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Wycliffe Stiffs Stickball Players Open 2024-25 Season

By Mike May

L to R: Marty Ross and Harry Klaff, throwing “first ball” prior to the first game on Opening Day of stickball.

The 2024-25 stickball season is now underway in Wellington.  Tuesday, December 3, was officially Opening Day for the Wycliffe Stiffs Stickball League which began its 23rd season of competition.  The stickball games – always played on Tuesday afternoons – are held on the grounds of Village Park, located off Pierson Road, in Wellington. 

This year’s stickball season has five teams competing throughout the season.  They are the Brooklyn Bums, Atlantic Whalers, New York Egg Creams, Hoboken Zephyrs, and the Bronx Clippers.

On Opening Day, Brooklyn played Atlantic in the first game while the Clippers faced off against Hoboken in the ‘nightcap.’  In the first game, Brooklyn doubled-up Atlantic, 8-4 while the Hoboken Zephyrs and the Bronx Clippers played to a rare 1-1 tie. The NY Egg Creams had a bye.

In honor of past Opening Day traditions, a ceremonial ‘first pitch’ was each thrown by Marty Ross and Harry Klaff prior to the first game while Rob Martin, the general manager of the Wycliffe Golf & Country Club, tossed the ‘first pitch’ in the second game.

In this version of stickball in Wellington, there is only pitching, hitting, and fielding.

According to league director Arthur Spector, there is no base running involved, but just like in regular baseball, the games last nine innings and the team with the most runs wins. 

“If there’s a tie after nine innings, a two-inning extra-inning session is held,” said Spector.  “If the tie is not broken, the game remains a tie.”

Prior to the actual competitive games on Opening Day, all those in attendance gathered and removed their hats in order to sing “The Star Spangled Banner,” which is a weekly tradition.

The last regular season game for the Wycliffe Stiffs Stickball League will be played on March 18.  The post-season playoffs begin on March 25.  The league championship game is scheduled for April 1.  The annual all-star game will be contested on April 8. Ross and Klaff are the only two players who have played in the league since its inception in 2002.

Arty Peskin of the Brooklyn Bums
Brooklyn Bums captain Stan Baum and Atlantic Whalers captain Ross Ginsberg

Securing Our Future Initiative Hosts Second Summit to Address Barriers to Upward Economic Mobility

Palm Beach Gardens, FL – The Securing Our Future Initiative is proud to announce the 2nd Securing Our Future Economic Mobility Summit, scheduled to take place on Monday, December 9, 2024, at the Palm Beach Gardens Marriott, 4000 RCA Blvd., Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33410. 

Running from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m, the summit will bring together community leaders, policymakers, and stakeholders to develop innovative solutions that empower low-income families to overcome economic barriers. 

This year’s summit will feature eight dynamic breakout sessions focused on equipping community-based organizations and local networks to implement effective frameworks for upward mobility across Palm Beach County. These sessions will provide attendees with a collaborative environment to address critical topics including re-entry challenges, food security, health equity, childcare, transportation, and affordable housing, all integral to advancing economic mobility in the region.

“We are thrilled to partner with Securing Our Future for a second year,” said Kelly Powell, CEO of Community Partners of South Florida, opening reception sponsor and Securing Our Future Initiative (SOFI) partner. “This summit underscores our mission to build pathways for families to break the cycle of poverty and create economic stability that lasts for generations.”

Securing Our Future is a collaborative initiative in partnership with Community Partners of South Florida, Community Action Program, Pathways to Prosperity, Birth 22 United for Brighter Futures and the Citizens Advisory Committee on Health & Human Services (CAC/HHS). The initiative is focused on developing integrated systems of support to drive economic mobility for families in Palm Beach County who are working to overcome the challenges of poverty.

The 2024 Summit is aligned with Securing Our Future’s mission to help families with children ages 0-18 who are living below 200% of the federal poverty level, particularly focusing on those at or below 100% of the FPL who are able to work. This comprehensive approach recognizes the unique challenges that low-income families face when it comes to securing work or education, and the summit will spotlight strategies to address these barriers, from childcare to access to education and health services.

