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Jay Levin: On You Being Psychic: Part 1 — Knowing It

Posted: June 17, 2012 at 2:14 pm


Here is a premise to ponder: that you were born psychic and intuitive -- meaning you came in with extrasensory radar that could move beyond time and space and report back with information you had not heard nor seen, tasted, smelled or touched.

Every now and then you likely get glimmers of your psychic ability in the form of "intuition." There is something you just "know" or feel. Most of us commonly dismiss, diminish or ignore this awareness. Think of the times you have later muttered "Oh, if I had only followed my intuition about this situation (or person)!"

Given my premise that you were born psychic, meaning with access to knowledge and information which did not come through your five senses and that often go well beyond the subtle pattern-recognition phenomena of your brain, then those moments of intuition or psychic clarity would hardly be remarkable in their own right. They stand out sharply ONLY against a general daily life in which you are out of touch with this side of yourself and instead are running on (and thinking with) other information and systems -- or as science has shown, with other parts of the brain.

In fact, we know from voluminous research into psychic phenomenon by scientists and scholars associated with many leading universities and institutions that psychic knowing is normative, not unusual. Some people have an extraordinary amount of it. Others have inklings.

Continuing with my premise, if we were all born psychic, there are profound implications to this.

- Ipso facto, you possess some yet-unexplained receptors that allow you to read or detect subtle information fields.

- That those subtle information fields exist somewhere.

- That this must be an innate human ability, the degree of which varies with different people.

- That this ability must to some degree either be quashed or encouraged by the experiences in childhood, including the manner in which you are nurtured and programmed by family, friends and community.

- Because so many of us don't retain much access to this level of knowing, it is fairly safe to conclude that most societies and child socialization processes tend to suppress rather than encourage this latent ability.

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Jay Levin: On You Being Psychic: Part 1 -- Knowing It

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June 17th, 2012 at 2:14 pm

excercise ball mishap – Video

Posted: at 1:19 pm



16-06-2012 12:07 Two guys,2 excercise balls... school gym...what could go wrong???

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excercise ball mishap - Video

Written by simmons |

June 17th, 2012 at 1:19 pm

Posted in Excercise

A Little Excercise – Video

Posted: at 1:19 pm



16-06-2012 20:51 Nothing serious. Just a small part of my full workout. Tried to make it a lil fun 🙂

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A Little Excercise - Video

Written by simmons |

June 17th, 2012 at 1:19 pm

Posted in Excercise

Thai yoga massage at Welwyn Garden City health shop

Posted: at 1:19 pm


Andrea White, Thai Yoga Massage Therapist

By Simon Wesson, Reporter Saturday, September 18, 2010 12:40 PM

BY looking at the pictures on this page, you would imagine I have just entered some kind of weird wrestling match and lost!

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However, I am being pinned down, stretched, twisted and stood on, while wearing unusual trousers, for a very good reason, and that is purely relaxation... oh, and to become more healthy.

The therapy I tested out this week is Thai yoga massage, a new treatment to arrive at the recently-renovated treatment rooms in Natural Health, WGC.

And while it may not always look that pleasant, I can assure you it is.

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Thai yoga massage at Welwyn Garden City health shop

Written by simmons |

June 17th, 2012 at 1:19 pm

Posted in Financial

Ebru Today – Gretchen Reynolds – Smart Excercise – Video

Posted: June 16, 2012 at 10:20 pm



15-06-2012 09:14 Gretchen Reynolds talk about how to exercise better, train smarter and live longer. Simple tips for staying healthy.

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Ebru Today - Gretchen Reynolds - Smart Excercise - Video

Written by simmons |

June 16th, 2012 at 10:20 pm

Posted in Excercise

Out for a dip and excercise in the pool. June 13, 2012. – Video

Posted: at 10:20 pm



15-06-2012 10:28 VISIT TO SEE FRANKS CAST LIVE !!! very nice day a little windy but tolerable warm 80f water

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Out for a dip and excercise in the pool. June 13, 2012. - Video

Written by simmons |

June 16th, 2012 at 10:20 pm

Posted in Excercise

Haleh Gianni, certified Life Coach interviews with Mr. Farrokh Torkzadeh on Persian TV – Video

Posted: at 1:17 pm



15-06-2012 01:33 What makes 505 Living different than other Life Coaching and Motivational Mechanisms is in the technology that supports it. The Ultimate Life Tool® is accredited by the International Coach Federation, California Board of Behavioral Sciences and California Board of Registered Nursing. It's Objective, Grounded in Science & Based on Nature. Take the test by going to & get your own operating manual!!!! How do you naturally process information, connect & communicate with the world!

