We've Found The G-Spot




Researchers at Kings College had studied 1,800 women and found no evidence of the fabled erogenous zone. They said it might be a myth encouraged by magazines and sex therapists.
But their counterparts across the channel - quick to defend their nation's reputation as better lovers - say the Brits were just unable to find the spot. Conference organiser Sylvain Mimoun declared that 60 per cent of women have a G-spot, it just needs to be discovered.
He said: 'In discovering the sensitive parts of her own body, this sensitive zone will become more and more functional. But if she has never touched it and no one else has ever touched it, it won't exist for her as a consequence.'

Leading French surgeon Pierre Foldes said: 'The King's College study shows a lack of respect for what women say.

'The conclusions were completely erroneous because they were based solely on genetic observations.

'It is clear that in female sexuality there is a variability. It cannot be reduced to a yes or no or an on or off.'

Gynaecologist Odile Buisson went further, saying the British character was responsible for a 'totalitarian' attitude. She said: 'I don't want to stigmatise at all but I think the Protestant, liberal, Anglo-Saxon character means you are very pragmatic.

'There has to be a cause for everything, a gene for everything. It's totalitarian'.

In the British study, published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, 1,804 women between 23 and 83 filled in questionnaires. All were pairs of identical or non-identical twins.

If a G-spot did exist, it would be expected that both identical twins, who have the same genes, would report having one. But in cases where one twin reported having the zone, the scientists found that no pattern emerged of the other having it.

In fact, identical twins were no more likely to share a G-spot than non-identical twins, who only share half their genes. Co-author Andrea Burri said: 'It is rather irresponsible to claim the existence of an entity that has never been proven and pressurise women - and men too.'

Info From/Kompas.com

Becarefull with your ATM


"Skimming is only a term, basically it means copying the data of a magnetic card illegally," stated Ruby when contacted Wednesday evening.

However he said that to crack into an account, a perpetrator also needs to know the PIN. In his act, a perpetrator would need a magnetic card reader device.
It's a simple device that can be disassembled for portability, and sold freely in the market. Usually the device is modified in such a way that it would be undetectable by the customer when placed on an ATMs card slot .

"It would read the data of the magnetic ATM card that goes through it. The data is recorded in its memory."

The record would be used to copy or clone the ATM card. Aside from this device, the perpetrator would also install a camera to peek at the customer's PIN.
The camera is tiny, it's called a pin hole spycam. Again this device is sold freely in the market. "Because its (the camera's) shape is thin it can be attached on the ATM, directed at the keypad to enter PINs."

The recording time of the camera can be sychronized with the magnetic card reader's time. Next, with a magnetic card writer, the ATM card can be cloned by copying the data into a blank card.
"It's a fast, instant process that can be done on the spot."

The card can even be cloned to any number desired. Once a card has been skimmed, the account can be cracked by multiple perpetrators.

According to Ruby, this crime is not a new kind. Considering that all of the required devices are sold freely, whether legally or illegally. Magnetic card reader, spycam, and magnetic card writer, all of which can be bought separately or in one set specifically sold for malicious purposes.

"An ATM skimmer set can be bought online for about 1,600 US dollars. One could order now, and wait for the goods to come in a few days." This means anyone can perform this crime. "It doesn't have to be a hacker. Anyone with an evil intent can do it."
The precautions

Although there's no absolute solution at least Ruby suggests that the following precautions. Before you insert your card, pay attention to the slot.
A reader device is only made of gypsum so it's often cracked and there's no way to attach it firmly to the ATM's card slot, sometimes it's only taped or glued to the slot. Try shaking the slot a bit hard.
If the slot comes off, then it's a reader device. Another tell-tale is that the color of the device is often similar but a little off compared with the rest of the ATM.
Next watch out for the tiny camera. It might be attached somewhere on the ATM or among a pile of leaflets beside the ATM.
Anything that points to the keypad should be checked first. Naturally, it's safer to go to ATMs protected by security guards and to avoid the old models, especially those in open places.
(WAH/C17-09)/kompas.com

Korean Robot



“The most distinctive strength of Mahru-Z is its visual ability to observe objects, recognise the tasks needed to be completed, and execute them,” You Bum-Jae, head of the cognitive robot centre at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology, told the Korea Times.

