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Archive for the ‘Life Coaching’ Category

Celebrity Designer Kelli Ellis Launches New Design Psychology Coaching Facebook Group for Current and Aspiring Coaches

Posted: February 28, 2012 at 10:08 am


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Making it easier to learn the latest on design psychology, celebrity designer Kelli Ellis recently launched a design psychology Coaching Facebook group. Online at https://www.facebook.com/groups/390766821941/, the page offers information on home, work and business.

Rancho Santa Margarita, CA (PRWEB) February 28, 2012

Just as design psychology coaching seamlessly blends life coaching, interior design and environmental psychology, Facebook combines the best of casual social interactions with important news. To augment her design psychology coaching practice and help more people get the latest industry news, celebrity designer Kelli Ellis recently launched a design psychology coaching Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/390766821941/.

The online group focuses on the study of design psychology as it applies to home, work and business while offering a place for conversation and connection, the latest in education, and encouragement for design psychology coaches and students.

“Designing beautiful and attractive spaces is about so much more than just furniture, lighting and accessories. It’s all about creating beauty that resonates with clients from the inside out, so that their lives are actually enriched by their homes and offices,” Ellis said. “That’s what design psychology coaching is all about – combining the best of life coaching and interior design to create ideal environments, so I’m thrilled to add this new Facebook group for all the existing and aspiring design psychology coaches out there.”

The Facebook group is also linked to the Spencer Institute’s online Design Psychology Coach certification, designed for anyone in the fields of interior design, feng shui, professional organizing or life coaching. The program focuses on elements of design, environmental factors that affect success, coaching for commercial projects as well as successful business models in design psychology coaching.

Based in Orange County, Ellis works in the field of design psychology coaching and interior design. With a variety of budget-conscious options for clients, her interior design business, Kelli Ellis Interiors, Inc., includes space planning, color schemes, interior architectural detailing, holiday décor, flooring, fabrics, kitchen and bath design, lighting, outdoor space, accessorizing, staging and more.

About Kelli Ellis

Award-winning celebrity interior designer and design psychology expert Kelli Ellis is owner and lead designer of Kelli Ellis Interiors, Inc. Ellis has a bachelor’s degree in Communications from Cal State Fullerton, a law school background and a certification from the Interior Design Institute. She has appeared on TLC’s “Clean Sweep,” HGTV’s “Takeover My Makeover” and Bravo’s “Real Housewives of Orange County,” where she helped fan-favorite Jeana Keough turn her house in her dream haven. She is also spokesperson for the Society of American Florists. Kelli Ellis Interiors is co-owned with her husband, John Spencer Ellis. For more information on the design psychology coaching Facebook page, please visit https://www.facebook.com/groups/390766821941/

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John Spencer Ellis
Kelli Ellis Interiors
949 683 3713
Email Information

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Celebrity Designer Kelli Ellis Launches New Design Psychology Coaching Facebook Group for Current and Aspiring Coaches

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February 28th, 2012 at 10:08 am

Posted in Life Coaching

Lite Life Surgery Adds Palm Springs Weight Loss Coaching Programs

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PALM SPRINGS, CA--(Marketwire -02/27/12)- Lite Life Surgery is pleased to announce the addition of weight loss coaching, dietician, and weight management programs to their California weight loss clinic. Lite Life Surgery, renowned for their bariatric surgery services and weight loss surgery solutions, has recently updated their services with weight loss programs and health regimens. The weight loss services provide for ongoing maintenance to those who have undergone weight loss surgery and also offer a nutrition and coaching solution to those who may have a BMI that is not high enough to qualify for surgical intervention.

Guided through each step by a registered dietician, Palm Springs patients enrolled in the weight management programs are taken through a 12-week course. The program includes weekly visits with a registered dietician who will educate patients on nutrition and exercise. A focus is placed on glycemic eating, as well as behavior and exercise modifications. Throughout the weight management programs, Palm Springs attendees of the program have access to a suite of online tools including a journal to track their thoughts, caloric consumption, and pattern of exercise habits.

