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Text Box: Acknowledge your fears, acknowledge your worries, acknowledge your most troubling concerns. Then let them go, and free yourself to move positively forward.                                                    For many of your fears, worries and concerns, there are certainly valid reasons. And that's why it is best to get beyond being paralyzed by fear and worry, so you can effectively address those underlying reasons.                                    Every moment you spend worrying is a moment you spend giving yourself even more reason to worry. When you allow fear to stop you completely, you give that fear even more power.                    By quickly Text Box: acknowledging the fears, the worries, the concerns, and listening to what they have to say, you can then simply let them go. And once you do that, you're free of their draining influence.                                     Once you do that, you're free to develop workable strategies and to take positive, effective action. By letting go of the fears and worries, you are free to positively change the underlying conditions from which those fears and worries arise.                               Feel the fears, acknowledge the worries, understand the concerns, then move on away from them. Set yourself free to achieve.            -- Ralph Marston
Text Box: We celebrate Saint Patrick's Day each year on March 17th. The festive holiday has everyone wearing green (so they don't get pinched) and chatting of four leaf clovers, shamrocks, lucky Text Box: leprechauns, and kissing some big rock called a blarney stone. Does it all sound a bit strange? It did to me too but after a bit of research it all made sense. Here's what I found out.

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Text Box: A ‘Lil St. Patrick’s Day History

Did you know that Saint Patrick's name at birth was Maewyn Succat? He was born somewhere near the end of the fourth century and took on the name Patrick or Patricus, after he became a priest, much later  Scotland two years later opening up the door for Patrick. Patrick was about sixty years old when he arrived in Ireland and it is said that he had a winning personality that helped him win converts. He used the shamrock, which resembles a three-leafed clover, to help explain the concept of the Trinity (father, son, holy spirit).

Patrick was arrested several times, but escaped each time. He traveled throughout Ireland, establishing monasteries and setting up schools and churches to aid in converting the Irish country to Christianity. Legend has it that Saint Patrick drove all the snakes out of Ireland. Evidently, they all went into the sea and drowned. The snake is a pagan symbol and perhaps this is a figurative tale explaining that he drove paganism out of Ireland.

Patrick's mission in Ireland lasted for thirty years. He then retired to County Down and died on March 17 in 461 AD. That day has been commemorated as St. Patrick's Day ever since. The first year St. Patrick's Day was celebrated in this country was 1737 in Boston, Massachusetts. As the saying goes, on this day "everybody is Irish!" Over 100 U.S. cities now hold Saint Patrick's Day parades.

 

 

 

 

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