True Confessions - Don't Judge

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Replies

  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    angelxsss wrote: »
    ic7ovp7ct14d.jpg
    a4ew98qh4p0d.jpg
    We made these last night. And I ate my whole one. I'm so fat :(

    OMG.. now this is only type of thing I want to confess about later! :p:p High fives and fist bumps!
  • synchkat
    synchkat Posts: 37,368 Member
    FeraFilia wrote: »
    I confess friend requests from people I've never interacted with and have no message attached kinda bug me... especially if the person's profile is private and I can't see if we have mutual friends or something.

    Those are the easiest to delete. :)
  • synchkat
    synchkat Posts: 37,368 Member
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    I confess I'm rolling my eyes so hard right now.

    Why ever would that be. Haha
  • FeraFilia
    FeraFilia Posts: 4,664 Member
    FeraFilia wrote: »
    I confess friend requests from people I've never interacted with and have no message attached kinda bug me... especially if the person's profile is private and I can't see if we have mutual friends or something.

    I confess that I have prepared several friend requests and then chickened out when came to hit the send button.

    I've done this, too.
  • Just_J_Now
    Just_J_Now Posts: 9,551 Member
    synchkat wrote: »
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    I confess I'm rolling my eyes so hard right now.

    Why ever would that be. Haha

    SMH. :# I bite my tongue every day.
  • FeraFilia
    FeraFilia Posts: 4,664 Member
    tjiddy wrote: »
    FeraFilia wrote: »
    I confess friend requests from people I've never interacted with and have no message attached kinda bug me... especially if the person's profile is private and I can't see if we have mutual friends or something.

    If you ever posted on one of the "make new friends here" or newbie threads, like EVER, you'll keep getting those requests.

    Always paying for things I did before I knew better.
  • synchkat
    synchkat Posts: 37,368 Member
    edited March 2017
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    synchkat wrote: »
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    I confess I'm rolling my eyes so hard right now.

    Why ever would that be. Haha

    SMH. :# I bite my tongue every day.

    I'd love one day for you to not have to. It would be so epic
  • Just_J_Now
    Just_J_Now Posts: 9,551 Member
    synchkat wrote: »
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    synchkat wrote: »
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    I confess I'm rolling my eyes so hard right now.

    Why ever would that be. Haha

    SMH. :# I bite my tongue every day.

    I'd love one day for you to not have to. It would be ao epic

    That will be my last day here. I'm going out with a bang. ;)
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  • iamangrydoug
    iamangrydoug Posts: 1,020 Member
    @iamangrydoug

    Doug, Y U so angry?

    Somebody's gotta be....and since I went without coffee this morning, it should be me! Of course, that doesn't explain the other 6 days of the week :lol:

  • iamangrydoug
    iamangrydoug Posts: 1,020 Member
    J_Surita3 wrote: »
    I confess if this turns into another attention seeking selfie thread I'm out.

    Because one picture derails a thread with 13k+ comments, mmkay...
  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    i confess that it's too late ^^^
  • FeraFilia
    FeraFilia Posts: 4,664 Member
    I confess I had a dream last night involving people from high school including that track guy I had a huge crush on, a woman I used to work with, a couple people from MFP, and Ben Carson. We sang the national anthem in a hotel room, went to a casino that used jelly beans, and I kept spilling water on myself.

    My brain is still a strange place.
  • andrewq6100
    andrewq6100 Posts: 415 Member
    i confess i'm very over protective of my son and I hate the fact that my EX chooses to bring random men around him when she has him for the weekend, that are into drugs etc and I feel like I have no power unless I get legal involved which I don't want to do but damn :(
  • cee134
    cee134 Posts: 33,711 Member
    Confession....I really want abs, but I really want Chinese food. My morning almost there abs will be gone after lunch :lol:

    Both personally and professionally, we make decisions everyday. Determining what to wear to work, which route to take to get there and even what foods we will eat are all decisions that have an impact on our lives. From a professional perspective, decision making is a key part of our jobs. Making the decision to hire or fire someone, whether or not to give someone an important project and deciding if we should launch a new product line, all impact our working lives and relationships in our organization. Decision making is defined as "the act of deciding between two or more alternative courses of action." (A Dictionary of Finance and Banking in Economics and Business, 1997). Being a good decision maker causes others to trust our abilities, whereas the opposite is true if we tend to make decisions hastily without carefully considering the ramifications of those decisions and their impacts across functional units.