Breakout Sessions Topics Include:

  • Navigating the Challenges of Re-Entry to Promote Economic Mobility
  • Harnessing the Power of Food Systems for Economic Mobility
  • Paving the Way to Economic Independence
  • Advancing Health Equity Through Economic Mobility
  • Exploring Childcare Solutions to Advance Economic Mobility
  • Advancing Transportation for Economic Mobility
  • Enhancing Education for Employment in the Digital Age
  • A Collective Effort to Increase Access to Affordable Housing
  • Building Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Health and Human Services: Addressing Current Challenges and Exploring Future Opportunities

The summit will conclude with closing remarks by Dr. James Green, Director of the Palm Beach County Community Services Department.

For more information about the Securing Our Future Economic Mobility Summit and to register, please visit: http://www.securingourfuturepbc.org/economic-mobility-summit.htm 

Happy Holidays, December 2024

With Krista Martinelli, Editor

Annual Farm City Luncheon on Nov. 20

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Photos by Carol Porter

The Central Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce, the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Palm Beach County and the Western Palm Beach County Farm Bureau presented the annual Farm City Luncheon at the South Florida Fairgrounds, on November 20 from 11:15 to 1 pm.  The theme was Preserving our Farms; Growing for the Future. The presenting sponsor was Baptist Health. For more information about the Central Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce check out their website at https://cpbchamber.com/

AW in Pictures – December

Wycliffe Stiffs Stickball League Sponsors. Photo by Harry Klaff.
The first Annual Wellington Ruck March and Food Drive, which took place at Village Park on Nov. 10th. Photo by Krista Martinelli.
The Farm City Luncheon at the South Florida Fairgrounds. Photo by Carol Porter.
The November 2024 AroundWellington Networking Mixer. This networking group meets the 2nd Monday of each month at 5:30pm at Village Music in Wellington.

LinkedIn Workshop on Dec. 9th

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Learn from Expert Strategists!

SARAH BUTLER:  WALKING THE WORLD’S FAIRWAYS – WITH A GOLF BAG IN TOW

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By Mike May

Of all the many people I have met in golf during the last 50 years — which include golf pros, tournament playing professionals, superintendents, club presidents, fellow golf writers, and, of course, hundreds of amateur golfers – the one category of people in golf that stands out the most would be the professional golf caddie.  They come in all shapes and sizes….men and women…..young, middle-age, and older….and all nationalities.  And, with that introduction, my story begins…….

There’s an old saying that the keys to being a successful golf caddie are your ability ‘to show up, keep up, and shut up.’  In other words, you must be on time, be able to carry a 30-35 pound golf bag for 18 holes (or more), and know when to talk and when to be quiet.  It also helps to know a little bit about golf. 

One of those individuals with the unique job title of a professional golf caddie – and unique skill set — is Sarah Butler of suburban Minneapolis.  She is a Minnesota native as she grew up in Roseau, Minnesota.

Sarah Butler, working as a caddie on the LPGA Tour

Since June 2021, Butler has had a consistent presence on the LPGA Tour carrying the golf bag for a number of LPGA Tour players.

I have worked for Lindy Duncan, Cydney Clanton, Katherine Kirk, Sarah Jane Smith, Joy Chou, Kristy McPherson, Jenny Coleman, and Elizabeth Szokol,” said Butler, 40, who is now working for Australian golfer Sarah Kemp.

Butler has only worked one tournament for Szokol and it was a two-person team event at the LPGA’s Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational in July 2023 at the Midland Country Club in Midland, Michigan.  Szokol’s partner was Cheyenne Knight and the team of Szokol and Knight won the tournament.

Butler enjoyed that trip to the winner’s circle with Szokol and she’s looking forward to being there again, soon, alongside Kemp.

Prior to becoming a caddie, Butler was an aspiring golfer in ‘The Land of 10,000 Lakes.’

“I am a golfer…or I was a golfer! Ha!,” said Butler.  “I don’t play much anymore. I grew up in northern Minnesota, about 10 miles from the Canadian border. During my six years on the varsity team at Roseau High School, my team won the state title twice, finished second twice and fourth twice.  Individually, I placed in the top ten every year, including a fourth-place finish in the eighth grade and finally winning the individual Minnesota state championship as a senior. I was inducted into the Roseau High School Hall of Fame in 2015.”

After high school, Butler kept climbing up the golf ‘ladder.’

SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE – MARCH 03: Jenny Coleman of The United States and her caddie Sarah Butler look on from the thirteenth green during the First Round of the HSBC Women’s World Championship at Sentosa Golf Club on March 03, 2022 in Singapore. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

“I played college golf at the University of Minnesota and attempted to play professionally for four years,” added Butler, who graduated from Minnesota in 2006 with a Bachelor of Arts degree.  “I think, technically, my handicap is around a scratch although my game does not feel up to that level right now.”

Anybody’s handicap will suffer when you are a committed caddie — logging nearly nine miles a day walking on a golf course and carrying a golf bag holding clubs, golf balls, tees, golf gloves, rain gear, and various accessories.

“The bag gets heavier when it’s windy and rainy,” noted Butler.

When Butler realized that while she was a talented golfer, but not good enough to make it as a playing professional, that’s when ‘Plan B’ became a reality.  And, getting to ‘Plan B’ also included a lengthy stint as a college golf coach at Old Dominion University, Iowa State University and Colorado State University, all between 2014-2020. 

“I knew a couple of caddies and was interested in trying something new after college coaching for seven years,” recalled Butler.  “I asked a fellow caddie friend if she knew anyone looking for a caddie and she responded an hour later saying I had work for the next five weeks.”

And, the rest, as they say, is history.

Butler has survived in this very unique profession by being focused on collecting key details, on a daily basis.

“Being a professional is very important,” noted Butler.  “I get the course work done early in the week. I try to pay attention to everything going on around me during the rounds, whether that is club selection, golf ball reactions, or wind directions.  It’s all important to the decision-making process during the actual tournament.”

For Butler, a typical LPGA Tour day starts early and can often finish late.

“I typically wake up three hours before the tee time,” added Butler.  “I like to have some quiet time for myself before the day gets going. I like to have about 45 minutes at the golf course prior to meeting the player so, depending on the player, this could be two hours before the tee time or more.  After the round, typically, there’s a brief practice. If we play early, we will grab lunch and then practice for 20-30 minutes following the round. If we play late, what we do afterwards depends on daylight and what is in store for the next day. Most of the time, I call it a day after a late round to get ready for the next day.”

While out on the course with Sarah Kemp, Butler’s biggest contribution is providing mental and emotional support.

MIDLAND, MICHIGAN – JULY 22: (L-R) Elizabeth Szokol of the United States and her caddie Sarah Butler pose with Cheyenne Knight of the United States and her caddie during the final round of the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational at Midland Country Club on July 22, 2023 in Midland, Michigan. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)

“I tend to think I’m pretty calm and that’s one positive trait for any caddie to have — calmness in stressful situations,” added Butler.  “Kempy (Sarah Kemp) has been on Tour for a long time so she’s been in many different situations, but I want to be able to support her in good and hard moments.”

In many respects, being a caddie is a perfect job for Butler since her experiences as a child were so sports-centric.

“I loved playing all sports growing up, especially baseball,” said Butler.  “We played football or baseball every day during recess, depending on the time of year. I also enjoyed playing basketball, but tore my ACL my freshman year of high school and stuck to golf after that.”

Since the LPGA Tour conducts events throughout the U.S., in western Europe, in Canada, and throughout Asia, Butler has been to more countries than many international diplomats.  She, of course, has a list of her favorite golf destinations in the U.S.

“A few of my favorites are Wilshire CC in Los Angeles; Upper Montclair CC in New Jersey; Congressional CC in Bethesda, Maryland; Lancaster CC in Pennsylvania; and, of course, the Pebble Beach Golf Links in California,” confirmed Butler, who attended the AIG Women’s (British) Open at the Old Course at St. Andrews in Scotland this past August.

Two tournaments that change venues every year are the ones which Butler doesn’t want to miss.

“The Canadian Open and the U.S. Open are the two best events for caddies,” added Butler. “They treat us really well. There are many options for recovery including a massage therapist.”

When Butler is not working as a caddie at a golf tournament, she likes to relax and ‘recharge her batteries’ at home.

“In my time away from the Tour, I like to recover!” said Butler.  “When I’m home during an off week, I like to caddie at a course called Spring Hill in Minnesota. It’s walking-only and I carry two bags so it’s a great workout. If I’m not on the course, I’m probably watching sports.”

Wherever Butler goes in golf, she knows that the keys to surviving and thriving on the golf course as a caddie remain having the ability ‘to show up, keep up, and shut up.’  And, clearly, she has mastered all three skill sets.

