Customer Review: parental advisory
I bought this for my 8 year old daughter, assuming that because it was geared towards kids, it would be appropriate. I was disappointed to see that these cds had a parental advisory: "Explicit lyrics" sticker on them. It did not say this in the product description. I will be returning this item.
Customer Review: Karaoke CD review
I like this, because i love to sing. It educates you in music and is a lot of fun to do with your friends. Its not very durable though, but how many CDs are???
Many people go through the motions during Christmas. If not
the whole holiday season just parts. I see them slumped in
line, not a smile to be found, their body stiff, just
counting the number of people ahead of them, and time. Gift
giving or even receiving is right, wrong, good, bad, or
considered a waste. The control of it all, tightens the
body, encompasses the soul, and buries the magic. Where is
the release or where do we begin? It starts mindfully with
a choice, movement in the body, and a change of spirit.
Resolve to release the stress of it all, the need for
control, the right, or the wrong. Stand tall, smile, talk
to your neighbor, give them the acknowledgment just like you
want and deserve whether its one minute or more.
1. Lower back release. Stand facing a wall. Palms flat
against the wall, arms stretched, body angled straight, bend
one knee, and place it closer to the wall. Bend gentle
towards the wall. Close your eyes and see the tension in
your back. Envision it as a light. Mindfully move that
light down your legs out into the floor. If the light
prefers, let it travel through the arms into the wall. It
doesn't matter, just that it goes. What is so nice about
this release is there is usually a wall available anywhere
you go or you can use this release in the shower at home.
2. Breathing exercises cleanse. Lay down, a bed or couch
work well, talk through a speech, or just talk aloud. At
the same time breathe deeply, watch your stomach rise and
fall, the same way a babys does when lying on their back
asleep. This will help you find your authentic voice; it
will probably sound different than ever before. Listen to
that voice, remember it well, use it often and what the
change in people who are listening.
3. Cheek, not facial, squeezing and release can be done
sitting in your office chair or while you are driving.
Squeeze, release, squeeze, release. Alternatively, play
each cheek to the beat of a song. Squeeze first the right,
then the left, and then the right again. Buttock dancing
is a great release for the back and shoulders. Its okay to
laugh through this because it then fades into number 4
below.
4. Laughter. Rent some funny movies or create your own
laughter. Try this: sit, feet firmly on the ground, bend
forward with elbows on your knees. Take a deep breath and
let out a big laugh. A hearty one, the kind from the
stomach, the kind you try to hide. Repeat until you feel
that the body releases the stress. It usually doesn't take
but two or three times. If you are a speaker, do this
before entering the room.
5. Do something wild. Streak across your room; sway naked
in the moonlight, or dance to wild music with your spouse.
Let the hair down, let go of control. When was the last
time you were not in control, the time you left all
inhabitations go, you went with your own personal flow? If
you are a writer, write wildly as if no censorship, no
rules. Use wild, daring words, don't ask what they mean or
spell like they sound. Release the wildness everyday, it
keeps the diseases at bay, its better than an apple a day.
If a runner, fling your arms wildly around, as if going
wild. Because actually, you am. Make ugly faces. Stand up
in front of your computer screen, dance and sway to
imaginary music if none is around. Howl at the moon and
even share it with friends. Bring some drums and strum.
6. Sounds. Let out a "yippee" or a big "yes" loud or soft,
in a car by yourself, or in your cubby hole at your desk
when you have completed something or did something well.
Let out a "You go, Girl" cry with a powerful arm thrust.
Open your mouth wide and verbally say the vowels, "aa, ee,
ii, oo, uu." (This is my favorite release before and after
a speech, it loosens the throat.) Yawn with sounds and
stretch with the yawn. Burp with oops and pride instead of
apology and shame. Its only a body movement nothing more.
When someone else does it, respond well, with jest rather
than a disapproving glare.
7. All choked up. Our throat harbors our unspoken dreams
and uncried tears caused from stress, of trying to be in
control. Use a pillow to muffle, or find a field where no
one can hear, yell and shout, but don't shriek, from the
depth of your belly. This sends any blocked energy from the
throat away. Your voice, even your body, may feel drained
as the toxins held inside get released, especially if you
keep it up for 10 or 15 minutes (your goal). Try this a day
before a speech to lower your pitch and relax your throat.
You will see a new sense of commanding power with a new
authentic voice in your writing or in your speaking.
These are seven various ways to let go of stress in your
body, open up your writing, improve your presentation
quality, or return your self-confidence and personal power.
Its easy to forget we need to let go, become wild into
order to take back our own control. Control of our health
and not take it for granted. You can also use any one of
these in the shower. Singing in the shower is a healthy
release of stress, in tune or not. Health is the one thing
in life money can't buy.
Copyright 2004, Catherine Franz. All rights reserved.
Catherine Franz, a eight-year Certified Professional Coach,Graduate of Coach University, Mastery University, editor ofthree ezines, columnist, author of thousands of articleswebsite: http://www.abundancecenter.comblog: http://abundance.blogs.com
dance music cd
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