    It is obvious that decision making is a key component in our lives, but decision making without critical thinking gives us only half of the picture. It is these two components combined that result in successes both personally and professionally.

    Combining the techniques of critical thinking and decision making results in situations that have been analyzed closely and potential outcomes clearly considered and defined prior to taking any action. In an article written by Greg Kitzmiller (2003), he states that "It seems most business people are busy taking action, meeting with people, interacting and making decisions. Certainly, thinking is one of the most important actions we take and is at the core of strategic planning."

    Based on Kitzmiller's comments, I believe that critical thinking and decision making must go hand in hand in order to be successful. In order to develop a strategic plan, you must closely evaluate all aspects and in making decisions about your course of action, you develop a strategic plan for the future. From both a personal and professional level, these two combined techniques will put you in a better position to reach your goals and be successful. As restated by Ken Petress "Making quality decisions involves critical thinking; critical thinking has been defined as - involving the ability to explore a problem, question, or situation; integrate all the available information about it; arrive at a solution or hypothesis; and justify one's position".

    Critical thinking allows us to question our environment and the information presented to us. "One alternative is to accept passively what you encounter; doing so automatically results in your making someone else's opinion your own. A more active alternative consists of asking questions of yourself in an effort to reach a personal decision about the worth of what you have experienced."
  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    I confess that am absolutely not serious at all today actually I am nevah serious at all here.. >:)
  • synchkat
    synchkat Posts: 37,368 Member
    cee134 wrote: »
    Confession....I really want abs, but I really want Chinese food. My morning almost there abs will be gone after lunch :lol:

    Both personally and professionally, we make decisions everyday. Determining what to wear to work, which route to take to get there and even what foods we will eat are all decisions that have an impact on our lives. From a professional perspective, decision making is a key part of our jobs. Making the decision to hire or fire someone, whether or not to give someone an important project and deciding if we should launch a new product line, all impact our working lives and relationships in our organization. Decision making is defined as "the act of deciding between two or more alternative courses of action." (A Dictionary of Finance and Banking in Economics and Business, 1997). Being a good decision maker causes others to trust our abilities, whereas the opposite is true if we tend to make decisions hastily without carefully considering the ramifications of those decisions and their impacts across functional units.

    It is obvious that decision making is a key component in our lives, but decision making without critical thinking gives us only half of the picture. It is these two components combined that result in successes both personally and professionally.

    Combining the techniques of critical thinking and decision making results in situations that have been analyzed closely and potential outcomes clearly considered and defined prior to taking any action. In an article written by Greg Kitzmiller (2003), he states that "It seems most business people are busy taking action, meeting with people, interacting and making decisions. Certainly, thinking is one of the most important actions we take and is at the core of strategic planning."

    Based on Kitzmiller's comments, I believe that critical thinking and decision making must go hand in hand in order to be successful. In order to develop a strategic plan, you must closely evaluate all aspects and in making decisions about your course of action, you develop a strategic plan for the future. From both a personal and professional level, these two combined techniques will put you in a better position to reach your goals and be successful. As restated by Ken Petress "Making quality decisions involves critical thinking; critical thinking has been defined as - involving the ability to explore a problem, question, or situation; integrate all the available information about it; arrive at a solution or hypothesis; and justify one's position".

    Critical thinking allows us to question our environment and the information presented to us. "One alternative is to accept passively what you encounter; doing so automatically results in your making someone else's opinion your own. A more active alternative consists of asking questions of yourself in an effort to reach a personal decision about the worth of what you have experienced."

