Archive for September, 2005

Apples and Pears and Sailors, Oh MY!

Thursday, September 29th, 2005

September 29, 2005, Vol. III Issue 20

Dear Friends,

One of the things I love most about my job is the opportunity to learn about innovative viewpoints. This information often initially comes via books and authors recommended by none other than our clients. This was the case with Dr. Marie Savard, author of Apples & Pears, The Body Shape Solution for Weight Loss and Wellness. When a client told me about that title, I was intrigued and had to know more. Off to the bookstore and now I get to share both her ideas and her expertise as a speaker for your health-centered events.

October means meeting season is in full swing and brings National Breast Cancer Awareness Month to our attention. I had the opportunity to attend a different kind of Susan G. Komen Race benefit this week. It was “Sail for the Cure” here in Portland with Becky Olson on the platform and a bevy of enthusiastic women sailors (and men) in the audience. I don’t know if it was the wind and water from the daytime activities or the wine consumed during the silent auction, but everyone appeared to be glowing with health and vitality and passion for the cause by the time Becky took the microphone.

I realized I haven’t shared any recipes in awhile so read on to the end for one of my fall favorites.

Yours truly,
Barbara

Are You an Apple or a Pear?

As the book jacket for Apples and Pears by Dr. Marie Savard reads, “When it comes to your health, body shape really does matter!” Hmm . . . that gets my attention. Could the key to better health actually be found via “testing” with a simple tape measure?

“Chances are you already know if you’re an apple or a pear. Most women know intuitively whether their bodies tend to store fat around their waists (forming an apple shape) or lower down around their hips, thighs, and buttocks (forming a pear shape),” Dr. Savard says.

But what does it matter? Gut or butt, too much is too much, right? Wrong!

Dr. Savard is a nationally-known internist, women’s health expert and advocate for patients’ rights. She is the award-winning author of How to Save Your Own Life, and the creator of The Savard Health Record.

According to Dr. Savard, there’s much more at stake here than the clothing style you might choose to camouflage, minimize or flatter your figure. She says your body shape is the single most powerful predictor of future health. “Body shape is the closest thing we have to a medical crystal ball,” she says. “This one simple piece of information is more important than weight for predicting your risk of heart disease or stroke. It is connected to differences in your physical chemistry, hormone production, and metabolism and directly affects your likelihood for obesity, heart disease, osteoporosis, the metabolic syndrome, diabetes, stroke, varicose veins and certain cancers.

“The good news,” she tells us, “is that this crystal ball only tells us what is likely to happen; our health destiny is not written in stone. We have the power to improve the course of our lives in spite of our shapes . . . if we are willing to take action.”

For example, it makes all the difference in your risk for heart disease. Women who gain weight around their middles (apples) are up to four times more likely to have a heart attack than women who add pounds around their hips, buttocks and thighs, but there are practical steps they can take to reduce their risk.

“Apple-shaped women have more visceral fat, which gathers around the internal organs and is generally more harmful to the body than subcutaneous fat, which appends itself to the buttocks and thighs. Visceral fat creates a physical environment that is primed for heart disease and stroke. The more abdominal fat a woman has (the greater her waist is in proportion to her hips) the more dangerous the situation becomes,” Dr. Savard says. “A tape measure can be the most powerful tool a woman and her doctor have to identify the woman’s risk of heart disease and to begin taking appropriate preventive steps.”

The best news is that there are things you can do to prevent or even reverse the risks of body shape. In the book, Dr. Savard offers specific nutritional and exercise recommendations based on body type for women of all shapes and sizes.

“No matter what body shape you have, how old you are, or how much you weigh, there are many things you can do to decrease your personal disease risk,” she says. “Diet and exercise are only part of the equation. Medical monitoring is critical, as is a change in mindset. We need to stop thinking of our weight problems, and learn to accept ourselves as women with figures. Every woman can become stronger, look better and feel healthier.”

“Once you understand what body shape means, how it is formed, how it changes, and how it relates to your health, the effect is like ripping off a blindfold,” she says. “Finally our stomach and thighs make sense. Finally you know what you have to do to lose weight more easily. Finally you can put medical problems in context and really know what to do to improve them. Finally you can appreciate and understand your body as it is, while still nurturing it to become stronger and healthier than ever
before.”

