Archive for May, 2007

For Your Well Being: A Day FOR Change

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

May 31, 2007, Vol. V Issue 11

Dear Friends,

Have you ever had the experience of reading something and it was exactly what you needed at the time? Well, it was exactly a year ago that I went off on a bit of a tangent in this e-news and wrote about being introduced to a book called Change the Way You See Everything, via lunch with the wife of my husband’s college classmate. I loved the book and simply wrote about the impression it had on me – no mention about the author speaking!

Shortly after that e-news publication, I received an email from Mary Jane Reichart, Executive Director for ProHealth Care’s Women’s Center in Waukesha, WI. She thought it was a perfect topic for their 2007 women’s retreat. I tracked down the author, Kathryn D. Cramer, PhD, and was happy to discover that she IS a speaker! In fact, she was the founder of The Stress Center at St. Louis University Medical Center, and is definitely both an excellent speaker and a change-maker, who is working with companies like Microsoft and Starbucks.

What she offers is a way to both prevent and manage stress. “The mind and mindset are the keys to leading a rewarding, creative life – staying pro-active, creating the reality you want to live in at home and at work,” Kathy says. “Asset-based thinking drives optimism, resilience, creativity and pro-active, rewarding living.” It counters the constant barrage of doom and gloom in our culture that rob us of our sense of hope and confidence, drain our energy, tax our immune system, strain our relationships and reduce our productivity. A small shift into Asset-Based Thinking can make a seismic difference. And when that happens one woman at a time, the results of one women’s retreat can be truly monumental.

Women’s Retreat Is A Day FOR Change

ProHealth Care, Waukesha, Wisconsin, held their second annual Women’s Retreat, April 20 at the Abbey Resort on Lake Geneva, about 45 minutes from their nearest hospital. It was sponsored by The Women’s Center and the Center for Breast Health. The all-day event drew 200 women to learn how to bias their focus in favor of opportunities, not problems, strengths over weaknesses, and what can be done rather than what can’t be done.

“We planned this as a destination retreat to offer women an opportunity to get away for the day and take care of themselves,” Sarah Dahlke, education specialist, told me. “Our observation is that women want practical tips that they can take home and implement in their day-to-day lives. Many of the women are taking a day off of work or finding a babysitter so they want to know that the day and content will be well worth their time and want to feel pampered and special throughout the day.”

What they got is a new viewpoint. It’s a revolutionary and refreshingly simple concept called Asset-Based Thinking – a practical approach to taking the positive side of life’s ledger and using it to full advantage in everything you do. Asset-Based Thinking calls for small shifts in the way people absorb, perceive, filter and interpret information. It changes the way we see everything, leading to dramatic improvements in the way we live and work.

“It was extraordinary,” according to Mary Jane Reichart, Executive Director of The Women’s Center. “The message that everyone left with – knowing there are certain things they can do in making changes in their own lives — was very inspiring. Kathy showed us three applications and we tried them out during the day: Change the way you see yourself, change the way you see others, and change the way you see situations. People left with one or two things they could definitely see differently, and the tools to apply the information at home and at work.”

“I commend ProHealth and the audience,” Kathy told me. “When I was at the Medical Center at St. Louis University, stress and wellness topics were a hard sell. This retreat was evidence that wellness is a proven concept that works.” Kathy’s programs are highly interactive and she told me the audience was very willing to play and they were energetic and involved for the entire day. “I observed Ah-ha’s going off all over the place,” she said.

“We gave everyone a nice healthy breakfast, lunch, and snacks throughout the day. We also gave everyone a copy of Kathy’s book as their gift for attending,” Sarah said. “In addition, we gave women the opportunity to try new things, like Qi Gong, that they might not otherwise have the opportunity to experience. Also, during lunch, we had dieticians roam the tables to answer any nutrition related questions. This was a nice extra touch the women seemed to appreciate.

“We are also finding that women want options throughout the day. They like a variety of speakers and activities. Women like to participate and have an interactive component to the day. They like to get moving! We offered a guided nature walk as well as the  Qi Gong as our movement activities and they were a huge success.”

Goals for the event included providing a destination retreat that focused on wellness rather than disease, to carry through wellness messages from 2004 – 2006 and to provide women with an opportunity to link into ongoing support, classes, and services at their facilities after the retreat, to assist in behavior modification.

“One thing we’re trying to accomplish with this event in the future is to look for ways we can track downstream revenue back to our clinical services,” Laura Armstrong, education specialist, told me. “This year we attempted to do that through a card we included in each participant’s folder where they could just check the services, screenings, and referrals they would like us to call them back on, i.e. schedule a mammogram, find a physician, osteoporosis screening, bladder health screening, heart risk assessment, etc. We don’t have a huge number of cards returned yet, but we’re anxious to see the revenue attached to the referrals made. We’re planning to track this for the next 12-24 months.”