    I confess I tried....I really really tried to read this through
  • Just_J_Now
    Just_J_Now Posts: 9,551 Member
    synchkat wrote: »
    cee134 wrote: »
    Confession....I really want abs, but I really want Chinese food. My morning almost there abs will be gone after lunch :lol:

    Both personally and professionally, we make decisions everyday. Determining what to wear to work, which route to take to get there and even what foods we will eat are all decisions that have an impact on our lives. From a professional perspective, decision making is a key part of our jobs. Making the decision to hire or fire someone, whether or not to give someone an important project and deciding if we should launch a new product line, all impact our working lives and relationships in our organization. Decision making is defined as "the act of deciding between two or more alternative courses of action." (A Dictionary of Finance and Banking in Economics and Business, 1997). Being a good decision maker causes others to trust our abilities, whereas the opposite is true if we tend to make decisions hastily without carefully considering the ramifications of those decisions and their impacts across functional units.

    It is obvious that decision making is a key component in our lives, but decision making without critical thinking gives us only half of the picture. It is these two components combined that result in successes both personally and professionally.

    Combining the techniques of critical thinking and decision making results in situations that have been analyzed closely and potential outcomes clearly considered and defined prior to taking any action. In an article written by Greg Kitzmiller (2003), he states that "It seems most business people are busy taking action, meeting with people, interacting and making decisions. Certainly, thinking is one of the most important actions we take and is at the core of strategic planning."

    Based on Kitzmiller's comments, I believe that critical thinking and decision making must go hand in hand in order to be successful. In order to develop a strategic plan, you must closely evaluate all aspects and in making decisions about your course of action, you develop a strategic plan for the future. From both a personal and professional level, these two combined techniques will put you in a better position to reach your goals and be successful. As restated by Ken Petress "Making quality decisions involves critical thinking; critical thinking has been defined as - involving the ability to explore a problem, question, or situation; integrate all the available information about it; arrive at a solution or hypothesis; and justify one's position".

    Critical thinking allows us to question our environment and the information presented to us. "One alternative is to accept passively what you encounter; doing so automatically results in your making someone else's opinion your own. A more active alternative consists of asking questions of yourself in an effort to reach a personal decision about the worth of what you have experienced."

    I confess I tried....I really really tried to read this through

    I confess I didn't even try. Sorry Cee. Love ya but, NO!
  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    I confess I tried....I really really tried to read this through [/quote]

    I do confess I did read the first two sentences in the first paragraph and skipped to last paragraph..

    i gave it my best effort, my attention span is small today.
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  • jbirdgreen
    jbirdgreen Posts: 569 Member
    edited March 2017
    I confess that although 99.9% of my fitness journey is for me and my goals, the remaining .1% wants my husband to be kickstarted by my progress and get into shape himself. I know it doesn't necessarily work like that.
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  • 4ever420
    4ever420 Posts: 4,088 Member
    Last week on my way to work, I stopped at McDonalds and got a McFlurry. It was so good that when I passed by the next McDonalds, I purchased ANOTHER McFlurry. *hangs head in shame*
  • Motorsheen
    Motorsheen Posts: 20,508 Member
    jbirdgreen wrote: »
    Confession -- I am also weirdly obsessed with taking sexy pictures of myself right now. I say they're for progress, but also I think I'm freaking hot right now, even though I have a ways to go.

    Sharing is Caring
  • jbirdgreen
    jbirdgreen Posts: 569 Member
    Motorsheen wrote: »
    jbirdgreen wrote: »
    Confession -- I am also weirdly obsessed with taking sexy pictures of myself right now. I say they're for progress, but also I think I'm freaking hot right now, even though I have a ways to go.

    Sharing is Caring

    I can't, I'm trying to be President.

    Although it wouldn't bar me from being the First Lady...
    sorry. I couldn't resist.