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Merry Christmas and Happy New Year 2015!
San Francisco, Paris, Philadelphia Seasonâs Greetings and Best Wishes for a Happy New Year!

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Merry Christmas and Happy New year 2015!
San Francisco, Paris, Philadelphia Season's Greetings and Best Wishes for a Happy New Year!
How to Become the Most Compelling Person You Will Ever Know
Paris, 12/18/14Â -
"Part of being human is striving to understand your life's purpose -- that single most significant reason for which you were placed here. Most people do not wish to pass through this life quietly, unnoticed and unremembered once they're gone. Most want to leave behind meaningful legacies as proof that they were here and that they mattered enough to somehow impact the world they lived in."
You need to take this with an enormous grain of salt, here's how:Â
Disregard all sense of "supposed to." The operative word in the phrase, "make your mark on the world," is "your." Shed outside expectations - anything your family has told you about how doomed your life will be if you don't become a doctor or lawyer, anything your family has told you about the necessity of finding the perfect spouse - to clear your mind and truly assess what will make the most sense for you and your legacy.
Decide what's meaningful to you. Consider what activities you love, ideas you have, ambitions you harbor, causes you're committed to, or current events you stumble across that send the strongest tingles down your spine.Â
Assess your natural talents and acquired skill sets. What are you good at that can allow you to contribute most positively and significantly to those people, ideas, causes or activities you've determined as most meaningful?Â
Seize the day. every day.Â
Maintain conviction, and view challenges not as setbacks, but as obstacles in place to strengthen you, test your resolve and bolster your commitment
So live. enjoy. share. And read on, and enjoy a few more tips to help you along the way.Â
-By Phil Mora (@orsusvirtum)Â
If you feel like you're just marking time instead of making your mark on the world, here's how to step up your game and start making a memorable difference for those around you.
As leaders, we all want to know that we're making a difference, but most of us have to work at overcoming the lesser instincts of the day-to-day.
Here are some things you can do today to begin living your most compelling life:
1. Be bold. Dare to instigate! Take chances, create opportunities, make things happen. Risk greatness.
2. Find your unique self and wear it like a badge of honor. Turn your back on conformity. Figure out what makes you different, and then embrace it. The world needs what you have.
3. Conquer the unknown. Try something new, and don't cringe at fear. Leaving the safe and ordinary is the only way to get to the extraordinary.
4. Be inclusive. The solitary hero is a myth; your allies are your greatest strength. Those who pride themselves on self-reliance have no safety net, and living a one-dimensional story is pretty limiting.
5. Be confident (but not arrogant). Show your self-assurance. Confidence gives voice to your gifts.
6. Be generous with everyone you meet. Generosity isn't just about money. Make introductions, teach what you know, reach out, send a text, share everything you can.
7. Never miss an opportunity to give a compliment. A sincere compliment is among the greatest of gifts. If you admire someone, if someone does something extraordinary (or something ordinary very well), if something goes right, then say so--in public, if possible.
8. Say no so you can say yes. Not everything that comes along is worthwhile, and not every opportunity is right for you. Say no to the things that drag you down to make room for what matters most to you.
9. Practice humility. When you're sincerely humble in your heart and mind, the connections you make with others take on a different tone. Ask questions, listen, stay open, and remember you don't know everything.
10. Stand for something. Leave no room for doubt about your passion for the people, places, and principles that are dear to you. A compelling purpose is a cause worth sharing.
Above all, to become the most compelling version of yourself, look within to find the heart of all that matters to you. Then go live it.
[EDITED: Read More Here > Thank You Inc.]
phil mora
Phil Mora (@orsusvirtum) is an Executive Director and VP, Digital Marketing at Hughes Creative, a startup headquartered in San Francisco (hughescreative.net). Obsessed with creativity, fitness, wellness, work-hacking, finance and high-tech, Phil is a thinker, a designer, a doer, a creative, a hacker, and a leader. Find out more about phil at toppgun.net and philmora.com
San Francisco, California
United States
Age may be just a number, but it's one you can change
San Francisco, 11/02/14 - Functional Age vs. Subjective Age: Your Fitness Age is the One that Really Counts as new research on the concept of fitness age shows that youâre more in control than you think of the way your body keeps track of time. The good news is that unlike your actual age, your fitness age can decrease. -By Phil Mora (@orsusvirtum)
Many people would agree that we benefit from the increased experience that getting older brings. However, with each passing year, the aging of the body creates its own difficulties in everyday life. There are the inevitable aches, strains, and pains of our aging bones, joints, and muscles not to mention changes in appearance that make it more difficult to feel accepted in a youth-oriented society.
