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December, 2009 – Wal-Mart Shopping Spree to Help Those in Need

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: MEDIA RELATIONS 688-3080

NEWS BRIEFING

My Brother’s/Sister’s Keeper Charitable Trust Inc, has PARTNERED with Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office and Wal-Mart to assist 50 families from the Western Communities

WHAT: Deputies from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, Community Policing Division will shop with one representative from each of the 50 families at Wal-Mart Super Center, Royal Palm Beach (441 & Belvedere). Each representative will receive $ 200 gift card to purchase basic necessities for their families.

WHERE: Wal-Mart Super Center
441 & Belvedere Road
Royal Palm Beach, FL

WHEN: Friday, December 11, 2009

TIME: 6:00 pm

WHO: County Commissioner Jess Santamaria – founder of My Brother’s/Sister’s Keeper Charitable Trust
Sheriff Ric Bradshaw
Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, Community Policing Deputies
One representative from each of the families (50 families) from Belle Glade, Pahokee, South Bay and Canal Point

Through the generosity of this trust, which was established by County Commissioner Jess Santamaria of Royal Palm Beach, $ 10,000 has been made available to aid these 50 needy families.

On December 11, 2009 an adult representative from each of these families will travel by bus from PBSO District 5 Headquarters Belle Glade to a Wal-Mart Super Center, Royal Palm Beach, where a deputy from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Community Policing Division will be paired with a representative from each family to assist them. The items to be purchased are basic necessities, such as food and clothing.

The board of the My Brother’s/Sister’s Keeper Charitable Trust Inc, is committed to lending support to the people in the Western Communities of Palm Beach County, through partnering with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Community Policing Division.

Future projects will directly impact the children of the Western Communities by sponsoring continuous activities that will have a lasting positive effect on these children.

December, 2009 – David Sandoval Presents Seminar

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 David Sandoval, Author of Green Foods Bible, to Present Seminar

Saturday December 12 @ 1PM Lite for Life of Boca Raton, 3013 Yamato Road, #14B  call Laura 772 215-3268 to confirm.
 
Sunday, December 13 at Soma Center, Lake Avenue between L and M Streets, 3 PM. Call Laura 772 215-3268.
 
Monday and Tuesday, Dec 14 & !5  @6:30 PM  Apropos Kafe, 147 South East First Avenue, Boca Raton.
Call Laura 772 215-3268 to confirm.
 
 
David Sandoval, author of the Green Foods Bible, has studied with the world’s premier authorities on Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Ayervedic Medicine, and Western holistic medicine, including his mentor, Ann Wigmore, the founder of the Hippocrates Health Institute, and the world’s foremost advocate of raw food nutrition.
 

December, 2009 – Blood Drive and Fundraiser in RPB

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Dec. 12th Blood Drive and Fundraiser

On August 7, 2009, Courtney Wolfe (Daughter of Captain Larry Wolfe – Station 32B Palm Beach County Fire and Rescue) was diagnosed with A.L.L. (Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia).


Luckily her cancer was caught early but she has a big fight ahead of her. She will have to endure two and a half years of treatments including chemo.

 

Palm Beach County Fire Rescue will be doing a Blood Drive this Saturday, December 12, 2009 at Station 28 in Royal Palm Beach.  The Palm Beach County Fire Rescue Family will be doing all day Blood drive and fundraiser.

 

December, 2009 – Western Execs Holiday Party

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Happy Holidays!
 
Announcing the Western Executives Holiday Party:

 

Palomino: (Wellington, Royal Palm Beach, Acreage)

 

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

 

Player’s Club
13410 South Shore Blvd., Wellington
(561) 795 0080
http://www.playersclubrestaurant.com

from 5:30 to 7:30 pm
Special Price Drinks, free Appetizers, Goodie Bags*

 

No Admission – please bring an unwrapped toy

 
We are collecting toys for thekids of the Farmworker Council of Palm Beach County. Please bring a toy for some Holiday cheer! Then meet and mingle with business owners from the Western Communities on this evening of fun, food and social networking.
Whether you own a business or whether you are a key player to any corporate entity – you do not want to miss it!
* offerings may vary from location to location.