Health is a Spectrum

By Lillian Khanna

November 1st kicked off the launch of a brand new summit here in Palm Beach County, Eudēmonia, a 3-day program that exists to help individuals create their own personal approaches to health and wellness by acknowledging the complexities of that pursuit and equipping attendees with the science-based tools needed to create a lifestyle best fit for them.

Eudēmonia’s curators had understood that “we exist in a complex, interdependent web of our individual behavior, relationships, and our environment” and it was evident by the heavy hitting lineup of speakers ranging from functional medicine specialists to renowned yoga instructors to neuroscientists.

Event headliner, Andrew Huberman Ph.D., is a decorated neuroscientist tenured professor in the department of neurobiology, and by courtesy, psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford School of Medicine. He has made numerous significant contributions to the fields of brain development, brain function and neural plasticity, which earned him the titles of McKnight Foundation and Pew Foundation Fellow and the Cogan Award, given to the scientist making the most significant discoveries in the study of vision, in 2017.

In case you missed Huberman’s incredibly palatable and well-rounded rundown on all things health and wellness, here are the new facts of science:

Look At Lifestyle Changes Through Three Lenses:

  1. Autonomic System Mastery:
  2. Optimize your sleep/wake cycle to enhance motivation.
  3. Ideal decision-making and cognitive function occur between 6-10 am.
  4. Circadian Biology:
  5. Support your circadian rhythm with exposure to natural light and regular exercise.
  6. Gut Health:
  7. A healthy gut is crucial for overall well-being. There is a direct relationship between your brain and your gut through your vagus nerve

Motivation Insights:

  • Motivation is a decision, not just a feeling.
  • Fear-based motivation is quick but unsustainable.
  • Love-based motivation is generative and long-lasting.

Exercise Recommendations:

  • Implement cardiovascular HIIT 2-3 times a week.
  • Include 3 short sprints per week (10-30 seconds each, 10 cycles total).
  • Combining with resistance training builds a better capacity for learning and improves mitochondrial function

Mind and Body Techniques:

  • Wim Hof Breathing:
    • Scientifically backed for enhancing well-being.
  • Maintaining Cognition as You Age (Super Agers):
    • Physical and mental challenges (doing things that take real motivation for you to do) help maintain or even grow the anterior mid cingulate cortex as you age
    • Engage in new activities annually, especially those that really challenge you to enjoy doing

Energy and Motivation:

  • Movement generates energy—don’t wait for it.
  • Manage dopamine levels primarily through sleep, gut health, caffeine (within reason)
  • Understand dopamine’s wave-like nature and manage the inevitable post-high dip. Think of dopamine circuitry as a wave pool, it’s depletable but renewable
  • Increased dopamine is always followed by a trough of domaine which you need to ride out
    • When you cannot ride it out, that is the behavioral sign of addiction.

Setting Stakes and Standards:

  • Setting higher stakes for yourself to engage more neurons but avoid setting them too high to prevent paralysis of your motor neurons.
  • You choke when you fixate on high rewards because you strain your nervous system to a point of analysis paralysis.
  • Set stakes high enough that it’s motivating but not so much that it’s paralyzing. When you set high standards (not goals) and you set them too high, you can’t even engage the motor neurons needed to complete the task.
  • Reduce the stakes, then increase your standards.
  • Consider trading 1-2 hours of sleep per week for exercise if necessary.

Supplement Suggestions:

  • If you had to take supplements, let these be the trifecta
    • Omega-3 (1.5g EPA per day)
    • Creatine (5-10g per day)
    • Probiotic

Light Management:

  • Dim lights at night and expose yourself to bright blue/yellow light in the morning.

Additional Insights:

  • Pregnancy induces brain changes in women, with lasting plasticity benefits.
  • Gut health can be prioritized by consuming fiber and 1-4 servings of low sugar fermented foods a day

Health is a spectrum. Implement what benefits you and avoid stress-inducing practices. The ideal lifestyle is the attainable one you have set for yourself that you wake up excited to implement every day.

