Tuesday, April 13, 2010

THE REALLY BIG THING

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OR COME SEE US TODAY !
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$0 DOWN PAYMENT
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Monday, March 15, 2010

Welcome 2011 Honda Pilot

Come by and take a look today !

2011 Honda Pilot SUV Offers Room for Eight People, Standard V-6 Power with Variable Cylinder Management and available VTM-Four-Wheel-Drive...

2011 HONDA PILOT PRESS RELEASE

Monday, January 4, 2010

Keeping your New Year resolution

Well the mistletoe has been taken down, the ornaments tenderly wrapped up in tissue paper, and gently stuffed into a 7 year old cardboard box that doubles as a tenement building for the family of mice who share your garage. The last piece of fruit cake sits all alone(and rightfully so)in the tin on top of your refrigerator...it is time to get serious about keeping those New Year's resolutions. You know, the ones you were going to keep all to yourself and just do them and then bask in the glory as your friends reveled in your discipline and willpower? But then you decided to go to the New Years-eve-extravaganza that was being held at your neighborhood clubhouse...the one with an open bar. An open bar that stayed open until well after you quit pretending that you were going home at a reasonable hour. Oof. Now all of your old friends, all of your new friends, and all of those who have made their resolution to never be friends with the likes of you, fully expect you to be a good 50 lbs lighter by bathing suit weather (and your hoping for a long cold winter), and to be bringing them a complimentary copy of the "now finished" novel that you started some 25 years ago in college. Well, as they say on the T.V...."Just Do It".

Here are a few steps that may help:

Step 1
Aim low. It goes without saying that most New Year's resolutions are easier announced (or written) than done-but if you set the bar too high, you're doomed from the start. Instead of a sweeping declaration like "I will lose 30 pounds by April and finally fit into that dress," target a goal that's more attainable, like losing 10 or 15 pounds.

Step 2
Don't overload yourself. It's difficult enough for the average person to follow through on one ambitious New Year's resolution; why on earth would you saddle yourself with three or four? Choose the most pressing issue at hand-losing weight, finding a girlfriend, improving your relationship with your parents-and concentrate on that. Trying to do everything simultaneously practically guarantees failure across the board.

Step 3
Tell everyone you know. One school of thought says that New Year's resolutions are best kept to oneself, but look at it this way: the more people to whom you announce your resolution (say, to get out of your dead-end job by spring), the more people there'll be to prod you along if you fall behind. There's no shame in seeking help if you can't accomplish your resolution on your own.

Step 4
Reward yourself. Following through on a New Year's resolution is rarely easy, so a little Pavlovian conditioning goes a long way. If you've resolved to shop less, stroke yourself for not buying those shoes by springing for a steaming hot cappucino at the mall. If you've resolved to be nicer to people, buy yourself a nice jacket after enduring that tedious cocktail party without delivering any insults.

Step 5
Wait until spring. Sometimes the best way to accomplish a New Year's resolution is to make it at a time of year of your choosing, rather than the one dictated by the calendar. May 1 is a good alternate date, since the change of season will neatly coincide with the change you're hoping to accomplish in yourself.