The Lite Life Surgery weight loss management program is a great way for patients to take control of their behaviors, bodies, and health. Whether for medical reasons or personal reasons, these programs prove successful because they offer consultation, one on one coaching, and unyielding support.

Overseen by a nutrition and weight loss coach, Palm Spring residents who are looking to lose a lot of weight, or just a little, are encouraged to check out these weight loss programs in California.

About Lite Life Surgery

Lite Life Surgery in Palm Springs, CA provides weight loss surgery, nutrition and exercise programs, and weight management programs for patients throughout Southern California and beyond. Lite Life Surgery is renowned for obesity weight loss surgery, including bariatric surgery, gastric bypass, lap band surgery, gastric sleeve and duodenal switch weight loss surgeries.

For more information about weight loss surgery options or weight loss management programs in Palm Springs visit http://www.litelifesurgery.com.

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Lite Life Surgery Adds Palm Springs Weight Loss Coaching Programs

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February 28th, 2012 at 10:08 am

Posted in Life Coaching

Jackson coaching icon nearing end to decades-long career

Posted: February 27, 2012 at 10:03 pm


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Posted: Monday, February 27, 2012 10:26 am | Updated: 12:28 pm, Mon Feb 27, 2012.

He’s seen his athletes run enough cross country miles that it would probably equal an excursion to El Paso and back. He’s observed approximately 960 quarters of football and he’s watched some 6,720 minutes of basketball.

Dan McFarlane never imagined he’d be posting such impressive numbers but then he never imagined a coaching career would encompass 30 years and touch four decades all at one school.

He’s short in stature but tall in respect at Jackson Intermediate School, his home away from home since 1982 when then Jackson Principal Ben Lenamon hired him and Steve Prusz his coaching sidekick for these last 30 years on the very same day.

But Jackson Intermediate’s iconic coaching team is about to go their separate ways. McFarlane, 64, is making the 2011-12 school year his last one, anxious to begin retirement and spending more time with his wife Mary of almost 40 years and their two grandchildren in Tomball.

“That’s one of the things I’ll probably miss when I retire is my close association with coach Prusz. All good things must come to an end sometime. Steve and I came to Jackson on the same day. Steve and I are on the same page. It’s a shared responsibility on what needs to be done. Obviously, something’s meshing when you’re working side-by-side with the same coach for 30 years,” McFarlane said.

McFarlane, who has 38 total years of coaching beginning with eight in Galena Park ISD, has been at Jackson so long that he’s seen five principals come and go. He’s been at Jackson so long McFarlane has coached at two Jackson Intermediate schools. Oh, and he’ll be the first to tell you he likes the air-conditioned gymnasiums and lockerroom version of Jackson far better.

And he’ll also be the first to tell you he wouldn’t trade all these past days, weeks, months and years for anything else. He knew coaching at a junior high and only a junior high was his calling in life. Not even the lure of two job offers at the high school level has been able to pull McFarlane away from Wildcat Country.

After all, he has leaned on the memories and lessons of a special junior high coach in the early 1960s when he attended HISD’s Hartman Middle School to guide him in his day-to-day dealings with his athletes.

“In junior high school, coach William Turney always encouraged everyone to give their best effort win, lose or draw," McFarlane said. "That left an impression on me all the way to today. He was the perfect mentor. He was low-key. He just treated kids with respect and got the most out of everyone. He never yelled. He was kind of like E.F. Hutton. When he spoke, everybody listened. That left a real big impression on me.

"The more I got into coaching, I realized in order for a school district to have a successful high school program, you have to have a solid junior high program where the kids are taught fundamentals. I’ve tried to model myself after him in the way you deal with students and the way you deal with your fellow faculty members and the public in general."

Pasadena High School varsity assistant football coach Cirilo Ojeda used a stop at Jackson to prepare him for the 5A job and he recalled the valuable input McFarlane provided him.

