ACTIVITIES: A FREE two-day event featuring the latest home products & services in the comfort of one of the areas finest shopping malls.In addition, meet your local doctors and health care professionals who will be on hand to share their knowledge, with some offering free medical & health screenings. There will also be some fun for the kids with face-painting, character appearances and interactive activities.
Finding balance is difficult when the demands on our time never stop. We need to give our attention to our businesses or careers, to our relationships and loved ones, and somewhere in between, to ourselves.
When we lack the proper attention in any one of those areas, we feel like something’s missing, like we’re spinning our wheels.But “proper” attention means something different to each individual – here are 7 steps to help you define what true balance means for you, and how to work towards it:
1. Define the areas in your life that feel out of balance
Brainstorm all the “should’s” that have been swimming around in your head.Don’t censor yourself – write down everything you feel you’ve been neglecting.And be honest – if you don’t want to write something down it’s a good sign you need to deal with it sooner rather than later.
2. Scrutinize the list for things you don’t really want to be doing
Put a star next to any items you don’t really want to do, but feel like you should do out of guilt, or pressure.What do you need to do to get that item off your list?
If you’re saying “yes” to avoid what you find uncomfortable, like delegating, asking for help (or just saying “no”) put your energy into learning how to do those things – these are skills that will help you honor your wants and needs long-term.
3. Scrutinize the list for your real wants
Now take a look at the things you’ve been neglecting that you do want to do, and group them together under broader categories.For example, getting your tax receipts system in order and looking into life insurance could go under “Finances,”losing 20 pounds and making an appointment to have a dental checkup could go under “Health.” And starting a social media campaign and doing more speaking engagements could go under “Work.”
Aim for as few categories as possible that represent a balanced life to you – fewer categories will be easier to manage and to work into your life.
4. Define just one change
Take only your top 3-5 categories to work on – the reality is that you won’t have time to do everything you want to do, so it is key to prioritize, be realistic, and forgive yourself for not being Superman or Superwoman.
Then, define ONE major change you can make in each of those areas that would get you closer to what you would like.And make sure to make the changes/goals measurable – so avoid words like “more” or “less” – define how much more, how much less, and how often.
If the change is difficult, or overwhelming, then get help – whatever it takes to move FORWARD.
6. You need more than time to make changes
In the book “The Power of Full Engagement” (by Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz) the authors’ core message is that you need to balance work and stress with recovery – the harder the work and the stress, the harder your body and mind need to recover to renew the energy.And it makes sense – energy is power – it affects everything.
So the next time you find yourself thinking that you need to push through a few more hours, push yourself to stop, and renew. And take care of your energy with proper nutrition and sleep.
7. Avoid all or nothing thinking
This type of thinking is rooted in perfectionism – if you can’t work out for a full hour, or 4 times a week, you don’t work out at all. Or if you can’t organize your whole office or closet in one day, you don’t start at all.
Start doing less and work on being OK with that – go to the gym for an intense 10 minutes if that’s all you can really fit in that week; organize just your supplies, or your jeans.
That doesn’t mean you don’t consistently strive to meet the goals you set, but be kind with yourself when you don’t.
Balancing all the demands of life is an imperfect process that takes work and never truly “ends.” But when you define balance by your rules, you set the stage for true productivity and fulfillment.
Productivity Coach and Professional Organizer Claudine Motto helps home office geniuses, entrepreneurs, and independent professionals get organized 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.
This Halloween, award-winning mixologist Victoria D’Amato-Moran has created three specialty recipes to toast the night. Inspired by Midori’s ghoulishly green coloring, these haunting treats are as festive as they are delicious.
Serve up a harvest themed punch by mixing the seasonal flavors of cranberry and apple juice with Midori and rum. Or opt for sophisticated cocktail recipes like the Midori Green Ghoul and Midori Spider’s Kiss – a festive, vibrant addition to any bar or Halloween table setting.
Midori Halloween Harvest
1 part Midori Melon Liqueur
1 part Dark Rum
1 part Light Rum
2 part White Cranberry Juice
1 part Unfiltered Apple Juice
1 part Simple Syrup
Juice of one lemon
*For a Punch Bowl (32 ounces) use this recipe X’s 8. Add the liquid ingredients and mix well. Top with apple slices, blueberries, and melon balls.
Or mix Midori mixed with ginger liqueur in a glass decorated with black licorice for a touch of style and sophistication.
Midori Green Ghoul
1 part Midori Melon Liqueur
½ part Strega Liqueur or Yellow Chartreuss
½ part Canton Ginger liqueur
Ginger Beer or Ginger Ale
Add first 3 ingredients into a shaker glass, add ice, shake, strain over ice in a collins glass. Line the inside of the glass with strands of black licorice. Pour in contents of shaker and fill with ginger beer or ginger ale.
Or serve up a tasty web chocolate, grenadine, vodka and Midori with the Midori Spider’s Kiss cocktail.
