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COMMON PHRASES TO AVOID IN CONVERSATION
Jun 5th, 2010 by kitiwiti

I admit I have the ultimate foot-in-mouth disease. This article explains why certain things that pop out of our mouths can be misconstrued as rude and to be avoided at all costs.

Taken from this LINK

What Not to Say About Someone’s Appearance

Don’t say: “You look tired.”
Why: It implies she doesn’t look good.
Instead say: “Is everything OK?” We often blurt the “tired” comment when we get the sense that the other person feels out of sorts. So just ask.

Don’t say: “Wow, you’ve lost a ton of weight!”
Why: To a newly trim person, it might give the impression that she used to look unattractive.
Instead say: “You look fantastic.” And leave it at that. If you’re curious about how she got so svelte, add, “What’s your secret?”

Don’t say: “You look good for your age.”
Why: Anything with a caveat like this is rude. It’s saying, “You look great―compared with other old people. It’s amazing you have all your own teeth.”
Instead say: “You look great.”

Don’t say: “I could never wear that.”
Why: It can be misunderstood as a criticism. (“I could never wear that because it’s so ugly.”)
Instead say: “You look so good in skinny jeans.” If you slip, say something like “I could never wear that…because I wasn’t blessed with your long legs.”

Expert: Clinton Kelly, cohost of the TLC show, What Not to Wear.

What Not to Say in the Workplace

Don’t say: “That’s not my job.”
Why: If your superior asks you to do something, it is your job.
Instead say: “I’m not sure that should be my priority right now.” Then have a conversation with your boss about your responsibilities.

Don’t say: “This might sound stupid, but…”
Why: Never undermine your ideas by prefacing your remarks with wishy-washy language.
Instead say: What’s on your mind. It reinforces your credibility to present your ideas with confidence.

Don’t say: “I don’t have time to talk to you.”
Why: It’s plain rude, in person or on the phone.
Instead say: “I’m just finishing something up right now. Can I come by when I’m done?” Graciously explain why you can’t talk now, and suggest catching up at an appointed time later. Let phone calls go to voice mail until you can give callers your undivided attention.

Expert: Suzanne Bates, president and chief executive officer of Bates Communications, an executive-training firm in Wellesley, Massachusetts, and author of Speak Like a CEO (McGraw-Hill, $22, amazon.com).

What Not to Say During a Job Interview

Don’t say: “My current boss is horrendous.”
Why: It’s unprofessional. Your interviewer might wonder when you’d start bad-mouthing her. For all you know, she and your current boss are old pals.
Instead say: “I’m ready for a new challenge” or a similarly positive remark.

Don’t say: “Do you think I’d fit in here?”
Why: You’re the interviewee, not the interviewer.
Instead say: “What do you enjoy about working here?” By all means ask questions, but prepare ones that demonstrate your genuine interest in the company.

Don’t say: “What are the hours like?” or “What’s the vacation policy?”
Why: You want to be seen as someone who focuses on getting the job done.
Instead say: “What’s the day-to-day like here?” Then, if you’ve really jumped through every hoop and time off still hasn’t been mentioned, say, “Can you tell me about the compensation and benefits package?”

Expert: Mary Mitchell, president of the Mitchell Organization, a corporate-etiquette training firm in Seattle, and author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Etiquette (Alpha, $19, amazon.com).

What Not to Say About Pregnancy and Babies

Don’t say: “Are you pregnant?”
Why: You ask, she’s not, and you feel totally embarrassed for essentially pointing out that she’s overweight.
Instead say: “Hello” or “Great to see you” or “You look great.” Anything besides “Are you pregnant?” or “What’s the due date?” will do. Save yourself the humiliation and never ask.

Don’t say: “Do you plan on breast-feeding?”
Why: The issue can be controversial, and she may not want to discuss her decision publicly.
Instead say: Nothing. Unless you’re very close, don’t ask. If you slip, make up for the blunder by adding, “And do you feel comfortable telling me?”

