Author Archive

Herbal Colon Cleanse

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

There are a huge variety of colon cleansers on the market, from the super natural herbal ones to others that contain things no one can even pronounce. Most of them are on the pricey side, the more benefits, the more money they want. However, I have discovered an amazing way to do a colon cleanse, for mere pennies.

Amoebas. Those tiny single cell critters that you studied in high school biology are alive and well in the real world, particularly third world countries. On a recent trip to Mexico, I sampled some street food that was obviously not up to our health standards. Although there have been a few stomach upsets from this sort of eating in the past, they did not prepare me for my astounding clean out.

Colon cleanses are good for you because they eliminate the built up toxins in the intestines. One of the most common comments by those who are successful in maintaining their bowels nice and clean is that they are able to go 2-4 times a day and have nice light brown stools which are fairly soft. Excuse me if this is too much information, it will get worse, I promise.

The first thing a colon cleanse does is get rid of everything in you. Often, the laxative is taken on an empty stomach and a true cleansing requires fasting for anywhere from one day to a week. During this time, you can drink liquids to stay hydrated, and will get rid of anything that has been stuck in your intestines for the past several years. That’s the theory, at any rate.

With amoebas, the cleansing begins quickly. First, you find yourself rushing to the bathroom where everything is expelled both upstairs and down, in waves. This usually goes on for about 12 hours. Once the first stage of the cleansing is over, you will probably be too weak to do much except lay in bed and sip Gatorade. That’s what I did, anyway. The nausea keeps you from eating, essentially forcing a fast that lasts anywhere from two to three days.

During the fast, the body continues to expel anything that enters the stomach as quickly as possible, often within minutes. There is also a lot of gas produced during this time. After three days of not eating and being maintained completely empty, I had lost a few pounds and found that things were finally getting back to normal.

Herbal teas eliminated the amoebas for me and upon returning home, I discovered that for the price of a simple tortilla con carne (about fifty cents), I had achieved that envied 2-4 times a day bowel regularity, complete with light brown color! Talk about saving money, why doesn’t everyone get amoebas?

Herbal Colon Cleanse

Tax Advisor Definition

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

Unless you’ve been living in a cave for the last ten years, you’ve heard all about eBay. It’s an online trading community where you can buy and sell just about anything. Millions of people around the world use eBay.

For many people, Internet auctions represent a thriving business opportunity. Thousands of people make their full-time living using eBay. Thousands more use eBay to supplement their regular income with a profitable work-from-home, part-time business.

As more and more people tune in to eBay as a source of extra income, a nagging question is starting to surface: Do I have to pay taxes on my eBay earnings?

The Internet and eBay are new technologies. Traditional laws and regulations just don’t seem to fit the new models of communication and marketing. And since there’s so much doubt and confusion, it’s easy to avoid the question all together. Some even feel the opportunity is at its best while the industry is unregulated. The unspoken attitude of many online traders seems to be one of wanting to exploit the current system for as long as possible.

It reminds me of the wild, wild west I remember seeing in old black and white western movies. Cowboys and bandits shooting up the town, drinking and gambling run amok. All of the chaos and lawlessness tolerated because the laws had yet to be defined and applied to the new frontier.

Indeed, the Internet is the new frontier. Maybe it’s not as dramatic as what we see in western movies, but it does raise some new questions about how the current laws and regulations are applied to a new and different situation.

So, what is the answer? Are eBay profits taxable?

Strictly defined, the IRS considers earned and unearned income from all sources worldwide to be taxable unless specifically declared untaxable.

Under this definition, a lot of activities are reportable on your personal income tax return – garage sale income, lottery winnings, jury duty pay, lemonade stand profits, and even income from illegal activities.

(That’s right! Drug dealers and embezzlers are required to report their illegal gain on their tax returns. Remember, the government couldn’t get Al Capone on murder charges but they put him away for a long time because of … income tax evasion!)

So that means that eBay and other online profits are subject to income tax.

But how does this play out in the real world?

Well, many people just don’t bother claiming their earnings. It’s the easiest and most convenient solution – certainly the most profitable – but it’s not necessarily the right choice.

Failing to report income could result in you owing additional taxes to the IRS. And if you don’t pay those taxes on time, they’ll tack on additional penalties and interest as well.

How easy is it for the IRS to find out about your online activities? That’s a tough question. Certainly the IRS has the power to review your financial documents, including bank statements. Anomalies – like large or frequent deposits – that can’t be explained would raise suspicions.

Unless you are in the middle of an audit for other reasons, this is not likely to come up. But what about eBay? Do they have any obligation to tell the IRS about sales that come through their website?

Currently eBay (and other similar websites) does not report income to or earnings to the IRS. In fact, eBay has taken a strict position that they are not responsible for reporting transactions. They claim simply to be a medium that connects buyers and sellers. In this respect, they are no different from a newspaper that publishes classified advertising.

For the time being, eBay is not backing down on this position. They do not want to be put in a position to report to the IRS any of the millions of transactions that move through their system each year. And unless Congress or the IRS forces a change, eBay won’t be reporting transactions in the near future.

eBay does, however, encourage it’s members to learn about the tax laws that may apply to them.

It would seem, at least for the time being, that income from eBay and other online sources are under the IRS radar. But is that good news or bad news? Are there any situations where reporting eBay income would be advantageous?

Owning a home business can be a major deduction on your personal income tax return. Reported income can be offset by legitimate expenses – in this case, the cost of inventory or the listing fees that eBay charges. As with all businesses, it’s possible to post a loss which, in turn, reflects on your personal income tax return as a lower adjusted gross income. A loss on your business could mean a lower overall tax liability.

You have to be careful, however. The IRS won’t appreciate you taking a loss every year just for the tax benefits. In fact, you will need to post a profit at least three years out of every five. If you don’t the IRS may reclassify your business as a hobby. If they do that, you’ll still be obligated to report your income, but you won’t be able to take any losses that are greater than the income you received. You can break even, but you just can’t take a loss. Even then, you won’t be able to deduct your losses unless you itemize using a Schedule A.

Whether your eBay activities can be considered a hobby or a business is another gray area cloaked in confusion. It usually comes down to your intent. If your intent is to make a profit or earn a full-time living from eBay, then you would probably classify your activities as a business.

If, on the other hand, your goal is to clear out your garage and sell all your dust-collecting kitsch in the great internet yard sale, then it could be considered a hobby.

As with other areas of your financial life, talk to your tax advisor about the best treatment for your own situation.