“It recognises people, can turn on microwave ovens, washing machines and toasters, and also pick up sandwiches, cups and whatever else it senses as objects.” The institute took two years to develop Mahru-Z, which is 1.3 metres (4.3 feet) tall and weighs 55 kilograms (121 pounds).

It could also work with an earlier maid robot called Marhu-M which moves on wheels, since both can be remotely controlled through a computer server. You claimed Mahru-Z as the most advanced robot in terms of mimicking human movements.

Apart from tackling chores, researchers say it could also be used in conditions too difficult or dangerous for humans. But mass production for commercial use is some way away. The science institute spends about about four billion won (3.5 million dollars) every year on robot research. It began receiving state funds for the project in 2006.

News from Haiti




United Nations officials said a large number of U.N. personnel were unaccounted for.

Communications were widely disrupted, making it impossible to get a full picture of damage as powerful aftershocks shook a desperately poor country where many buildings are flimsy. Electricity was out in some places.

Karel Zelenka, a Catholic Relief Services representative in Port-au-Prince, told U.S. colleagues before phone service failed that "there must be thousands of people dead," according to a spokeswoman for the aid group, Sara Fajardo.

"He reported that it was just total disaster and chaos, that there were clouds of dust surrounding Port-au-Prince," Fajardo said from the group's offices in Maryland.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington that embassy personnel were "literally in the dark" after power failed.

"They reported structures down. They reported a lot of walls down. They did see a number of bodies in the street and on the sidewalk that had been hit by debris. So clearly, there's going to be serious loss of life in this," he said.

Alain Le Roy, the U.N. peacekeeping chief in New York, said late Tuesday that the headquarters of the 9,000-member Haiti peacekeeping mission and other U.N. installations were seriously damaged.

"Contacts with the U.N. on the ground have been severely hampered," Le Roy said in a statement, adding: "For the moment, a large number of personnel remain unaccounted for."

Felix Augustin, Haiti's consul general in New York, said a portion of the National Palace had disintegrated.

"Buildings collapsed all over the place," he said. "We have lives that are destroyed. ... It will take at least two or three days for people to know what's going on."

An Associated Press videographer saw the wrecked hospital in Petionville, a hillside Port-au-Prince district that is home to many diplomats and wealthy Haitians, as well as many poor people. Elsewhere in the capital, a U.S. government official reported seeing houses that had tumbled into a ravine.

Kenson Calixte of Boston spoke to an uncle and cousin in Port-au-Prince shortly after the earthquake by phone. He could hear screaming in the background as his relatives described the frantic scene in the streets. His uncle told him that a small hotel near their home had collapsed, with people inside.

"They told me it was total chaos, a lot of devastation," he said. More than four hours later, he still was not able to get them back on the phone for an update.

Haiti's ambassador to the U.S., Raymond Joseph, said from his Washington office that he spoke to President Rene Preval's chief of staff, Fritz Longchamp, just after the quake hit. He said Longchamp told him that "buildings were crumbling right and left" near the national palace. He too had not been able to get through by phone to Haiti since.

With phones down, some of the only communication came from social media such as Twitter. Richard Morse, a well-known musician who manages the famed Olafson Hotel, kept up a stream of dispatches on the aftershocks and damage reports. The news, based mostly on second-hand reports and photos, was disturbing, with people screaming in fear and roads blocked with debris. Belair, a slum even in the best of times, was said to be "a broken mess."

The earthquake had a preliminary magnitude of 7.0 and was centered about 10 miles (15 kilometers) west of Port-au-Prince at a depth of 5 miles (8 kilometers), the U.S. Geological Survey said. USGS geophysicist Kristin Marano called it the strongest earthquake since 1770 in what is now Haiti. In 1946, a magnitude-8.1 quake struck the Dominican Republic and also shook Haiti, producing a tsunami that killed 1,790 people.