The one truth about aging is that itâs intimately linked with the passage of time. We may be able to alter the clock by setting it forward or backward an hour depending on the season, but we canât set it back for more than that, much less days, months, or years. No one has figured out how to alter the bodyâs pace-setter cells that mysteriously link the bodyâs aging with the number of times the earth revolves around the sun. Â
Just as the average person may bemoan the basic fact that aging and time are completely tied together, scientists who study the aging process find their job made far more difficult by this age-time conundrum. Are the changes we think due to aging actually due to social and historical changes? Consider aging within the Baby Boomers versus aging within Gen X-ers. The Baby Boomers had few of the benefits of improved social attitudes toward healthy eating and fitness that characterize the younger generation as they approach midlife. The Baby Boomers also went through different historical periods that affected their social and political attitudes. Because we canât pluck people out of their own generation and watch them grow older in a different one, weâll never know how much any individual, much less an entire age cohort, is showing changes intrinsic to aging separate from those related to these cultural factors.
Average people probably doesnât fret too much about the limitations of research on aging, but they should. Most of what we read about aging in the popular press ignores the possibility that cultural shifts rather than true age-related changes account for a studyâs findings. Do people actually become less well able to remember as they get older? Or is it only that older people now had poorer education when they were young and so never had learning skills as solid as their younger counterparts do now? Even if we follow the same people from youth to old age, we donât know whether they change as a result of aging or as a result of the historical era in which they lived.
Clearly, then, we need a way to separate age from time. Such a feat would also have tremendous potential benefits for health. What if you didnât have to lose your physical prowess and health as you got older? If you could slow down the biological time bomb counting down within your body, imagine how much better you would feel.
For decades, scientists who study aging have proposed swapping functional age for chronological age as a way out of the age-time quandary. Weâve also thought about asking people to tell us how old they âfeel,â or subjective age. This wasnât a bad idea, but it was not particularly scientific or reliable. Letâs say youâre 28 but youâre coming down with the flu, so you like youâre 48. When you get together youâre your high school pals, though, you feel 18. For a measure of age to perform as an adequate substitute, it has to provide a mood- and illness-resistant estimate.
A biological measure of functional age would seem to have more credibility, but itâs not very practical. Taking all the measurements that youâd need to estimate someoneâs functional biological age becomes an expensive and time-consuming operation. In addition to measuring such obvious factors as blood pressure, heart rate, muscle mass, lung expiratory volume, kidney excretion rates, and so on.
To get biological age, you would also need to put people on a treadmill and get their heart and lungs to crank out their maximum capacity- so called âaerobic power.â Even this would not be a complete measure of functional age, but with an average decline of 1% per year after the age of 30 in the ordinary (sedentary) person, youâd have some sort of quantitative index that isnât completely mixed up with historical era.
Norwegian medical researchers may finally have cracked the code. In a 24-year follow-up study of 37,000 adults, Bjarne M. Nes and his colleagues used a measure of cardiorespiratory fitness based not on actual exercise capacity as measured by aerobic power but instead on the far simpler method of asking people a series of questions, including their age, Body Mass Index (BMI), resting heart rate, and answers to these 3 questions:
How often do you exercise? (5-point scale from never to almost every day)
How hard do you usually push yourself? (3-point scale from not at all to push yourself to exhaustion)
How long do you exercise? (4-point scale from less than 15 to 60 minutes or more)
The cardiorespiratory fitness measure was particularly useful in predicting death from cardiovascular disease among people less than 60 years old. They calculated the odds of dying from cardiovascular disease as well as any cause at all on the basis of 1 standardized unit of fitness defined as a âMETâ (metabolic unit) which equals the energy (oxygen) used by the body at rest. The harder your body works during the activity, the more oxygen is consumed. Each MET increase in cardiorespiratory fitness was reduced with as much as a 22% decrease in cardiovascular disease death and 10% less for all causes of death. Â
In addition to showing that your risk of death is reduced proportionately to the extent that you exercise, the studyâs findings allowed the authors to develop a test of fitness age.
The studyâs findings show that if we think of age not as years since birth but years prior to death, itâs clear that you can literally become âyoungerâ (have more years left to live) by maintaining this level of fitness. The expression âadd more life to your years rather than years to your lifeâ couldnât be more appropriate.
Although cardiorespiratory fitness was the main focus of this study, physical exercise has other benefits that can keep your brain âyoungerâ as well. Dementia due to Alzheimerâs disease is, at this point in time, not thought to be preventable. In contrast, vascular disease, which is related to cardiorespiratory fitness, can be preventable through exercise. There are also benefits of exercise to your mood, metabolism, and sexual health.