There is one other reason why you would want to report your business income to the IRS. When you own a business you are responsible for paying the social security and Medicare taxes on your earnings. The down side to this is that you’ll end up owing more taxes. The upside, however, is that self-employment income counts toward your social security retirement. The additional tax you pay now will be deposited to your retirement account. We’ll save the discussion on the merits of the Social Security System for another day.

So, now you know that your eBay profits are taxable and owning a small business could be a considerable tax advantage. Check with your tax professional to discuss your unique situation. It’s worth the price to stay clear from trouble with the IRS.

While the Internet frontier may appear to be a wild wasteland free from regulation and oversight right now, it’s only a matter of time before the government figures out how to get their share of a billion dollar industry. And when they do, you can be sure that the tax man will come calling.

tax advisors

Weight Training & Weight Lifting Tips

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

Working out and lifting weights is an always popular pass-time for teenage boys. Many see it as a popular and harmless hobby. The trouble with this viewpoint is that beginning a weight training regimen can cause harm if it isn’t done properly, and committed to. Weight training is different for all people, but most especially for teenage boys. Use these tips when bulking up to make sure muscle mass is added safely and without injury.

1. Make sure that weight training is something you see as a long-term commitment. Weight training isn’t merely a hobby, but is part of an overall lifestyle change that requires proper diet and exercise. It can reshape your body, mind, and even metabolism. A sudden change in body shape can be traumatic. Bulking up means making a commitment to staying in shape. Losing muscle mass turns to pudge if it isn’t maintained through a healthy diet and proper exercise.

2. Determine what type of workout works best for you. Home gyms work well for people who don’t have workout partners. Resistance weight training doesn’t require a workout partner to spot, and can offer the most flexibility and convenience for many. Gym memberships generally allow for ready made spotters with just a simple request for help, plus offer trainers and other experienced lifters who can give you tips and ensure you are using proper form to avoid injury.

3. Determine your overall goals. Are you trying to put on mass? Are you trying to tone up some pudgy areas before bulking up? If you are thin, and you are attempting to bulk up, it is important to increase your caloric intake and avoid too much cardiovascular exercise for the sake of burning calories. You might consider a protein supplement or other supplements to help with your weight gain goal if you are having difficulty in this area. For those trying to lose weight, don’t go very heavy on weights or attempt to bulk up until you have lost the excess baggage through cardio work. Otherwise, the increased muscle mass below the fat will make you look fatter.

4. Research specific exercises, paying close attention to proper form. Ask an experienced lifter or trainer to watch you at least a couple of times, and give you pointers on improving your form. Bad form causes pain, torn tendons and ligaments, and other injuries (some of which can’t really be fully repaired). Heavy weights with fewer repetitions build bigger muscles faster. Lighter weight with more reps tone and define lean muscle mass without packing on too much bulk.
5. Make sure you take in more calories than you burn. If your body burns all the calories you take in, no calories are left for building muscle. Make sure that you are taking in enough protein - about 2 grams of protein per pound of body weight per day is recommended to gain muscle mass.

6. Stretch before all workouts. Stretch your entire body, and focus on the muscle groups you will work that day. Stretching releases synovial fluids in joints to lubricate and decrease the chances of injury and pain.

7. Don’t work your entire body every day. Split your workout into muscle groups. Common divisions call for working back and biceps together, and chest and triceps. Legs and abs can be grouped, or done on separate days. Giving muscles time to rebuild after you tear them down lifting weight is what makes them bigger and stronger.

8. Seek a physician’s advice before you begin any workout regimen. Keep in contact, and get regular checkups. Check any irregular aches or pains swiftly, and follow doctors orders as to healing time. Don’t overwork your muscles or joints.

9. Avoid the use of steroids and other get-big-quick scams. Hard work, heavy weight, and commitment are the only legitimate ways to get big muscles. Steroids are unhealthy and cause a host of other problems including “roid rage”, severe acne, addiction, and can even shrink your testicles.

10. Get plenty of rest, and stay hydrated. Working your body that hard requires giving it additional rest to recover. Further, all body systems and functions require water to work efficiently and properly. Dehydration causes headaches, dizziness, nausea, shakiness, and many other problems, so drink water and electrolyte drinks to stay hydrated and balanced.

With proper consideration, planning, training, and commitment, weight lifting can be a healthy life activity to undertake. weight training can help teenage boys gain self esteem, confidence, focus and discipline, so long as care is taken to ensure it is done properly.

weight lifting workouts

The House Cleaning Tips

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

It’s not difficult to find advice on how to clean and organize, and what products to use for what chore. There’s Mom, Grandma, Mrs. Smith next door, Mr. Jones down at the hardware store, and hundreds of books and articles on the subject!

But the single most common reason why major household cleaning efforts fail — lack of preparation to do the job at hand that leads to frustration, lost time and wasted effort — is often overlooked in advice columns and how-to books.

As with any other human endeavor, planning pays off. So before you dive in to that unspeakable attic mess or tackle that maze of a kitchen cupboard, consider these six time-tested planning tips to make the task easier … and even enjoyable!

1. Do something pleasantly different

Instead of assaulting your senses and the environment with a literally dizzying array of cleaning chemicals, consider taking a morning to prepare some herbal and natural cleaning solutions this year.

Some natural disinfectants include rosemary and lemon, and the leaves and stems of thyme and sage. Cloves, lavender, orange, peppermint and sandalwood also have antiseptic powers.

You can use six drops or so of their essential oils, mixed with a teaspoon of isopropyl alcohol and a quart of lukewarm water.

You can also cook up a great smelling, spirit-lifting disinfectant by culling the leaves and stems of rosemary, eucalyptus, thyme, sage or lavender, and letting the mixture simmer for an hour. Simply strain out the solids and let the mixture cool. You’ll love the fresh scent and the gentle way the solution cleans your spaces!

The sweet, nutty seeds of the fern-like Sweet Cicely plant can be crushed to yield a wonderfully aromatic natural furniture polish. Pulverize the seeds, then scoop up a handful in a soft cloth and admire the gentle way it coaxes shine from wood!

2. Be alone and enjoy it!

You’d never try to clean a keyboard while someone’s typing, or clean your oven while preparing Thanksgiving dinner. It’s a mystery why so many well-meaning people think they can clean a room or a closet with other people coming and going!

If your family members aren’t going to help with the tasks — or you know you’ll drive yourself to distraction trying to keep tabs on who’s doing what — then enjoy your time alone! Turn up your favorite music. Get some aerobic exercise with the bending and stretching you’ll be doing. And promise yourself a treat — anything from a day at the spa to a pint of orange frozen custard — when the task is successfully completed.