The temblor appeared to have occurred along a strike-slip fault, where one side of a vertical fault slips horizontally past the other, said earthquake expert Tom Jordan at the University of Southern California. The earthquake's size and proximity to populated Port-au-Prince likely caused widespread casualties and structural damage, he said.

"It's going to be a real killer," he said. "Whenever something like this happens, you just hope for the best."

Most of Haiti's 9 million people are desperately poor, and after years of political instability the country has no real construction standards. In November 2008, following the collapse of a school in Petionville, the mayor of Port-au-Prince estimated about 60 percent of the buildings were shoddily built and unsafe in normal circumstances.

Tuesday's quake was felt in the Dominican Republic, which shares a border with Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, and some panicked residents in the capital of Santo Domingo fled from their shaking homes. But no major damage was reported there.

In eastern Cuba, houses shook but there were also no reports of significant damage.

"We felt it very strongly and I would say for a long time. We had time to evacuate," said Monsignor Dionisio Garcia, archbishop of Santiago.

The few reports emerging from Haiti made clear the country had suffered extensive damage.

"Everybody is just totally, totally freaked out and shaken," said Henry Bahn, a U.S. Department of Agriculture official visiting Port-au-Prince. "The sky is just gray with dust."

Bahn said he was walking to his hotel room when the ground began to shake.

"I just held on and bounced across the wall," he said. "I just hear a tremendous amount of noise and shouting and screaming in the distance."

Bahn said there were rocks strewn about and he saw a ravine where several homes had stood: "It's just full of collapsed walls and rubble and barbed wire."

In the community of Thomassin, just outside Port-au-Prince, Alain Denis said neighbors told him the only road to the capital had been cut but that phones were all dead so it was hard to determine the extent of the damage.

"At this point, everything is a rumor," he said. "It's dark. It's nighttime."

Former President Bill Clinton, the U.N.'s special envoy for Haiti, issued a statement saying his office would do whatever he could to help the nation recover and rebuild.

"My thoughts and prayers are with the people of Haiti," he said.

President Barack Obama ordered U.S. officials to start preparing in case humanitarian assistance was needed.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro said his government planned to send a military aircraft carrying canned foods, medicine and drinking water and also would dispatch a team of 50 rescue workers

Haitian musician Wyclef Jean urged his fans to donate to earthquake relief efforts, saying he had received text messages from his homeland reporting that many people had died.

"We must think ahead for the aftershock, the people will need food, medicine, shelter, etc.," Jean said on his Web site.

Brazil's government was trying to re-establish communications with its embassy and military personnel in Haiti late Tuesday, according to the G1 Web site of Globo TV. Brazil leads a 9,000-member U.N. peacekeeping force there.

Felix Augustin, Haiti's consul general in New York, said he was concerned about everyone in Haiti, including his relatives.

"Communication is absolutely impossible," he said. "I've been trying to call my ministry and I cannot get through. ... It's mind-boggling."

Have Fun In 2010

Where will we go, what will we do and how much will we spend in 2010? Jane E. Fraser consults the crystal ball to discover the trends ahead.

Australian travellers will flood overseas destinations this year, driven by a powerful combination of affordable prices and pent-up demand. Cheap air fares, a strong Australian dollar and greater consumer confidence are expected to lead to a surge in international trips.

"There's no doubt that many are getting itchy feet to take off and explore the world after staying home last year," says a spokesman for Escape Travel, Colin Bowman.

"As conditions have started to improve, there's been an increase in interest in long-haul travel."

The managing director of Harvey World Travel, David Rivers, says forward bookings show Europe is "back" and the US is "a boomer", thanks to the strong Australian dollar and competition between airlines.

The executive director of the Tourism and Transport Forum, Brett Gale, says the trend to international travel is likely to continue for the next decade, with fewer people holidaying at home.