“As long as he’s been there, one of the things you want from someone like that is to soak everything up like a sponge," Ojeda said. "That was my first job so he showed me a lot of the ropes to the ins and outs of coaching the game. I really learned a lot to the point where I felt confident making that move from the intermediates to the high school.

"He wasn’t just a coach; he was a teacher-type at all times. Whether he was in the classroom, PE or athletics, he always had that teacher’s role.

Between the chalk lines, he and Prusz have become the symbol of Jackson sports.

“He was a well-respected coach within the district, always a very pleasant adversary,” Park View Intermediate coach Elton Blanchard said.

“There wasn’t a whole lot that he wouldn’t do to see his kids succeed,” said Thompson Intermediate’s John Fowler, who is also retiring at the end of this school year, ending decades of service to the school district.

McFarlane’s long-time presence at Jackson has undoubtedly meant so much to the student-athletes because in north Pasadena life has the potential to be harsh in more ways than one.

“We have a lot of single-parent families or grandma or grandpa taking care of the kids," McFarlane said. "The kids have a lot of baggage nowadays. It’s not just Pasadena, it’s all over. Athletics is another tool for kids to be successful.

"Here at Jackson, we encourage every kid to participate. At the same time, they’ve got to meet the standards of the school and the district. The value is the student learns about himself and with a little work, he can be successful.

“The junior high kids need all the mentoring they can get. That’s why I stayed where I’m at. One of the problems we have today is when I came to Pasadena we had a group of men who were basically the same age. We were all baby boomers. We all pretty much had the same idea that we were where we needed to be and provide that structure for the junior high kids.

"I don’t know if that would ever happen again. We see so much turn over now. I’m not sure we’ll ever see that point of stability."

As for athletic highlights, McFarlane says although Jackson rarely defeats Beverly Hills in football, perhaps his favorite memory is the 1998 season when both the eighth grade A and B teams won the district title and the A team had to go through Beverly Hills to do it. After a 15-14 win very early in the season over the Bears, the Wildcats came back in the title contest and won convincingly 38-14.

His second favorite memory occurred the year before when things weren’t going well.

“We didn’t win a football game, we didn’t win a basketball game and we weren’t very optimistic about our chances in track but that particular group could run long distances," McFarlane said. "We had a young man by the name of Kenneth Thornton. His nickname was Cooter. He took charge of that group. He dedicated that group to winning. They gave us everything they had in football and everything they had in basketball, they just didn’t have enough to get over the top. But they all had cross country bodies.

"That was back in the old Jackson and they got together in the neighborhood and ran every Saturday and Sunday. It was a very successful group of kids.”

His third were the two years that a future Summer Olympics gold medal winner walked the halls of Jackson Intermediate.

Kelly Willie attended Jackson from 1995 to 1997, before transferring to Houston Sterling High School where he was named Nike’s High School Athlete of the Year in 2002. From there, it was a scholarship to LSU where he was a four-time NCAA All-American in the 400-meters (indoors and out).

After his sophomore year at LSU, he anchored the United States’ 4 by 400 relay team at the Rome Summer Olympics that won the gold medal in 2004. By his senior year in 2006, he was ranked seventh in the world, fifth in the U.S.

“He had track potential all over him," McFarlane said. "He wasn’t too fond of football. I told him to just run fast and nobody would catch him. He set the 100-meter and the 200-meter record in the eighth-grade season. You don’t get a chance to coach a potential gold medal winner every day."

McFarlane recalled other names like Wes and Zach Berridge, Cedric Andrews, Armando Gonzalez, Rufus Bias and Edwin Flores, Jackson athletes who went on to feed Pasadena High School’s football program and fed it well with all-district accomplishments.

With anywhere from 130 to 150 seventh and eighth-grade students becoming Jackson athletes in any given year, it means that McFarlane has personally touched the lives of 4,500 youngsters over the 30 years. That’s the equivalent of every male and female student at two Class 5A high schools with a little left over. And not one has ever been allowed to throw in the towel.