Midori’s Spider’s Kiss
1 part Midori Melon Liqueur
1 part SKYY Vodka
Juice from ½ Lemon
Chocolate syrup
Grenadine
With chocolate syrup, draw a web on the inside of the martini glass. Chill glass. Shake Midori, SKYY and lemon juice with ice and strain into martini glass. Drizzle grenadine down the side for a blood effect.
About Victoria
Victoria D’Amato Moran, San Francisco native, started in the restaurant business in 1984, working under Jeremiah Tower, at his 4-star restaurant, Stars.
The daughter of a north beach bartender, and directly related to the historic fishing industry at the Fisherman’s Warf, D’Amato-Moran’s family was always cooking, making wine, grappa’s and vinegar, so naturally, she grew up in the kitchen. Finding herself managing a bar for her cousin in North Beach, in 2000, she knew bartending and inventing new drinks would be her art.
When D’Amato-Moran entered and won her first drink competition in 2003, she was hooked. Eight successful competitions later, she continues to thrive on visualizing and creating delicious and beautiful drinks. D’Amato-Moran has been recognized for her work in Santé Magazine, Wine Enthusiast, San Francisco Magazine, and is a bi-monthly cocktail contributor to Un Buona Salute Italian Magazine.
On Thursday, September 24, from 7:30-8:45 AM at HSBC Bank, which is just south of Southern, 900 St Rd 7, join other professionals for a great Networking Opportunity. Fran Tarkenton via speaker phone does a conference call to help small business owners increase their profits and protect their business. No charge! Coffee and Donuts. Bring lots of cards, flyers, coupons etc.
For more information about this event, please contact:
Palm Beach Harvest – Feeding the Hungry since 1998
By Jeri Wise
It seems that we are in the worst of times. It’s not news that our economy is not good. Thousands of homes are being foreclosed and people are losing jobs.It could be your neighbor, one you don’t even know about, who is going without food. Palm Beach Harvest has been feeding hungry people 7 days a week, 365 days a year since 1998, but lately, the need has become frightening.
Thousands of pounds of perfectly good food are thrown away daily (millions yearly) while children and adults go hungry. Here in Palm Beach County, more and more of the population are living at or below the poverty line. Palm Beach Harvest is a non-profit, community-based organization of volunteers who collect and transport surplus food to non-profit distribution centers throughout Palm Beach County. Palm Beach Harvest utilizes volunteers who donate their time to rescuing three million pounds of food per year. At locations where adults and children find food and shelter, Palm Beach Harvest provides nutritious hot meals to those who come to their doors.
Deborah Morgan, Palm Beach Harvest’s Executive Director, offers her insights: “Back in 1998, I decided that something had to be done to help the countless children and adults who go without food right here in our own back yard. Palm Beach Harvest gave me that opportunity. Back then, Palm Beach Harvest was a grass-roots, all-volunteer organization, a chapter of USA Harvest. Since then both our donor base and the number of hungry people have grown tremendously, and we get large-scale donations that must be transported and refrigerated. We need funding for trucks, drivers, gas and refrigerated storage.”
October is National Cookie Month!
To celebrate, Palm Beach Harvest is partnering with Zen Rabbit Baking Company to share
The Gratitude Cookie™. A deliciously addictive cross between a butter and a sugar cookie, this treat is so named because you’re encouraged to think about something you are grateful for as you’re eating. Order for yourself or as thoughtful gifts for friends or clients, and Zen Rabbit donates 50% of the purchase price to Palm Beach Harvest. Visit www.PalmBeachHarvest.org for details.
We Can Help Each Other!
Palm Beach Harvest is partnering with organizations who are willing to share their profits with us while offering you some great deals! On our website,
www.PalmBeachHarvest.org, you’ll find links to extend your own food and fuel costs while helping Palm Beach Harvest Meet the Need to Feed.
Sign up to receive grocery and gas savings certificates. Spend $100 per month on gas or groceries and receive a Visa gift card worth $25 each month. Over 20 months, you get $500! Visit PalmBeachHarvest.org for details.
Help us help others by helping yourself! It’s the ultimate win-win situation. Visitwww.PalmBeachHarvest.org today and find out how.
Jeri Wise is a freelance writer and desktop publisher. She invites you visit http://www.palmbeachharvest.org/ to learn more about Palm Beach Harvest’s mission to feed the hungry in our community 365 days a year. Working together, we can reduce, even eliminate hunger locally. Yes, we can!
Kids Against Hunger – PBC at Faith Farm Ministries Fellowship Hall
Stop in and experience how you can be a part of aKids Against Hunger(Palm Beach County) packaging event. This is a hands-on opportunity. You can measure the ingredients, fill and seal your own bag of a special-formula package that feeds 6 people for just .25 cents a meal.
Boynton Beach, Fl., Saturday, September 26th 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Kids Against Hunger-PBC will be set up in the Fellowship Hallat Faith Farm Ministrieson State Rd. 7, 1/4 mile north of Boynton Beach Blvd., to demonstrate how you can feed starving families locally and around the world.