Overseas destinations

Lonely Planet's top 10 places include El Salvador in Central America, for hiking, surfing and low tourist numbers, and the Dutch-speaking Suriname in northern South America - the smallest country on that continent - for its cultural diversity and natural riches, including underwater wonders.

On the more traditional front, the US is "cool again" thanks to President Barack Obama, Morocco makes the list for its combination of "glam and grit" and Nepal is expected to be in demand now that peace has returned.

Interest in Germany is expected to be high, 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, while Greece makes the cut for having "something for everyone" - from ruins to idyllic beaches - and Portugal is expected to draw in travellers as it experiences a "new wave" of modernity amid tradition. Closer to home, New Zealand and Malaysia round out the top 10 due to their natural beauty and diversity of experiences.

The US (particularly New York and Las Vegas) also makes the cut for Flight Centre's top 10 destinations, along with Vancouver in Canada, with the city hosting the Winter Olympic Games next month.

Botswana's plush tented camps are predicted to be in favour with the glamping (glamour camping) market, while Mexican and Caribbean beaches are back in fashion and luxury river cruising is expected to draw visitors to Vietnam.

Flight Centre joins Lonely Planet in including Greece (particularly Santorini and Mykonos) in its top 10, along with Malaysia (especially for shopping in Kuala Lumpur).

Rounding out Flight Centre's top 10 are Cadaques in northern Spain, "for a coastal yet cultural escape"; Provence in France for activity-based holidays such as cooking and art classes; and cruises from Australia.

Intrepid Travel is banking on interest in East Timor, with a new trip this year. The company says East Timor is "virtually untouched" by tourism and offers a combination of lush rainforest, traditional villages and Portuguese and Indonesian influences.

Transglobal Destinations says Turkey is emerging as a cheaper alternative to France, Spain and Italy, while World Expeditions says demand for off-the-beaten-track destinations such as Madagascar, Syria and Ethiopia has risen as confidence has returned.

Australian destinations


AOT Holidays, Australia's largest wholesaler of domestic holidays, says the Gold Coast will retain pole position this year, due to its ability to cater for all budgets and ages. Queensland islands are expected to be in second place, thanks to deals such as free nights and children-stay-free, while Tasmania is in third spot thanks to more fly-drive packages coming on to the market.

More-competitive accommodation and touring rates, along with improved flight access, is generating demand for Western Australia, the Northern Territory, South Australia and Tasmania, with the Margaret River region, Kangaroo Island and Broome particularly attractive.

Luxury travel specialist Travel Associates says more than 40 per cent of its forward domestic bookings are for Queensland island getaways, typically for three to four nights.

How we'll book

The general manager of Zuji Australia, Peter Smith, says figures collated by research agency PhoCusWright show the move to online bookings will speed up. While the overall market (leisure travel and independently booked business travel) is expected to grow by 7.5 per cent this year and by 9 per cent next year, online booking and sales growth is expected to be almost 20 per cent each year.

"In 2008, online share was 26 per cent; this is due to rise to 41 per cent by 2011," Smith says.

Webjet.com, a flight booking provider, is banking on healthy growth this year after reporting its October bookings were up 50 per cent on the previous year. Also expecting to see continued growth is online auction site ubid4rooms.com, which allows travellers to bargain direct with hotels by stating what a guest is willing to pay. The rapidly growing site, which features about 800 accommodation options, recently expanded to include houseboats and motor homes and has indicated flights and cruises are on its radar.

What we'll book


Travel agencies are reporting a trend to small-group tours and personally escorted tours as travellers seek more authentic experiences while not wanting to give up the convenience and safety of group touring.

A Travel Associates spokesperson says the company has experienced a 25 per cent increase in demand for small-group tours (up to nine people), as well as a 20 per cent increase in inquiries about women-only tours.

STA Travel, which caters for the youth market, says organised tours are "definitely cool again".

Travel Associates says food and wine tours and cooking schools are also in demand - up 35 per cent - thanks to television shows such as MasterChef.