“Quitting is not allowed here," McFarlane said. "My dad was a real big proponent that if you started it, you finished it. Quitting is the easy way. I’ve preached that to the kids. No matter how hard it is, give it your best effort. If you can look me in the eye and say you gave it your best, that’s all I can ask for. I don’t ask for anything more than that."

No doubt, McFarlane’s had his share of days and wondered if it’s all been worthwhile. But if as dedicated a junior high coach as this man has been, he’ll look back over his 30 years and answer with an emphatic yes.

“Building a relationship with a kid is the most important thing you can do," McFarlane said. "The kids have to feel you’re genuine. If they don’t feel you’re genuine, they won’t participate. They can read through it, pretty quick. I’ve told my athletes here at Jackson that my door is always open. If they need to come and talk, man-to-man, come on in. If I can’t help, I’ll find someone who can. That’s what I mean by genuine, that your concerned about them. Kids respect that. It stays with them forever."

Just like it stayed forever with McFarlane and his junior high coach so many years ago.

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Jackson coaching icon nearing end to decades-long career

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February 27th, 2012 at 10:03 pm

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My Hot Tub and YOU-Tulsa Life Coach- Motivational speaker – Video

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25-06-2011 17:06 http://www.coachjc.com http twitter.com JonathanConneely, Coach JC is a Life Coach and motivational speaker in tulsa oklahoma. Here is your Creating The Winning Mindset Key of The Day! Your Lifestyle Transformation Coach, Coach JC developed Tulsa's #1 Fitness program. Tulsa Oklahoma's only Lifestyle Transformation coach. Coach JC talks about why Bootcamp Tulsa clients are losing weight faster than gym in Tulsa. Coach JC coaches people to live life to the fullest. He is a coach, author, life coach, motivational speaker and Fitness Bootcamp Innovator. bootcamptulsa.com Bootcamp Tulsa is Tulsa's #1 Outdoor Fitness Program. Bootcamp Tulsa is a training program exclusively for women where women have fun, get great results and build lifelong relationships with other women. Bootcamp Tulsa is for people of all ages and all fitness levels. Tulsa women finally have a fitness program that is fun, affordable and produces results. Over the last three years, bootcamp style workouts have been exploding in popularity across the country. This popularity may be attributed directly to the results achieved through this type of workout. Women are experiencing life-changing results faster than any other method and they are having fun. New Jersey native and now Tulsa transplant, Jonathan Conneely Coach JC, recognized a need in the Tulsa market for a bootcamp style workout. Conneely, the founder of Bootcamp Tulsa, understood that with proper instruction, encouragement and guidance Tulsa women would ...

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My Hot Tub and YOU-Tulsa Life Coach- Motivational speaker - Video

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February 27th, 2012 at 10:16 am

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Life Coaching Tips From a Life Coach – Video

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22-02-2012 14:34 To learn more you can check out http://www.adaringadventure.com As a Life Coach I regularly get asked for my best life coaching tips and self development advice. Although I chop and change a bit on the best piece of advice, these are 4 that are always at the forefront of my mind. Implement these and you can Life Coach yourself.

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Life Coaching Tips From a Life Coach - Video

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February 27th, 2012 at 10:16 am

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Create The Winning Mindset-Coach JC- Tulsa Life Coach – Video

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26-02-2012 13:18 Whats YOUR standard?www.coachjc.com http twitter.com JonathanConneely, Coach JC is a Life Coach and motivational speaker in tulsa oklahoma. Here is your Creating The Winning Mindset Key of The Day! Your Lifestyle Transformation Coach, Coach JC developed Tulsa's #1 Fitness program. Tulsa Oklahoma's only Lifestyle Transformation coach. Coach JC talks about why Bootcamp Tulsa clients are losing weight faster than gym in Tulsa. Coach JC coaches people to live life to the fullest. He is a coach, author, life coach, motivational speaker and Fitness Bootcamp Innovator. bootcamptulsa.com Bootcamp Tulsa is Tulsa's #1 Outdoor Fitness Program. Bootcamp Tulsa is a training program exclusively for women where women have fun, get great results and build lifelong relationships with other women. Bootcamp Tulsa is for people of all ages and all fitness levels. Tulsa women finally have a fitness program that is fun, affordable and produces results. Over the last three years, bootcamp style workouts have been exploding in popularity across the country. This popularity may be attributed directly to the results achieved through this type of workout. Women are experiencing life-changing results faster than any other method and they are having fun. New Jersey native and now Tulsa transplant, Jonathan Conneely Coach JC, recognized a need in the Tulsa market for a bootcamp style workout. Conneely, the founder of Bootcamp Tulsa, understood that with proper instruction, encouragement and guidance ...