Kids Against Hunger-PBC is a local satellite of the KAH international organization. With the help of volunteers and sponsors, we package a special-formula food that includes essential vitamins, minerals, protein & dehydrated vegetables to nourish starving families locally and globally.
We have set a goal to package 30,000 meals each month and with the help of more volunteers and sponsors, this is a reachable goal. We are interested in sending a large portion of the food to Haiti, India, Kenya, Bulgaria, Israel and Afghanistan. It’s also possible for you to choose a different destination for the food that you sponsor and package with your group, club, church, synagogue, or organization. Come to this event and see this hands-on local opportunity demonstrated. Everyone can make a difference!
Since the grand opening of the KAH satellite in Palm Beach County in January of 2008, we have packaged over 70,000 meals. A large portion of the meals went to Haiti. Check out the YouTube videos taken with the Founder of KAH, Richard Proudfit, while in Haiti.
Abruzzo Visits Wellington High School’s Young Democrats
Representative Joseph Abruzzo was the guest speaker at the first Wellington High School Young Democrats meeting of the school year on Wednesday, September 16th, 2009. The lecture was entitled “The Life of a Legislator.” The discussion was nonpartisan and open to all students and faculty.
Representative Abruzzo discussed the bills that he worked on during his first year as a legislator. In addition, he discussed the bills that he is currently working on.During the question and answer session, Representative Abruzzo clearly explained the difference between our state and federal government. The subject is normally taught during the senior year in American Government classes, but hearing about it from a state legislator gave the students a fresh perspective on the topic.
Victoria Davy, Vice-President of Programming, reads Representative Abruzzo's bio and introduces him to the club.
Evan Baumel, the founder of the club, stated, “I am doing everything I can to raise student political awareness and I am doing my best to keep our lectures nonpartisan and educational. I believe it is imperative for my peers to exercise their privilege to vote at the age of eighteen. If Representative Abruzzo’s visit influenced even one person to take that privilege seriously then our district will be so much the better for it.”
The officers of the club presented Representative Abruzzo with a “Certificate of Appreciation” for taking the time to speak at Wellington High School.
On the same day, the Wellington High School held its club fair on September 16th, 2009 during the student’s lunch hour. In this photo, Evan Baumel and Samuel Alba man the WHS Young Democrats Club booth as a new member signs up for the club.
Join the Wellington community and celebrate the UN International Day of Peace and the thousands of International Peace Day celebrations worldwide, each fostering the concepts of cultural understanding, religious diversity and the hope for a peaceful world.
Monday, Sept. 21, 2009 at 6:00pm at the Wellington Rotary Peace Park (Near the public library, corner of Royal Palm and Birkdale, just south of Elbridge Elementary School and off of Forest Hill Blvd.) Presented by the Wellington Rotary Club and the Village of Wellington.
Your Bosom Buddies II, Inc. Puts On a FREE Seminar
Natural Strategies to Reduce Cancer Risk
On Saturday, Sept. 26th, the Wellington-based group Your Bosom Buddies II will present a FREE Seminar in “Natural Strategies to Reduce Cancer Risk” at Wellington Regional Medical Center in the Conference Room from 9am to 1pm. Marketing coordinator of Your Bosom Buddies II Abbe Felton says, “It’s going to be a wonderful event, hopefully an annual event and we would like everyone to attend!”
Jill Schneider, Director of the Circle of Life holistic program
Viana Muller, PHD, Whole World Botanicals
As well as a few other talented speakers
The YBBII group is also happy to say that complimentary snacks will be provided by Whole Foods Market in Wellington.
It’s a FREE event and the public is invited to attend!
In support of the YBBII group, the Brighton store at the Mall at Wellington Green will be giving back $10 for every bracelet or badge holder purchased between September 25th – October 31st. THANKS to the community for your support of breast cancer awareness and direct support to breast cancer survivors in your contributions to Your Bosom Buddies II, Inc.
For more information about the event or about the group, contact Your Bosom Buddies at (561) 422-6034.
“PAWS FOR A BLESSING” – St. Michael Lutheran Church in Wellington will be holding a Blessing of the Animals on Sunday, October 4, 2009 at 2 pm. Being sponsored by Thrivent Financial for Lutherans. Everyone is welcome to attend. Bring your pet to be blessed either leashed or confined in a carrier.
“PAWS for a Blessing” is also a fundraiser for the Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League who will be on-site with their PetMobile for those who may wish to adopt a pet.
It is asked that everyone bring canned pet food for a donation to Peggy Adams. If you cannot attend but would like to donate, your donation can be dropped off at the church, 1925 Birkdale Drive, Wellington, Monday thru Thursday between 9 am and 12 Noon.
St. Michael Lutheran Church is located on the corner of Forest Hill Boulevard and Birkdale Drive in Wellington. For more information, call the church 561-793-4999 or Donna Tagg at 561-762-3185.