Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Self Esteem
How do you feel about yourself? Do you consider yourself attractive? Interesting? Sexy? How do men respond to you? Do men respond to you?
Self-image is the single most important ingredient in a good attitude. The way you see the rest of the world depends to a great extent on how you see yourself. To those with a positive self-image, the world is an exciting, challenging place. To those with negative self-image, the world can be menacing and cruel.
A poor self-image can out you in double jeopardy- not only does the world seem depressing but by projecting your own insecurities, you make it depressing. No matter what you do to the outside, for example, a makeover, your self-image eventually comes through. If you perceive yourself negatively, that is how others will see you. Self-image is also a key to the quality of your relationships. A woman who feels good about herself projects a radiance that attracts others. That kind of glowing good looks can't be bought or applied or faked. When there is real satisfaction, it shows.
Southern Belle Manners
A true southern belle has perfect manners. Read up on your table manners, and make sure to always practice them. When you bump into someone accidentally, say "Excuse/Pardon me", when someone gives you a compliment, smile and say "Thank you!". And of course, always be polite to everyone.
Respect your elders. Call anyone you meet "Ma'am" and "Sir", unless told to do otherwise.
Add the nicknames "Sugar", "Sweetheart", "Darling'", "Lamb", and "Baby", to your vocabulary, and start calling your friends that. Don't overdo it though!
Make sure you always dress well, and are presentable at all times. Do not wear clothes that are too revealing. Southern belles love wearing dresses, pearls, heels, and nice jackets. Invest in a few nice, casual dresses if you can.
Keep yourself looking clean and neat. Bathe everyday, wear a light perfume, keep your hair looking nice and clean, keep your nails manicured and polished, and never cake on the make up!
Southern Belle's are very family oriented. Always help out your family, spend quality time with them, and love them. Call your Mother, "Momma", and call your Father, "Daddy", regardless of how old you are!
Take compliments well. When you're complimented, do not try to shoot down the compliment. When someone says "You look very pretty today!", smile warmly and say "Thank you! I love your ---!". Complimenting them back shows that
you're a sweet, kind person.
Smile! A southern belle always has a bright, warm smile on her face.
Have Southern hospitality. A southern belle is sweet, kind, and generous to everyone they come across. This is where "Southern Hospitality" comes in to play. If you don't like someone, still be polite and sweet. And if you can't, simply do not say anything!
Learn how to make sweet tea! Offer it to everyone who visits your home. It's a Southern staple, and tastes delicious!
Do your mother a favor, and clean the house for her a few times a month. Doing chores for your mother shows that you care, and respect all the sacrifices she does for you!
Finish school. A southern belle has an education, and a good head on her shoulders.
Don't drink excessive amounts of alcohol. A Southern belle would never be caught singing drunk in her panties.
Never swear. Use euphemisms instead. Say "Darn" instead of "Damn", and so on. Swearing shows a lack of intelligence, it sounds dirty, and it's completely unnecessary. Even the word "crap" sounds vulgar.
Never speak of using the restroom to anyone. If you need to use the restroom, simply excuse yourself.
Southern belles are very religious. Respect your religion, and those of others, as well. God is your number one go-to advice-giver.
Have genuine, sweet, down-to-earth attitude.
Pay attention to how you present yourself. Hold your head up high, sit up straight, and have a neat, groomed
appearance.
White shoes should never be worn before Easter or after Labor Day, unless it is your own wedding. Then it is okay to wear but when you change out of your bridal wear, you will need to change your shoes or you will be seen as "tacky".
Regardless of how many trips down the aisle a Belle has made, a Southern bride always wears white.
Cleavage is reserved for evenings.
Chewing gum in public is just plain "tacky".
A modern Southern Belle may smoke or drink but they should never walk around with cigarette or a drink in hand.
Know how to accessorize without being tacky. If in doubt, remove one item before leaving the house. In the South, this is called "understated elegance".
Never gossip. When you have something to say that isn't nice, always start out with "Bless her heart" or "Please pray for her". You can pretty much get away with anything with those statements before it.