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February 27th, 2012 at 10:16 am

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Tigers' rise displays Brad Brownell's coaching ability

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Tigers have "fought" and are seeing rewards None

CLEMSON — If anyone doubts Brad Brownell’s ability as a basketball coach, they clearly haven’t been paying attention this winter.

Clemson’s second-year head coach has squeezed the absolute most out of his team, and Saturday’s effort inside Littlejohn Coliseum was a prime example.

Facing an N.C. State team inspired and fighting for its NCAA Tournament life, the Tigers fought through late-game offensive doldrums and took a 72-69 overtime win.

It was Clemson’s fourth win in its last five games, displaying clear progress from early-season struggles.

While it would take an ACC Tournament title – and the league’s automatic bid – to make a fifth consecutive NCAA Tournament, the Tigers have demonstrated clear progress.

They defend. They care. They haven’t mailed it in. At all.

While NIT bids are disappointing to many programs, that wouldn’t be the case with this team, this year.

At 15-13, 7-7 in ACC play, Brownell’s bunch has worked itself into postseason contention, a testament to its overall resolve. After losing three games by a total of eight points in a seven-day stretch this month – a string that would break many teams’ spirit – this group stayed strong.

Saturday, senior guard Andre Young, who had crucial misses against Virginia and Maryland, nailed a pair of overtime 3-pointers, including the game-winner with 11.8 seconds to play.

You can see key growth in virtually every player on the roster, from 5-foot-9 Young to 7-foot-2 Catalin “Bobo” Baciu.

Tempestuous junior forward Milton Jennings has hit double figures in four of six games after returning from his second suspension of the season, and is playing with clear energy and excitement.

The five freshmen who play are up-and-down, and none of them have emerged as a consistent night-in, night-out contributor. But all have had their moments, and all have progressed.

Saturday, guard T.J. Sapp emerged from a deep shooting slump with a pair of 3-pointers and excellent defense. Fellow guard K.J. McDaniels flashed his athleticism, turning a Young miss into an impressive follow dunk.

Devin Coleman, Bernard Sullivan and Rod Hall have all shown their potential in various ways.

You watch this team, and get a case of the what-ifs: what if they hadn’t lost to Coastal Carolina? Or South Carolina? Or Hawaii? Or UTEP? Or Boston College? Would we be discussing bubble status right now?

But you also wonder: what can Brownell do if he has more players that fit his system of motion offense and tough defense?

The recruiting class arriving on campus next fall features a pair of top-150 players in forward Jaron Blossomgame and guard Adonis Filer. As Brownell mentioned Saturday, the Tigers will be even younger next winter, following the departures of Young, Baciu, Tanner Smith and Bryan Narcisse.

However, their potential will be outstanding.

In both years on campus, Brownell has taken teams in crisis and made them better as the season has worn on.

This time, the nation might not be taking notice, but Clemson fans certainly should be.

It is a story well worth following – this year, and beyond.

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Tigers' rise displays Brad Brownell's coaching ability

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February 27th, 2012 at 10:16 am

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Morris: How a coach and an athlete are completing an arduous journey

Posted: February 26, 2012 at 5:38 am


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TO THE 14 members of the South Carolina women’s basketball team, the coaching staff and their families, today’s Senior Day celebration at Colonial Life Arena will be anything but ordinary.

Five seniors will be recognized before tipoff for their contributions in building the foundation of Dawn Staley’s program. Charenee Stephens is one of those five. She will proudly stand at midcourt with her mother, Charlotte, and her 3-year-old son, Christian.