Since the retreat, Mary Jane has been giving the book, Change the Way You See Everything, as a gift to award recipients, friends and as the opening to challenging conversations, and now she has people buying copies to pass along to their friends and co-workers. “It was inspiring for leadership, to see how we can see things differently in our personal and work lives. I highly recommend Kathy Cramer. She’s great to work with – a fun person.”

Dr. Cramer is a licensed psychologist and founder of The Cramer Institute in St. Louis. She specializes in organizational change consulting, leadership and team development and executive coaching. Click here to find out more about Dr. Kathy Cramer, or give me a call at 503-699-5031.  If you’d like a full description of Kathy’s keynote, reply to this email and write CHANGE in the subject line.

FULL CIRCLE

Now, it so happens, exactly one year later, I’ll be seeing my husband’s friend’s wife, Denise, who was the literary agent for Change the Way You See Everything, again and meeting her husband for the first time this weekend at their Princeton class reunion in New Jersey. My husband is very excited to share the Princeton campus and this piece of his life with me. I’m looking forward to it and curious about who I might meet . . . ?

And, speaking of impact, I have an earthquake of information coming your way on transforming your relationships with men. Interested? It seems to me relationships within our homes, families, schools and workplaces pretty much involve the opposite sex, and what could be more important to our mental, social and emotional health than getting along better? This is REALLY good stuff. Stay tuned.

Until next time, be good to yourself for your good health and those you love.

Yours truly in good health,
Barbara

About Our Services

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website, SpeakWellBeing.com.
(AOL users click here) or please call anytime and let us assist you.

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.  When you work with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

Your feedback is always welcome and appreciated! Write to us at barbara@speakwellbeing.com

For Your Well Being: Self and Soul

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

May 17, 2007, Vol. V Issue 10

Dear Friends,

A few months ago, someone turned me on to Joan Anderson’s books, and asked me to check her out as a speaker. Her memoirs — A Year By The Sea, An Unfinished Marriage, A Walk on the Beach and A Weekend to Change Your Life – all stem from the time she took for herself, mid-life. After years of focusing on the needs of others as a wife and mother, she devoted a year to rediscovering herself and reinvigorating her dreams. Now, I had not followed the traditional wife and mother path and am a first-time newlywed in my 50’s, so I doubt I would otherwise have picked up her books. I LOVED them all and found them to universally embrace the search for self. No matter our path, women are easily sidelined from taking care of themselves, and nourishing their talents and dreams. In rediscovering herself, Joan Anderson developed a way to help other women do the same for themselves. I’ll share a bit of that in this issue.

In our May 3 issue, I told you about Teresa Heinz Kerry’s Conference on Women’s Health and the Environment held in Pittsburgh. There’s nothing like the energy of 2,000 women in the same place, committed to a cause, but putting that aside, the next best thing is the miracle of the web. All of the talks from that day, including actress Fran Drescher, who is passionate about early detection of reproductive cancers, are posted on the conference website. Just click on the Podcast link in the menu bar. Once I got started watching and listening, I had a hard time tearing myself away to write this e-news. So, trade in some TV time for some web time — click, watch and listen. You will definitely learn.

And, a report on my Freedom from Self-Improvement Day revelation.

Joan Anderson:
A Scholar of Self and Soul

Joan Anderson

“Ever since I can remember I have been curious—asking questions, trying to figure out life’s meaning—all in an effort to live fully and get it right,” Joan says.

She was already a writer and author of the book Breaking the TV Habit, when she took her break from life as she knew it. “After I ran away from home and lived a year by the sea on my own, I realized that there was something in this experience worth writing about. So many women I knew wanted or needed to stop the craziness of their lives but had not the will or the ability to do so. By writing my story it has given hundreds of thousands of women the excuse to take themselves away, have their turn, and see who they are beyond the roles that they play.

“The four books that have come out of my experiences have all been best sellers and many have been printed in foreign languages. My big boost came when Oprah called and invited me on her show — not once, but twice! There have been several appearances on the Today Show, eight book tours, and numerous articles headlining me as the ‘woman who got away,’ ‘the runaway wife,’ or ‘the woman who took a sabbatical.’ Actually, I’m not any one of these descriptions. I am simply a person who wanted to become a scholar of self and soul.”

