Jennifer James

Jennifer James
Jennifer Jamesis an English actress born in Billinge Higher End, Wigan in Greater Manchester. She played the role of Geena Gregory on Coronation Street...
ProfessionSoap Opera Actress
Date of Birth3 December 1977
anger fighting thinking
Anger is a response that can lead to harm if we don't evaluate what we are upset about. Ask yourself what you are afraid of, as anger is almost always fear in disguise. If we think something or someone threatens us, we feel fear-fear that we are inadequate, that our lives are out of control, that things won't go our way. Then we fight. Find out what you're upset about. We rarely are upset for the reason we think.
home heart journey
The journey toward the heart is always a journey home.
jealousy pain envy
Then you will be the one others envy, and you can remember the pain and reach out to them.
children optimistic views
What choices are you making in your perception of the events around you? We choose how we view our times. There is a pinch of pessimism in our culture now. Counter it with small acts of optimism. Pick up a piece of litter that isn't yours. Show some extra grace on the freeway. Give to your food bank. Smile at a child who is in your way. Help someone you know. Help someone you don't know. The accumulation of small, optimistic acts produces quality in our culture and in your life. Our culture resonates in tense times to individual acts of grace. What's your choice?
optimistic grace quality
The accumulation of small, optimistic acts produces quality in our culture and in your life. Our culture resonates in tense times to individual acts of grace.
change self-worth two
If you had to choose only two qualities to get you through times of change, the first should be a sense of self-worth and the second a sense of humor.
change skills firsts
Learning how to respond to and master the process of change - and even to excel at it - is a critical leadership skill for the twenty-first century. Constant, rapid change will be a fact of life for all of us.
hurt names car
Rush hour brings out the worst in some people. They make faces, gesture, yell, call names, bump you with their car, and lean on their horn over the slightest perception that they are right and you are wrong. If you take any of these signals seriously, you can be hurt every time you drive. If you cannot crack a joke within a few minutes of rear-ending someone on the freeway, don't go out there.
thinking ideas people
People who think in absolutes usually don't listen to anyone but themselves. They resist new ideas and try to preserve the status quo. ...
grief law mind
The lost wallet or purse law: No matter how careful you are, assume that you will lose a few. ... Keep grief to a minimum. It's bad enough your stuff is gone; don't lose your mind too.
produce
You are much more than the sum of what you produce.
two suffering rewards
There are, of course, two kinds of suffering, that which has a reward and that which doesn't.
teacher pain way
Pain is a great teacher, but most of us would rather learn some other way.
children memories fall
The average person's short-term memory can hold only five to seven bits of data at any one moment. If you put more items in, others fall out. The older you are, the more you have crammed into those memory circuits. Twenty-five-year-olds can remember things because they still have empty space. Some of us take our children to the supermarket in the hope they will remember why we are there.