Don’t say: “Were your twins natural?” or “It must have been hard for your child’s birth parent to give him up.”
Why: You’re suggesting that natural conception is better than in vitro fertilization (IVF) or adoption.
Instead say: To a parent of multiples, try a light “Wow, you have your hands full!” To an adoptive parent, say the same stuff you would to any other parent: “She’s adorable!” or “How old is he?”

Expert: Kim Hahn, founder and chief executive officer of Conceive magazine.

What Not to Say to a Single (or Newly Single) Person

Don’t say: “You were too good for him.”
Why: You are basically saying she has bad taste. And you’ll be embarrassed if they ever patch it up.
Instead say: “His loss!” It gets the same point across without disparaging her judgment.

Don’t say: “I’m glad you got rid of him. I never liked him anyway.”
Why: She’ll wonder about your fake adoration for him while they were together.
Instead say: “I’m confident you’ll find someone who will give you exactly what you want.” It focuses on what’s to come, not on the dud you’re glad she’s done with.

Don’t say: “How could someone as perfect as you still be single?”
Why: A statement like this comes off as a backhanded compliment. What she hears is “What’s wrong with you?”
Instead say: “Seeing anyone?” If she’s tight-lipped about her love life, move on to other topics.

Expert: Bethany Marshall, Ph.D., a psychotherapist in Beverly Hills and the author of Deal Breakers: When to Work On a Relationship and When to Walk Away (Simon Spotlight Entertainment, $23, amazon.com).

What Not to Say During a Fight with Your Beloved

Don’t say: “You always” or “You never” or “You’re a [slob, jerk]” or “You’re wrong.”
Why: Speaking in absolutes like “you always” and “you’re wrong” is playing the blame game, and resorting to name calling makes your partner feel helpless, which puts him on the defensive and makes a bad fight worse.
Instead say: “I’m upset that you left the dishes in the sink again. What can we do so that this stops happening?” Starting with the pronoun I puts the focus on how you feel, not why he’s in the doghouse, and it will make him more receptive to fixing the problem.

Don’t say: “If you really loved me, you would…”
Why: The more you treat your partner as if he’ll never satisfy you, the less satisfied you’ll be. Controlling your partner by imploring him to do something isn’t a good way to build intimacy.
Instead say: “I feel taken for granted when you don’t help around the house. I would feel better if we could…” The best way to keep a productive fight from becoming a dirty one is to be clear about why you’re upset and then offer a solution.

Expert: Terrence Real, a family therapist in Newton, Massachusetts.

364 days, and what he just said.
May 18th, 2010 by kitiwiti

hurrray! we survived 364 days of marriage!

today, though, i am wondering if i am still married to the correct person.

half awake before we woke up, I pulled the sheets from under him.

“Good job” he says calmly.

I look over, but his eyes were closed. “With what?”

“Getting the coordinates”, he replies matter-of-factly.

At this point I was like WTF! but went on “of what?”

“The shadows…” he mumbles and shifts to face away from me.

Hmm. I doze off for a few minutes before I wake him up and tell him what he just said.

CPU Discussions on Tom’s Hardware
Mar 21st, 2010 by kenohki

This thread is interesting, in that it had reminded me of how passionate one can be when it comes to raw benchmark results and how it relates to real-world applications usage.

I started out on a Compaq Deskpro 286 in 2000 – it was a gift from my mom’s coworker.

I then got my own PC, which was an AMD K62, branded in a Compaq mini tower, circa 1998

My third rig was an Ascent PC, which I think was a Pentium II.

From there, I upgraded to an Athlon X2, which ended up being my mom’s computer.

My next pyuter was an Intel Core 2 Duo, packaged in the form of a polycarbonate Macbook, which is now my wife’s computer.

I then downgraded to a PowerMac G4, running on the PowerPC architecture, which is enough for daily web surfing, bill-paying, and photo retouch and uploads to our social networking sites.

Overall, I’m still undecided as to which route to go to: AMD or Intel.

I’ve had problems with mobile computers in the past, mostly because they are fragile and need constant care, but if I do go back to using a desktop as my primary machine, I’d have to narrow down my needs.