When someone is sick or passes away, bring food to the family. People get hungry when taking care of an invalid and after losing a loved one, but they don't have time to cook. Most belles have a favorite casserole that others eventually come to expect. When they receive it, they get concerned that you may be sick, and you just might find other people showing up at your door with food.
A Southern Belle breaks rules all of the time and she does so in good humor. However, as she skips along with an armful of stacked bracelets and white shoes the week before Thanksgiving, you can count on her looking over her shoulder to make sure her Mama isn't looking!
Never show anger in public. Smile and always act like a lady.
Act helpless and confused when it is to your advantage; never let them know how clever and capable you really are!
Charm, charm. charm!
Be elegant and graceful!
Respect your elders. Call anyone you meet "Ma'am" and "Sir", unless told to do otherwise.
Add the nicknames "Sugar", "Sweetheart", "Darling'", "Lamb", and "Baby", to your vocabulary, and start calling your friends that. Don't overdo it though!
Make sure you always dress well, and are presentable at all times. Do not wear clothes that are too revealing. Southern belles love wearing dresses, pearls, heels, and nice jackets. Invest in a few nice, casual dresses if you can.
Keep yourself looking clean and neat. Bathe everyday, wear a light perfume, keep your hair looking nice and clean, keep your nails manicured and polished, and never cake on the make up!
Southern Belle's are very family oriented. Always help out your family, spend quality time with them, and love them. Call your Mother, "Momma", and call your Father, "Daddy", regardless of how old you are!
Take compliments well. When you're complimented, do not try to shoot down the compliment. When someone says "You look very pretty today!", smile warmly and say "Thank you! I love your ---!". Complimenting them back shows that
you're a sweet, kind person.
Smile! A southern belle always has a bright, warm smile on her face.
Have Southern hospitality. A southern belle is sweet, kind, and generous to everyone they come across. This is where "Southern Hospitality" comes in to play. If you don't like someone, still be polite and sweet. And if you can't, simply do not say anything!
Learn how to make sweet tea! Offer it to everyone who visits your home. It's a Southern staple, and tastes delicious!
Do your mother a favor, and clean the house for her a few times a month. Doing chores for your mother shows that you care, and respect all the sacrifices she does for you!
Finish school. A southern belle has an education, and a good head on her shoulders.
Don't drink excessive amounts of alcohol. A Southern belle would never be caught singing drunk in her panties.
Never swear. Use euphemisms instead. Say "Darn" instead of "Damn", and so on. Swearing shows a lack of intelligence, it sounds dirty, and it's completely unnecessary. Even the word "crap" sounds vulgar.
Never speak of using the restroom to anyone. If you need to use the restroom, simply excuse yourself.
Southern belles are very religious. Respect your religion, and those of others, as well. God is your number one go-to advice-giver.
Have genuine, sweet, down-to-earth attitude.
Pay attention to how you present yourself. Hold your head up high, sit up straight, and have a neat, groomed
appearance.
White shoes should never be worn before Easter or after Labor Day, unless it is your own wedding. Then it is okay to wear but when you change out of your bridal wear, you will need to change your shoes or you will be seen as "tacky".
Regardless of how many trips down the aisle a Belle has made, a Southern bride always wears white.
Cleavage is reserved for evenings.
Chewing gum in public is just plain "tacky".
A modern Southern Belle may smoke or drink but they should never walk around with cigarette or a drink in hand.
Know how to accessorize without being tacky. If in doubt, remove one item before leaving the house. In the South, this is called "understated elegance".
Never gossip. When you have something to say that isn't nice, always start out with "Bless her heart" or "Please pray for her". You can pretty much get away with anything with those statements before it.
When someone is sick or passes away, bring food to the family. People get hungry when taking care of an invalid and after losing a loved one, but they don't have time to cook. Most belles have a favorite casserole that others eventually come to expect. When they receive it, they get concerned that you may be sick, and you just might find other people showing up at your door with food.
A Southern Belle breaks rules all of the time and she does so in good humor. However, as she skips along with an armful of stacked bracelets and white shoes the week before Thanksgiving, you can count on her looking over her shoulder to make sure her Mama isn't looking!
