Create Your Compass for Growing (B)older
As we grow through life, it can be extraordinarily helpful to create an internal as well as a visual compass to ground and inspire us as we navigate our way. For this interactive conversation, let’s focus on what it takes to grow boldly, to remain ongoingly involved with and connected to our own true self as well as to others and to the larger communities in which we all participate.
Using a coach approach, we will explore inspirational ideas about how to thrive through every time of life. Sharing my own most recent compass as an example, we will explore ways to tap into our capacity for gratitude, gusto, grit & grace. Then, we will heartstorm other possible compasses that might serve you now.
Earn 1.5 Core Competency CCEU
Learning Objectives:
-
Improve active listening skills through coaching conversations in breakout rooms
-
Discover new ways to embody and maintain a coaching mindset
-
Use introspection to evoke self and client awareness
-
Create methods to facilitate self and client growth
Core Competencies addressed and practiced in this session:
CC1 Embodies a Coaching Mindset
CC5 Maintains Presence
CC6 Listens Actively
CC7 Evokes Awareness
CC8 Facilitates Client Growth
About the Speaker: Minx Boren, MCC
Minx Boren develops and presents innovative programs that support health and balance, reflection and achievement. Trained in Positive Psychology, the Art of Convening, Positive Intelligence, Emotional Intelligence, Conversational Intelligence, and more, her focus is on supporting her audience to discern what truly motivates and inspires them, what arouses their curiosity and sparks their creativity, and, above all, what brings them joy, satisfaction, and a sense of fulfillment. Minx is author of more than 25 books and writes for several online publications.
As a community activist, she has served on several boards in Palm Beach County, is the 2013 president of Executive Women of the Palm Beaches, and is a recipient of the Giraffe Award, presented by the Women’s Chamber of Commerce to women who “stick their necks out for others.”