Of course, exercise canât prevent everything wrong from happening to you, and there in fact can be risks associated with exercise not properly conducted. You can exercise to the point of damaging your joints, you might become obsessed with it, and you might even suffer more pronounced tooth decay than you otherwise would.
By the same token, leading a sedentary existence can make it even more difficult for you to exercise, starting a vicious downward cycle. Once you start to incorporate a reasonable amount of exercise into your lifestyle, though, it can set up a pattern of reinforcement especially if you notice that your mental outlook starts to lift and you start to feel more alert and energetic.
Once you think of your age as a needle you can move down the scale, you can conceive of your own life in a new and more controllable light. Age can truly become, for you, âjust a number,â defined by you, and not just the calendar.
[EDITED: Read More Here > Thank You Psychology Today]
Phil Mora
Hughes Creative
VP, Digital Marketing
Phil Mora (@orsusvirtum) is an Executive Director and VP, Digital Marketing at Hughes Creative, a startup headquartered in San Francisco (hughescreative.net). Obsessed with creativity, fitness, wellness, work-hacking, finance and high-tech, Phil is a thinker, a designer, a doer, a creative, a hacker, and a leader. Find out more about phil at toppgun.net and philmora.com
San Francisco, California
5 Things to Pack to Stay Fit While Traveling
If you only travel occasionally, maintaining your health and fitness routine over the course of each jaunt probably isnât such a big deal. A few days off now and again never hurt anybody, and besides, sometimes a vacation needs to be just that -- a vacation.
But if youâre like me and travel on a regular basis, squeezing in good eating habits and exercise is essential, not only for your physical fitness, but for your mental health as well. Traveling can be stressful and there's no better solution to stress than exercise.
Here are some key items to pack to inject a bit of health and fitness into your travel itinerary:
1. Healthy Snacks When youâre on the go, it can be impossible to find healthy food. Vending machines become your kitchen, and your healthiest option ends up being a $14 salad from an airport restaurant.
Instead of scrounging around for something vaguely healthy, pack healthy snacks like nuts, trail mix, fruit or protein bars. Feeling bold? Think bigger than a snack and prepare a full meal the night before you set off on your trip. You can also find low calorie dehydrated food and prepare it in your hotel room - all hotel rooms have a coffee maker and all you need is hot water!
2. Jump Rope I discovered the benefits of a jump rope while I was travelling the world: it was a tip from my doctor. Not only is a jump rope a highly portable piece of workout equipment, but it can be used practically anywhere, especially in a hotel room. And of course, do your best to use the stairs instead of elevators, it makes a really huge difference!
3. Reusable Water Bottle It's easy to become dehydrated while traveling. Youâre lugging around bags and working up a sweat (which is actually good exercise -- carry your bag instead of dragging or rolling it) or youâre too busy hurrying to your gate to find a water fountain and airport security just confiscated your half-full plastic bottle.
By bringing along a metal or plastic water bottle, you control your water supply. Empty it out before going through security, then take a moment to refill it at a fountain once youâre through.Â
4. Comfortable Walking/Running Shoes A lot of the times when people are traveling solely for business purposes, they bring only the essentials they need for their business, which generally means dress shoes.
Bring along a pair of shoes that you can either use for running, or that youâll at least feel comfortable walking around in for an extended period of time. Even if you canât work in a run, build in opportunities for long walks. Not only does walking burn a lot of calories, it also provides you with a chance to see the location youâre visiting. Taking the time to get some air, relax your mind and take in the sights is definitely good for your mental health.
5. Frisbee It sounds kind of silly, but a Frisbee actually makes for a pretty good piece of travel fitness equipment. Itâs flat and can easily fit into a suitcase; all you need to do is find another person and pretty soon, youâre running around, working out your core and upper body and getting your blood pumping in general.
A Frisbee makes for a great way to get in some exercise and pass the time with your travel companions, and if you're traveling solo, it's a great way to break the ice with new acquaintances.
Each of these five items take up very little space, but will go a long way in keeping you healthy and fit when you're on the road.
Do you exercise and eat healthy on the road, or do you take a break from both while you travel? Do you pack workout clothes or equipment like resistance bands or a jump rope? What do you do on the road to stay fit? Leave a comment below and let me know.
phil mora
philmora.com
Digital Marketing + Creative Design
Phil Mora (@orsusvirtum) is an Executive Director and VP, Digital Marketing at Hughes Creative, a startup headquartered in San Francisco (hughescreative.net). Obsessed with creativity, fitness, wellness, work-hacking, finance and high-tech, Phil is a thinker, a designer, a doer, a creative, a hacker, and a leader. Find out more about phil at toppgun.net and philmora.com
San Francisco, California
United States

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