C17-13b Cheryl Bass is Aspiring Women to BE.

Choose Positive Living with Sara Troy and her guest Cheryl Bass, on air from March 28th

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Seven Survival Habits Women Habitually Need to Master to Stay in Business’ 

1. Listen to that still small voice inside of you.

2. Know your story and it’s ending

3. Build a compelling vision that excites you and others

4. Begin everything with your end in mind

5. Find a tribe, join it ensuring you are surrounding yourself with people who will push you, make you accountable and will commit to pulling you up your next step 6. Know your numbers

6. Know your numbers, your competitor’s numbers, the numbers you need to master if you are to attain your vision

7. Understand at a global and pinprick level what makes what you do successful, scaleable, sell-able, sensational and sincere.

I AM WOMAN is a ‘heart centered’ family of aspiring women in business, management, and leadership, who motivate, inspire, empower and support one another through its network of Business Clubs and On-line Forums.


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FOUNDER Cheryl Bass, Award Winning Inspirational Business Growth Speaker, and Coach

Cheryl Bass, The business expert, has spent over 24 years leading national and international businesses at the highest level, putting her in a unique position to deal with contemporary business challenges.

Her mix of vast experience allied with an accomplished ability to make business simple and her infectious enthusiasm and energy has inspired global audiences to seek Cheryl’s advice to achieve immediate, yet sustainable business and personal growth.

Her passion for women’s liberty and growth is evident in her conviction.

For Cheryl’s info and previous show with me

GO HERE 

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17-11 Other People’s Driving, TR, O’Connor

Transforming Relationships with host, Julieanne O’Connor, on air from March 14th

Tune-in for an episode you can likely relate to.  Do you drive angry?  Do you hate riding with others? Or are you a friendly driver who is mindful of others?  Let’s chat about how your driving is a reflection of everything going on in your life.

Please email Julieanne O’Connor with your questions, comments, stories or quotes about relationships. Spellingitout@yahoo.com or visit www.spellingitout.com


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17-10 Children are a Mirror, TR, O’Connor

Transforming Relationships with host, Julieanne O’Connor, on Air from March 7th

Tune-in for an episode about slowing down and spending more time being.  Sometimes, we do do do so much we forget to just be.  Get inspired by understanding a fundamental key to happiness.


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Please email Julieanne O’Connor with your questions, comments, stories or quotes about relationships. Spellingitout@yahoo.com or visit www.spellingitout.com.

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C 17-12b Joy in Mathematical Puzzles with Rob Eastaway

Choose Positive Living with Sara Troy and her guest Rob Eastaway, on air from March 21st.

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CHILDHOOD

I grew up in Cheshire in the North West of England in what – looking back – I realize was quite a carefree home environment where there were plenty of opportunities for imaginative play.  I loved playing most ball sports.  More unusually from a young age, I was also always intrigued by mathematical puzzles, an interest that was fed by my dad and later by one of my teachers who would often pose us riddles and quizzes. 

TEENS

images-1In my early teens, I had a few creative hobbies, including producing simple cartoon flick books and four-minute silent movies using an old 8mm cine camera.  But the innocent enthusiasm behind those and some of my other interests often set me apart from my peer group whose interests were increasingly turning towards heavy metal and parties.  I spent much of my mid-teens as an observer, watching how teenagers behaved with each other.  I was never bullied, but I became very sensitive to the injustice of people being laughed at just because they or their ideas were ‘different’. 

Around the age of 15 I immersed myself in the solitary activity of solving puzzles, and one day on a whim I had a go at setting a puzzle myself.  I submitted it to a national newspaper – The Sunday Times.  To my delight and amazement, they agreed to publish it.  That launched me into becoming a regular puzzle setter, first for The Sunday Times and then for New Scientist magazine.  Writing a monthly puzzle gave me early exposure to the world of journalism, and also took away some of the mystery of creativity.  I realized that ‘new’ ideas often come from immersing yourself in old ideas and then repackaging them.  There were other important lessons, too.  The second puzzle of mine that was published contained a serious error (it required April to have 31 days) and I was inundated by letters from angry readers who had been wasting time on an unsolvable challenge.  It was a harsh way to learn that while ideas are important, the end product has to work too.  


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CORPORATE CAREER

My interest in ‘real world’ puzzle solving led me to do study Engineering for my degree (at Cambridge University).  I then spent a few years working for Deloitte, one of the large management consultants.  I was lucky that their culture turned out to be one in which encouraged eccentricity.  Ideas and innovation were actively encouraged.  It gave me an excellent grounding in professional creative problem solving, and it was a confirmation that ‘fun’ could have serious benefits.  In 1991 I went freelance: I’d had my fill of working for big organizations and wanted the freedom to pursue my own passions in my own way.   I began running creative problem-solving workshops for senior managers in government (it was a huge, untapped market!) and also for graphic designers.  In my spare time, I also wrote a book about cricket.  I’ve always loved cricket, as a player and as a spectator, but was aware that the arcane laws of the sport are a mystery to most people. The book (‘What is a Googly?’) is an explanation of cricket to the general public. Getting that first book published in 1992 was probably the most satisfying creative project of my life – taking a project all the way from the seed of an idea to the finished product over the course of about 18 months, after many rejections by publishers.   The book did very well.  Its biggest claim to fame was that in 1993, Prime Minister John Major presented a copy of it to President George Bush (Snr) at Camp David.  (At the time it was an ongoing joke between the two leaders that Bush was a baseball fan, John Major a cricket fan).