The ceremony will not allow enough time to recount the arduous journey Stephens took over the past four years, an adventure that began with an unexpected pregnancy, continued through a difficult battle of wills with her coach and ultimately will conclude in May with her graduation from USC.

We have the time here to tell the tale, so let’s start at the beginning.

Staley first recruited Stephens out of Decatur, Ga., outside Atlanta, to play at Temple. Staley then continued her pursuit of the athletic, 6-foot-1 forward when she took the coaching job at USC. After landing Stephens as part of her first recruiting class, Staley headed off to coach the United States team in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Stephens enrolled at USC that summer and worked out with her future teammates. Upon her return to Columbia, Staley began noticing Stephens seemed to lack some of the athleticism that made her the fifth-best high school forward in the country, according to Scout.com.

So Staley went to the athletics training staff with one request.

“Can we eliminate this as a possibility?” Staley asked of administering a pregnancy test to Stephens.

She was pregnant. Seven months pregnant.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Staley said. “I could not believe it.”

The easy option was for Staley and USC to wash their hands of the situation, send Stephens home where she would forever reflect on the missed opportunity of playing college basketball and earning a college degree.

Staley had other ideas, perhaps because she saw a little bit of herself in Stephens’ fighter mentality. Staley grew up in the projects, the product of a single-parent home, determined to find a different life than the one she saw on those North Philadelphia streets. Staley became a star point guard at the University of Virginia, graduated and played in the WNBA before going into coaching.

Staley mapped out a similar plan for Stephens that would make her young mother-to-be the first in her family to graduate from college. The way Staley saw it, Stephens had a chance to affect her family’s future for generations.

First, though, Staley wanted to take care of Stephens. Prenatal care was arranged. Stephens was healthy, as was her baby. But the news of the pregnancy took a toll on Stephens’ mental state.

Too embarrassed to tell her in person or by telephone, Stephens emailed the news of her pregnancy to her mother. Charenee is named for her mother, Charlotte Renee. Charenee might have some heroes and role models on the athletic fields, but there is one person she idolizes. That is her mother, a single parent to five children.

“I love kids,” she said. “I’m just dedicated to them. They’re my life.”

She works the 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. shift in the collections division of the Genuine Parts Company in Atlanta. The job has provided enough over the past 11 years to make rental payments in the family’s three-bedroom Decatur home, food on the table and clothes on their backs.

Early on, Mom recognized the middle of her children as the most athletic. Mom never could get Charenee interested in dolls. She preferred tennis balls, basketballs, softballs, anything that provided an outlet for her competitive spirit.

Her basketball skills helped lead Southwest DeKalb High to a state championship and her Georgia Metros AAU team to a national championship in 2007. She spurned offers from Florida and Auburn within the SEC because she connected well with Staley during the recruiting process.

It would prove to be the most fortuitous decision of her young life.

Christian William Stephens was born Nov. 17, 2008, the day before his mother turned 19. Upon returning from their season-opening game at Penn State, members of the USC women’s team gathered in a Palmetto Richland Memorial Hospital room to celebrate.

“It was a team,” Staley said of the occasion. “(Charenee) was part of our team. We had a new addition to our team. It was a good thing.”

Within a few weeks, Charenee turned Christian over to his grandmother, allowing her to turn full attention to being a student and athlete. Her weight had soared to 245 pounds during pregnancy and remained at 185 after birth.

Getting back in basketball playing shape at 167 pounds took nearly a year, but Stephens somehow managed to work her way into a game against Connecticut just five weeks after Christian was born.

“I needed to play,” she said. “I needed minutes.”

She was not to be denied, a characteristic that no doubt stems from a stubborn streak that has been both beneficial and costly to her over the past four years. Stephens admits to being immature early in her career. She admits to being a rebel. She admits to succumbing to her instincts to question authority at every turn.