Dr. Savard welcomes the opportunity to share the revelations of apples and pears with your group. Find out if you’re an apple or pear by taking the quiz on her website, http://www.applesandpears.org.

You’ll be seeing Dr. Savard and other exciting new speakers on my website as soon as I emerge from the chaos of moving. For info about fees and availability, mailto:Barbara@speakwellbeing.com or call me at 503-699-5031.

Becky Olson: The Five H’s and Sister Lister

I love it when I get to see a speaker locally whether it’s one of “my” speakers, one I’m scouting or someone I just want to hear/see for my own enlightenment or personal growth.

Sunday night I got to experience Becky Olson, an up and coming speaker in the health arena. Becky recently left the corporate world to pursue her passion for speaking and sharing her experience living through breast cancer. She is a 2X breast cancer survivor, author of The Hat that Saved My Life and was the keynote speaker for the “Sail for the Cure” event here in Portland.

I loved that Becky got us all involved in her talk. She had five points to make, called the 5 H’s, and she had us repeat them out loud. Then, during her talk, she asked us, when she got to each point, to name it. Much to my amazement, I remembered each one, and so did other audience members! Now, I could tell you what they were…or you could ask. I will tell you, that her first “H” was Hair and that launched her into the story that led to the title of her book, The Hat That Saved My Life. If you want to know the rest of the five H’s, email me.

Becky’s also developed a program around a character, “Sister Lister.” A list maker all her life, Becky addresses a problem that many women face: Too much to do and never enough time to do it. You’re a sister lister if you’re a woman who makes lists. I can relate. In the weeks and days leading up to my wedding, I lived by lists. I even made lists for my fiancé. So many lists that on our honeymoon, our mantra was, “No lists!”

Becky, however, has a point. When you’re feeling stressed out by too many things on your mind, list-making can be a lifesaver.

In her Sister Lister talk, she’ll teach you how to better organize your life by learning to focus on one task at a time. “Too often we get caught up in one daunting task only to find ourselves thinking about all the other ones that are piling up behind it,” Becky says. “The first one doesn’t get done and the second one doesn’t get started because we are not focused.

The best part of it is, she does it all with a sense of humor. “Get control, get focused, get it done and then GO PLAY!” she says. I knew I liked this woman the moment I met her!

Learn more about Becky on my website.

A Different Kind of Turkey in the Oven

Being married is a whole new world in many ways. One of the things that’s come up for me, of all things, is meal planning. Now, my husband likes to cook and we like to cook together, and we both like to eat healthy (he would even tell you I have been a good influence on him in this arena!) Meal PLANNING, however, is a different issue
I’m learning. I know, I know, all of you have known this for years.

Since I go for my evening Nia workout most weekday early evenings, I get home a little after 7 p.m. and I want to eat NOW! So, I plan ahead and while I have always done this and cooked for myself, somehow it’s different doing it for the two of us. Anybody know what that is all about?

Now that there’s a nip in the air, I find myself turning away from the barbecue and toward the crockpot and the oven, and two of mymfavorite chapters in Zonya Foco’s Lickety Split Meals for Health Conscious People On the Go. Those are “Slow-Cooking” and “Oven, Exercise, Eat.”

The premise of course, in “Oven, Exercise, Eat,” is that after some quick preparation, you put dinner in the oven and head out for some exercise while it’s cooking. Got that part covered. I’ve never been a traditional meat loaf fan, but Jim and I agree Tantalizing Turkey Loaf is a winner (and the house smells awesome when you walk in the door!). It’s on page 133 of the newest edition of LSM. If you’d like the recipe, email me at Barbara@speakwellbeing.com and write Turkey Loaf in the Subject line.

I’ll share our favorite slow-cooking recipe in a future issue.

Until next time, take care of yourself, for your well being and those you love.