3. Survey the damage

Before you lift a hand to whatever particular housework horror you have in mind, take stock of what you’re facing. Nearly every home has clutter that clogs up the cleaning process. Put it away or pitch it.

Don’t despair or get distracted if you’re cleaning up a really cluttered area — such as a table piled high with papers and bills or a bathroom counter crammed with a seemingly endless array of bottles, boxes, tubes, cosmetic containers, jars and baskets of numerous interesting shapes.

Your goal at the moment is to clear the surface so you can clean it. Don’t file, catalog or try to sort the clutter right now. Toss the whole mess into a box, label and date it, and sort it that night while you’re watching TV or listening to music.

4. Look up, look down, look under

Standing in the doorway of the room you’re about to clean, look up to the ceiling, to the furthest corners of the room, then bring your eyes gradually down to the floor, then up again, left to right, top to bottom. Note problems such as leaks, broken or cracked plaster, missing tiles, splintered moldings, creeping mildew.

Eyeball the spots you usually don’t notice: heating baseboards, radiators, windowsills, caulking, curtain rods. Write down anything that needs to be repaired or replaced, and start building a project list.

5. Dress the part

Whenever you’re preparing to clean, get comfortable. Wear old clothes, soft socks and rubber-soled slippers. Consider using a full-length garden apron with pockets, plus a tie-back garden pocket belt to stash a scrub-brush, plastic gloves, tissues and a small bottle of antibacterial cleanser for the odd unpleasant surprise.

If you’ve got long hair, tie it back in a braid and remove jewelry and piercings. Safety first!

6. Let there be light … and heat … and other comforts of home

Make sure all light bulbs work and have at least two that are preferably brand new. The last thing you want is to be suddenly thrust into darkness while you’re up to your elbows in bleach-water or standing on a metal step-stool washing walls.

Check your flashlight and know where to find extra batteries. Keep the room temperature at a comfortably cool, but not cold, level, because you’ll probably work up a sweat and you want to avoid being chilled.

Also, keep a water-bottle handy (you will get thirsty!) and a box of lanolin-based baby wipes, in case you’re called to the door or have an unexpected visitor!

Most important to your chore planning: be ready to work and have a great attitude. Don’t try to accomplish more in a day than you know you can complete, and be proud of your successes.

Remember that if a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, by planning ahead, then doing the job to plan, you’ll have just take one giant step toward beating the house-cleaning blues!

house cleaning

E-Conveyancing in Global

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

If you are preparing to move to Ireland and are about to start navigating the home buying process in Ireland you might hear the word conveyance tossed around a lot. You may even here it wrongly called conveyancing, which is not the correct term. Conveyance is actually just the legal term for processing all of the paperwork that is necessary when buying and selling property, as well as transferring deeds of ownership. It can be a lengthy and complicated process that is best navigated with the assistance of an estate agent, sometimes referred to as a solicitor in Ireland.

There are many things involved in conveyance. When you find a home that you are interested in and you and the seller agree on a price, your seller’s solicitor will draw up a contract and have it sent to the solicitor acting on your behalf. Your solicitor should look over the paperwork and check the title before giving it to you to sign off on. This is when you will have to pay a deposit.

After that process is complete, your solicitor drafts up a purchases deed and raises queries or requisitions, which are simply searches, on the title before sending in your deposit. Then he will draft the deed and any objections that he may have in reference to the title back to the seller’s solicitor. This means that you have agreed to purchasing the property and are now waiting for the seller to confirm that he is committed.

Some of the requisitions that will be carried out will include a planning search to see if there are any plans to build anything by the planning commission that would have a negative effect on the value or use of the home. This includes roads, rail lines, airports and more. There will also be a search as to whether the land is subject to a compulsory purchase by the local authority for road building or widening and the like. There will also be a check to ensure that the seller actually is the owner of the property, that the property was build in accordance with regulations, that there is no debt tied to the home because unpaid property debts are tied to property instead of people, and if there are any guarantees that you can benefit from.

Once your solicitor is done, he will draft the deed transferring the title and if satisfied the seller will sign it. Your solicitor will need to check to see if capital gains tax has been paid by the seller if applicable. If the purchase price exceeds a certain amount, then the buyer can be subject to a 15 percent capital gains tax.

As you can see, buying or selling a home in Ireland can be rather confusing. It is advisable to seek the assistance of a reputable solicitor in Ireland before you begin your home search. They are used to this process and will most likely be able to save you some money as well as some headache and frustration.

conveyancing

An ANXIETY CURE that works every time

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

It is difficult to explain anxiety to one who has never experienced severe unrelenting anxiety. This is not nervousness, the kind we may experience before an interview, it is not fear in the traditional sense, where the sun sets and you need to make your way back to camp in the dark. It is a very unique terror. It is the war within, the battle against ones own thoughts. This battle is dark and deep and terrible at times. Yet, more of that later, first let me tell you my story of how anxiety came upon me and how I found my way free of it.

I will say I am not a doctor and nothing within this article should be taken as medical advice, nor should anyone discontinue any treatment based solely on the information in this article. Please consult your doctor before coming off any medications.

Anxiety disorders are the most common of our struggles in America. It is even more common than depression. The spectrum of disorders ranges from Panic Disorder to GAD (Generalized Anxiety Disorder) and everything in between. Now for me, it began as simply stress. I was in a difficult relationship, and had got myself into a good one as the saying goes. I was with a wonderful woman who had not matured in a few key ways and I had left some of my center in order to engage in this relationship. The details of that are less relevant than this one key: For about 4 months I was intensely stressed. This “stressed” was not panic, it was simple stress. Tightness in my chest, a constant feeling of restlessness, the need to just take it out somewhere, and once in awhile toward the end some difficulty drawing a full breath. The stress continued and I ignored the warning signs. Then one night it happened, a sudden surge of panic. It was as if all the little things that had been on low heat on the stove suddenly boiled over violently. The panic didn’t pass. It stayed with me. This was not simply an unpleasant feeling. It was panic which would not relent. I would run outside and jog for 30 minutes at 3am just to move. All pleasure left me. The pleasure of eating eggs in the morning. The pleasure of seeing my friends, of watching a movie, all of it was gone. I found delight in nothing and worst of all my mind and my thoughts were racing. One after another, relentlessly running. What if this happens? What if she does this? What if I don’t feel what I used to feel? What if I dont get better? When does this pass? How do I get through this? No, not again! and on and on and on.