Viator, an online tour booking service, says independent travellers are returning to traditional hop-on, hop-off tours, with bookings increasing 65 per cent over recent months, while cultural products such as museum tickets are up by more than 50 per cent and adrenalin-charged experiences have risen by more than 70 per cent.

Active holidays are expected to be popular this year, with UTracks reporting strong demand for its self-guided walking and cycling holidays and World Expeditions saying bookings for its Australian walking holidays are up by 25 per cent.

Travel.com.au says it is seeing demand for "shop-overs", with Australians stopping in Asia on their way home from Europe. It is also seeing demand for multi-generational family holidays.

Luxury walking tour operator bothfeet reports a 50 per cent increase in demand from families with teenagers, who are turning to activity-based trips rather than traditional touring.

Cruising is expected to continue its stellar growth, with Harvey World Travel's David Rivers saying voyages from Australian and Asian ports are particularly popular.

Specialist retailer Cruiseabout has noticed a trend to themed and special-interest cruises, from salsa dancing and Italian cooking to a cruise inspired by the Twilight vampire books and films.

The Tourism and Transport Forum's Brett Gale says he expects to see strong growth in nature-based tourism at both upmarket lodges and in the caravan and camping sector.

And STA Travel is predicting continued growth in "voluntourism", particularly short-term volunteer projects focused on community work.

How much we'll spend


Australians will have less disposable income, in real terms, than they had last year, according to a senior economist at ANZ, Julie Toth. While the dip is partly a statistical anomaly due to the effect of 2009's stimulus payments, factors such as weak jobs growth, inflation and high population growth will be at play.

"We're actually looking at quite a weak year for household disposable income," Toth says. "This is a delayed effect from the downturn ... people won't have any additional money."

However, Toth notes that spending on recreation remains in second place in Australia, behind outlays on a mortgage or rent but ahead of food.

"It's just a matter of how that [spending on recreation] is divided up," she says.

A demographer for KPMG, Bernard Salt, believes Australians will spend more on travel after staying close to home and choosing cheaper options last year.

"I think people will be bolder in terms of their travel aspirations," Salt says. "I think we'll see a greater confidence; there's a sense that we've escaped the worst of this [financial crisis].

"I think there will be a reasonable rebound ... as people enjoy a period of greater confidence and rising prosperity."

What we'll pay for


An aviation consultant for CAPA Consulting, Ian Thomas, expects continued restraint in the classes of travel people will book throughout the year. Premium economy will continue to grow at the expense of business class and low-cost carriers will continue to expand at the expense of full-service airlines.

"One of the biggest changes in the past year has been in premium travel - business-class travellers have moved down a notch and they don't seem to be moving back," Thomas says.

"People are looking for a fairly basic, comfortable product and they won't find it in economy but they might find it in premium economy."

When it comes to accommodation, research by online booking agency Wotif shows Australians are consistent in their standards, regardless of the economy.

A recent survey found 63 per cent of respondents budget for between $150 and $200 a night for accommodation, a figure consistent with previous years.

The general manager of Wotif, Megan Magill, says people tend to shorten their stay rather than lower their standards, with four-star accommodation and quality apartments remaining the most popular.

What we'll learn


Travellers accustomed to bargain-basement deals could be in for some shocks, with prices expected to steadily rise as conditions improve.

American Express is forecasting Australia will face some of the biggest increases in the world and industry leaders warn that the best deals may have been and gone.

"If demand continues to improve, it will inevitably become harder to get a bargain," says a spokeswoman for Flight Centre, Nicole Moy. "We will continue to see eye-catching special offers from time to time but the widespread discounting we saw last year is unlikely to be repeated."  

Finally Yes,I can Do This



So this year I decided to reflect less on the changes I want to make and focus on changes I've succeeded in making in the past, in the hope that from this would come fresh impetus for change in the future. And what I have discovered is that the things that have given me the greatest sense of pride over the years are what I call my 'I Can Do This' moments.