Yours truly,
Barbara

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABOUT OUR SERVICES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Speak Well Being Group specializes in providing exceptional speakers for health, wellness and women’s events. Because we’ve worked with so many hospitals and healthcare groups around the country, we speak your language. Our hand-picked speakers are attuned to your needs and adept at addressing the issues while delivering information in an entertaining way, or simply providing a good time with a light message when that’s the ticket. When youwork with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website.
Or please call anytime and let us assist you: 503-699-5031
The Speak Well Being Group, 4261 Collins Way, Lake Oswego, OR 97035
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Good Hearts, Good Intentions OUT LOUD

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

September 15, 2005, Vol. III Issue 19

Dear Friends,

The last few weeks have been intense. Katrina with all of its human drama, social and political ramifications, has rocked the world. In my little world, I’m dealing with the physical and emotional consequences of moving and merging two households. I’m ready for some levity (assuming it is too soon to ask for another honeymoon
in Hawaii!)

It was this time last year that I went to see Menopause the Musical, sponsored by Sparks Regional Health System in Fort Smith, Arkansas, for their annual Woman to Woman event. In a year, MTM has expanded internationally and now its offshoot, Menopause the Musical Out Loud, promises to bring more joy to millions of women, along with attention to ovarian cancer. Read all about it.

A few issues ago, I shared with you an idea we picked up at the Spirit of Women annual meeting. We thought it was a very clever solution to the problem of getting cell phones turned off during meetings. Read what transpired when meeting attendees turned the idea upside down.

And Deb Gauldin came through, once again, with that little bit of levity from the totally unexpected faux pas that brings a smile to everyone.

Yours truly,
Barbara

Menopause the Musical Out Loud

The overwhelming success of Menopause The Musical® (MTM) in cities across the country (and the obvious enthusiasm with which the show is embraced by its audiences) has demonstrated that its time the phase of life that author Gail Sheehy called, The Silent Passage, be addressed Out Loud.

Recognizing that the show can be a valuable tool for encouraging dialogue, disseminating information and raising funds to promote women’s health, the Women For Women Foundation launched the Menopause The Musical Out Loud® tour in Washington, DC last week.

The idea was prompted by Janet Rigdon, an ovarian cancer survivor. She emailed Jeanie Linders, creator of MTM to see if MTM was scheduled to come to her city, Greenville, SC. Since ovarian cancer treatment launches patients into early menopause, she and her support group friends were looking for a way to laugh at their experiences and they’d heard MTM did just that.

Linders receives numerous requests from women wanting to know if and when the show will come to their city, but Rigdon’s inquiry was different. Jeanie said this one set off a little bell that said this is important. “Something inside of me shook,” she said.

The result was the decision to use her play to raise awareness and research money for ovarian cancer, and hence The Menopause The Musical Out Loud® tour (MTMOL), made possible by corporate contributions to the nonprofit Women For Women Foundation, launches this month (to coincide with National Menopause Awareness Month) and will visit fifty cities nationwide through the spring of 2006. From Hartford, Connecticut to Omaha, Nebraska, performances in these cities will raise awareness of menopause and menopause related issues and will help to raise funds for local and regional ovarian cancer charities.

For more information, visit the website. Click on the city under the green button on the right side and it will give you date and ticket information for that city. Or click the green button, and then the Tickets and Shows button on the left side and all of the locations will come up, listed by state.

Ringing in the Ears All the Way to Bali
by Jana Stanfield

August 13, 2005

It was the last day of Jack Canfield’s 8-Day Breakthrough to Success Seminar in Las Vegas, where we were working with 288 high achievers. Now, you need to know that these are not Mercedes-driving, Armani-wearing, Harvard-educated high achievers. We’re talking minivan-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, state college-educated difference-makers.

On the first day, inspired by an idea from the Spirit of Women national annual meeting last June, I suggested that we have a cell-phone charity. Just before the doors opened, I told Jack Canfield I’ve been trying to raise $50,000 to help 50 Balinese orphans. We’ve raised half the money but are still $25,000 short.

In his opening session, Jack told the group about the girls I want to help and announced that whenever a cell phone goes off, the owner owes $5 to the orphanage fund.