Let me get this started…

I need a computer to do these things daily:

  1. Pay my bills
  2. Manage my calendar events
  3. Browse through my messages on social networking sites
  4. Check and reply to e-mails

I need my computer to do these things at least once a week:

  1. Download multimedia and tech-tools
  2. Download Linux operating system disk images
  3. Upload and retouch photos; upload to social networking and personal sites

Edit: 2010-07-02-1405CST

I acquired a netbook recently thanks to a random ninja. I’m actually using it now. Will post more about first impressions of the netbook soon.

    Stainless Browser for OS X
    Mar 7th, 2010 by kenohki

    There is a little known web browser for the Mac that also has built-in functionality that uses parallel sessions, thus allowing a user to log in to multiple accounts on the same web site:

    http://www.stainlessapp.com

    I have a couple of Gmail accounts, and when I loaded up Stainless, I logged in to my first account, then hit command + shift + t

    A Single Session tab opened up. I loaded up Gmail again, and logged in to my second account.

    Both tabs were able to log me in to two accounts simultaneously.

    Stainless also runs each tab or browser window through its on process, so if one tab or window crashes, the others stay open.

    Temper Temper
    Feb 1st, 2010 by kitiwiti

    This morning my sister was “try to make conversation” by asking me why on earth I even want to have a wedding when we have thousands in debt because of [hub's] school loans.

    I said it was my decision to go thru that rite of passage and nothing she will say will change my mind. However, she didn’t let up by insisting that being debt-free (and unmarried via the church way) like her, is better which made me lose my temper. Again.

    i do realize that:
    1) i have read a bit more in what she was saying, altho im pretty sure it was what she implied; by saying so, she belittles my belief & decision to do the church wedding.

    2) had i shut up instead and tuned her out, it wouldn’t have made me lose my temper even more, because i screamed at her for 15mins straight at the top of my lungs. ive done this to one person (her) a total of 4 times. i feel like shit everytime, but im at that point that i really see red and i cant stop. good thing i dont hit her at all. I feel like screaming like crazy is just a little better than hitting her, although I don’t really think it works. To rephrase that: it does not.

    3) not all her life-decisions are clear cut and perfect so why should i even bother listening to her, esp to her crappy unsolicited advice?

    However, there had been 3 or 4 occasions in the last 60 days wherein i had jumped the gun and attacked people at the jugular with what they had said, or even implied.

    My sister brings it out of me the most. Especially since our last three arguments in which i yelled out at her to shut up was basically me losing my temper after i kept begging her that i dont want to talk/argue about it anymore, for 15 mins. and she wont let up.

    A few days before Christmas, my aunt also gave me an earful about making plans for my cousins car (i had found parking for it in our complex, instead of driving it all the way to my aunts 40mins away– because my sister was taking over the car when she came back from her trip after xmas). Not only did i feel like she was treating me like a child who could not make sound decisions, it even came to a point where she was throwing indirect criticism towards the hubs that I lost my temper. I did not yell at her, but I did cry afterwards.

    Another time was when I wrote a badly phrased facebook status. It was directed towards the hubs, who didnt even really read it, probably. Point was, it was to say internet is crappy, and not from his perspective of crappy, which is AT&T/TimeWarner crappy, which is pretty darn good by PI standards.

    However, two persons reacted badly and pretty much said something like (this is my weakness , i can never repeat verbatim, which means, when i paraphrase, some of the meaning is lost or colored up badly):

    - Hey hey we’re all in the PI. Does that mean we’re all fucked by default?
    - Even with spotty internet, if i were in the PI, I wouldnt complain.

    AS IF!

    1. I wrote that only as a “you should feel good about your internet bec someone out there (me) has the worst connection evar”
    2. It was NOT a hater commentary on the PI and its people, services etc
    3. and i sooooo hate people who go, “well, idk about you, but im doing this and im cool (and youre shallow, whiney and lame).” etc etc maybe ive been spoiled for lotsa sympathy for my whiney posts, but some people, such as the poster of the latter , can be plain douches. It was my first time to post a tagalog swear word (and making it public makes ME look bad, altho i deleted it right after i posted it, but only after i was sure he read it.

    And to further justify my kupal hirit… he had been commenting weird shit the past few weeks on my statuses as well. This certainly shut him up.

    Kupal_Kristian_FB

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