The battles between Stephens and Staley can only be described as royal. In what became an annual occurrence over the first three years, Staley ordered Stephens off the team, telling her to come back when she was willing to listen, learn and change.

“I might not have understood something and she might not have understood me and we bumped heads,” Stephens said. “But it was never disrespectful. It was just intense.”

Staley admits there were times when she had doubts. She doubted whether Stephens would ever mature to the point of turning the corner. She questioned whether it was worth keeping Stephens around.

“That’s the thing that forced me to go toward her instead of pushing her away,” Staley said. “Sometimes you think she’s not going to ever get it. I thought about that. I thought about, do I let this one get away for the betterment of the team?

“But I think Charenee needed us more than we needed her. When it’s like that, you’ve really got to grab them. You’ve got to pull them in to make sure they don’t get lost.

“A lot of that had to do with Christian, her son. I wanted him to see something different in their family. I wanted to see her graduate, be the example for what is to become of him.”

It is a message that has not been lost on the Stephens family. Charenee’s older brother and sister are out of the Stephens’ household and working in the Atlanta area. Her younger brother and sister want to follow in her footsteps and attend college.

As much as today’s Senior Day will recognize Charenee for persevering through difficult times and remaining committed to completing her college athletics career, it will pale in comparison to the celebration in May when she wears a cap and gown and holds a diploma in her hand.

“The first one in the family. The first one,” Charlotte said this past week while fighting back tears of joy. “It’s just exciting. It’s unbelievable. It’s like a dream come true. She’s a mentor to her smaller brother and sister and to Christian.”

So there you have it, the compelling story behind Senior Day at Colonial Life Arena for Charenee Stephens.

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Morris: How a coach and an athlete are completing an arduous journey

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February 26th, 2012 at 5:38 am

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Life Coaching Courses | NLP Training | Life Coach Training | NLP Practitioner Courses | NLP Modeling – Video

Posted: February 25, 2012 at 2:07 pm


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21-01-2012 07:27 http://www.nlplifecoachtrainingacademy.co.za People studying martial arts normally take months to learn this. These Trainees modeled me in less than 30 minutes to do the same thing. The key is only your mindset and not your physical power. This will really show you how 'Powerful' the right Mindset is and by applying this mindset daily in your own life... 'You WILL Achieve Anything!!! http NLP Life Coach Training Academy offer Life Coaching Courses, Life Coach Training, NLP Training, NLP Practitioner Courses and DVD Home Study Programs in NLP, Life Coaching and Life Skills. It is a Powerful Combination of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching, Success Mind Set Strategies and the most Advanced Positive Psychology. Currently we are South Africa's most Prestigious Training Company in NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching, Life Skills, Personal Development and Self Development. Get Certified as a Life Coach, NLP Practitioner and as a Negative Emotional Therapy™ Practitioner. After you are Certified by us, you will be able to help Clients with Life Coaching, Mentoring, Counselling, Low Self Esteem, Anger Management, Depression, Trauma Counselling, Phobias, and much more... You will get all of this and more in one training. http://www.youtube.com

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February 25th, 2012 at 2:07 pm

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Life Coaching Courses | NLP Training | Life Coach Training | NLP Practitioner Courses | Interview – Video

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24-01-2012 06:42 nlplifecoachtrainingacademy.co.za NLP Life Coach Training Academy offer Life Coaching Courses, Life Coach Training, NLP Training, NLP Practitioner Courses and DVD Home Study Programs in NLP, Life Coaching and Life Skills. It is a Powerful Combination of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching, Success Mind Set Strategies and the most Advanced Positive Psychology. Currently we are South Africa's most Prestigious Training Company in NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching, Life Skills, Personal Development and Self Development. Get Certified as a Life Coach, NLP Practitioner and as a Negative Emotional Therapy™ Practitioner. After you are Certified by us, you will be able to help Clients with Life Coaching, Mentoring, Counselling, Low Self Esteem, Anger Management, Depression, Trauma Counselling, Phobias, and much more... You will get all of this and more in one training. http

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February 25th, 2012 at 2:07 pm

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