On the eighth and final day, professional funny-man Paul Lenaberg stopped me as I was stepping onstage for my last song of the workshop. He said his cell phone was ringing and he needed to pay.

As I reached out to accept the cash, another phone went off.

And another.

And another.

I looked out in confusion to see a room full of people holding up ringing cell phones!

They filed slowly into the center aisle three-across, waiting in line to put their money on the stage where I knelt in tears.

By the end of the day, this group of 288 generous spirits gave $25,432.55, just what we needed to restore the girls’ orphanage.

People are full of goodness and this world is full of miracles.

When we’re lucky, God lets us watch them happen.

Overwhelmed with great-fullness,
Jana Stanfield

P.S. For a video clip of these wonderful girls, go to www.JanaStanfield.com/bali

EDITOR’S NOTE: For those unfamiliar with Jack Canfield, he is the co-author of the original Chicken Soup for the Soul books, motivational speaker and expert on self-esteem and peak performance. Jana participates and performs annually at this seminar.

Good Intentions and OOPS!

Now what was it we were saying in our last issue about checking the details? I remember relating it to my wedding planning.

Deb Gauldin recently presented a workshop at the Wisconsin Women’s Foundation retreat in Madison, Wisconsin, titled, “As Long As Your Net Carbs Aren’t Double Your IQ, You Are Probably OK.” She covered the way the media and the diet industry conspire to keep women feeling bad about their bodies. Part of the workshop was a Power Point presentation showing women’s fashion/advertising through the years.

Deb hadn’t given this presentation for quite some time, so she was converting it from slides to Power Point late into the night before the program. “At the very last minute, I decided to import a few more images,” she said. “An obvious image from the 50′s is a poodle skirt, so I Googled ‘poodle skirt’ and found a photo of a woman in a poodle skirt playing a guitar. Perfect! I imported it into the tiny slide image on my screen and didn’t think a thing of it.”

The next day, Deb was blithely flipping through the pictures with appropriate commentary in her presentation. The images are now up on the BIG screen, and she’s getting into the 1950′s. She moves on to Twiggy and how fashion changes in the 60′s and starts to select the 70′s slide. “All of a sudden, a lady from the front row speaks up andrequests that I go back several slides to the poodle skirt. Then she asked in a tiny voice, ‘What ARE those poodles doing?’

“OH MY GOD! The poodles were doing ‘IT’ right there on the skirt! I was absolutely mortified,” Deb related. Of course there was a ripple affect through the audience and everyone had a good laugh.

I haven’t mastered the art of putting photos in this e-news, and but if you’d like a good laugh, too, I’d be happy to email the attachment to you. It is quite funny. Just reply and write Poodle in the Subject line. After all, we all need a little levity.

Until next time, take care of yourself, for your well being and those you love.

Yours truly,
Barbara

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABOUT OUR SERVICES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Speak Well Being Group specializes in providing exceptional speakers for health, wellness and women’s events. Because we’ve worked with so many hospitals and healthcare groups around the country, we speak your language. Our hand-picked speakers are attuned to your needs and adept at addressing the issues while delivering information in an entertaining way, or simply providing a good time with a light message when that’s the ticket. When you work with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website.

Or please call anytime and let us assist you: 503-699-5031

The Speak Well Being Group, 4261 Collins Way, Lake Oswego, OR 97035
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In this Issue: 1, 2, 3, Testing, Testing . . .

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

September 1, 2005 Vol. III Issue 18

Dear Friends,

I’m not sure we will solve any problems or resolve the issues that arise with audio-visual challenges, but perhaps, we can at least commiserate and share some ideas. All the planning in the world is sometimes for naught when the problems arise on location.

That was the case just last week for Dr. Deborah Kern in Chicago. After a perfect sound check and introduction, her lavaliere cut in and out, in and out, in front of a packed house of 1,000 women. If the sound system is causing the speaker problems, the audience is distracted, and so is the speaker trying to overcome the problem. The A/V pros rushed her a handheld mic which she used until they came and wired her onstage with another lavaliere. Always awkward, yet I’ve seen many a speaker handle this situation with a sense of humor. In this case, the crew was professional, so where do those A/V gremlins come from anyway? Anybody got any ideas?