Never show anger in public. Smile and always act like a lady.
Act helpless and confused when it is to your advantage; never let them know how clever and capable you really are!
Charm, charm. charm!
Be elegant and graceful!
A True Belle
Belle Etiquette Must Know Rules
Manners of a Lady in the 1800's
Gait and Carriage
"A lady ought to adopt a modest and measured gait; too great hurry injures the grace which ought to characterize her. She should not turn her head on one side and on the other, especially in large towns or cities, where this bad habit seems to be an invitation to the impertinent. A lady should not present herself alone in a library, or a museum, unless she goes there to study, or work as an artist.
Gentlemen's attendance. - After twilight, a young lady would not be conducting herself in a becoming manner, by walking alone; and if she passes the evening with any one, she ought, beforehand, to provide some one to come for her at a stated hour; but if this is not practicable, she should politely ask of the person whom she is visiting, to permit a servant to accompany her."
Attentions to Others
When you are passing in the street, and see coming towards you a person of your acquaintance, whether a lady or an elderly person, you should offer them the wall, that is to say, the side next the houses. If a carriage should happen to stop, in such a manner as to leave only a narrow passage between it and the houses, beware of elbowing and rudely crowding the passengers, with a view to get by more expeditiously; wait your turn, and if any one of the persons before mentioned comes up, you should edge up to the wall, in order to give them the place. They also, as they pass, should bow politely to you.
Raising the Dress
When tripping over the pavement, a lady should gracefully raise her dress a little above her ankle. With the right hand, she should hold together the folds of her gown, and draw them towards the right side. To raise the dress on. both sides, and with both hands, is vulgar. This ungraceful practice can only be tolerated for a moment, when the mud is very deep.
Speaking to Your Husband
A lady should not say "my husband," except among intimates; in every other case she should address him by his name, calling him "Mr." It is equally proper, except on occasions of ceremony, and while she is quite young, to designate him by his Christian name.
Never use the initial of a person's name to designate him; as "Mr. P.," "Mr. L.," etc. Nothing is so odious as to hear a lady speak of her husband, or, indeed, any one else, as "Mr. B."
How a lady should be spoken of by her husband. - It is equally improper for a gentleman to say "my wife," except among very intimate friends; he should mention her as "Mrs. So-and-so." When in private, the expression "my dear," or merely the Christian name, is considered in accordance with the best usage among the more refined.
Manners from the Fifties
Good Manners of the 1950s
Manners for Young Children
Children had a very strict behavioral code to follow from a very young age in the 1950s. Mothers strove to provide clean, well-ordered homes, with well-behaved children at all times. To this end, children followed a long list of rules including holding doors for adults, greeting elders with proscribed scripts, never leaving the dinner table early, not speaking until spoken to and saying "may I" instead of
"I want". "Please" and "thank you" were mandatory at all times.
High School Manners
As children matured, schools reinforced manners. "Mental Hygiene" films, based on the propaganda films of World War II promoted good manners in every conceivable situation. These 15-minute films included subjects ranging from "how to make friends" to what happens to outcasts and drug users. Well mannered teens were expected to dress cleanly and modestly, speak politely at all times, follow scripts for greetings and many social interactions and look to adults for guidance.
Dating Manner
Dating was expected in high school. Teenagers followed a strict code while dating. Girls were asked out by boys and provided answers quickly. Boys provided detailed information about the date at the time of the invitation, and asked far enough ahead of time. At the time of the date, both were ready on time and the polite boy arrived to pick up the girl with enough time to visit with her parents for a few minutes.
During the date, both the boy and the girl were instructed on where to sit (e.g. boy sits on the outside), who should walk in front (boy leads to seats, girl leads out) and how to order food politely. Boys were expected to open doors for girls, hold chairs for them, help them with their wraps and pay the bill. Girls were to be attractive and pleasant company at all times.