A vocation has come as a result of her search and her books. She conducts weekends by the sea on Cape Cod for women seeking nourishment and weekend retreats in other parts of the country and abroad such as Sonoma, California, Sedona, Arizona, and Iona, Scotland. She keynotes women’s events and leads workshops.

Her fourth book, A Weekend to Change Your Life: Find Your Authentic Self After Being All Things to All People was written because so many women told her that her three memoirs had made a difference in their attitudes but now they wanted to take that next step. How could they, not only move beyond the various roles that they played, but truly develop themselves in the process?

“It is no easy trick to unravel a self, to drop old habits and climb out of the box. When I looked back on how I managed to change my life during that year by the sea (and then develop a workshop program that would help other women do the same) it all boiled down to the six R’s:

1.    Retreat
2.    Retrieve strengths from her past
3.    Repair the worn parts of her body and soul
4.    Regroup by getting rid of unnecessary baggage
5.    Regenerate by taking new paths and having adventure, and then (and only then)
6.    Return to her old life as a new person!”

Sounds like a big job, doesn’t it? Well, yes and no. With a skilled guide like Joan, you’re in excellent hands whether you attend one of her retreats or create your own personal retreat and follow the exercises in the book. Or, have her in to keynote your women’s event and inspire your audience with her candor, eloquence and humor.

After devouring her books one after another, I called Joan and we had a long and lovely conversation. While I have not had a chance to see her speak in person, which as you know is my preference, I checked out her references and they were absolutely glowing. For an invigorating keynote or an insightful retreat, I highly endorse Joan Anderson.

And, now I’m looking forward to her fifth book, “A Second Journey.”  Stay tuned…

Off the Hook

Despite my good intentions to clean my bookshelves to celebrate Jennifer Louden’s Freedom from Self-Improvement Day this week, I found myself looking longingly at the titles on the shelves and wishing I took more time to read them. The fact is that when I got married and moved almost two years ago, I hauled away trunkloads of books to re-sell or donate, so they’ve pretty much been pared down to my favorites (and the ones I haven’t read yet). I also vowed to use the library more often. So, these days, the stacks of books by my bedside are primarily from the library and, from speakers who send me their books – it’s a hazard of the job.

What I did do to honor myself on Freedom from Self-Improvement Day was to decide to be satisfied with my life just the way it is. While the longing for something more or different or better will always be there, (and I believe that goals and dreams are still a good thing), I’m going to spend more energy reveling in life just the way it is. And that includes gratitude for all the self-help books, motivational speakers and seminars that got me to this point! Like Joan Anderson, being a scholar of self and soul seems to be in my DNA.

Until next time, be good to yourself just the way you are, for your good health and those you love.

Yours truly in good health,

Barbara

About Our Services

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website, SpeakWellBeing.com.
or please call anytime and let us assist you.

The Speak Well Being Group specializes in providing exceptional speakers for health, wellness and women’s events.  When you work with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

Your feedback is always welcome and appreciated! Write to us at barbara@speakwellbeing.com

For Your Well Being: Tired of Being Tired?

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

May 3, 2007, Vol. V Issue 9

Dear Friends,

Tired of being tired? That’s the main reason over 600 women showed up for Providence St. Peter’s “Heart to Heart” program with Mary Ann Bauman, MD, in Olympia, Washington, last month. Dr. Bauman is the author of Fight Fatigue: Six Simple Steps to Maximize Your Energy. As a medical doctor, she’s seen her fair share of tired women. Surprisingly, she didn’t talk so much about the physical stresses that might ail us but more about the emotional stresses that drain our tanks. “We lose our energy bit by bit by bit. We over-extend, juggle balls, and don’t pay any attention to ourselves. We make assumptions about how someone is going to react to something. We cause our own stress,” she told us. Hmm, that got my attention. I’m glad I was there and I’m happy to share a few of her ideas with you in this issue.

May is a month for celebrating women. Mother’s Day kicks off National Women’s Health Week and nurses (men, too, of course) will be appreciated during National Nurses Week, May 6 -12, at hospitals nationwide. And there’s a brand new day to commemorate — May 15, 2007 is the first Freedom from Self-Improvement Day. Now that may sound like a strange recommendation from someone who promotes motivational speakers. Read on – you’ll find out why I’m on board!

I realize this a long issue, but it’s all timely, so hang on. My goal is always to make it worth YOUR time and I welcome your comments.

Tired of Being Tired?

“Fatigue is the number one reason women come to the doctor,” Dr. Mary Ann Bauman, told the women in Olympia. “As a primary care doctor, I have done the medical evaluations for fatigue on hundreds of women who are tired. After doing all the tests that might explain the symptoms, the tests usually all come back normal.