If you sleep normally every night you may not stop to appreciate how your mind drifts pleasantly from one soft thought to another and slowly you surrender and fall asleep. For those struggling with intense anxiety, there are no pleasant thoughts, there is no peace, no rest, no surrender. There is a battle on. Imagine as you begin to fall asleep you hear glass shatter, gunshots and the screams of your baby girl sleeping upstairs. Now try to get to sleep. It just doesnt happen. You’re awake, you’re up, you’re running, full alert, reading to fight to the death, but with anxiety, there is no enemy. All the same emotion, but no enemy but a situation, or a thought, or a series of thoughts. And so the battle never seems to end.

I have struggled in the past with a few small episodes of this same feeling. One lasted as long as 5 or 6 days. This one was longer, much longer. It was hell. I would try to go to work but I could not focus on work. I am in advertising and marketing as a creative director and I own my own company, so I needed creativity and this feeling is the anathema of creativity. I would try to focus, but focus was near to impossible. I would find myself googling all day anxiety and anxiety disorders. Surely there had to be some explanation, if only I could find it. Work suffered to the point that I was producing maybe 5% of what I was before I broke down. Yet another reason to be anxious. At this point I was worried. I had fought through this for awhile now and no end was in sight. This time I was not going to go it alone without an end in sight so I called my local doctor. He was very kind which was nice to find. He gave me a prescription for Xanex, Ambien and Lexapro. So I thanked him and left.

On the drive to the pharmacy, my mind was racing. I have not had an easy life. My childhood was hard, damn hard. I was neglected, abused and lost for many many years trying to find who I was and what love and God meant to me. But through all this I had never gone on an anti-depressent. Maybe I should have, but I powered through and I never wanted to be on a pill. I loved my mind, the clarity of my thoughts, the depth of my feeling, the power behind it. I had started 3 companies and was successful. I had debates late into the night about the nature of God, original sin, love, unconditional and otherwise, and I loved the power of reason. I hated the notion of anything dulling this power or inuring me to the depth of thought and feeling. I would often sit in fields and read poems and let the wind wash over my face and think of the gift of life with such fondness. I feared losing all this. But hey, fear is what got me here right so I thought maybe this time was different. Maybe I needed some kind of special help because I felt nearly helpless.

In the weeks that followed I ended up taking Xanax, without the Lexapro, trying to get through hard nights. Ambien helped me get to sleep for about 3 hours and then I woke up like water was thrown on me. Wide awake, mind racing again. There were some intensely stressful events that happened in those weeks that made it worse, far far worse. I started to get thoughts “stuck” in my head. I would obsess on a thought over and over again, and this thought had a fire to it that burned me relentlessly. I swear severe anxiety seems harder than the worse torture in some underground Iraqi prison ever could be. I spent hour after hour researching. I bought 30+ books and read them. I read every article known to man and in the end I was confused. So many opinions. So many kinds of disorders. I seemed to have OCD according to one site. I had GAD according to another site. But the thing that I couldn’t figure out was that I was FINE just a few months ago. I loved life. I didnt worry about everything. Sure I was stressed and anxious about your usual things in life and had occasional phobias rear up but I loved life. I loved my friends, my family, my music, everything. It was all a gift that brought me joy. It was gone now, all of it was gone. I couldn’t feel anything but agony now and I couldn’t not understand how suddenly a guy is rolling along through life and then BLAM! Now you have OCD. It just didn’t add up to me. And honestly after reading thousands and thousand of pages in books and magazines and online and spending hour after hour in therapy, I have to say the mental health community really doesn’t do much to help people with these disorders but confuse them more and offer poor explanations for the onset of these disorders and how long they last.

Added to my regiment was therapy. I was talking to one therapist who listened kindly to what I was saying, but my problem with therapy has always been the same. I know everything I need to do. I have read enough books and I am pro-active enough to know a pattern of dysfunction pretty quickly. I know this sounds arrogant, but they offered little to no new insight and this was $140 a session. I tried another therapist who said he specialized in anxiety. His approach was to dig deep into my childhood to understand why I am prone to anxiety and how these thoughts represent my deepest fears. While I won’t discount this approach, the problem was this: My fears in this state were EVERYTHING. I was afraid of not ever getting better, of not feeling natural affection for the woman I loved, of being hated by God, of being broken, of not being able to make a living and going on disability, of burning out my family and friends with endless struggles deep in my mind so having me list all these out and giving each of them attention seemed again like a bit of a waste of time.

I would like to spend a moment on the what it feels like to battle with anxiety for a long time for those who need to know they are not alone and for the family and friends of those who battle trying to understand what it is to feel this. First, you are confused and bewildered. What happened? Why me? What is going on? This bewilderment is a sort of panic of its own. You were fine, you were functional and suddenly you broke and you have no idea what the hell is going on or how to get out of it. Next you become consumed with a world of anxiety. Its your thought every day, its your life. You drink anxiety, breathe anxiety, ask people about your anxious thoughts, worry about everything, fear everything, try to distract yourself over and over so you can go to sleep, take drugs to calm your thoughts. You run, you hide, you gather strength to fight, you read books over and over, you write journals. You don’t see your friends much anymore, you strain your relationships, you become totally internalized. You live inside your skin and inside your head and slowly, slowly the world fades. You don’t seem to fit anymore. You see people playing and laughing at a restaurant and long to be like them again, just to be care-free for a moment, like you used to feel. You get a sense of unreality like none of it is real expect for the intensity of your anxiety. Because it is so confusing as to where this came from and why it exists, and the mental health community really has no idea either you next start to lose confidence. You don’t know what you feel anymore. You don’t know what you think. You don’t know if God cares, if you’re friends like you if your family loves you. You don’t know if you love your wife. You logically think of course I do and you discipline your mind to act lovingly even though you don’t feel it. You try to let logic rule over feeling, hoping someday feeling will return to make this world make sense. You lose your center and with it that old confidence that you knew how it all worked, and in short you learn some fast hard humility. Next is perhaps the most terrifying feeling I have yet known in my time alive on this earth. The feeling of disintegration. This means you literally feel like you are pulling apart from the inside out. Your identity is no longer available to you. You don’t remember who are and what you believe anymore. You think you do, but its all logic, you can’t feel anything anymore, just fear, constant fear. You are falling apart. It was near this point that I started on Lexapro.