BOOKS AND MATHS

In the late 1990s, an old friend Jeremy Wyndham asked me if I’d be interested in writing a book with him about the maths of everyday life.  That book became the bestselling Why Do Buses Come In Threes? and it was to push my career in a different direction.  I began to be invited into schools to give talks about maths for disaffected teenagers who couldn’t see the point of the subject.  I also started doing talks on maths and magic for primary school children.  Both of these proved to be a wonderful stimulus for generating ideas for new book material.  Jeremy and I wrote a second book, ‘How Long Is a Piece of String?’, and I have since gone on to write/co-write seven more books, some but not all of them about the maths of everyday life.  In 2004 I had the idea of putting on maths lecture shows for teenagers.  To get away from the notion that maths only happens in schools, we decided to hold the shows in regular theaters such as the Bristol Hippodrome and London’s Gielgud Theatre.  Our shows attract about 15,000 teenagers every year from across the UK.  We have to come up with new material each year, so nurturing ideas is an important part of my daily life.

CREATIVE THINKING BOOK – COMING FULL CIRCLE

In the last few years, maths education has become dominated by the words ‘creativity’ and ‘problem-solving’.  This has been a theme of workshops that I have run for maths teacher for several years, but until now I never formally made the link back to my previous life running workshops for civil servants.  My new book ‘Any Ideas?’ has brought those two worlds together.  The book is about the whole process of ideas – from having them, to implementing them.  What distinguishes it from the many other books on this topic is that I differentiate between having ideas on your own, and having ideas with one or more other people.  In most situations, there’s more than one person involved in the idea process, and that introduces all sorts of complications.  A lot of the book is about how to overcome the natural tendency to kill ideas (either our own or other people’s).  There’s also a chapter dedicated to the importance of SILLINESS: if we want to have new ideas, we have to tolerate a period of having ideas that may at first seem impractical, dangerous, crass or just silly.  The other feature of the book is that it has puzzles dotted throughout.  Puzzles are often a great way to illustrate the principles of creative and lateral thinking.

The book is aimed at the general public but it’s as relevant to maths teachers as it is to any other adults.

FAMILY

I’ve been married to Elaine, an American, for 18 years.  We have three children, who help to keep me young and (most of the time) enthusiastic.

WHY WE NEED MATH

http://www.robeastaway.com

http://www.robeastaway.com/books

rob@mathsinspiration.com

twitter.com/robeastaway

linkedin.com/in/rob-eastaway

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LM 17-11 Sacred Songs with Susanne Sundancer

“for the LOVE of Music”  with Nathen Aswell and is guest Susanne Sundancer, on air from March 14th.

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Susanne Sundancer is a nordic ritual artist and singer-songwriter, living in Denmark. All through her childhood and adult life she has been creating art, performing and singing. She played her first acting role at the age of 6. At the age of 10 she became a part of a child circus and experienced being in a studio recording their own music. At 15 she learned the guitar and at 20 she became a singer in a danish band. At 27 she got her art shown at censured exhibitions and different galleries, but something was missing. There was an emptiness inside and she did not know how to fill that. In 2009 she became a mother and music and art got a whole new meaning to her. Her pregnancy opened the connection to the lineage of women giving birth before her. The transformation she experienced through her body, heart, and mind was exciting. Nature had always meant a lot to her, but now she felt that it revealed a deeper layer. By coincidence, she stumbled upon an interview with Annette Høst from Scandinavian Center of Shamanic Studies and she felt the door to her soul open. So she attended Annette’s workshops and there she got to experience how creativity, rituals, sound, songs and drumming can be a tool to enter hidden worlds and connect with spirit guides. In 2012 Susanne stepped into the wild woman path, inspired by her work with nordic shamanism. The songs began to flow to her. Songs about Mother Earth and the divine love flowing through everything. The songs initiated her and brought her home to her essence. She could feel the universal energy flowing through her body when she sang, sending shivers down her spine. Tears were flowing as she remembered where she came from, she felt home.


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The songs became the voice of her soul. They became her teachers connecting her to her inner guides; the messenger, the crone, the mistress, the shaman, the inner child, the mother, the visionary and the healer. The songs told her that she was allowed to express every emotion she had. That she was everything. She was already all that she ever wanted to be. Finally, she felt whole. The empty feeling had disappeared. The more connected she became to her essence and the wild road, the more courage she got to sing the sacred songs to others. In 2013 she founded her danish creative-spiritual company Kraftkvinden (The Woman of Power). She began using the songs in ceremony and rituals. When she was singing directly to the soul of the person in front of her, she could see their healing gifts, as tears ran down the face of the one coming home. In 2015 she turned her energy towards her international connections and created the sacred online platform called “Wild Woman Celebrating Ritual Group” a place for wild women to meet, inspire each other and make rituals. In 2016 she created her first international programs, “The Ritual Artist Program” and “Sundancer”. In almost everything she offers, creative expressions, songs, and sounds are a part of it. They are the tools that creates connections between the singer and her body, her heart and soul, her visions and dreams, the earth and the ancestors, the divine and spirits guide the ritual space, people, the community and the now.
In 2015 she invited the two danish musicians Mark Ansbjerg and Henrik Steen Jensen, to join her and form a trio that could play the sacred songs at small intimate concerts. In 2016 they played 11 living room concerts in Denmark, creating a love-filled space for people to settle down, relax, open their hearts and share the love for music. In 2017 they will continue with the intimate living room concerts but they are also looking for heart-based festivals and nature events, to play their songs at. In the future, they would love to travel and connect with music lovers from all over the world.



www.sacred-songs.com

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Your Host Nathen Aswell 

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