“However, I am still left with a woman who is tired and who is looking to me for an answer. She wants to have the energy to satisfy her obligations and enjoy life. It’s frustrating for the patient to be told all is fine and it’s frustrating for the doctor when we can’t help our patients to feel better.”

It was this mutual dissatisfaction that led her to search for an approach that would help women re-claim their energy. Although she is an internist, she had always been drawn to the mind and its immense influence over our well being. Repeatedly, both in the studies she read and in her own on-the-job experiences, she was struck by the clear links between emotional and physical health.

“The mind-body connection is happening in your body whether you like it or not,” she said. “If you don’t feel good emotionally, you won’t feel good physically.

While fatigue is the number one reason women go to the doctor, that’s not true for men. She wondered why. In looking at the differences in how we approach our tasks, our relationships and the challenges in our lives, she discovered that the very same nurturing spirit that makes women such devoted moms and caretakers is also responsible for our energy crises. Just as she was observing this, the medical literature on the importance of the mind-body connection began to explode.

“Putting this altogether, I began to look at my patients’ energy woes in a different light. I began to explore not just the demands on them but also how they interpreted those demands, how they felt about them, and why they continued to do things they didn’t want to do for people they didn’t like.

“Self-esteem, is probably not what you were expecting to hear about tonight,” she said, “but self-esteem and energy are intricately linked. Men learn it comes from accomplishment. Women learn it comes from relationship. Neither is right or wrong, but because women get their self-esteem from relationships, we risk being people-pleasers — at the risk of our physical and mental well being. Identifying and understanding your reactions to people and situations has practical consequences to your energy balance.”

In her book, Fight Fatigue, Mary Ann outlines a six-step process for re-claiming and maximizing your energy. With acute awareness that women already have more than enough to do in our lives, she designed the steps as something to fit into your life, not something to add to it. It does require commitment, but it’s designed to be implemented during your regular daily activities.

“We’re on a journey to figure out why we do what we do, so we can take the behaviors we do well and nurture them, and take the bad ones and change them. It’s important to know why you do what you do. You will never change behavior if you are not aware of it. You have to discover why you do what you do.”

Providence St. Peter’s Heart to Heart events are held at the Washington Center, a performing arts center in downtown Olympia. For an hour before the talk, women enjoyed healthy munchies, informational displays, screenings and chair massages. Janice Ewing, Public Relations Coordinator, told me how much she appreciated Mary Ann’s responsiveness during the planning process. “She was so easy to work with. I always got an answer from her right away and the evening of her appearance was totally carefree.”

And, from Deborah Shawver, Marketing and Communications Director: “Mary Ann Bauman provides unique insights into causes and solutions for fatigue that so many women experience. She is a high-energy, inspiring speaker.”

Personally, I was impressed that (as a medical doctor) her talk was enhanced by stories, and it was delivered without PowerPoint, both notes- and podium-free. I admit a preference for speakers who prefer to walk around on the stage and engage with the audience rather than stand behind a podium. That isn’t to say there aren’t some very fine podium speakers. It’s simply a distinction I notice as a professional. Learn more about Dr. Mary Ann Bauman on our website.

Mary Marcdante:  National Spokesperson for American Greetings Mother-Daughter Cards

You may hear a familiar name in the news in the next few days as author and inspirational speaker Mary Marcdante hits the airwaves. She’s been named national spokesperson for American Greetings Mother-Daughter cards for Mother’s Day 2007, and launches a national satellite radio tour today.

As the author of My Mother, My Friend, Mary is a natural for the role. In the research for her book she found that of all the feedback women receive in their many roles in life, “appreciation” is the one-quality moms crave most from their families. “Ideally, mothers and daughters should make it a point to express appreciation for each other every time they connect — through words, actions and just spending time together,” Mary said. “So often, women don’t fully realize how important this relationship is to both of them until the daughter becomes a mother herself, or one of the two experiences a major turning point like a divorce, a job relocation or a health issue.”

Mary speaks from experience. For her, it was the diagnosis of her mother’s ovarian cancer that drew the two closer together and increased their mutual awareness of the special bond they shared. “From the moment I learned of the diagnosis until my Mom’s death, I felt like I was in graduate school, cramming the night before finals for a course called: ‘Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About Your Mother and Forgot to Ask,’” Mary said. “This experience prompted me to write my book and reach out to other daughters to help them build their relationships with their mothers.”