December, 2009 – Order Holiday Cards to Help the Horses

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Holiday Gifts to Help Horses!!!
************************
Please click below to order your gifts to help the horses this holiday season!

 

Holiday Card Sets:

$10 – (10) holiday cards (one choice of card design for each $10)*
*You may buy card-sets @ (10) cards/each from all these designs:

To view the different designs of cards and a few holiday gift giving ideas, visit the Pure Thoughts website.

December, 2009 – Help by Adopting Cats

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PLEASE CROSS POST
 
If you (or your friends) can adopt any of the sanctuary cats, it will save their lives. But you must act quickly. I am no longer in charge of the cats, LaBelle Animal Control is.
 
Please go to the links below, download the appropriate application, fill it out, and then fax it to the number shown.
 
For 501c3 rescue organizations: http://www.ufsheltermedicine.com/documents/TransferRequestForm.pdf
 
For adoption of cats or to reclaim your cat(s): http://www.ufsheltermedicine.com/documents/AdoptionApplication.pdf
 
Fax it to 863-675-0037.
 
Understand that the forms will need the name and phone of your vet (who will be called) and LaBelle Animal Control will call your Animal Control to make sure you are not in trouble with them. If everything is OK, LaBelle Animal Control will call you and set up an adoption appointment.
 
We are running out of time, so please act quickly. The deadline of December 8 is no longer in effect. An agreement to extend it to December 18 will be signed on Monday December 7.
 
HOWEVER, ONCE ANIMAL CONTROL GETS ALL THE FRIENDLY CATS ADOPTED AND ONLY FERALS REMAIN, ANIMAL CONTROL MAY ELECT TO CLOSE EARLIER THAN THE DECEMBER 18 (NEW) DEADLINE. IF/WHEN THEY DECIDE TO CLOSE THEY WILL EUTHANIZE ANY REMAINING CATS BECAUSE THEY ARE NOT IN A POSITION TO PROVIDE LONG TERM CARE.
 
LaBelle Animal Control has been doing a good job of getting the cats adopted and is eager to help.
 
The remaining FRIENDLY cats are mostly black or black & white. Rescue adoption groups don’t like to take these cats because they are so hard to get adopted. Yet, it is my belief that they are more lovable than any other cats with different colors. Why? I don’t know. What I do know is that many of the black or black & white cats are lovers – many were at my home before I brought them to the sanctuary over a year ago. Please, adopt these babies.
 
The remaining ferals: These are cats that will not make good pets – they don’t like humans. But, they can be given a home and can live out their lives. If you or someone you know can build them an outdoor  fully enclosed habitat that meets local Animal Control and Building and Zoning rules, please save their lives by taking and caring for them. The enclosure allows you to catch a sick cat (you can’t when they are free roaming), and allows you to catch them when they need a current rabies shot. Without an enclosure, your Animal Control people won’t approve you (they don’t want free roaming cats in their county).
 
Hendry County (and possibly other counties) allows an individual (not a corporation) to own as many cats and dogs as they want so long as there are no complaints and the animals are well cared for. Rescue adoption groups don’t want ferals because they can’t get them adopted (and can’t handle them very well while in their possession).
 
If you are thinking of taking ferals, please check with your Animal Control first and see how many cats you can own. If the number is limited, follow their rules and only adopt the maximum allowed.
 
The only other option is to take feral(s) into your home where it can be difficult to catch or treat them. It is unlikely that you will ever be able to hold them and get them to purr. Yes, some will, but it is a small percentage – maybe 5 out of 100 ferals.
 
I will be sending out a newsletter that will explain what happened in the next few weeks. I know I said I would send it out earlier, but everything is still under investigation and I am limited in what/when I can say anything. When this is over, I’ll send it.
 
In the meantime, I’m doing everything I can to get as many of the sanctuary cats re-homed or adopted. Please help.
 