Up until this point I had tried Xanex alone at .25 and I had suffered. Plain and simple. While it had helped a little, it didn’t change my thoughts just helped me care a little less. I had read online about Lexapro and how it was very helpful for anxiety. I figured never mind my pride I couldn’t live like this. My company was failing, my relationships were strained and I was desperate. So I started. And stopped. And started. And stopped. I would take half my 10MG pill like the doctor told me for a day and then say, “No! I can do this alone!” and I would stop. Finally it got so bad I just stuck with it and I made it 5 days. I will say this marked the lowest and most difficult point. I know this drug affects everyone differently but for me it was hell getting on. At day 4 I wanted desperately to end my life. I felt like I was ripped apart inside with no center, no identity, nothing of myself left. I felt I was going crazy. I felt like this was it for me. I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life in a cell at some mental hospital. All the man I was, all the power and beauty I knew I had, were gone here. It was hell on earth, and for some of you, you know what I am talking about. On day 6 I made a decision. Part of the problem with anxiety is indecisiveness. You have no compass of confidence to make choices. So working with my fiance who was there through all of this like few souls could be, we decided that come hell or high water, no Lexapro for a month. This was especially hard because on the night of day 6 I started to actually feel a little better. I asked for my medication back, which I had given her and she said, no we made a decision. I said ok and powered through. The next part of my story is the key and in it I will present the secret I learned and how I learned it and how I got out of this anxiety and how I will never be subjected to it again and why I have that confidence.

In my journey and my reading I came upon many books. One was by Jon Kabit-Zinn called Full Catastrophe Living which was helpful. I began learning how to meditate. I did at times experience deep calm from this. I must say though, this was not the answer, but it was helpful and the attitudes of mindfulness are closely associated with the answer I found. The thing is I worked outside in, thinking my thoughts were beyond my control, because that is how it feels. And while all these techniques were helpful, they never seemed to click with the core issue. I could imagine a deep practice of mindfulness if done fully could really aid someone in recovering, and of all I did and tried I think it was the closest to actually helping so I would recommend it as part of a plan of living we all might have to keep stress down before a breakdown.

I tried prayer a lot too, as I am a deeply religious person who really loves God and tries to live a moral life believing that morality and growth is the answer to recovering from broken childhoods. In states of anxiety I must admit it can be hard to pray as you seem to feel nothing and the thought that God too hates you for a mistake you made adds guilt and shame. I recommend you keep fighting through this though and don’t give up.

When I quit the Lexapro I did so with a plan. I would meditate for 45 minutes a day. I would read my bible and pray. I would study a new therapy called ACT therapy in a workbook I had bought and I would exercise at least 30 minutes a day which had proved to be a little helpful. All of this did some to help. But now I want to share with you the breakthrough.

A little book I had read some months earlier was Hope and Help for Your Nerves by Claire Weeks. I remember loving but I set it down and moved on to reading the next book, thinking surely modern medicine had figured something out beyond a book written in 1969. It turns out I was wrong. In fact, the issue had been far more complicated since her little book and is a quagmire of opinions which leave one feeling more and more confused. So I came back to it and I purchased her CD: Pass Through Panic: Freeing Yourself From Anxiety and Fear. I started reading the book again and for once it all clicked. What no Web site or book seemed to address was onset. I was a normal guy as the idea goes with a successful company and a great life. What the hell happened that now I was suddenly had OCD who was tormented forever more by thoughts he could not get out of his head or worry over a thousand things due to GAD? No book addressed this clearly except for hers. And so I read on. And on. And on. And let me tell you something clearly that is simply my opinion: Put every book you own, your lists of your fears, your other audio tapes, your rubber bands on your wrists and everything else you have tried and done on the shelf and read Hope and Help for Your Nerves and buy her audio CD and sit and listen to it over and over again until you understand what she is saying. Because despite 40 more years of research we have seemingly lost the understanding this beautiful woman had of this illness over 40 years ago when she wrote this precious book.

I cannot speak for every kind of nervous illness, only for those of us who remember being “ok” and just increasingly stressed or subjected to a traumatic event and then suddenly we were plunged into cold water and deep black. For those and I believe all others, this is the way out.

Do not confuse yourself by reading 50 books at once or trying new things over and over. Understand what happened to you is simple. It is not a mystery. When nerves are subjected to stress for long enough (or through a very traumatic event) and to enough of this fight or flight chemical adrenaline, they begin to weary. This weariness is usually felt as a difficult in breathing sometimes, a constant state of strain although not panic and just being nervous all the time. We may be short-tempered and lash out like after a long day of hard frustrating work. After enough adrenaline ours nerves become “sensitized” and this is the very state I am describing in this entire article. There is no mystery to it. You have been stressed too long, worried too long, feared too long or had too much adrenaline all at once and your nerves failed and spun you into a pattern of sensitization. Here your mind races, you worry about everything, emotions are 20x more intense than before and its all negative. You begin a cycle of fear, adrenaline, fear that becomes overwhelming. Then our lives become about anxiety management, we stop living, we sit and fret and worry and panic. Its so damn painful to live here that everything becomes about avoiding pain. Like someone being tortured, they will do anything to avoid more pain. So it is with the severely anxious person. This is how disorders like OCD develop. People find small ways to avoid more pain and anxiety like handwashing. This then becomes necessary to avoid the anxiety caused by germs or any other stressor. Open spaces, supermarkets, people, situations, whatever the case might be. We can call these disorders all sorts of different names, but in the end, its all the same thing: Fear and the desperation to not feel the pain associated with it. So we run, we avoid, we study and read and obsess.

The way out of this is CLEARLY addressed in Claire Weeks’ book and on her CD. Please buy the CD, I have no association with her work, but I tell you nothing helped me more than listening to her CD. Her strong powerful voice, her clear no-nonsense approach and her clarity of thought are like sweet relief after so long of being confused and fighting.

The great key she discusses on her CD is a 4 step process that more and more is being understood to be key in overcoming anxiety, getting OUT of the state of sensitization and staying out of it for the rest of your life.

The steps are:

1. Face the Anxiety, the fear, the thought, the situation, the anything that causes you intense anxiety.
2. Accept it.
3. Float.
4. Let time pass.

This sounds simple right? Well its hard. And I read this early on and said yeah makes sense and never really applied it and therefore never got out of my anxious state. I am sitting here writing you this article being now free of anxiety and free of the power it had over my life. I feel again like I used to, I am returned to myself. Let me talk for a moment about why it initially didn’t work for me and what I needed to understand in order to allow its power to actually work for me and cure me from this illness forever.

