Friday, August 3, 2012

Payday greetings, NectrHeadz,

While scouring my Fb for all your awesome news ran across this group that I'm joining TODAY:


  • 5 of 11

No, I Don’t Care if I Die at 12 A.M., I Refuse to Pass On Your Chain Letter

**********

Yagottalovethisbiz!  Ran into a  friend at Lowe's yesterday and he shared a 'new deal' that he is in where he put in $5,000 and makes 1.25% interest compounded daily and paid every 30 days, plus much more. We have been approached by several others about this and have even looked at their website.  We were thoroughly unable to understand any of it.

Which brings me to our Cardinal Rule of Business:  Never do anything that you can't understand, and  turn around and tell somebody what it is and how it works.

So, we told him we just aren't smart enough for that biz, but we hope he makes a ton of $$.  (And we do - he's a great guy.)  

However, he brought up some of his health issues and is interested in giving Nectr a test run to see what it does for him.  

This we can live with:  tell somebody about superfoods, "people are getting results", "try it and see what you get",  THIS we can understand, explain and share.  And feel good about what we've done at the end of the day.  Because we know we're building something real.

**************

Plus:   every Friday is payday-deposit. (Often on Thursdays!)

************

FROM THE 'DON'T LET CRITICISM BOTHER YOU' FILE:

Check out these loser-criticisms about past blockbuster movies:

Titanic (1997)

"What does $200 million buy? The 3-hour-and-14-minute 'Titanic' unhesitatingly answers: not enough."—Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times

Star Wars (1977)

"It’s an assemblage of spare parts—it has no emotional grip... an epic without a dream."—Pauline Kael, The New Yorker

Forrest Gump (1994)

"It is... glib, shallow, and monotonous, a movie that spends so much time sanctifying its hero that, despite his 'innocence,' he ends up seeming about as vulnerable as Superman."—Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly

Gladiator (2000)

"By the end of this long film, I would have traded any given gladiatorial victory for just one shot of blue skies."—Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

Source:  RD.com

************

YOU ARE INVITED:



***************

SHARE THE LOVE:  become a NectrHead!

NectrHugs
Barb






No comments:

Post a Comment