Thank you.
(Posted by Maury, formerly of the 10th Life Sanctuary)

December, 2009 – TWO MEN AND A TRUCK® Operations Manager

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For immediate release                           Contact: Joel Dowley

December 7, 2009                            4439 Westroads Dr. West Palm Beach, FL 33407                                                                                 Phone: 561-845-7373 or 561-248-2475

                                                            Email: [email protected]

 

                             

NEW OPERATIONS MANAGER NAMED

              

 (West Palm Beach, FL) TWO MEN AND A TRUCK® West Palm Beach has named James L. Bledsoe, Jr. its new Operations Manager.  Before moving to Palm Beach County Bledsoe spent more than 6 years as Operations Manager at the TWO MEN AND A TRUCK® location in Cincinnati, Ohio.

 

  In announcing the appointment, Janelle and Joel Dowley, co-owners of the West Palm Beach TWO MEN AND A TRUCK® franchise, stated, “Jim’s experience in using great customer service and goal-oriented leadership to grow the franchise in Ohio fits in well with our operation here in Palm Beach County.”

TWO MEN AND A TRUCK 

 

TWO MEN AND A TRUCK® is the USA’s first and largest local moving franchise company with locations in 32 states, including 21 locations in Florida.  For more information log on to www.twomenandatruckwestpalmbeach.com.

December, 2009 – Holiday Cocktail Recipes

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Festive Holiday Drink Recipes

Submitted by Lindsay Hull

 

The holidays are a great time of year to add a festive punch bowl or cocktails to your celebration! Seasonal recipes highlights include:

 

·         Festive ingredients like cinnamon, peppermint and cranberry

·         Hot recipes for dessert or fireside sipping

·         Add color to the table or bar with signature red and green hues

·         Seasonal garnishes like cinnamon sticks and fresh berries

·         Original holiday punch recipe ideal for serving large groups

 

Here are a few recipes for drinks to give your holidays a little flair.

 

 

Midori Merry Berry Bowl (Created by Victoria D’Amato Moran)

1 oz Midori Melon Liqueur

1/2  oz Flor de Cana Rum Platino

½ oz Pear Liqueur

1 oz Pear Juice

1 oz White Cranberry

*This recipe makes 1 serving

To make a punch Bowl: multiply this recipe by 8.  Add the liquids, then add cranberries, pear slices, pierced with cloves, 2 cinnamon sticks and winter melon balls. May also add Champagne, Prosecco or Sparkling water.

Midori Merry Berry Bowl
Midori Merry Berry Bowl

 

 

 

 Midori Peppermint Kiss (Created by Victoria D’Amato Moran)

1 oz Midori Melon Liqueur

1 oz Skyy Vodka

3 oz Pineapple juice

¼ oz fresh lemon juice

¼ oz Peppermint Schnapps

6 Basil Leaves, gently torn in half, ( to release oils)

In a chilled shaker glass, add all the above ingredients.  Add ice, shake for 15 seconds, strain into a Collins glass.  Garnish with a basil leaf and one raspberry sitting in front of basil in glass.

 

Peppermint Kiss
Peppermint Kiss

 

 

 

 

Tully-Tini (Created by Tullamore Dew Irish Whiskey)

1.5 oz of Tullamore Dew Irish Whiskey

.5 oz of Sour Apple

3 oz of Cranberry

Shaken and served in a martini glass

 

Tully-tini
Tully-tini

 

 

 

 

Tullamore Toddy (hot) (Created by Tullamore Dew Irish Whiskey)

1 cup brown sugar

1 cup water

3 pieces Cardamon

2 pieces Anise

1 tablespoon Allspice

1 very small Vanilla Stick (or half a large one)

Tullamore Toddy
Tullamore Toddy

 

Heat brown sugar and water to a simmer, add spices. When adding vanilla pod, cut down the middle and scrape out the insides into the pot.  When this “Toddy Mix” is done, mix 1 ½ oz of it with 1 ½ oz of Tullamore Dew Irish Whiskey.  Garnish with a lemon peel, possibly flamed or cinnamon stick.

