Black & Decker FSB18 FireStorm 18-Volt NiCad Slide Style Battery

Black & Decker FSB18 FireStorm 18-Volt NiCad Slide Style Battery Feature
- Compatible with all spring-loaded style Firestorm and Black and Decker 18-volt cordless products
- Rough and tough plastic housing for durability
- Lets you tackle yard clean-up jobs wirelessly
- Dimensions: 5.5 x 3.0 x 3.0 inches; weighs 3.0 pounds
- Includes a 2-year warranty
Black & Decker FSB18 FireStorm 18-Volt NiCad Slide Style Battery Overview
18V Nickel Cadmium Slide Battery, 1.2A Hours, High Output Battery Cell, No Memory Technology, Provides Up To 500 Recharges, For Use With All Spring Loaded Battery Style Firestorm & Black & Decker 18V Products. Read moreRelateItems
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Brand : Black & Decker
List Price : $50.57
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Availibility : Usually ships in 4-5 business days
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Probably in your early teens, your friends start smoking, and they're all trying to get you to smoke. You don't really want to, so you're kind of nervous. They're all poking fun at you, because you're not smoking--giving you a hard time. For some people, all it takes is one experience like this to start smoking. For some people, it takes four, or five, or six times of being given a hard time about this before they finally break down and start smoking. Eventually, you give in to peer pressure. It happens.
When you do, here's the process: Most people, ADD or not, say that they smoke to release stress. Especially when they get really anxious or really wound up about something, people will run right outside and start smoking a cigarette.
Black & Decker FSB18
The interesting thing about this is that cigarettes actually, physiologically, dramatically increase your stress levels. When you smoke, your blood pressure goes up, your heart rate increases--your body actually shows every conceivable, physiological sign of increased stress--yet many smokers feel as if smoking relieves stress. It all comes back down to hanging out with those four or five people when they're trying to get you to smoke when you're a kid. Here's the way it goes. You're nervous. You're tired of people giving you a hard time. You feel uncomfortable.
You're squirming. You maybe feel embarrassed. You're not feeling very good about yourself. You finally say, "Fine. I'll just smoke a cigarette." You grab the cigarette. You bring it up to your lips. You're getting ready to light the thing. Before you even take your first puff, your brain says, "Whew, my friends aren't going to give me a hard time anymore. I can relax. I can feel good." A whole mixture of neuro-chemicals are released that end up going out throughout the entire body to relieve anxiety, stress, and tension, because you're not going to be given a hard time anymore about not smoking.
Before you take the first puff, you're feeling better. From then on, the smell of a cigarette, the feel of a cigarette, the look of the cigarette, and even the smoke from the cigarette tell your brain to relax. Your brain starts relaxing the body or gives you the illusion that your body's relaxed. Bam! You think it's a stress reliever and you continue to believe that for the rest of your life. Thus, every time you get stressed out, you want to go and you want to smoke a cigarette. Make sense?
When you're talking about these habits that are so quickly ingrained, you really have to sa,y "How can I change a habit, or create a new habit?"
In both cases, what you actually need to do is create a better, more powerful, stronger habit than what you have already.
You need to identify what the old habit is that you're replacing. I'd like to give you an example of this, just to really drive the point home and explain how this whole thing works. Let's say you're driving a 1986 Oldsmobile, four-door sedan and it's leaking oil like a sieve. It's blowing thick, black, smelly smoke out of the back. It gets about three miles to the gallon. Max speed is about 35 miles per hour and you get AM radio. Those are your wheels.
Let's say you work as a part-time nurse. You have low income. You're just barely scraping by. You're working in a hospital. You're on call that night and somebody gets rushed into the hospital. It doesn't matter what the situation is really, but one way or the other, you end up being responsible for saving their life, and you do it.
You save somebody's life. You feel pretty good about yourself, but at the same time its just part of the job, right?
What happens if a couple days later you come home from a long 12-hour day--you drive your Oldsmobile home--and there's a car sitting in your driveway with a big, red bow on top of it, and it's your absolute dream car? Maybe you have your absolute dream car, or you know what it is; either way, what is your absolute dream car?
What happens if you see that this vehicle is clearly intended for you? There's a greeting card tucked underneath the windshield wiper with a key taped inside. It has a nice note from the person whose life you saved. They say, "Listen, without you I wouldn't be alive today. I did a little investigating. I found out what your dream car was and I bought it for you. Thank you, so very, very much. By the way, insurance is covered for the rest of your life. It's completely legal and ready to drive right now. I already cleared it with the hospital, so we're not violating any of your employment rules."
You pull up. You park your Oldsmobile right next to that vehicle. It's been a long day. I mean, you are wiped out. You decide to take it for a spin tomorrow. You get up in the morning. You look out the window of your apartment and you see that, in fact, there it is. It wasn't a dream, right?
Which car are you doing to drive to work? Probably the new one. Yes, and the next day, which car are you going to drive? The new one. Yes. Unless you need to take a big load of stuff to the dump or something, most of the time you're going to drive the new one. You'll drive the old one when absolutely necessary, but you now have the perfect car.
Here's why: You're now excited. You're pumped. You're ready to go on driving the new car. It's perfect. It's all about intensity. You don't have to think about it and you don't give your old car a second thought. Your new, souped-up car is perfect for every situation.
This is the way habits work. The only way you will create a new habit is if you create a habit that is way better than the old one, way more satisfying.
Adult ADD and Smoking: How to Un-Form the Habit
Tellman Knudson, certified Hypnotherapist and ADD driven, is CEO of Overcome Everything, Inc. Stephanie Frank, also an ADD person, is an internationally known speaker, entrepreneur and author of "The Accidental Millionaire." Take the ADD test at InstantADDSuccess.com
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