Mary said Mother’s Day provides daughters with a perfect opportunity to build on their relationships with their mothers, and that often cards are a great way to break the ice. “Cards can really help out, because often, they express words that are in our hearts but we may have trouble communicating,” Mary said. “They provide a very tangible way to let mothers know just how much they mean to us. Ultimately, the gift of time and acceptance of each other — flaws as well as strengths – is the most meaningful gift mothers and daughters can give each other on Mother’s Day.”

In addition to My Mother, My Friend, Mary also has written Living with Enthusiasm and Inspiring Words for Inspiring People. A resident of San Diego, California, she is a contributing author to five Chicken Soup books and A Woman’s Way To Success in Business, and a contributing relationship expert on www.iVillage.com. She has spoken to over 250,000 people and presented more than 1,500 speeches, seminars and workshops worldwide.  Learn more about Mary Marcdante on our website.

National Women’s Health Week

The 8th annual National Women’s Health Week runs from May 13 through May 19, 2007 with the theme, “It’s Your Time: Pamper Your Mind, Body and Spirit.” Two of the goals are to celebrate extraordinary progress in women’s health and bring attention to and create understanding of women’s health issues.

At Oregon Health Science University’s (OHSU), 12th Annual Women’s Health Conference last Saturday, Joanna Cain, MD, Director of the Center for Women’s Health said in her introductory remarks, that we’re reaching a tipping point in women’s health. She pointed out that we now have ten years of gender-based research — research that wouldn’t exist if a law requiring the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to do clinical trials for women had not been passed ten years ago.

“The fruits of that kind of research are just beginning to be picked,” she said. “This is a critical time in women’s health – when the new information from studies that women fought so hard to get instituted are beginning to come out and should change how women should be taken care of.” Dr. Cain also urged the attendees to continue taking action by letting our legislators know our concerns and interests in women’s health and passing on what we learn at conferences to others who couldn’t attend.

Other goals of the national women’s health week are to encourage women to get regular check-ups, provide free or reduced fee screenings for women nationwide, and educate women about steps they can take to improve their physical and mental health and prevent disease. If you go to the website, you’ll find a link to The WOMAN Challenge, an 8-week program, starting Mother’s Day, to increase physical activity. It has online support similar to the “Lighten Up America” that I wrote about in our last issue. To save space, because there’s so much in this issue, I’m going to let those of you who are interested follow the link. The map is very intriguing!  Check it out.

May 15 — Freedom from Self-Improvement Day

When I first read about “Freedom from Self-Improvement Day,” I was intrigued – and inspired. Images of cleaning my shelves of half-read self-help books danced in my head. I had to know more. This is the brainchild of Jennifer Louden, bestselling author of all of the Woman’s Comfort Books – including The Woman’s Retreat Book. Make a note of that, retreat planners, Jennifer is a skilled retreat presenter and facilitator.

I met Jennifer for the first time just a couple of months ago when she was on book tour with her newest book, The Life Organizer: A Woman’s Guide to a Mindful Year. I thoroughly enjoyed her workshop and have been working on and off with my own life organizer — but that’s another story for another time. Back to that freedom day she’s declaring for us self-help junkies: “Self-improvement is a one-way ticket to misery,” Jennifer says. “Instead, the path to happiness and fulfillment starts with acceptance of who and where you are.”

“Beating ourselves up because our thighs aren’t thin enough, or because we still haven’t perfected the art of ‘positive thinking’ hasn’t made us happier or the world a better place,” says Jennifer, “Inner peace through endless self-improvement only serves to make us endlessly dissatisfied and disappointed. The biggest paradox in trying to change ourselves is that nothing happens until we embrace who and how we are right now, imperfections, perceived flaws and all.”

Oh, yes, now.  NOW.  That thing I keep trying to be in, which of course, I can’t possibly be in if I’m TRYING to be in it.  If you’ve read any self-help books, you know, like I do, that trying is worthless. Okay, sign me up NOW for “Freedom From Self Improvement Day.”  If I call you that day, do not take my call.

The website includes resources to encourage self-acceptance, ban self-improvement, and have fun while doing it. “I want to give people a taste of freedom from the constant litany of ‘shoulds,’ ‘don’ts,’ and ‘musts’ that fill our brains,” says Jennifer.

As for me, I think I’ll clean my bookshelves. How about you? What do you think? Until next time, be good to yourself for your good health and those you love.

Yours truly in good health,

Barbara

About Our Services

You’ll find many of our speakers on our website, SpeakWellBeing.com.
(AOL users click here) or please call anytime and let us assist you.

The Speak Well Being Group specializes in providing exceptional speakers for health, wellness and women’s events.  When you work with us, you’ll come back for more “How are we going to top that?” speakers.

Your feedback is always welcome and appreciated! Write to us at barbara@speakwellbeing.com