December, 2009 – Playwright Theresa Rebeck

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Playwright Theresa Rebeck

by Marla E. Schwartz

The New Theatre in Coral Gables {a Miami suburb} is a place where living playwrights can have their work produced in exceptional ways. 

Theresa Rebeck is one of these playwrights to have her

Playwright Theresa Rebeck
Playwright Theresa Rebeck

extraordinary work produced by this company.  The production of her play, Mauritius, about two half-sisters vying for the rights to a recently inherited and extremely valuable stamp collection, premiered not only to sold out houses last season, but was so successful that the run was extended.  People were literally staying in the lobby afterwards discussing this enthralling play.  To say that Rebeck has lots of fans in Miami is putting it lightly – they adore this woman!  It’s the incompatible relationship between the sisters in Mauritius who inadvertently meet up with a couple of con artists ensnaring them in their own web of deception, along with a fascinating ending, that has caused all the fuss.  It’s a story that keeps you thinking and on your toes the entire time.

 

If you haven’t seen a production of Mauritius yet – make sure that you see it somewhere, anywhere … as it’s as perfect as a play can get, written by an absolute genius.  A kind woman who would blush at being called a genius, but there’s no doubt about it – she’s an American gem!Rebeck’s plays have been produced all over the world.  Her play, Omnium Gatherum, co-written with Alexandra Gersten-Vassilaros, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2003.  The Understudy recently opened in New York at the Roundabout Theater.  It stars Justin Kirk (Uncle Andy, Weeds), Mark-Paul Gosselar, (Zack Morris, Saved by the Bell) and Julie White (Mitzi Huntley, Six Feet Under).

 

Michaela Cronan in Mauritius
Michaela Cronan in Mauritius

 

A native of Cincinnati, OH, and a graduate of Catholic University, she has an MFA in Playwriting and a PhD. in Victorian Melodrama, both from Brandeis University and lives in Brooklyn with her husband Jess Lynn and two children, Cooper and Cleo.  She has written for numerous television shows, such as: L.A. Law and Third Watch and has been a writer/producer for shows such as Law and Order: Criminal Intent and NYPD Blue.  For more information on all of her work and numerous awards, go to:  http://www.theresarebeck.com/.

 

Rebeck has been kind enough to answer a few questions about her work:

MES. Where did you come up with the idea for writing Mauritius?

 

TR. I had been interested in writing a play about a valuable object for several years—I actually wrote a few pages about a valuable bottle of wine at one point–and then I found some information about those stamps when I was just poking around some websites. I became really fascinated by them and continued to do some research. I loved the fact that those stamps were so small and beautiful and historic and yet so frail. It seemed quite mysterious to me. The play was first produced up in Boston, at the Huntington Theater, directed by the wonderful Rebecca Taichman. When it was a success there, I was invited by Manhattan Theater Club to bring it to their Broadway stage. After that it went into publication, with Samuel French, who handles the booking of further productions. I don’t know specifically how it came to Miami; {but} I’m glad to hear it was successful for them.

 

MES. Mauritius was your Broadway debut – how did your friends and family in your hometown react?

 

TR. My friends in Cincinnati were excited and a most of my family came to see it. They live very different lives. Sometimes I think they don’t really know what to make of me.

 

MES. Can you tell me if you have a specific writing schedule?

 

TR. Most people are impressed by the fact that I’m “prolific” but honestly I am not terribly interested in a lot of other things. So my “schedule” is that I write a lot.

 

MES. Do you have a particular writing style?

 

TR. Certainly. My work tends to fall in the area of heightened realism, I think. I write stories, with characters, which reveal themselves through action and dialogue. I believe in musical language and I’m not terribly interested in deconstructing the universe, at least not at this time.

 

MES. When did you first become interested in writing plays?

 

TR. I started writing plays in high school and college but there was no real container for it–there were no classes, where I was from; no one saying ‘let’s see what you have this week.’ it wasn’t until I got to graduate school that I started to get serious about it.

 

MES. Is it true that you got your first experience as a produced playwright while a graduate student at Brandeis University? If so, what was this experience like for you?