In another venue last year Deb and Dr. Karen Wolfe showed up early, as usual, for their sound check. They had meticulously choreographed their program together so it would be more like a conversation between them than two consecutive presentations, each half of the program. Of course, they had ordered two microphones. Unfortunately, the sound people couldn’t get the frequencies on the system to handle both mics. They ended up having to pass the lavaliere back and forth. This physical awkwardness spoiled the natural interaction. In this case, the facility was in a small town and simply wasn’t equipped for the job. Unfortunately, it did affect the quality of the program.

A glitch doesn’t always work against the speaker, however. On one occasion Dr. Wolfe’s PowerPoint projector went down in the middle of one of her programs at the National Wellness Institute conference, forcing her to deviate from her prepared script. As a result, I thought the program was better than it was with the A/V.

Zonya Foco walked into a luncheon presentation earlier this year, where the hotel meeting room was entirely walled by mirrors. She later reported that “This was not only a nightmare visually; the sound just bounced off the walls. It was so hard for people to hear, I felt sorry for them.” I guess that is part of my reason for writing this. That is, to let you know, that our speakers really want to bring value to you and your audiences. They travel to get there (that often includes its own challenges!), and bring their knowledge, talents, and sense of humor to your program, but there’s very little they can do about the venue, other than roll with the punches.

The proper A/V as requested by the speaker is critically important to the performance, especially live music. For that reason when booking musical performers, we always include specific A/V instructions with their contracts.

When a speaker asks for a CD player hooked into the sound system, that’s what she means (not a boom box). She is planning to use music in her presentation. You just can’t get the same emotional impact (or output) from a boom box. Now that is not to say that speakers don’t or won’t adapt. If they’re doing a retreat in a cabin, and there is no sound system, every professional speaker I represent adapts to the situation.

With her ever-present sense of humor Deb Gauldin, who sings and plays guitar in her programs, relates this experience:

“The facility for this event had been a church in a former lifetime and had been converted to a space referred to as a ballroom. It was hotter than blazes and the only relief for the attendees was to use my handout to fan themselves and attempt to hear me over the rattling of two enormous free standing air conditioning units flanking the ‘stage’ area. ‘I’m a professional, I can handle anything,’ was my
mantra all day.

“I called ahead to make sure they had a sound system in the wall. The staff at the ballroom said they sure did, not to worry! Someone had built a wooden cabinet about waist high with a lock on it. When the keeper of the keys finally arrived, and I was ready for a very belated sound check, it turned out the only things in the wall were the screws attached to the cabinet!

“Inside the box that was attached to the wall was a $29 Radio Shack microphone and tiny plug-in amp. Not quite compatible with my Madonna headset and wireless guitar pick up. I carried on, talking to myself as they passed around factory sized boxes of donuts while I was presenting. Good thing I am a professional, know how to find the humor, and really love what I do!”

A second point is, though, that as much as our speakers adapt to the situation, there is only so much they can do. In order to assure a successful event, the planning must include careful attention to the A/V requirements when selecting the venue and physical checks of the equipment as soon as you arrive for the event.

Consider this dialogue open. We’d love to hear your stories!

10 Instant ‘Youtheners’
by Victoria Moran

We’ve heard the old saw: “If I’d known I was going to live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself.” Most of us are taking better care of ourselves these days and information about how to do that is coming at us from half the magazines on the newsstand, every health fair at the mall, and those good-looking doctors on the evening news. Still, a lot of the work we put into our health and longevity seems to have a delayed payoff. We’re hedging our bets that what we do today will make things better five, ten, or twenty years from now. We could use a little immediate gratification.

That’s where the 10 Instant ‘Youtheners’ come in. I devised this list to use for radio interviews in conjunction with my latest book Younger by the Day (HarperSanFrancisco). These are quick-payoff rejuvenators that can make us look or feel noticeably better in nearly no time and subsequently inspire us to stick with the other good habits that offer more long-term gains. They are:

1. Stand up straight. It will slim your waist and tummy, make your clothes hang better, and give you a more confident look.

