Harnessing the maximum potential of you, your children, your students and everyone else you love.

In this workshop Steve and his panel introduce you to new insight and provide simple progressive steps to harness the potential of this new generation.

This workshop includes resources and tools towards

• Understanding the underlying gifts
• Leveraging a diverse group of simple solutions
• Learning how to support your children and your students

Stephen T. Jones is a Consultant, Professional Networker, Unfacilitator and an Inspirational speaker. He is a master at helping people find their “Genius Spot’ (their true essence). Steve is continually finding himself as a bridge to the special gifts of the world. He and his unique network are looking to expand and partner with people and organizations in the 15 aforementioned areas of influence by contributing their unique gifts to joint endeavors that promote good in the world. Join us and use your gifts to inspire others in the areas Health and Wellness, Renewable Energy, Business (Profit and Non-Profit), Family, Technology, Humanity, Masterminding (Life Deals), Wild Life Conservation and Nature, Arts and Culture, Fun and Entertainment, Empowering Men Women and Children, Wealth, Education, Marketing and Mentoring. Inspired? To hire Steve or his team e-mail him at Steve@ASimpleGuideMD.com.

In this workshop Tony Lucer0 shares  new insight and strategies.

Workshop includes Tools and Resources

• Eating Healthy Strategies

• Attracting good health into your life today

• Giving your body what it needs

Tony’s true passion is assisting others reach their potential. He became fascinated with the mind about 15 years ago and began to study Hypnosis for improving his life. To find out more about http://www.mojohypno.com/

In this workshop Steve and his panel introduce you to new insight and strategies.

Workshop includes Tools and Resources

• Eating Healthy Strategies

• Attracting good health into your life today

• Giving your body what it needs

Stephen T. Jones is a Consultant, Professional Networker, Unfacilitator and an Inspirational speaker. He is a master at helping people find their “Genius Spot’ (their true essence). Steve is continually finding himself as a bridge to the special gifts of the world. He and his unique network are looking to expand and partner with people and organizations in the 15 aforementioned areas of influence by contributing their unique gifts to joint endeavors that promote good in the world. Join us and use your gifts to inspire others in the areas Health and Wellness, Renewable Energy, Business (Profit and Non-Profit), Family, Technology, Humanity, Masterminding (Life Deals), Wild Life Conservation and Nature, Arts and Culture, Fun and Entertainment, Empowering Men Women and Children, Wealth, Education, Marketing and Mentoring. Inspired? To hire Steve or his team e-mail him at Steve@ASimpleGuideMD.com.

In this workshop Viraja Prema shares  new insight and strategies.

Workshop includes Tools and Resources

• Eating Healthy Strategies

• Attracting good health into your life today

• Giving your body what it needs

Viraja Prema is a natural born healer with a huge passion for living life powerfully present, open, loving and joyous. She assists others in achieving their version of this and truly enjoying their experience in their body and their life. Viraja is a therapist, coach, healer, speaker, mother and actor.

To find out more about Viraja go to http://www.transformationaltouch.com/

In this workshop JOY shares  new insight and strategies.

Workshop includes Tools and Resources

• Eating Healthy Strategies

• Attracting good health into your life today

• Giving your body what it needs

JOY is a life transformation specialist from New Zealand traveling the world teaching by example how to live a more joyful, less stressful life. To find out more about JOY go to http://www.ExperienceJOY.com

Looking for extreme inspiration, take a look at this video and see our human potential. How can you use this? How does this inspire you? Are any of us living up to our full human potential? 

What are some examples that you have seem of extreme inspiration?

Here is a great example of being creative by R. Christian Minson.

R. Christian Minson is a healer, public speaker, and facilitator of an amazing process called Transformational Breathing. He was also a monk for 10 years! He’s back now to squeeze every last drop of juice out of life! When it hurts, he breathes…To find out more go to http://www.breathflow.com/

In this 6 part series David Moye and Steve have a conversation about Marketing, PR and anything else that came up. Listen to this video and you will be inspired to find your marketing plan for any budget while finding new and different ways to build your business in uncertain times.
  • Conscious Time Management- (breaking technology addiction)
  • Pitching Ideas to the media
  • Building an Interdependant Network leveraging the 2 Degree’s of separation- (humanity is in an amazing position to solve the problems of old)
  • High Tech/ High Touch- (Social Networking with old fashion service)
  • Leveraging FREE internet Resources

David Moye is a Media Relations Manager at Alternative Strategies PR to find out more go to http://www.youtube.com/PRPuppetTheatre

Right before Steve was introduced at his speaking engagement at Grossmont College the professor Brandi read the essay ”THE WATCHER AT THE GATE” by Gail Godwin. In this impromptu presentation Steve inspires the students to get to know their inner watcher (critic) and to take conscious action NOW to make the world a better place.