 

TR. Yes, I had plays done at Brandeis and also a couple of plays were done in Boston, at a little theater called Playwrights Platform. It really was a playwrights’ collective–we all chipped in and rented a space and produced ourselves, with actors who were friends. It was fantastic, frankly.

 

MES. Do you have any role models?

 

TR. I really admire Edward Albee for the way he survived a long period when he was not welcome in New York. I think he is edgy and interesting.  I like David Ives for the way he lives a complicated life as a writer and thinker. Marsha Norman and John Weidman are wonderful theater artists who have provided enormous psychological support to other artists, including me.  On the other side of the question allow me to say there are plenty of people who have been discouraging to me in ways that were painful. I think all but a few artists must have those people in their lives.

 

MES. Do you have any specific playwrights – those considered living legends, which you admire?

 

TR. I’m a little perplexed by the ‘living legend’ tag. Certainly I think Albee has earned it and Caryl Churchill as well.  I think the jury is still out on the rest of us.

 

MES. Congratulations on your position on the Board of the Dramatists Guild, Inc. as Treasurer. When did you first become involved with this organization?

 

TR. I became a member of the Dramatists Guild when I was in graduate school, twenty years ago. It is a superb organization and I think it does a tremendous job helping playwrights at all levels. I urge everyone who is interested in writing for the theater to join.

 

MES. Do you have any advice for young people who are just beginning to follow their dreams of becoming a playwright?

 

TR. Mostly I tell young writers that they should learn the basics–things like how to write character, how to achieve forward motion through action, listen for the music in your language, try to keep your stakes high. Also, I think everybody should learn how to FINISH.  So many writers get caught up in process and can’t finish a draft. You really have to learn how to get through a draft and rewrite it. So my advice is technical, yes: learn how to write. There are a lot of forces at work in the corporate side of things now, which muddy the waters.  A playwright is a singular voice – and necessary as such.

 

MES. When was the first time someone asked you for an autograph and how did it make you feel?

 

TR. I always find it a bit overwhelming to be asked for my autograph. I can’t imagine why anyone finds me interesting enough to want it. I particularly like those people who come up to me after plays and ask me to sign their programs. There are so many people who are really passionate about the theater and collecting memorabilia. I love those people.

 

MES.  Do you know that you’re on Wikipedia? Have you had a chance to look at it and make sure that the information is accurate?

 

TR. I did finally go on my Wikipedia page and straightened it out.  It had a lot of strange stuff on it, and I don’t know who wrote the first version of my page.  But it’s good now.

 

MES. The idea that playwriting is a dying art seems very sad to me – how do you respond to such an assertion?

 

TR. Well, I don’t think it’s dying but I do think that there are trends in the American theater right now that really aren’t helping very much. A lot of producers are running around saying things like “audiences don’t want new plays!” which I think is completely untrue. I think frankly audiences are pretty tired of revivals. And I think that they are hungering for a kind of contemporary American theater that speaks to their lives. So I think that producers need to start getting excited about new plays, and I also think that in general we all need to be working HARD to bring ticket prices down. I think that that is keeping people away. But my experience is when you lower ticket prices and do new plays, people show up in droves, and are interested in what theater offers them, which is so much richer and more immediate and frankly beautiful than most film and television. 

MES. You’ve worked with a great deal of celebrities, do any of these actors specifically ask you to write roles for them to portray?

 

TR. Let’s see. Obviously I worked a lot with Jimmy Smits and Dennis Franz when I was writing for NYPD Blue. I also did a movie a long time ago with Kate Hudson and James Marsden, although I am not sure they’d even remember me. In the theater I’ve worked with Kevin Bacon and Tony Goldwyn and Kate Burton. I did a couple of readings with Michael C. Hall, who plays Dexter on television, but we never made it to a full production. I did The Scene in New York with Tony Shaloub, Patricia Heaton, Anna Camp and Christopher Evan Welch. The person I really write for mostly is Julie White, who was in Grace Under Fire, Six Feet Under and currently she’s in the Transformer movies.