2. Have a glass of water. Water is the difference between a plum and a prune. Get yourself hydrated.

3. Wear a pheromone fragrance. Pheromones, the just-below-the-radar scents that make us attractive to others, diminish in midlife. Some studies suggest that wearing a pheromone-imbued fragrance is a subtle way to mitigate the “invisibility” that can seem to accompany growing older. I make no claims, but I ordered some of the stuff and the doormen in my neighborhood do seem friendlier when I wear it.

4. Invert yourself. If you’re a yoga student, do a headstand or a shoulder stand. Otherwise, spend 3 to 5 minutes on a slantboard with your feet higher than your heart. You’ll feel relaxed, look refreshed, and get some color in your face. (There’s more information at http://www.ageinreverse.com.)

5. Cover your gray. Some women (and most men!) look sensational with silver hair; if you’re one of them, skip this. Otherwise, erase the gray, especially if you already color your hair and it’s time for a touchup. Use a high quality color like Aveda and protect your investment from the sun (a hat can protect your hair as well as your skin).

6. Get a brow arch. A good eyebrow arch (waxed or tweezed) can open your eyes and do more for a face than anything short of cosmetic surgery. Go to someone skilled at the practice at least once a season; you can keep up the good work with your own tweezers in between appointments.

7. Fit in 15 minutes of cardio. Hop on the treadmill, put on music and dance, or go outside and walk like you mean it. Although we should aim for 30 minutes a day for the sake of our hearts, just fifteen when you can grab those minutes increases your circulation (that will show on your face) and get those feel-good endorphins going (those will show in your day).

8. Do dry skin brushing. Before your a.m. shower, brush your body with a dry body brush (find one at your pharmacy or natural food store). Start with your feet and work up to your shoulders (this is not for the face). Dry skin brushing revs up circulation, warms you up on a cold morning, and European researchers insist that it can help mitigate cellulite.

9. Drink a glass of fresh juice. Freshly extracted vegetable juice is an infusion of vitamins and disease-preventing phytochemicals that are readily assimilated by your body. Try carrot/celery/beet or tomato/cucumber/lime.

10. Sit quietly and breathe. Even three deep breaths, in and out through your nose, can relieve stress and lower blood pressure. If you sit longer and watch your breath, you’re meditating, and studies have shown that meditators are physiologically younger than the rest of us.

Victoria Moran is the newest member of the SpeakWellBeing family. She is the author of ten books including Younger by the Day, Fit from Within, and the best-selling Creating a Charmed Life. A two-time Oprah! guest, Victoria shines as a keynoter with topics such as “TheFountain of Youth Is Up and Running” and “How to Create a Charmed Life Out of the One You’ve Got.” She lives in New York City.

For more information, please give us a call at 503-699-5031 or check our website.

Reflections

As the head decision-maker for my wedding, I got to stand in your shoes as meeting planners. Probably the best thing I did was hire a wedding planner. That took me out of the minutiae and let me focus on the overall design of what I wanted to achieve, which was, of course, the more fun, creative aspect.

I knew I didn’t want to be in charge the day of the event. That was her job. I had other things to do. When the day came, I loved saying, “Ask Kate.” Naturally, not everything went as planned, and there were a few last minute surprises. But this is what I learned: the planning and attention to detail in preparation paid off, and the glitches went virtually unnoticed. Who cared if the florist forgot to prepare bouquets for two out of three of the attendants? We assembled some on the spot from the flowers for the friendship ritual. In the end, as speaker friend Sue Kirby says, “It Doesn’t Matter.” You know what? She’s right.

Until next time, take care of yourself, for your well being and those you love.

Yours truly,
Barbara

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABOUT OUR SERVICES
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Speak Well Being Group specializes in providing exceptional speakers for health, wellness and women’s events. Because we’ve worked with so many hospitals and healthcare groups around the country, we speak your language. Our hand-picked speakers are attuned to your needs and adept at addressing the issues while delivering information in an entertaining way, or simply providing a good time with a light message when that’s the ticket. When you work with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website.

http://www.speakwellbeing.com

Or please call anytime and let us assist you: 503-699-5031
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~