New year is a time for resolution. Mentally, at least, most of all could compile formidable lists of "dos" and "don't ". The same favorites recur year in year out with monotomous regularity. We resolve to get up early each morning, eat less, and find more time to play w/children, do a thousands of one jobs about the house, be nice to people we don't like, drive carefully, and take the dog for a walk everday. The past experiance ahs taught us that certain accomplishment is beyond attainment. If we remain inveterate smokers, it is only because we so often experienced frustrations resulted from failure. Most of us fail in our efforts at self-improvement because our shemes are too ambitious that we never have time to carry them out. we also make the fundamental error of announcing our resolutions to everybody so that we feel more foolish when we slip back into our bad old ways. aware of this pitfall, I attempted to keep the resolutions to myself. I limited myself to two ambitions: to do physical exercise everyday and read more of an evening. an all night party at New year's eve provided with great excuse for not carrying out either of those new resolutions on the first day of the year, but on the second, I applied myself assiduously on the task. [color=#8B0000]Will be going on when I have finished reciting them----[/color]
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