College Manner
When entering college, students were provided with etiquette guides reinforcing that the behavior expected from them at home was still expected. The etiquette guide from Rose Polytechnic Institute in Terre Haute, Indiana, clearly outlined expected manners in multiple situations, including appropriate greetings (introduce elders first), invitation protocols, dance protocols and dining protocols. As with dating expectations, the etiquette outlined was very rigid. For example, when being introduced a student must answer "how do you do" plus the name. Never should a student respond with "pleased to meet you" or anything else.
Manners From Yesteryears
During the reign of Louis XIV of France, the expectations of proper social behavior when in the presence of the King were codified and distributed on small cards to members of his court to assure uniformity of court behavior. In French, this placard or card upon which these rules of behavior were listed was referred to as an “etiquette.” This term soon became the synonym for acceptable public behavior.


Tuesday, February 23, 2016
The Southern Woman
A Southern Woman
Growing up in a Pentecostal family, my mother taught me to be a true Southern Lady by using the Bible as reference. The virtues of a true lady are spelled out for us in Proverbs 31. I like using the Amplified Version of the Bible since it is easier to understand and mine also has commentaries by Joyce Meyer whom I love to hear preach and teach!
"A capable, intelligent, and virtuous woman- who is he who can find her? She is far more precious than jewels and her value is far above rubies or pearls. The heart of her husband trusts in her confidently and relies on and believes in her securely so he has no lack of honest gain or need dishonest spoil. She comforts, encourages, and does him only good as long as there is life within her. She seeks out wool and flax and works with willing hands to develop it. She is like the merchant ships loaded with foodstuff; she brings her household's food from afar. She rises while it is yet night and gets food for her household and assigns her maids their tasks. She considers a new field before she buys or accepts it, with her savings she plants fruitful vines in her vineyard. She girds herself with strength (spiritual, mental, and physical fitness for her God given tasks) and makes her arms strong and firm. She tastes and sees that her gain from work is good; her lamp goes not out, but it burns on continually through the night (of trouble, privation, or sorrow, warning away fear, doubt, and distrust). She lays her hands to the spindle and her hands hold the distaff. She opens her hand to the poor, yes, she reaches out her filled hands to the needy (whether in body, spirit, or mind). She fears not the snow for her family, for all her household are doubly clothed in scarlet. She makes for herself coverlets, cushions, and rugs of tapestry. Her clothing is of linen, pure and fine, and of purple. Her husband is known in the city's gates, when he sits among the elders of the land. She makes fine linen garments and leads others to buy them; she delivers to the merchants girdles (or sashes that free one up for service). Strength and dignity are clothing and her position is secure; she rejoices over the future. She opens her mouth in skillful and Godly Wisdom, and on her tongue is the law of kindness. She looks well to how things go on in her household, and the bread of idleness (gossip, discontent, and self-pity) she will not eat. Her children rise up and call her blessed and her husband boasts and praises her. Many daughters have done virtuously, nobly, and well, but you excel them all. Charm and grace are deceptive and beauty is vain, but a woman who reverently and worshipfully fears the Lord, she will be praised! Give her of the fruit of her hands, and let her own works praise her in the gates." Proverbs 31:10-31
Lemuel extols on the character of the Godly wife and mother. He wrote this beautiful acrostic poem, one in which each verse begins with a succeeding letter of the Hebrew alphabet. He profiles a woman who is godly, industrious, creative, sensitive, multi-talented, and one who is a wife and mother! She wears many different hats. She is a seamstress, a merchant, a cook, real estate agent, gardener, and community volunteer. But her energies are directed towards her home and is a blessing to her family. Embrace what you are! You are wife and mother and your family is blessed to have you. To be a Southern Lady you must be a Proverbs 31 Lady!
Being Entertained Tips For the Perfect Hostess
Thanking Your Hostess
Buy a case of wine to use as hostess gifts. Most wine retailers offer a 15-20% discount when you buy six or more bottles. This will save you at least $2.00 per bottle.
Nab a box of quality candles at a warehouse store and pair with votives from the dollar store.
Hit the clearance rack for unexpected gifts. Target, Wal-Mart, and Home Goods have clearance items on the endcaps of their aisles. That is where these stores unload discounted candles, picture frames, and other knick knacks for $2.00 - $3.00.
