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April 2007 Newsletter
 
whisperingtree.net Do you hear the trees whisper?
 
April 2007
Newsletter

 

Sacred Space Introduction to Sacred Space
May 10, 2007

Teleconference workshop that focuses on one of the fundamental concepts for spiritual exploration: the importance of creating Sacred Space.

Learn more by visiting us!

 

Dolphin T-Shirt Animal Totem T-Shirts

These fun shirts are the latest in our line of Animal Totem Products! These unique shirts make excellent gifts, and come complete with a matching Animal Totem Card!

The shirts are available in a variety of colors for Dolphin, Buffalo, Owl, Raven, and Wolf. Shirts are available in S, M, L, XL, and 2XL.

Take your favorite Animal with you!

Learn more by visiting us!

 

Paths Letter from the Staff

Welcome to our April Newsletter!

Either Or

 

We’re good at sorting things into buckets. We plow through volumes of information that is thrown at us in school, work, and daily life. This works for us!

Sorting, labeling, and categorizing helps us manage the choices and decisions we are faced with daily. Like a clothes closet bulging with the remnants of decades gone by and of sizes that only our imaginations see us wearing, we decide what goes and what stays, what suits us and what does not.

For some, this might appear as an easy process. We walk through life easily partitioning one’s choices into good or bad, win or loss – a study in radical contrasts. Twenty years ago, I would have said that this approach clearly worked. Sometimes, the problem is that we fall into such rigid viewpoints that we focus our attention on either end of the see-saw and forget to look at the balance point in the center.

But more and more the keywords are “recycling,” “exploration,” “complementary,” and “integration.” The old TV show, MacGyver – a resourceful secret agent who used his knowledge, a pocket knife, and a variety of assorted and seeming useless materials to solve a host of problems – really exemplifies what these concepts are about. We have the intelligence and ability to sort through a bin of seemingly disjointed and possibly discarded ideas and creations in order to find the gems or useful bits that we can use.

Funny that sometimes we don’t necessarily see the worth in something. Often, we don’t recognize a things worth until an event or a life experience forces us to revisit what we previously sorted into our rubbish pail. We see these epiphany moments in scientific research, in entrepreneurial endeavors, in artistic talent, and even in interpersonal relationships. Those out of the blue flashes of inspiration are often the result of our brains suddenly making a connection that had escaped us.

Part of the equation is acknowledging the possibility that there are other facets to explore. If we leave our channels open to make those connections, we find that we have so much more available to us. Realize the potentials available to you instead of drowning in your discard pile; allow yourself to find the hidden jewels, like MacGyver.

Please pay us a visit!

 

 

Sarah Rollins Practitioner Spotlight

This month we would like to introduce you to Sarah Rollins, and the Brain Integration Technique (BIT) developed by Susan McCrossin, head of the Learning Enhancement Center.

Spotlight: Sarah Rollins by Colleen M. Quinn

If asked to think back to their school years, whether grade school or college, most people probably would describe those days as fun but difficult. You were expected to know everything while cramming for tests, writing papers, and giving presentations. But what if someone had told you school might have been easier and more effective if you could think more efficiently. Without drugs or surgery, your brain could function better. Too good to be true? Sarah Rollins says it isn’t ...

In 2004, Rollins opened a private practice in kinesiology which the scientific study of human movement. During this time, she met Susan McCrossin, head of the Learning Enhancement Center in Boulder, Colorado. The Brain Integration Technique (BIT), developed by McCrossin herself, has proven effective in alleviating the problems that accompany many learning difficulties.

“I was intrigued by Susan because of her work with children who have ADHD,” says Rollins. “Susan was actively accessing their brains."

In November of 2004, Rollins took her son to McCrossin, and she saw a significant change after the integration. Inspired by the success she saw in her son, Rollins began training with McCrossin in 2005 to become a certified BIT practitioner. She now co-teaches the technique at the Learning Enhancement Center with McCrossin and directs the BIT Prerequisite Program there ...

Read the full article by visiting us!

 

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