Thursday, July 3, 2025
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Influencing Personality Types

Every mother knows that when she looks at her child in the nursery for the very first time, something in his personality is already on display: whether he’s active or quiet, shy or introverted, extraverted or anxious, passive or aggressive. You can observe these characteristics right away. And, as you get to know your child better, you recognize that you can frame his environment to form his personality.

For example: you may have a shy child, and you recognize that right from the start by his reactions around strangers. Now, by creating social situations in which you build your child’s confidence around others, your shy child learns to trust you, his environment, and other people through monitored exposure. Will your child ever be a gregarious social butterfly? Probably not. But, can you help him become more socially confident? Yes.

Influencing your personality type

There’s a window in which you can influence a personality type. Extraverts, for example, put out less energy when they are with others, and therefore, are replenished by social discourse. An introvert, on the other hand, uses up a lot of energy to socially interact, and as a result, can find too much social exposure both draining and exhausting. In fact, neuroscience tells us that there is a biological origin to the five core personality types. Thus, there is no perfect personality type. And, there are no clear delineations of personality, but rather, many personality trees in our forest.

Because you are always evolving, and fluid in your emotions, you have the opportunity to deliberately and consciously develop or strengthen some traits that you like, and lower the decibels of those you don’t. By becoming aware of your own personality patterns, you can stop projecting out onto others your feelings unconsciously. This is how you gain control over your behavior, rather than being compelled by your complexes.

By catching a glimpse of the principles under your personality patterns, you can positively affect them in a way that works for you; this is how you can influence your personality type. So, although you cannot change the consolation of your complete personality, you can influence those parts of yourself — those multiple trees in your forest — to be more of what you want to be. This allows you to be comfortable in your own skin, and gives you the ability to choose the appropriate part of yourself in different social and emotional experiences. Thus, rather than being reactive, you can choose which traits to strengthen and which traits to use, which traits to enhance and which traits to reduce.

In the final analysis, your personality traits are inborn and yet, your environment can shape your personality traits, even if they go against type. So when picking a job, a career, or a mate, it is important to recognize who you are, the real you, so that you can discriminate between your wants and your needs, and strengthen and coalesce the dominant traits that work the best.

Royal Ascot opens. Summer is here.

The well-known event started on Tuesday 15th June, and attracted droves of celebrities, royalty as well as well-dressed men, women and children who are all wanting in on the fun and the opportunity to catch the eye of some the world’s most influential. A pillar of British sporting life, the Royal Ascot is as much about high fashion and celebrity culture as it is about high stakes on the tracks. The event first took place in 1839, and has run almost continually ever since – though it’s not the only significant racing occasion at the spectacular Ascot Racecourse. The event is the most valuable race meeting in Britain with a total prize fund of £6million.

While the Queen opted to watch the opening day from the comfort of her Castle, other Royals, Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall were there, alongside the Princess Royal, the Earl and Countess of Wessex and Zara and Mike Tindall. It is expected that there will be more royal appearances throughout the week. Other celebrities and famous people were also spotted in their best outfits. One that caught the eye is Charlotte Hawkins, GMB morning and Classic FM Sunday night’s presenter, in her white and yellow midi dress oozing style and elegance

As for betting enthusiasts, the favourites can change over time, with some horses performing well in races leading up to Royal Ascot coming to the fore, while others fall away. There might be issues with injuries or trainers that could also impact the horses that will be lining up at the starting line come race day. Some of this year’s favourites are : Stradivarius, Battaash, Palace Pier, Just Fine, Pied Piper, Campanelle and Spring is Sprung.

It was a scorching day at Ascot Racecourse attended by 12,000 people allowed as part of the Government’s pilot test event programme where everyone is tested before and after and no masks or distancing for spectators. The Champagne and Pimms flowed as racing got underway on the first day of the Royal meeting. King George VI is also a prestigious weekend meeting, second only to the Royal Meeting, and involves its own unique spectacle in the form of a royal procession to kick off the action on the tracks.

Whether you’re a seasoned better or once-a-year type spectator, the onset of summer and start of the horse racing season always brings with it a sense of excitement and carefree fun.

US Women’s Open’s final

The United States Women’s Open is at its mid-point with the final 36 holes being contested this weekend at the Olympic Club’s Lake Course in San Francisco. A field of 156 of the top female professional and amateur golfers is vying for the most prestigious trophy in the history of women’s golf. This year’s event will mark the 12th time that a golf course of note has hosted both a men’s and a women’s National Open. This is the 76th edition of the oldest of the five majors that make up the LPGA Tour.

What was then called the “Ladies Open” was initially contested in 1946. It was organized by an entity called the Women’s PGA. The champion of that very first women’s golf major was future Hall of Famer Patty Berg. The Women’s PGA suffered from financial issues from the very beginning and went belly-up at the end of 1949.