1. Facing

This step is important. Look your fear in the face. Don’t fight it, label it, or do anything with it. Just look straight at it. Feel it. Let it course through your veins. You’re not running this time. You’re gonna sit with it for a minute. It’s important. Imagine yourself facing a lion. It’s terrifying, you think you are going to be eaten alive. Here I am asking you to face the lion, stare at it and say if you want to eat me, here I am. Do not run, or flee. Just stand your ground and feel panic, fear, a disturbing thought, an disturbing image, a disturbing point of view on a particular problem, whatever it might be. Face it. I know the courage it takes. I know you have it. More than most anyone else may know, I know what it takes and know that the heart in you will be stronger forever for having the courage to face this fear.

2. Accept it.

This step is by far the most important of all the steps and one that it took me the longest to understand. So please pay close attention to this part. Acceptance must be real for this process to work. It cannot be the idea of acceptance. You will find if you have struggled with this problem of anxiety for awhile you will notice that a thought has power to it. You feel a fire, or electricity associated with the thought. If you break it down further you will see that in fact two things are going on here. First, you have a disturbing thought, second, the thought hurts, is painful or terrifying in some way. Next fear comes. Fear of these thoughts, memories of how long you have been struggling like this, a dread of this never going away, of things never returning to normal, and so the spiral continues downward. Stress has many physical symptoms. They include headaches, body aches, a sensation of an iron band around your head, heart palpitations, and various other chemical and physical reactions. These usually follow the first thought, or come randomly. It is very key at this moment when a thought feels electrified and when these physical feelings come to do something very different than you ever have done. ACCEPT THEM. Do not fight with them. Do not war with them or try to change them. Do not argue with yourself or try to change the feeling. Do not try to get the thought out of your head or distract yourself. Accept deeply in your soul whatever sensations are associated with the painful thought. Accept that your heart is racing and that is ok. It is just your body reacting to stress. No mystery here. Accept that you are feeling a sense of panic. Just nerves that are highly sensitized right now. No mystery here. Accept it and work deeply to accept it. This acceptance again CANNOT be surface, but must extend deep within yourself. If you think you are too ill, have struggled too long, or are too weak to find this kind of strength, think again. I promise you, you have this power, as it is the power of surrender, not the power of fighting. DO NOT FIGHT. Accept. Accept. Accept whatever comes next. Let acceptance be a coat you wear in the winter of your mind. Whatever comes is ok. I accept it. Say to yourself: Bring your panic, mind, bring your racing heart and your throbing head. I accept it all. I have no fight for you. Just calm acceptance. Bring your worst and I will not fight you, I will lay down and watch it pass over me like gazing up at the stars as they pass slowly overhead. I watch you move across me and just as I cannot stop the stars in the sky, so I do not fight you, but I let you do what you are going to do. If you feel better for a few hours and think “Oh is this it? Am I done? What if? What if? What if?” Stop yourself and say “I accept this moment, and whatever may come next. Panic may come, fear may come and I will accept that as well. I accept all that comes” Stop battling to escape pain. This is a life lesson that anxiety like nothing else teaches. Learn it well. Face the pain, the fear, and then accept it, deep in your gut, accept it. Only now can you truly let it go.

3. Float

Claire Weeks talks alot about floating, and its another important step. Imagine yourself on water backfloating. Or imagine you are on a cloud just drifting. You don’t know where the cloud is going and you don’t know where backfloating is taking you. You just float. No fight, no war, just surrender and relax into your own surrender.

4. Let time pass

This step is hard because we hate pain. We want relief now. It hurts so much, we just want it to end now, but stop and have compassion for yourself for a moment. You have been suffering for weeks or months or years, your body needs a little bit to heal and recover. You will recover. It just needs to work through itself and bring itself back to its center now that you have learned how to let it heal. It will take a little time though. Be prepared to accept anything that comes. YOU WILL RECOVER NOW THAT YOU KNOW THE WAY OUT. Be kind to yourself and gentle and let time slowly heal you now that you have stopped fighting.

I have to again say, Claire does a far better job than me explaining how this works, so please read her book and listen to her CD and it will work for you. This process is what pulled me from months of anxious suffering. I was close to suicide a few times not because I hate my life but because I could not imagine continuing to live in this way. It was horrible and painful beyond measure and yet I am grateful for the experience.

Anxiety has many lessons about life waiting for us if we would listen to them. Life will force us to either grow up or become more neurotic, there is not much of an in-between. Carl Jung said “Neurosis is always a substitute for legitimate suffering.” Anxiety also preys on those who struggle with ideas like acceptance and letting go. What we call well adjusted human beings. We all must learn to accept things in this life and we must also learn how to let go. These are not simple lessons and there is no greater teacher than anxiety. In so many areas of life now when something stressful comes up I simply say I accept this moment as stressful and I accept my bodies reaction to it. From here I find calm to move and make good decisions.

For all of you who are struggling with anxiety, be it severe or mild, you have my love. As odd as that may sound from an online article, you really do as I know exactly what it is to suffer this kind of pain and you are not alone. No matter how bruised and broken and empty and alone you feel, you are not alone and more than that you can end this and you can be free again, stronger than when you came, more powerful than you ever would have been without this experience and further along on your journey toward health. Remember that even the smallest effort at the four step process above is a beginning and beginnings are a victory. Once you know the path, YOU WILL RECOVER and you will never be here again, I promise.

In regard searching for the cause of the anxiety and recovery in general: While there is some value in searching your childhood and life for all the reasons for your anxiety, my advice is just to try to bring peace to your life in all the ways that are within your power to control. I do advise you though to not make major life decisions in a state of sensitization and anxiety as you cannot think clearly from these places. But in general understand that you were fine before this happened right? You are in a state of sensitization and everything here will feel 20x more intense than it otherwise would. Rather than digging deep, just work to stay peaceful where you can and focus on the 4 step process to get yourself de-sensitized. So many people spend so much time giving such power to thoughts that really are just intensified fear.

I cannot speak to all the various kinds of anxiety that exists, yet I do believe this process frees us from all of them that I have seen. I have not treated thousands of patients so I cannot claim the expertise of a doctor, but having seen many of them find somehow that experience lacking due to a lack of first hand experience. What I do know is that for the majority of us WE ARE KEPT IN OUR ANXIOUS STATES DUE TO WORRY ABOUT OUR CONDITION RATHER THAN ANY ACTUAL PRESENT DANGER OR DIFFICULTY and this key is what I mean when I say this process works to end the fight and get us back to our lives.