The precise, revelatory moments when changes I felt I lacked the courage or ability to make were suddenly achieved, or at least embarked upon. We all have these moments. And it's not the size of the achievement that matters. The trick is to recognise what is significant for you, and try to hold on to the special glow of satisfaction it gives you.

Here are my top 'I can do this' moments...

I CAN TRAVEL ALONE

Other than for business reasons, when I had a full-time job, I'd never really travelled alone. It seemed a rather sad and lonely thing to do, to have a holiday completely solo.

But I needed a break after my separation from my husband, and none of my friends were free to accompany me. So I booked the Eurostar and a room in a small hotel. I studied a map and my guidebook, choosing museums, restaurants and flea markets I wanted to visit.

I arrived nervous but excited. As I checked into my attic room, with its creaky plumbing and views all the way to Sacre Coeur in Montmartre, I thought: 'I CAN DO THIS!'

I CAN PUT TOGETHER FLAT-PACK FURNITURE


When the desk I'd bought as my son's Christmas present arrived from John Lewis, I'd been expecting it to come in pieces. But I'd been thinking more like five pieces, rather than 105.

I've never been into DIY. It had always been husband territory, as far as I was concerned.

I laid the bits out in front of me and felt ready to weep. But it had to be put together before my son arrived home for the holidays from his year of working abroad as part of his studies.

The instructions suggested it would take 45 minutes. I got down to work. Six hours and many tantrums later, it was finished. I punched the air and shouted: 'I CAN DO THIS!'

But as far as DIY is concerned, never, ever again.

I CAN SING HAPPY BIRTHDAY IN TUNE


I love to sing, but I hate the sound of my own voice. I come from a long line of people who can only sing out of tune, so I guess it must be genetic. Even Happy Birthday is beyond me.

Or at least it was before my singing teacher, Rachel, came into my life. I realised I didn't want to be on my death-bed regretting the fact I'd never learned to sing, so decided to invest in private singing lessons.

At first, I was so embarrassed all I could do was break into nervous laughter. But the fact I could hear my own voice was out of tune was a good sign, apparently.

Over the months I grew in confidence. Rachel decided I had a good ear and encouraged me into believing that, by practising the exercises she gave me, I could improve enormously.

Six months on, I was in the bath belting out Happy Birthday. And I thought: 'I CAN DO THIS!'

For the first time at midnight mass on Christmas Eve I sang rather than mimed. I still haven't been asked to join the choir, but at least I'm no longer frightened by the sound of my own voice.

That night, at a restaurant on the Left Bank, I met a fellow traveller, also on his own. We chatted for hours, then shook hands and went our own ways. This would never have happened if I'd been with a friend.

The next day, at lunch, I got chatting to an American woman and left with a list of new places to visit.

'We'll always have Paris,' said Rick in Casablanca. I'll always have Paris, I thought happily on my way back to London.

 I CAN GO TO A PARTY ON MY OWN


I know plenty of women who turn down invitations rather than walk alone into a room full of people, most of whom they don't know.

It's a ghastly feeling, standing by yourself, pretending to be fascinated by your cocktail, but even that's better than becoming a hermit.

When I was young, I had to go to receptions related to my work. It was easy because I was a pretty young thing and all I had to do was stand there and within moments some guy would come and start chatting to me.

These days I have to work a lot harder. If I know only the host I will ask him/her to introduce me to some people. If the host is too busy I look for someone else on their own and start a conversation.

If everyone's in huddles I'll suss a friendly-looking group, approach, and ask: 'Do you mind if I join you?' Only the rudest of people would say no, and so far it's never happened to me.

I CAN STRIP OFF IN FRONT OF A MAN


After a failed marriage and 25 years of fidelity, the one thing I was quite certain of when we separated was that I would never take my clothes off in front of another man.

My fifty-something body, I believed, just wasn't up to naked scrutiny. And if I couldn't take my clothes off, that meant sex was also off the agenda.

I've met dozens of older women who feel exactly the same way after the end of a long-term relationship.
I wasn't averse to dating, though. After a few not-so-hot dates with various men, I met a guy I really liked.