 

THE WATCHER AT THE GATE

by Gail Godwin

 

I first realized I was not the only writer who had a restraining critic who lived inside me and sapped the juice from green inspirations when I was leafing through Freud’s “Interpretation of Dreams” a few years ago.  Ironically, it was my “inner critic” who had sent me to Freud.  I was writing a novel, and my heroine was in the middle of a dream, and then I lost faith in my own invention and rushed to “an authority” to check whether she could have such a dream.  In the chapter on dream interpretation, I cam upon the following passage that has helped me free myself, in some measure, from my critic and has led to many pleasant and interesting exchanges with other writers.

            Freud quotes Schiller, who is writing a letter to a friend.  The friend complains of his lack of creative power.  Schiller replies with an allegory.  He says it is not good if the intellect examines too closely the ideas pouring in at the gates.  “In isolation, an idea may be quite insignificant, and venturesome in the extreme, but it may acquire importance from an idea which follows it. . . . In the case of a creative mind, it seems to me, the intellect has withdrawn its watchers from the gates, and the ideas rush in pell-mell, and only then does it review and inspect the multitude.  You are ashamed or afraid of the momentary and passing madness which is found in all real creators, the longer or shorter duration of which distinguishes the thinking artist from the dreamer. . . . You reject too soon and discriminate too severely.”

            So that’s what I had:  a Watcher at the Gates.  I decided to get to know him better.  I discussed him with other writers, who told me some of the quirks and habits of their Watchers, each of whom was as individual as his host, and all of whom seemed passionately dedicated to one goal:  rejecting too soon and discriminating too severely.

            It is amazing the lengths a Watcher will go to keep you from pursuing the flow of your imagination.  Watchers are notorious pencil sharpeners, ribbon changers, plant waterers, home repairers and abhorrers of messy rooms or messy pages.  They are compulsive looker-uppers.  They are superstitious scaredy-cats.  They cultivate self-important eccentricities they think are suitable for “writers.”  And they’d rather die (and kill your inspiration with them) than risk making a fool of themselves.

            My Watcher has a wasteful penchant for 20 pound bond paper above and below the carbon of the first draft.   “What’s the good of writing out a whole page,” he whispers begrudgingly, “if you just have to write it over again later?  Get it perfect the first time!”  My Watcher adores stopping in the middle of a morning’s work to drive down to the library to check on the name of a flower or a World War II battle or a line of metaphysical poetry.  “You can’t possibly go on till you’ve got this right!” he admonishes.  I go and get the car keys.

             Other Watchers have informed their writers that:

        “Whenever you get a really good sentence you should stop in the middle of it and go on tomorrow.  Otherwise you might run dry..”

            “Don’t try and continue with your book till your dental appointment is over.  When you’re worried about your teeth, you can’t think about art.”

            Another Watcher makes his owner pin his finished pages to a clothesline and read them through binoculars “to see how they look from a distance.”  Countless other Watchers demand “bribes” for taking the day off:  lethal doses of caffeine, alcoholic doses of Scotch or vodka or wine.

            There are various ways to outsmart, pacify, or coexist with your Watcher.  Here are some I have tried, or my writer friends have tried, with success:

            Look for situations when he’s likely to be off-guard.  Write too fast for him in an unexpected place, at an unexpected time.  (Virginia Woolf captured the “diamonds in the dust heap” by writing at a “rapid haphazard gallop” in her diary.)  Write when very tired.  Write in purple ink on the back of a Master Charge statement.  Write whatever comes into your mind while the kettle is boiling and make the steam whistle your deadline.  (Deadlines are a great way to outdistance the Watcher.)

            Disguise what your are writing.  If your Watcher refuses to let you get on with your story or novel, write a “letter” instead, telling your “correspondent” what you are going to write in your story or chapter.  Dash off a “review” of your own unfinished opus.  It will stand up like a bully to your Watcher the next time he throws obstacles in your path.  If you write yourself a good one.

            Get to know your Watcher.  He’s yours.  Do a drawing of him (or her).  Pin it to the wall of your study and turn it gently to the wall when necessary.  Let your Watcher feel needed.  Watchers are excellent critics after inspiration has been captured;  they are dependable, sharp-eyed readers of things already set down.  Keep your Watcher in shape and he’ll have less time to keep you from shaping.  If he’s really ruining your whole working day, sit down, as Jung did with his personal demons, and write him a letter.  “Dear Watcher,” I wrote, “What is it you’re so afraid I’ll do?”  Then I held his pen for him, and he replied instantly with a candor that has kept me from truly despising him.

            “Fail,” he wrote back.

Stephen T. Jones is a Consultant, Professional Networker, Unfacilitator and an Inspirational speaker. He is a master at helping people find their “Genius Spot’ (their true essence). Steve is continually finding himself as a bridge to the special gifts of the world. He and his unique network are looking to expand and partner with people and organizations in the 15 aforementioned areas of influence by contributing their unique gifts to joint endeavors that promote good in the world. Join us and use your gifts to inspire others in the areas Health and Wellness, Renewable Energy, Business (Profit and Non-Profit), Family, Technology, Humanity, Masterminding (Life Deals), Wild Life Conservation and Nature, Arts and Culture, Fun and Entertainment, Empowering Men Women and Children, Wealth, Education, Marketing and Mentoring. Inspired? Join us by visiting www.ASimpleGuideMD.com to Share, Shape and Manifest your dreams into reality.

 

This was e-mailed to me and found it funny and very insightful.

Apparently we’ve had it all wrong for years !
 
His practice has no room for new patients! Now, he’s a medical wizard!   I love this Doctor!
Q: Doctor, I’ve heard that cardiovascular exercise can prolong life. Is this true?
A: Heart only good for so many beats, and that it… Don’t waste on exercise. Everything wear out eventually. Speed up heart not make live longer; that like say you can extend life of car by driving faster. Want live longer? Take nap.

 
Q: Should I cut down on meat and eat more fruits and vegetables?
A: You must grasp logistical efficiencies. What does cow eat? Hay and corn. What are these? Vegetables. So, steak nothing more than efficient mechanism of delivering vegetables to system. Need grain? Eat chicken. Beef also good source of field grass (greenleafy vegetable). And pork chop can give 100% recommended daily allowance of vegetable products.

 
Q: Should I reduce my alcohol intake?
A: No, not at all. Wine made from fruit. Brandy is distilled wine. That means they take water out of fruity bit; get even more of goodness that way. Beer also made out of grain. Bottoms up!

 
Q: How can I calculate my body/fat ratio?
A: If you have body and you have fat, ratio is one to one. If you have two bodies, ratio is two to one, etc.

 
Q: What are some of the advantages of participating in a regular exercise program?
A: Cannot think of single one, sorry. My philosophy: No Pain…Good!

 
Q: Aren’t fried foods bad for you?
A: YOU NOT LISTENING!!! …. Foods fried in vegetable oil. How getting more vegetables be bad for you?

 
Q: Will sit-ups help prevent me from getting a little soft around the middle?
A: Definitely not! When you exercise muscle, it get bigger. You should only do sit-ups if want bigger stomach.

 
Q: Is chocolate bad for me?
A: You crazy? HELLO . Cocoa beans! Vegetable!!! Cocoa beans best feel-good food around!

 
Q: Is swimming good for your figure?
A: If swimming good for figure, explain whales to me.

 
Q: Is getting in-shape important for my lifestyle?
A: Hey! ‘Round’ is shape!

 
Well, I hope this has cleared up any misconceptions you may have had about food and diets.

 
AND…..

 
For those of you who watch what you eat, here’s the final word on nutrition and health. It’s a relief to know the truth after all those conflicting nutritional studies:

1. The Japanese eat very little fat
And suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

2. The Mexicans eat a lot of fat
And suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

3. The Chinese drink very little red wine
And suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

4 The Italians drink a lot of red wine
And suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

5. The Germans drink a lot of beers and eat lots of sausages and fats
And suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

CONCLUSION.. …

 
Eat and drink what you like. Speaking English is apparently what kills you.

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