We have spent a lot trying to escape anxiety. It has costs us relationships perhaps, friends, time, money, jobs, careers, happiness, joy, dignity and more. You can end this now, but only you have the tools to end this. A pill might help for a moment or even for months and years, but you must live in your own skin and within you is the power to heal you. You must learn this life lesson to move on from it. You must learn how to stop fighting and accept. Right now, you just got yourself stuck in a rut of fear, adrenaline, fear and this is the way to break that. If you do this and work hard at it, you will be free.

I want to thank Claire Weeks for not only being a good doctor, but for being an extraordinary human being who literally saved my life even though she has since passed away. I thank the woman I love for her unending support even though it was exhausting and difficult. Also, my family for their patience and love to the best of their ability and to all of you who who struggle alone in the dark and have found the power in your own beauty and strength to rise and remember your God-given right to choose your course in this world.

I hope this is of some benefit to those who are afraid and confused and who are unsure what is going on. I ask that you add this wisdom to your treatment plan and see if it does not bring you back as it did for me.

anxiety cure

Insurance Policy for Mobile Phones

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

In today’s society, the cell phone has not only been a major means for communications for people, but they can also serve as a status symbol for many including you teens and twenty-somethings. But, when something happens to this item, to some it is like losing your best friend in a car accident and having absolutely no way to recover.

But, it’s also much much more than that. Cell phones today can cost about as much as a normal computer, starting as low as $150.00 for your basic style where can simply just talk. Then, you also have those phones that can play music, take pictures, allow you to text, record video, and even read a book. These nice little toys start at the minimum approximately $600 and up. Depending on your needs, this also can determine how much that an insurance company will do and if they will charge when helping you to obtain a replacement. The best thing to remember is that if something does happen to your phone, your insurance company is here to help you with your problems.

Now, before you even think of filing a claim, here are some honest tips and helpful hints that you will need to remember before you pick up the phone and begin to file:

1) Read Your Policy Brochure: This is the most common mistake that many people make is that just because it is insurance, that insurance will cover anything and everything and that they will not have to pay anything towards the phone. While this may be true with some insurance companies, that may not be necessarily true with all. Also, many different carriers may have different nuances to their coverage, so it is best to make sure that you understand everything that there is to know about how their specific policy works. Know what they will and won’t cover, what other stipulations that may be placed on you with your claim and so forth. Education is the first vital tool.

2)Listen to the Representative: The representatives that work for these companies go through extensive training in their fields so that when the time comes for them to assist you, they know the ins and outs of what you need to get the claim finished and to help you accordingly.

3) If you don’t understand something, ask! : Questions are the lifeblood of any customer service representative, and that is a major part of what they do other than filing claims. If they don’t have the ability to answer your question, there are usually places where they can find that information for you.

4) BE HONEST! : There is the occasional time when someone may know that there is something that has happened to their phone and they will tell a different set of circumstances in order to be able to receive a replacment. This is, by far, the very worst thing that you can do. Representatives are trained to sniff out inconsistencies in a claim and ultimately, the outcome may not be what you would like, (say in the form of instant non-coverage of the claim). If it is not, there are usually other ways that you can get help in getting resolution for your cell phone problems. It may sometimes just be a matter of contacting your carrier about the issues and seeing if there’s something they can do.

5) Might Is Not Going To Make It Right: If you are upset with the outcome of your claim, cursing at the rep or belittling them is not going to change the outcome. For one, these reps are used to handling tough customers, and the one thing that you don’t want to do is having to end up talking to someone above them, such as a supervisor, and they have been trained in just the same manner. Just a rule of thumb: Keep the language out of the discussion and reamin civil, no matter what happens. The other rule: it will keep the FCC off your back and keep you from getting into a nasty law suit for phone harrassment!

6) Never be afraid to ask for the supervisor: If there are still questions that you do not feel have been answered in a way that you feel would have been informative, never be afraid to ask for their supervisor. It is best to do this on inquiries, as they will have a fountain of knowledge that the rep may not be aware of. Thye are also more apt to investigate claims further for you and give you a more detailed breakdown of why a claim is not covered. All in all, the best bet is to stay with the rep ans simply accpet the answer, because more than likely, it is the correct answer.

We all hate to call insurance companies when we have a problem. It is probably one of the most mundane things that a person can do on a Saturday night when they could be going to the movies instead. But, the reality of the situation is that the cell phone is here to stay, and there are things that can will and will happen to it. When Murphy’s Law was created, this device was probably the the very thing it was looking for. There are a great many misnomers that are out today currently about cell phone insurance companies, such as they are out for the bottom dollar, that they don’t care, and the reps are rude and wish they were somewhere else. Whether true or not, their ultimate goal is to try to assist you in the fastest, best, and easiest way possible so that you can get back that which you have lost. In the end, when filing the claim, if you follow these easy steps you may be able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

phone insurance

Fine Art Landscape Photography For Sale

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

Cuba Gallery: Street photography by ►CubaGallery

“Seize the Moment” This is one of my favorite sayings. How often do we take advantage of the MOMENT? The moment is instantaneous. What happens right now will not happen again, ever! Will you remember the moment?

Photography is the art of capturing an image of that moment. It could be a face, a plant or a mountain. It could be something that will be there tomorrow but will look different or it could be something that won’t be seen again. I read in a comic book once of a conversation between a father and son. The young son asked his father why old photos were always in black and white and new photos were in color? His father said there was always color film in the old days, but the world was only in black and white then! It was funny but some of our most famous photography “artist” worked in black and white such as Ansel Adams. He and so many others were artists that couldn’t make up their work but had to capture it at the right instant of time.

I was going through some photos with my wife the other day. Some of them would take my breath away. They were images captured in time of babies in our family. Some of these babies are now 5, 8, 10, 14, 17 years of age. They are my children, nephews and nieces. Some of them are of my wife and her sisters. They’re baby pictures! They are an instant caught in time. They were either taken by my in-laws or given to them as gifts. They may not have been present at the time the photo was taken but they had that image of that instant in time to carry with them until they died. These images were no different than the images that Ansel Adams gave me as a gift when he photographed San Francisco bay where the Golden Gate Bridge is before it was built. He gave me a memory that I could not have had otherwise. My family and my sister-in-laws’ families gave my mother -in-law and father-in-law memories that they would never have had if it weren’t for photography.

Even if you aren’t a great photographer, a picture is still worth a 1,000 words. When a newborn baby comes home from the hospital and the family and extended family come by to see him or her, what comes out? Of course, the cameras come out and start snapping. I learned two schools of thought from photographers that I took courses from. One was in a roll of 36 exposures, 34 better be the top quality photos that you intend to sell. The other photographer taught that in a roll of 36 exposures, expect 2-3 quality photos that are worthy of selling. What I learned from this is spend your time taking posed photos but keep snapping for candid photos.