Unsung Heroes: How The American Association of Caregiving Youth Is Supporting Families in Crisis

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By Khanna Connections 

While many American children are off playing video games and living carefree lives, there are millions of American children shouldering extraordinary responsibilities within their households. Youth caregivers—children and adolescents providing essential care for family members with chronic illnesses, disabilities, or age-related conditions—represent a critical yet rarely acknowledged demographic facing profound challenges. American Association of Caregiving Youth (AACY) is an organization championing these youths who find themselves in the challenging situation of caring for ill, injured, elderly or disabled family members. 

The Prevalence of Youth Caregiving

Research from the American Association of Caregiving Youth (AACY) reveals staggering statistics. An estimated 5.4 million children aged 18 and under care for a loved one who is sick or disabled according to aacy.org.

Jacob Gutierrez is an example of a young American caring for loved ones at home.  Gutierrez revealed in a segment with NBC’s Maria Shriver on TODAY that he cares for his grandmother who has dementia and his mother who is battling multiple sclerosis. Before and after school, the teen cooks for them and makes sure they have their medication and anything else they might need. “Every day when I’m in school I call at least two times per day making sure that everyone’s alright,” Gutierrez said. “There can be a lot of stress put on me.”

Like  Gutierrez, many of these young individuals extend far beyond typical household assistance, delivering complex medical care, emotional support, and critical daily help to parents, grandparents, and siblings with serious health conditions.

Caregiving youth demographics span diverse socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds. Families facing economic constraints, limited healthcare resources, and chronic health conditions experience this phenomenon most acutely.

Psychological and Academic Consequences

Responsibilities thrust upon young shoulders exact significant developmental tolls. Caregiving youth frequently encounter:

  • Academic Interference: Balancing familial medical needs with educational requirements creates increased absenteeism and reduced study opportunities.
  • Emotional Strain: Continuous exposure to family health crises precipitates potential anxiety, depression, and accelerated emotional maturation.
  • Social Development Limitations: Traditional childhood experiences diminish as caregiving responsibilities consume personal time and energy.
  • Physical Health Risks: Emotional and physical demands generate chronic stress and potential long-term health consequences.

AACY: Targeted Support Strategies

Recognizing these complex challenges, AACY provides comprehensive support through targeted programs such as identifying youth caregivers via school and community partnerships, delivering academic intervention and support mechanisms, constructing mental health resources and peer support networks, developing personalized care plans balancing familial responsibilities with individual development and advocating for policy changes acknowledging youth caregivers’ unique circumstances.

Reimagining Community Support

Understanding youth caregiving demands holistic approaches from education systems, healthcare providers, social services, and community organizations. Viewing these young individuals as resilient family contributors—rather than burdens—represents a critical perspective shift.

Societal recognition transforms when we comprehend the profound emotional intelligence, compassion, and strength demonstrated by children supporting their families through medical challenges. These remarkable young people deserve comprehensive support, systemic understanding, and collective appreciation for their extraordinary contributions.

“AACY is the only organization in the country dedicated solely to addressing caregiving youth issues,” AACY.org states. “We champion youth who care for chronically ill, injured, elderly, or disabled family members, support their role as caregivers, safeguard, and celebrate their success in school and life.”

Standing Rib Roast

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Ingredients

Yield: 8 to 12 servings

  • 1(4 rib) standing rib roast, 7 to 8 pounds
  • 1 tablespoon coarse kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1 cup minced herbs (optional)
  • 4 garlic cloves, mashed to a paste (optional)
  • 2 teaspoons smoked paprika (optional)
  • Extra-virgin olive oil, as needed (optional)
  1. Step 1

Pat meat all over with paper towels, then season it all over with salt and pepper. If you want to make a smoky garlic-herb paste, combine herbs, garlic, smoked paprika and just enough olive oil to make a paste. Rub all over meat. Let meat come to room temperature for 2 to 3 hours depending upon how cold it was to begin with.

  1. Step 2

Heat oven to 450 degrees. Place meat bone-side down in a roasting pan or on a rimmed sheet pan. Roast for 20 minutes, then turn heat to 350 degrees and continue to roast until the meat registers 115 degrees on an instant-read thermometer for rare, 125 for medium rare (it will continue to cook after you pull it out of the oven). Timing depends on your oven, your pan and the shape of your roast, so start checking after the meat has been in the oven for an hour, but it could take 1½ hours or even slightly longer.

  1. Step 3

Let meat rest at room temperature for 20 minutes before carving.