• Next Meeting

    Next Meeting

  • N.E.W. After Hours!

    N.E.W. After Hours!

  • N.E.W Munch & Mingle

  • Upcoming Meeting

    Upcoming Meeting

Next Meeting

upcoming-meeting-graphicMay 2012 - Register Online

Date: May 16, 2012
Time: 5pm - 8pm
Location: St. Charles Medical Center - Conference Room - Bend
Menu: Grilled and roasted pork loin, creamy roasted pepper polenta, green salad
Program: Kristin Kristensen – program topic:  “A  N.E.W. You"

Read more...

N.E.W. After Hours!

after-hours-graphicN.E.W. First Tuesday - After Hours Networking Event - June 5th, 2012 from 5-7pm

Don't miss out on this social networking event - no format, no programs, just an opportunity to connect to other N.E.W. members and guests in a fun and casual environment.

Where: Level 2
360 SW Powerhouse #210, Bend (In the Old Mill above Saxon's Jewelers, in the building across from Mio Sushi)

Read more...

N.E.W Munch & Mingle

The N.E.W Munch & Mingle

Thursday, May 10 - 1pm ~ Location TBD

Have you been looking for an opportunity to connect with other members in a fun & interesting way? This is your chance to be set up on a lunch date with 3-4 other N.E.W. members at a local restaurant.

Read more...

Upcoming Meeting

next-meeting-graphicJune 2012 - Register Online

Date: June 20, 2012
Time: 5pm - 8pm
Location: St. Charles Medical Center - Conference Room - Bend
Menu: TBA
Program: TBA

Read more...
2010 - April Newsletter
Subject: 2010 - April Newsletter
Send date: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
Issue #: 25
Content:
Enewsletter Volume 4, Issue 4- April 2010
Crager-Corporate-Ad
Our Upcoming Meeting
Program:

The Health-Wealth Connection

Date: Wednesday, Apr. 21st, 5pm

Location: St. Charles Medical Center - Bend

Agenda: Networking: 5pm - 6pm
Dinner & Program: 6pm - 8pm

Menu: Marinated Grilled Chicken, Cucumber Olive Salsa, Israeli Couscous “Risotto,” Field Greens and Arugula. Dessert and Vegetarian menu TBD
~ Vegetarian Meals Are Available ONLY If Ordered In Advance

Register: Please make your dinner reservation no later than Thursday, Mar. 11th, online at www.networkwomen.org.
Member price is $22 and non-members price is $27. A an additional $5 charge is automatically added to late registrations. Indicate regular or vegetarian meal.

Board Spotlight - Vicki Hunter – Secretary

vicki-hunter-small

Vicki Hunter – Secretary

Vicki Hunter is beauty in a small package with a desire and passion for making us all a little more beautiful.

Vicki graduated from U.C. Berkeley with psychology degree, and then went on to San Francisco State University for a teaching credential.  With two young boys, Vicki decided to start a tiny business so she could stay home with them.  That tiny Mary Kay business grew, and Vicki has been with the company for 27 years.  Earning 14 free career cars with Mary Kay and putting her two sons through college, both graduating debt free, not such a tiny business after-all!  Currently Vicki is the #4 Sales Director in the state of Oregon.  Vicki loves working with women either mentoring them or just helping them feel better about themselves.

Vicki is single with 3 rescue Labrador retrievers with whom she spends a lot of time.  Vicki also ballroom dances and travels frequently to visit family and to work with her out-of- state consultants.  If you haven’t spent time with Vicki, take a moment to get to know her, you will be glad you did.

N.E.W. Connections Membership Drive

Reminder - The NEW Connections Membership Drive continues.  1. Bring a guest to the next meeting (April 21st). If they sign up, you get great prizes (from a free announcement all the way up to FREE one-year membership!), including a FAB Bag! Start thinking now about who might be the right person to invite and get in touch with them early so they can get it on their calendar.

N.E.W. After Hours

Reminder - Don’t forget N.E.W. after hours on the 1st Tuesday of every month from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM at Wine Styles locate at 1740 NW Pence Lane. It is a great way to meet and network without the hustle bustle of the meeting schedule.

Your Essential Being/Your Magnificent Self

kristina-bak

By Kristina Bak

When Jane Meyers gave us a list of “Networking Questions” at our February NEW meeting, the one that struck me most was How is your work connected to what you were like growing up?  Our earliest child selves are our Essential Beings, who we are before we shape-shift to meet our culture’s expectations.  In that essential being lies the seed of our dreams, later nurtured or obscured by life experience, so the question is an important one.  I was surprised by the connections I found as I reflected on it.

I was an only child.  For my first seven years I lived on a farm with my parents.  At night the only lights we saw besides our own were the moon and stars, until 1957 when the Russians launched Sputnik, which we could sometimes see moving like a tiny alien spark across the sky.  Once a week or so a propeller-driven plane flew over the Cascades toward Yakima, and we would stop whatever we were doing to watch its silvery form, hardly less alien to us than the Russian satellite.  We had no telephone, no TV, only a floor model radio in a wooden cabinet with a round face.  My mother was a country- western musician who sang on live broadcasts from the local station. I’d press my ear against the radio’s speaker to catch her voice amid the static.

Pre-school was unheard of, and kindergarten too far away.  My playmates and best friends were a huge oak tree, a herding dog who believed he was my personal bodyguard, a black cat, a blind chicken, a pinto horse, a red milk cow, an ever-changing assortment of wild creatures, frogs, and (yes) fairies.  I painted, I drew, I read, and I explored.

From the age of four I was free to wander alone between our place and my grandparent’s ranch a mile or so up Ahtanum Creek, and to roam Indian reservation land on the ridge to our south.  My Slovak Greek Orthodox grandmother was a beautiful woman who talked with birds and let large spiders nest in the ceiling corners of her house as friends and allies.  We saw few people outside the family except our Yakama Indian neighbors and an old guitar-playing cowboy and his wife who lived further up the creek with kerosene lamps and hand-pumped water.  Until I caught the yellow school bus for the long ride to first grade, that was my world.

When I asked myself Jane’s question, here are some of the connections I found between the work I do now and the lessons I learned in those early growing-up years:

Counseling––Understanding communication beyond and beneath words.

Energy Healing––Using awareness of invisible, but tangible, energies as tools for healing without the need for human-created devices.

Qigong––Engaging embodied comprehension of natural cycles for physical, emotional, and spiritual health, and finding joy in free movement and strength.

Teaching and Intuition––Respecting the unique character and dreams of every individual, connecting on a soul level, and appreciating diverse ways of being in the world.

Art––Loving the power of beauty to inspire, creativity to heal, and art to reveal the true beneath the obvious.

When you renew your acquaintance with your own Essential Being, you’ll find insights into dreams that help you become ever more your full Magnificent Self, and certainly much to be grateful for.  

I look forward to seeing you at my May Showcase table where you’ll learn how my work can help you reach your dreams, and a 15-second meditation that can literally change your life.

kathy-green-small-ad Farmers Insurance - Karen B Inventure Journeys
Five Talent Software Healing Bridge The Source
sww-attorneys-ad Jami-Garrett-ad-small

Corporate Sponsors

Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner

Web Advertisements

Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner