Last night the hubby and I watched Valentine's Day while in bed with our recovering double knee surgery Pomeranian Peaches.
I accidentally ordered the non-HD version of the movie.
Hubby: You didn't order HD.
Me: Ooops! Hmmm.. (We watch a few seconds of the screen) I wanna watch the HD one.
Hubby: Really? It's a Garry Marshall film, not like there are gonna be fight scenes or cool special effects that we want to see in HD.
Me: (I consider his point of view for a few minutes as the opening scenes are unfolding.) Look at the title, it looks fuzzy. Everything looks like it has a film on it. I don't like it. I am gonna order the HD version.
We start the HD version and the difference is really astonishing. I feel more part of the experience. I feel more connected to the movie. I feel more entangled in the story line and connected to each character. I am literally pointing out the differences to hubby through the first few minutes. =)
Once you have experienced something in an HD experience - you are unable to foster the same experience of feelings for the non-HD version.
Just the other day I watched a video about the business of software. In it, a woman is a speaker at a developers conference and she talked for just a few brief minutes as part of a larger topic about people having HD experiences.
In her PowerPoint presentation she showed a picture of a huge rock formation. "To some you may see a huge rock formation".
I think to myself - Yup, check - huge rock formation.
However, there are people who see that rock formation and have an HD experience about that rock formation:
To a rock climber, it is a wicked challenge of skill, brains and fitness and so much more.
To a geologist, it is minerals and earth formation with climate and period of drought indicators and so much more.
To an archeologist it is a burial ground of information and treasure and so much more.
These people have these HD experiences because they are passionate about it. They have taken the time to learn more about it, experience it on a deeper level than the average person would. If you haven't created an HD experience for yourself, then you just simply won't be able to see all the possibilities that it holds. You will just see it for what it is, for what you know it to be - a huge rock formation.
So.. the question is - are you experiencing your journey in HD?
I accidentally ordered the non-HD version of the movie.
Hubby: You didn't order HD.
Me: Ooops! Hmmm.. (We watch a few seconds of the screen) I wanna watch the HD one.
Hubby: Really? It's a Garry Marshall film, not like there are gonna be fight scenes or cool special effects that we want to see in HD.
Me: (I consider his point of view for a few minutes as the opening scenes are unfolding.) Look at the title, it looks fuzzy. Everything looks like it has a film on it. I don't like it. I am gonna order the HD version.
We start the HD version and the difference is really astonishing. I feel more part of the experience. I feel more connected to the movie. I feel more entangled in the story line and connected to each character. I am literally pointing out the differences to hubby through the first few minutes. =)
Once you have experienced something in an HD experience - you are unable to foster the same experience of feelings for the non-HD version.
Just the other day I watched a video about the business of software. In it, a woman is a speaker at a developers conference and she talked for just a few brief minutes as part of a larger topic about people having HD experiences.
In her PowerPoint presentation she showed a picture of a huge rock formation. "To some you may see a huge rock formation".
I think to myself - Yup, check - huge rock formation.
However, there are people who see that rock formation and have an HD experience about that rock formation:
To a rock climber, it is a wicked challenge of skill, brains and fitness and so much more.
To a geologist, it is minerals and earth formation with climate and period of drought indicators and so much more.
To an archeologist it is a burial ground of information and treasure and so much more.
These people have these HD experiences because they are passionate about it. They have taken the time to learn more about it, experience it on a deeper level than the average person would. If you haven't created an HD experience for yourself, then you just simply won't be able to see all the possibilities that it holds. You will just see it for what it is, for what you know it to be - a huge rock formation.
So.. the question is - are you experiencing your journey in HD?
From everything I have read and seen so far on those who have taken off the weight and kept it off - that is what they are all doing - they EAT and TRAIN and LIVE like athletes. (If you have seen otherwise, please show me links because I can't find it anywhere. =)
The ones who keep it off make their physical health and just as equally their mental health a priority over EVERYTHING else. They experience their transformation and/or their maintenance journey in HD. They are plugged in to everything they learned, applying methods, trying new things, and drawing from resources constantly available to learn new and different things and to BE and STAY successful at their maintenance programs.
The ones who keep it off make their physical health and just as equally their mental health a priority over EVERYTHING else. They experience their transformation and/or their maintenance journey in HD. They are plugged in to everything they learned, applying methods, trying new things, and drawing from resources constantly available to learn new and different things and to BE and STAY successful at their maintenance programs.
Love this:) I have an HD Experience everyday:)
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