"The Scene" by Theresa Rebeck with Tony Shalhoub and Patricia Heaton
"The Scene" by Theresa Rebeck with Tony Shalhoub and Patricia Heaton

 

 

MES. Law & Order Criminal Intent is one of my favorite TV shows – can you explain your journey to becoming involved with this show?

 

TR. I wrote for Law and Order so long ago! I haven’t written much television since. Mostly I help out with pilots.  I might do it again someday, but right now my real interest is in theater and fiction.

 

MES. You co-wrote the play Omnium Gatherum with Gersten-Vassilaros, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2003 – congratulations, first of all. But I’m curious, how did this project come about and why did you decide to write the play with a collaborator? Can you describe how you worked together on this play – for example, did you have a set writing schedule? Where were you during the events of 9/11?

 

TR. I was at home, in Brooklyn, when the Towers were hit. I live very close to Flatbush Ave. We’re actually right across the river from Wall Street, about a mile further in. So we were out on the street, watching, when the towers came down. Shortly after that, the first people who had made it across the bridges marched straight up Flatbush. They were covered in ashes, and they were silent. It was really just devastating.

 

Those of us who were here in New York were obviously very overwhelmed by those events. I went to a meeting of playwrights shortly after the terrorist attack happened, and many people felt silenced by the event–they admitted that they didn’t know how to write, or what to write about, in a world that seemed so radically and tragically different, suddenly. I did not feel that way. But most of us at that time also didn’t want to be alone. It made sense to share the event of writing at that time. It really helped both Alex and I understand at least some of what had happened to us in this city. Basically we would come together, usually at Alex’s house and write and talk and share things we had been reading, and act out scenes with each other, and write them down. I was usually the one at the typewriter because I type faster than she does. Then we’d go off and work on our own, then come back together and try to fold the work into a coherent whole.

 

MES. Can you tell me about your first novel, Three Girls and Their Brother and why did you envision this story as a novel and not as a play or a movie?

 

TR. I’ve always loved and respected fiction–it was one of my life’s dreams, to write a novel. I finally had an idea that I thought would work well as fiction, and I decided to stop being a chicken about it, and just write it. Then it took me another year to find an agent and get it published. It is a very different world, fiction, as you might imagine. My second novel is coming out in May, and that was both more difficult and less difficult.

 

MES. What’s next?

 

TR. My second novel, Twelve Rooms With A View, comes out in England in November. Then it’s coming out here in the spring.

 

Theresa Rebeck, thank you very much for your time.

 

Ricky J. Martinez, Artistic Director and Eileen Suarez, Managing Director, of New Theatre are always on the search for new plays.  Check out its website, study it, and if you feel you have a new play that would match their production history, by all means submit it.  The website address is: www.new-theatre.org; play submission information is listed at the same web address.

 

Upcoming New Theatre productions include: In Development by David Caudle, October 8 – November 8, 2009; 26 Miles by Quiara Alegría Hudes, November 19 – December 20, 2009; The Hour of the Tiger by Sandra Riley, January 14 – February 14, 2010; Equus by Peter Shaffer, February 25 – March 28, 2010, and A New Play, TBA, April 8 – May 9, 2010.   For tickets and more information, call the box office at (305) 443-5909.

 

 

 

Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State, Marla E. Schwartz has been a professional journalist since her teenage years and is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine, and a freelance writer for CRAVINGS South Florida in Aventura, as well as Around Wellington Magazine and Lighthouse Point Magazine.  An avid photographer, her images have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, the Miami Herald, the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and the Palm Beach Post.  She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country.  Her short play, America’s Working? was originally read at First Stage in Los Angeles and in the same city produced at the Lone Star Ensemble.  It was then produced at Lynn University in Boca Raton, FL and then taken to an Off-Broadway playhouse by its producers Adam and Carrie Simpson.  Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist at the Actor’s Theater in Louisville, Kentucky.    Feel free to contact her at: [email protected].