In 1950 the Ladies Professional Golf Association was founded by 13 established women professionals of note and included Louise Suggs, the aforementioned Patty Berg who also served as the LPGA’s first president, Marlene Hagge, and the best known female golfer of the post-war era, Babe Zaharias. The brand new LPGA circuit continued with the playing of the Ladies Open. In 1953 the United States Golf Association agreed to become the full time host of the Open and the name of the tournament was changed to the United States Women’s Open. It followed the same criteria as the men’s U.S. Open with a certain amount of top golfers receiving exemptions into the tournament coupled with the remainder of the field advancing to the championship by means of regional qualifying tournaments.

For a period of time, the U.S. Women’s Open was played in minor markets at golf courses that weren’t necessarily among golf’s top courses. Some of those early Opens were contested at courses such as Starmount Country Club in Greensboro, Rolling Hills Country Club in Wichita, and the Dunes Golf and Beach Club in Myrtle Beach. On two occasions the Women’s Open was played at Winged Foot and Baltusrol although it was held at the “other” courses that make up those 36 hole complexes. In other words, it wasn’t held on the same courses that hosted the men’s version of the National Open. However, beginning in 1977 with the playing of the Women’s Open at Hazeltine, the ladies started playing their Open on courses that had also served as sites for the men. Over the course of the last 30 years or so, the women have been to

Colonial, Oakmont, Interlachen, Cherry Hills, Pinehurst, and most recently, the Champion Golf Club in Houston last December. In a similar vein, the 2023 version of the Women’s Open will be held at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

Scheduling this year’s U.S. Women’s Open at the storied Olympic Club is a real feather in the cap of the women’s game. First opened in 1924 and designed by the well known team of Willie Watson and Sam Whiting, the Olympic Club is situated alongside the southwest corner of San Francisco alongside the banks of Lake Merced. Its golfing neighbors include Harding Park, the site of last year’s PGA Championship, the highly regarded San Francisco Golf Club, and Lake Merced Country Club, the site of next week’s LPGA MEDIHEAL Championship.

Of course from the men’s perspective, the Olympic Club has been known for its heart-breaking moments for some of the game’s top performers. It all started at the 1955 Open when virtual unknown Jack Fleck defeated Ben Hogan in an 18 hole playoff. Arnold Palmer lost a big lead in the 1966 U.S. Open and faltered the following day to Billy Casper in a Monday 18 hole playoff. Scott Simpson eclipsed Tom Watson at the end in 1987 while the same happened to the ever popular Payne Stewart in 1998 at the hands of Lee Janzen. Webb Simpson won the U.S. Open title at Olympic in 2012 when Jim Furyk struggled down the stretch. The Olympic Club has also hosted a pair of U.S. Amateurs, the 1981 version won by Nathaniel Crosby, the son of longtime O Club member Bing Crosby, and the 2007 Amateur captured by Colt Knost.

There are multiple story lines at this year’s U.S. Women’s Open. San Francisco resident and former Stanford University student Michelle Wie West is making her golf comeback from wrist surgery in 2019. She is now married, has a young daughter, and the ever popular 2014 U.S. Open champ is hoping for a golfing comeback. So too is Inbee Park, winner of seven LPGA majors although her last one was at the 2015 Women’s British Open. A win by Inbee would be her third U.S. Open title. It’s hard to think about 24 year old Lydia Ko and comebacks, but she has been in a Jordan Spieth type slump over the past three years. She went winless on the LPGA Tour from May 2018 to this past April when she finally broke through and won her 16th circuit title. Ko has been on golf’s center stage since she won the Canadian Women’s Open in 2012 as a 15 year old amateur, and the game is in a much better place when the affable Lydia Ko is atop the LPGA leader boards.

There are two sets of sisters at the Olympic Club this year, and all four of them are capable of winning the U.S. Women’s Open. Nelly Korda and Jessica Korda won back to back LPGA tournaments earlier this year. Neither has a major title to her name, but both are among the favorites this week. So too are Ariya and Mariya Jutanugarn of Thailand. Ariya won the LPGA tourney in Thailand last month and a win at the Olympic Club would be her third grand slam title to go along with the 2016 British Open and the 2018 U.S. Open.

When all is said and done, it will take a control player who is an iron master to prevail this Sunday evening at the U.S. Women’s Open at the Olympic Club. The course will play to a par of 71 and can be stretched out to 6,457 yards. The Lake Course at the Olympic Club has a number of dogleg holes and most of them are built along the hilly slopes that run in that direction. A dogleg right hole drifts to the right meaning that a tee shot down the left side will end up in the middle of the fairway. Trying to cut the dogleg could be a bit precarious as the tee shot could instead bound further right into the wiry rough.

The 76th version of the United States Women’s Open is playing out this weekend at the Olympic Club’s Lake Course alongside San Francisco’s Lake Merced. It should be a great weekend of women’s grand slam golf. However, if the history of the O Club has anything to offer us, we might need to assume that the favorites will be upset by someone from the pack.

Source : Record-bee

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