If you are taking photos of babies or children, take your time for both types of photos. I personally do not like posed photography but that’s me. I prefer to capture a child that is at play trying to solve a problem or just being natural. I like the expressions when they are deep in thought or interacting with other children. I found a photo of my son that I took through a car window when he was five holding his hand up with his fingers stretched out. That photo is so memorable to me because I sent it to my mother before she passed away. It was exactly the same photo that my mother took of me when I was five years old.

May I suggest that you seriously consider studying photography to get a better understanding of the capabilities of using a camera properly? If you are just starting out, you need to start with the basics and work from there. Here is a good site to learn various aspects of photography from: http://www.photographytips.com/ For some detailed photography, study someone like Ansel Adams and look at this website: http://www.anseladams.com/

Photography For Sale

Find free shed plans online

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

The holidays are here, and so is the delicious food. How will you avoid gaining those extra pounds over the holidays? If you do decide to enjoy every ounce of Grandma’s cookies, what is your plan to loose the extra pounds you put on feasting this holiday season? I have a few suggestions to loose those extra five or ten pounds of unwanted weight.

The Two Week Cereal/Tea Diet

A silly diet plan that works

Want to loose up to ten pounds in 2 weeks? Okay I’ll warn you, that this isn’t going to be one of those “eat what you want and loose weight” diets. The cereal/tea diet will not satisfy your taste buds, but you will loose the weight. Although the cereal/tea diet is probably not the tastiest diet, it is easy and inexpensive. Follow these simple steps to achieve five-ten pounds of weight loss in two weeks:

grocery list:

2-3 boxes of one of the following cereals

Grape Nuts
Special K
Quaker Oatmeal Squares

One Gallon of Skim Milk
Or
One Gallon of Soy Milk

One large box of herbal teas
(green tea, white tea, and ginger tea)

The Cereal/Tea Diet Plan:
Every day for two weeks have a bowl of cereal for breakfast and dinner. Drink five glasses of herbal teas hot or cold every day for two weeks. Cut out coffee completely.

The Tuna/Grapefruit Diet

It’s time to stock your fridge with tons of grapefruit and frozen veggies. The tuna/grapefruit diet is not for those that hate tuna fish. Tuna is a lean source of protein and can be prepared several ways. It is much leaner than chicken or beef. This diet is also pretty simple. Follow the following steps for two weeks:

grocery list

14 grapefruits
6 large cans of chunk/light tuna
4 frozen tuna fillets
6 bags frozen veggies
Lemon juice
Garlic cloves
Fat free spinach tortilla

 tuna/grapefruit diet plan:

Every morning have one whole grapefruit for your breakfast with a glass of water. For lunch prepare canned tuna with lemon juice or garlic cloves. Eat tuna alone, or on fat free spinach tortilla. For Dinner bake one half of a tuna filet with garlic cloves or other favorite spices. Eat as many frozen vegetables as you like. For dessert have one half of a grapefruit.

Moderation/Portion Size

My last diet suggestion is for anyone that does not want to follow a diet plan that limits what types of foods you can eat. My best advice to someone that wants to shed pounds is to cut back on their portion sizes and stay away from restaurants for a couple months. If you still want to dine-out make sure to only eat half of everything on your plate, and save the rest for a second meal. Portions served at restaurants tend to be way over the healthy amount that you should consume at one meal. Limit the amount of red meats that you have in your diet, and stick mostly to fish. Fish is a leaner source of protein and will help to keep you at your ideal weight. Stock up your fridge with convenient healthy snacks. Carrot sticks, apple sauce, apples, cereal sticks, almonds, olives, Jell-O, and yogurt are easy healthy snacks that will save you the extra pounds. Stay away from sodas, and stick to lots of green tea. If you still want to have soda limit it to once or twice a week, not every day.

As always make sure to consult your doctor before you start any new diet plan. These diets may not be suitable for everyone.

shed plans

mobile local fusion

Posted by iucyhless on January 25th, 2011

The “Marbl” cell phone by Virgin Mobile is an affordable option for people who need a cellular phone but without the restrictions of a two-year contract. The Marbl is Virgin Mobile’s basic prepaid phone, and as such it lacks many of the features of more expensive Virgin Mobile models, but the Marbl is still a sturdy and reliable cell phone that will be good for the basic user who does not need any of the premium features.

The benefit of the Marbl by Virgin Mobile is the ability to get a cell phone at a minimal upfront cost without having to sign up for a lengthy contract. Thus the Marbl is a good choice for students or travelers who will only need a cell phone on a limited basis for a definite period of time. Many retailers are offering the Marbl by Virgin Mobile for under $10, plus the cost of the initial prepaid airtime. Of course, prepaid airtime is generally more expensive than to be on a regular contract such as those offered by AT&T Wireless, Verizon Wireless, or Sprint. But the prepaid option is a good way to get a cell phone cheaply without having to worry about contracts or penalties.

For those customers who want the cheaper airtime rates without the restrictions of a contract, Virgin Mobile offers a recurring monthly payment option, with lower airtime rates, as long as the customer is able to set up recurring monthly payments to a debit card or credit card. Because of these prepaid and recurring monthly payment options, the Marbl is an extremely flexible and affordable way to get started with a cell phone.

The only accessories that are included with the Marbl by Virgin Mobile are the AC adapter and the instruction manual. Those Virgin Mobile users who want to use their Marbl phone while traveling from a car will also want to purchase a DC adapter to use in a car’s cigarette lighter or DC power jack. Due to the very cheap price of the Marbl, you should be prepared to pay more for the DC adapter than you do for the Marbl itself.

Activating your Virgin Mobile Marbl phone is very easy, and is just a matter of calling the Virgin Mobile activation number and/or customer service number (1-800-322-1122). Alternatively the salesperson at the cell phone retailer can likely activate your Marbl phone for you through Virgin Mobile’s activation website. In either case, the activation and programming of the Virgin Mobile Marbl cell phone is easy and quick.

In conclusion, if you are looking for an affordable way to get a prepaid phone or a phone with low monthly cost without the restrictions of a cellular service contract, consider the Marbl by Virgin Mobile. The Marbl is a basic phone, and lacking in many advanced features, but if you just plan to make and receive calls with the occasional text message, then the Marbl should be adequate for your needs.

mobile local fusion