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Haleh Gianni, certified Life Coach interviews with Mr. Farrokh Torkzadeh on Persian TV - Video

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June 16th, 2012 at 1:17 pm

Posted in Life Coaching

Life Challenges, Life Coaches

Posted: at 1:17 pm


Having a preconceived impression of a life coach as being a New Age concept, I was quite surprised to discover that I knew one. I have worked with Barbara Marchand on any number of projects involving such decidedly down to earth organizations as the Rotary Club, the Chamber of Commerce and the Alameda Welfare Council. I have always known her to be level-headed, practical and honest. When she asked me if I would be interested in trying some coaching, I had to re-evaluate my whole idea of it.

When I first started talking with Barbara about this, I had just learned that my mother-in-law had been diagnosed with Alzheimer's. The family was in the process of sorting out her living arrangements, medical care, and financial situation, all the while grieving the future loss of a vibrant and brilliant woman. Because she had always been fiercely independent and (justifiably) proud, we were completely side swiped by this turn of events.

Unfamiliar with the process involved with consulting a life coach, I wasn't sure whether what I was going through was even an appropriate direction to pursue. My understanding of what I would address during the coaching process would be to try to organize my time and resources, or to try to get in the routine of regular exercise or eating right. How would those principles apply to processing the painful, frightening truth of what we were going through?

I have plenty of sympathetic ears and shoulders because we are by no stretch of the imagination the only people who are going through the ageing process with our parents. I consider myself to be extremely fortunate to have a support network to help with the unfamiliar emotional terrain.

I am discovering, however, that there are actually very practical, organizational facets to this process. For example, I was trying to determine what government programs might be available to my mother-in-law. Navigating the Internet, I discovered that there are any numbers of government programs, but the qualifications for each of these programs differ in infinitesimal ways. The language is deceptive and unwieldy. Before long I felt as if I would never make progress on this relatively small project I had been assigned. Much like being the poor sap that catches the ball in the middle of the game, with no idea of what the rules are or what team I'm on. Like the team coach, Barbara is not on the playing field surrounded by all of the players, she is able to watch the "game" from a distance, and see the directions that are available to me. With a gentle nudge, she points out what she can see, and then the obstacles fade away. It might be a simple suggestion to call an organization to ask for help, or it might be a way to sort out the information that I have in order to be able to make heads or tails of it.

One of the most important tools that Barbara has given me, or should I instead say she has reminded me that I already have, is to write it down! Whether it is a note about a conversation I have had with a medical professional, a question that has come up that I need to find the right person to ask, or simply the way that I am feeling at any given time about the process, it is important to be able to access that again easily.

This is a long, arduous road we're setting off on. The way is frequently murky, and it certainly feels as if we're walking uphill both ways barefoot in the snow. In helping to guide me through this unfamiliar terrain, both emotionally and practically, Barbara is making it possible for me to navigate it, and share with you my journey.

Carrie Beavers can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . For a free one hour coaching session, visit barbaramarchandassociates.com or call 510-410-8100.

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Life Challenges, Life Coaches

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June 16th, 2012 at 1:17 pm

Posted in Life Coaching

Coaching up the talent

Posted: at 1:17 pm


Rick Suhr says he has no use for the spotlight. Can you blame him??In his one big moment on the national stage, he was unfairly vilified for a perceived berating of Jenn Stucyznski after she won a silver medal four years ago in Beijing. People wondered what was the guy's problem.

What they should have been asking was, What's his secret?'

Really, now. Can someone explain it? How in the world could one man have produced so many elite pole vaulters? In an area that has been otherwise irrelevant in major track and field for decades, how could five national pole vaulting champions have come out of one makeshift training facility outside Suhr's home in Churchville.

Is there some unknown coaching technique, some mystical method for inspiring athletes? Some magical jumping beans, perhaps?

"It is a secret," said Jenn Suhr [formerly Stucyznski], who married Rick two years ago. She tells her husband all the time, in fact, that he's the best-kept secret in sports.

"It's amazing what he's done, going back to 2004," she said. "I look at all the records. He's produced a national champion every year. That's too many years and too many people for it to be a coincidence. It all revolves around one person, and that's him."

No, it's hardly a coincidence that three women's pole vaulters from Western New York will be in Eugene, Ore., next weekend at the U.S. Olympic track and field trials. Suhr is the defending Olympic silver medalist, a 10-time national champion who is considered a virtual lock to make the American team.

