Silver Skater

A skater from the Hollywood, California area. I've been skating in Hollywood since the age of 4 and now, over 20 years later, I'm still skating in Hollywood.

Monday, December 18, 2006

The Emotional Tone Scale

You can predict other people’s behavior.

You are living life and things don’t always go the way you had predicted. You may have a spouse and he is not as you had imagined, so what do you do? You now have no way out. How can you prevent this? You are in business and the deal just fell through. How can you predict what is going to happen in the future? How do you know who to trust?

Life and relationships can sometimes be fragile. You can improve your relationships and know who to associate with. (find out how >)

Saturday, December 16, 2006

What is Scientology?

Scientology comprises a body of knowledge which extends from certain fundamental truths. Prime among these truths:

Man is an immortal spiritual being.
His experience extends well beyond a single lifetime.
His capabilities are unlimited, even if not presently realized.
Scientology further holds man to be basically good, and that his spiritual salvation depends upon himself and his fellows and his attainment of brotherhood with the universe. In that regard, Scientology is a religious philosophy in the most profound sense of the word, for it is concerned with no less than the full rehabilitation of man’s innate spiritual self — his capabilities, his awareness and his certainty of his own immortality. Furthermore, as religion deals with the spirit in relationship to itself, the universe and other life, and is essentially the belief in spiritual beings, Scientology follows a religious tradition that is at least as old as mankind. Yet what Scientology ultimately represents is new. Its religious technology is new, its ecclesiastical organization is new, and what it means to 21st-century man is entirely new.

At the heart of Scientology lie its axioms that precisely define the fundamental laws and truths of life, including who we are, what we are capable of, and most importantly, how we might realize our native spiritual abilities. These axioms form the foundation of a vast body of wisdom that applies to the entirety of all life. From this wisdom has come a great number of fundamental principles people can use to improve their immediate lives, as well as to achieve spiritual immortality. In fact, there is no aspect of life that cannot be improved through the application of Scientology principles. (Source)

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Speed Your Recovery from Accidents and Injuries

I'm sure you all agree that skating injuries suck. You may or may not have heard of this but there's a way to increase your reaction time, have fewer accidents and make speedier recoveries from injuries.


Check out this news article to find out more http://www.scientologytoday.org/press/610060018241_scn-vm.html

Monday, December 04, 2006

Career Highlights of Skate Legend Danny Way
www.dannyway.com

He broke the world record for the highest air on a skateboard in 1997.

The first and only skateboarder to drop out of a helicopter onto a ramp. The feat was repeated in 1999 for MTV.

Late in 2002, Way built the first Megaramp. He set a new ramp to ramp record of 65 feet and a new highest air record of 18 feet, 3 inches (5.6 m).

A second version of the Megaramp was built. On June 19, 2003, Danny broke two world records in one run: the longest ramp to ramp record at 75 feet and the highest air at 23.5 feet. He also broke records for the highest Fast Plant, highest Christ Air, and highest McTwist.

He won gold in 2004 at the first ever Skateboarding Big Air contest held at the X Games at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. He established a new distance record of 79 feet.

On July 9, 2005, he jumped the Great Wall of China on a skateboard, becoming the first person to clear the wall without motorized aid, despite hurting his ankle the practice run the day before the jump.


On April 6, 2006, Way set the world record for a bomb drop (a general skateboarding term for jumping off anything) in Las Vegas, Nevada He jumped off the 82 foot, 3 inch Fender Stratocaster guitar at Hard Rock Cafe into a quarter pipe[1].

Need I say more...