 

 

December, 2009 – Motivation and Productivity: A Winning Combination

Motivation and Productivity: A Winning Combination

By Claudine Motto

Claudine Motto, Organization Expert
Claudine Motto, Organization Expert

 

 

You need the right amount of motivation and productivity to accomplish your goals. Motivation inspires you and makes work more enjoyable, and a focus on productivity forces you to step out from the everyday busyness once in a while to make sure you’re still moving toward your goals.   

Here are 5 things that if you do on a consistent basis, will help you stay motivated, productive, and in tune with the bigger picture.  

1.) Know yourself: “Money” is usually the first thing that comes to mind as a motivator for accomplishing goals.  Yet, a study conducted by Kenneth Kovach of George Mason University revealed that interesting work and appreciation of work rank higher than money on a scale of external motivators.   

Knowing what motivates you, then, can make what you use to inspire you really “speak” to you.  For example, if you crave recognition, thinking about people asking for your autograph might be more motivating for you than thinking only about the money you’ll make. 

Action step: whenever you set a new goal, make a list of other factors besides money that will make the goal uniquely “you” and give you the drive to pull through and accomplish it. 

2.) Appreciate yourself: When you work from home, you have no boss to say “thank you” and recognize you for a job well done – so you must do this for yourself.  The challenge with this is that we’re often our own worst critic and are quick to point out what we didn’t get done or didn’t accomplish.   

Action step: right now, and every day from now on, write down at least one thing you did right today – perhaps you made a difficult decision, got started on a project you have been putting off, or stuck to your self-imposed limits for hanging out on Facebook during the workday.   

If you tend to be hard on yourself, set aside a notebook just for keeping track of these every day accomplishments that are so easy to ignore. 

3.) Keep turning yourself on – motivation doesn’t just “happen” and it doesn’t just stick around by itself – you need something to aim for, and you need to remember why your goals matter to you – otherwise projects, deadlines, and busyness will cause you to lose direction. 

Action step: revisit your priorities daily, weekly, and monthly, so that you keep on track about where to exert your efforts (and why you want to in the first place).  If a priority is particularly challenging, or you’ve been avoiding it, write it in a place where you’ll be reminded of it every day – having it loom over your desk might be enough of a motivator to just get it done.

4.) Schedule a punch out time – if you often think to yourself “I’ve got all day to finish that project” or “I can get that done tonight” you’ve probably gotten too used to having no end to your workday.  This is especially true if you work from home – the fluidity is good, but it can also make it too easy to slack during the day and then difficult to pull away at night – which makes it harder to find time to recharge.

Action step: come up with an ideal of what you would like your work hours to be – if you work from home, perhaps you can split your day in two shifts to accommodate your personal preferences and or/home responsibilities.  Strive to stick to that ideal every day and schedule some fun, relaxing, or non-work related activities during the off hours.

 

5.) Attitude is everything – how you deal with problems when they come up has an effect on your motivation, and your productivity.  Negativity, fear, and insecurity can slow you down, sap your energy, and increase your stress level, because they force you to stay focused on problems.  Thinking positive and feeling confident, on the other hand, can lead to an attitude of “I can,” which keeps you focused on finding solutions to challenges. 

Action step: think of a problem that has been bothering you, and come up with at least one positive thing that can come from it – be open to the answers that come to you, even if you resist them.  If you can’t come up with any on your own, ask someone for help – they may be able to see something you can’t.  Then, from that more positive outlook, brainstorm some possible solutions to it, or things you can do to better deal with the situation. 

Give yourself permission to accept that motivation takes effort and persistence. It’s easier to drown in the busyness, to look down, rather than up.  So if you’re constantly working on keeping yourself motivated, you already have plenty to be proud of. 

2009 Claudine Motto, All Rights Reserved. 

Productivity Coach and Professional Organizer Claudine Motto helps home office geniuses, entrepreneurs, and independent professionals get organized and in control of their workload so they can reach their goals with less struggle and less stress. She offers one-on-one coaching and group training programs – please visit http://www.vistalnorte.com or call 561-641-9500 for more information, to sign up for her monthly newsletter, or to schedule a complimentary 20-minute consultation.