors are great to help you overcome past hangups regarding money and unifying language for you and your spouse.

Believe me when I say, this is the last subject I would choose. Why finances and money when I am not a financial planner or even an accountant? Because I have been there, done that, and stayed out of credit card debt for 14 years. Why now?

Will you join me in this journey to consider a new way of life? I am not promising you a program that will work for you. I am promising you honest questions, encouragement, and stories of how we made the shift. How our world is so much different now that we are not afraid to answer the phone or open the mail. Bill collectors are not encouraging.

Since the two articles are interviews, they can not go into as much detail or express all my emotions about the stages of our get-out-of-debt journey. So the next few weeks I will break down the emotional journey to prepare your heart to make the same journey.

If you are willing, join me. I will encourage you in honest and real conversation. There will be lots of freebies and videos. Please join us on Facebook and Instagram to engage in the conversation. IF you ask the questions, I will answer from my journey and get you a resource when possible.

This is an important conversation. It is not meant to rack you with guilt or consume you with embarrassment Join me in taking that out of the equation. It is what it is right now. You can change your circumstance. You are not alone!

Do you have a magical childhood memory? Maybe it was not so great and you would like to change it up for your kids. Hallmark movies are perfect plots for turning the mistakes of the past into blessings for the future. How does that fit into your holiday season in the midst? In the midst of real messy, real busy, real tiring life. No pausing for dramatic plot lines or nice endings wrapped up with a kiss under the mistletoe.

Whatever your past, let love lead you into the blessings of your future. Reach out to your family, friends, and community to take a moment to show love to one another. It could be a simple jesture of a smile or returning a harsh word with a kind one.

Last week I asked you to consider kindness. The act of kindness breeds more love in this world. It is that simple. I do not need you to think like me, be like me, look like me, or live the life I live. We all need a little more love, kindness and grace in our lives. As we end 2018 this week, what will that look like to you? What will be the title of your Hallmark movie?

Yesterday I was in a parking lot driving around looking for a spot. I stopped to let the pedestrian cross in front of me to get to their car. The vehicle behind me proceeded to honk and flash their lights. Why should I be kind?

The holiday season presents more challenges to retailate against the anger. It is a season that presents us unlimited opportunities to practice kindness. Have you ever felt exhausted by the feeling you are the only one choosing kindness?

Last week we talked about small moments that can overwhelm the hard stuff. Kindness is no different. Often there are days during this season that I am hard pressed to find a smile, a kind word, and especially a driver that is not operating in road rage.

I am not sure why kindness should be a challenge. Kind words, a kind gesture, a kind smile they are simple. Yet so complicated. This does not mean to diminish the hard days. The days when you cannot see the good or the glass-half-full. Do you feel like all sanity can go out the window when dealing with the stress of the holiday?

How about this week our kindness challenge takes us outside of our own stuff. What if we take this week and create an intentional daily kindness act. Whenever I set myself on personal goal or challenge I feel presented by overwhelming opportunities to practice. For example, when I prepare to speak on a topic, like parenting teens, I feel like I have extra fun opportunities to improve my parenting that week.

No matter what your relationships, family, marriage, living, and work situation the holidays bring out the most stressful situations in us all. Do you do too much? Do you over schedule? Do you choose not to delegate?

We believe that most offense come from the unspoken thoughts in our heads. Assuming what others intentions, thoughts, and actions could mean can be the first end to any relationship. We challenge you to instead ASK questions. We all interpret based on our life filters. The person in line behind you may have just had the worst news possible. Treat them to a coffee instead of a harsh remark.

It is very difficult not to let assumptions creep in our thoughts and manifest in our decisions. It is a daily decision to ask the questions, choose to believe the good, and build opinions on fact not emotions

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