Buy a case of wine to use as hostess gifts. Most wine retailers offer a 15-20% discount when you buy six or more bottles. This will save you at least $2.00 per bottle.
Nab a box of quality candles at a warehouse store and pair with votives from the dollar store.
Hit the clearance rack for unexpected gifts. Target, Wal-Mart, and Home Goods have clearance items on the endcaps of their aisles. That is where these stores unload discounted candles, picture frames, and other knick knacks for $2.00 - $3.00.
The Perfect Hostess- Ending Your Event With Style and Grace
Being a fabulous hostess is something we strive for. It can also mean your parties take on a life of their own with crowds enjoying your hospitality longer than you expect. Even if you have specifically noted the start and the end time for your gathering, there can be a couple (or more) guests who are having too much fun to know better. So, when it is time to wind the party down, you can pull out a few gracious signals that the party is over.
1. Change the tempo of music and lower the volume.
2. Start clearing the table and cleaning around the room.
3. If there are leftovers, start giving out "doggie" bags. Nothing says "goodbye" more than giving a doggie bag.
4. Blow out a few candles.
5. Stop serving alcohol and start serving coffee.
6. When all else fails... Thank your guests for coming and let them know that you would be happy to call them a cab to get home safely or drive them home yourselves.
Being a fabulous hostess is something we strive for. It can also mean your parties take on a life of their own with crowds enjoying your hospitality longer than you expect. Even if you have specifically noted the start and the end time for your gathering, there can be a couple (or more) guests who are having too much fun to know better. So, when it is time to wind the party down, you can pull out a few gracious signals that the party is over.
1. Change the tempo of music and lower the volume.
2. Start clearing the table and cleaning around the room.
3. If there are leftovers, start giving out "doggie" bags. Nothing says "goodbye" more than giving a doggie bag.
4. Blow out a few candles.
5. Stop serving alcohol and start serving coffee.
6. When all else fails... Thank your guests for coming and let them know that you would be happy to call them a cab to get home safely or drive them home yourselves.
The Perfect Hostess- Your Party
Your Party
Now that your guests have arrived, it is time to set the tone of your party.....HAVE FUN!!!! Long after your guests leave, they will remember the energy you set for the gathering and how the joy spread from guest to guest. Don't set yourself up for failure by taking on more than you can handle or simply because you are not "feeling" it.
Disarm and welcome your guests. Start off by taking their coats, make a little chit chat, and direct them to where the other guests are. This will welcome your guests and it is something that they will remember long after the party. It will show how hospitable you are and they will appreciate your kindness. Always be warm and approachable. A Belle should always have a smile on her face. Invite your guests to make themselves comfortable and to have fun!
The Perfect Hostess
When hosting an event the first thing you need to do is make a guest list. When you have the guest list and know approximately how many people there will be at your event, you need to think about what you will eat. Remember that it is best to have too much food. It is tacky to not have enough food for your guests. It is a good idea to make a menu. Making the food in advance is a great idea. You don't want to be in your kitchen preparing food all day before your party. You need to be able rest and to be able to get the last minute details finished before the party. If you are having a dinner party, cook a day or two in advance and warm up the dishes the day of the party. If your event is a sports game, cheese, crackers, chips, and dip are simple people pleasers and great snacks during the game.
For decorations, less is more. You can go all out with streamers, banners, and balloons or you can go simple with small touches throughout your home. A beautiful table setting with a centerpiece is always nice and flowers in vases strategically placed throughout the area of your event. If you are going to have a theme, make sure your decorations make sense. If you are having a Cinco de Mayo party, it makes sense to have sombreros and not leprechauns throughout. Believe me, mistakes like this have been made before!
Before the event, take some time before the guests arrive to breathe and calm yourself. Hosting an event can make you a nervous wreck but take the time to calm yourself and gain your self-confidence. Get yourself into the party spirit! Get yourself into a place where you feel good and are ready and excited to open your home to your guests. Trust yourself to be the most confident hostess!
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