Please don't let him rush this, I thought, or I'll run a mile. Fortunately he didn't rush and I didn't run. We met a few times over a couple of months, not even a kiss was exchanged between us.

Then I went away for a few weeks. We emailed and I thought of him often. I came home. We met up again and spent the whole day walking in the country. When it happened that night it was all so simple.

'I CAN DO THIS!' I thought, with uninhibited joy. I finally remembered that sex is about how we connect, not what we look like.

I CAN CLIMB A MOUNTAIN


My approach to things that scare me, especially physical things, is to accept the challenge first, then worry about how I'm going to cope with it after.

This is how I, a virgin trekker, ended up heading to the Atlas Mountains in Morocco.

Once I'd signed up for the charity trek and collected my sponsorship money, there was no way I could back out. It's become such a cliche, that thing of climbing to the tallest peak, then bursting into tears at the wonder of it all.

The wonder of your surroundings, the wonder that you actually did it. But so what if it has become a bit cliche? The thrill of that 'I CAN DO THIS' will never fade away from my memory.

I CAN SHOW WEAKNESS


It took a massive nervous breakdown before I learned to accept my vulnerabilities and not be ashamed of them. I thought I could do it all.

Be a high-powered exec, a great mum, a loving wife, a perfect hostess. When depression kicked in, I thought I was a woman without worth. I thought I had no right to feel so bad when I had so much.

It took two years of pills, therapy and time out from work before I began to see that being strong and capable wasn't the answer. I gave up full-time work and went freelance.

On my first day of freedom I started out with a walk, then went to a cafe and leisurely read the papers. 'I CAN DO THIS,' I thought. I can earn less, spend less, enjoy life more and own up to not being superwoman.

I learned the hard way. The trick is to change direction without falling to pieces first. Listen to the voice in your head, rather than trying to live up to impossible standards.

I CAN LOVE AN ANIMAL

Until Cuba, my black labrador, came into my life, I would cross the road to avoid a dog coming towards me, even if it was on a lead. And if a dog jumped up at me in the park I would recoil in horror. But I love to go for long walks and, when I started working from home, began to notice what fun other walkers seemed to be having out on the heath with their dogs.

Then, through a friend, I learned that a dog belonging to a woman down the road had produced a litter of nine pups. Under pressure from my friend, I went to have a look at them. It wasn't love at first sight - cute though Cuba was - it was more a case of me deciding it was time to stop being such a wimp around animals.

I crouched down and Cuba leapt into my arms. The truth is, I didn't think about the responsibility, the expense, the fact both the dog and I would need to be trained.

I just thought: 'I CAN DO THIS!' Seven years on, I can't imagine my daily routine without Cuba, and these days I get along fine with most dogs. I became a dog owner for the wrong reason, but it turned out right.

Sometimes you need to forget logic and make a leap of faith.

I CAN SPEAK IN PUBLIC

When it came to question time in class at school, I would dread being chosen by the teacher and I certainly never once put up my hand to volunteer an answer.

If the teacher's beady eyes came to rest on me, my heart would race, my face turn bright red and I would stammer and squeak, to the amusement of my classmates.

Being the centre of attention, even for a moment, was my worst nightmare. When I was a journalist, in my 20s, I began, occasionally, to speak on the radio. I dreaded it every time.

Then, one day in my 30s, I was asked to give a speech to the Literacy Trust to an audience of perhaps 100 people. I prepared for a week. I learned the whole thing by heart.

I had prompt notes as well as the speech written out in front of me. I took a Valium.

And then I went for it. At one point, the audience burst into spontaneous laughter. This was the turning point when I thought: 'I CAN DO THIS!'

The fear of speaking in public has never gone away, but the knowledge that I can do it, and do it well, has encouraged me to take on the challenge whenever I'm asked.

But I would never attempt to do it off the cuff. Preparation is the key.
Editor: jimbon/Linda Kelsey

stat counters

FIFA.com - Latest News