Mary Saxer, who broke the girls' national record seven times at Lancaster High, will be there. So will Medina's Janice Keppler, who vaulted in college at Eastern Michigan and Arkansas and finished second last winter in the indoor U.S. Open at Madison Square Garden.

Suhr, Saxer and Keppler were all ranked among the top 10 in the nation recently. All three got their start in Churchville, where Suhr has been producing champions since putting a couple of quonset huts end-to-end to serve as a pole vaulting practice facility about 15 years ago.

"They all came out of a steel building in Buffalo," Rick said. "That doesn't make sense. I don't care what the records of the Bills and Sabres are. We've got the best pole vaulters in the country, hands down. I don't want to toot my own horn, but it is what it is."

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Coaching up the talent

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June 16th, 2012 at 1:17 pm

Posted in Life Coaching

Coaching your child: Expert advice from T-ball to high school and beyond

Posted: at 1:17 pm


It's the second-most memorable line in Field of Dreams: "Hey, Dad, you wanna have a catch?" Kevin Costner is already an adult when he tosses a baseball to his ghostly father. For most dads and kids, the moment comes much sooner; and for thousands of families across the country, a simple catch leads to dad signing up his son or daughter with the local youth league, and then signing up himself as coach.

Then the simple joy of tossing a ball back and forth transforms into something more complicated. The team, of course, includes other players. And they have parents, many of whom have opinions about you as a coach. Practices are difficult enough to run smoothly, and they lead to games, and games are competitive. Are you a good coach or a poor one? Is your child a good player or a lousy one? Are you playing favorites with your child? Or are you harder on your kid than on the others, creating friction in the family?

Chipper Jones has enjoyed a 19-year career thanks to the teachings of his dad. (AP) None of that mattered during the backyard catch. Coaching a son or daughter, it turns out, is one of the most challenging pursuits a parent can take on. It can be exceedingly rewarding. And it can be exceedingly frustrating to the child as well as the parent.

Even if the child hits the sports equivalent of the lottery and becomes a professional athlete, memories of the years under dad's tutelage can be a mixed bag. Kevin Neary and Leigh A. Tobin co-authored a book, Major League Dads, which features 250 pages of big-league baseball players recounting being coached as youngsters by their fathers. Most of the memories are positive: the work ethic dad taught, the skills he honed, the fun he emphasized. Others are telling, and could help serve as a road map for any dad piling bats and helmets into his car and heading off to the field. Neary and Tobin even reference Field of Dreams (and its most memorable line: "If you build it, he will come.")

Another resource for parents coaching their children is Bruce E. Brown of Proactive Coaching, who has spoken to more than a million young athletes, parents and coaches over the last 12 years. His common-sense advice helps anyone involved in youth, high school and college sports maximize their enjoyment while avoiding pitfalls. He was the primary source for a story I wrote in February on how to avoid being a nightmare sports parent.

Brown points out that because professional athletes often have such freakish athletic ability, their success isn't necessarily the product of a dad who did everything right as a coach. Then again, some dads do get it right. The finest youth coach in tiny Pierson, Fla., 35 years ago was Larry Jones, whose son, also named Larry, was such a chip off the old block people started calling him Chipper. Of course, today Chipper Jones is a 19-year MLB veteran and seven-time All-Star with the Atlanta Braves.

"My dad and I still talk two or three times a week," Jones told Neary. "Whenever I get into a slump, my coaches ask me if I've called my dad. He knows my swing the best of anyone."

Greg Maddux, who ranks eighth all-time with 355 wins, is appreciative of something most children don't hear: "The greatest lesson I learned from my father was that you've got to think for yourself. You've got to learn how to do things for yourself. I know it was hard for a dad to do and say, but he did it."

Greg Maddux's father taught him how to be independent. (Getty Images) It's inevitable that a coach will say something to his child he wouldn't say to another player. When a pre-teen Derek Jeter wouldn't shake hands with the other team after a loss, his father/coach told him it was "time to grab a tennis racket, since you obviously don't know how to play a team sport." And Tampa Bay Rays slugger Evan Longoria's dad told him to stop crying when the boy was pitching at age 8.

"I can just remember him walking out to the mound and him giving me that stern look almost a yell, but not really saying, 'What are you doing crying out here?'" Longoria said. "But he made sure not to go too far with his look because he didn't want me to cry even more."

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Coaching your child: Expert advice from T-ball to high school and beyond

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June 16th, 2012 at 1:17 pm

Posted in Life Coaching


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