April 27, 2024

Andre Moxie Advises Parents to Keep Kids’ Sports Fun and Rewarding

One of the values of organized sports, says Coach Andre Moxie, is that they teach people to work together as a team and to function as part of a greater whole than the individual player. For this reason, Andre Moxie encourages parents to involve their children in organized sports. Andre Moxie’s sport of choice is soccer.

Andre Moxie notes that soccer is an increasingly popular sport in America amongst young children. For some inexplicable reason, continues Andre Moxie, interest in soccer seems to wane later in life, displaced perhaps by baseball and football. Kids’ sports are a great way to give children the socialization, cooperation and exercise that will benefit them all of their lives, according to Andre Moxie.

However, Andre Moxie also cautions parents not to become excessively enthusiastic about their kids’ sporting endeavors. Andre Moxie explains that children’s sports can often dominate a parent’s life, causing a confusion of priorities. Andre Moxie adds that it is natural for parents to want to see their children excel and succeed. But it is just as important, says Andre Moxie, to keep those desires in perspective.

Andre Moxie reports that several studies have been done to examine the sometimes-tenuous relationships between parents, coaches and children on the field. Andre Moxie has also observed several common mistakes that well-meaning soccer parents would do well to avoid. Andre Moxie has seen several parents inadvertently project their personal aspirations onto their children.

Andre Moxie also explains that many coaches have reported parents who are negative – even pushy – and who have become a source of embarrassment for the child, the team, and for the other parents. Children on a team, says Andre Moxie, are all meant to be held accountable to the same expectations, without preferential treatment. One of the social values of team sports, concludes Andre Moxie, is that they should give children a chance to perform among their peers, not their parents.

About the Author

Andre Moxie entered the world the same year that the Beatles let it be known that they wanted to hold your hand. Born in Ithaca, New York in 1964, Andre Moxie was raised as an independent thinker during a time of great civil unrest. Andre Moxie completed his primary education and then entered the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware in 1983 where he obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice. Following graduation, Andre Moxie relocated to Yuba City, California and entered the Air Force as a 2nd Lieutenant.

From 1988 until 1991 Andre Moxie served his country as a Personnel Officer in command of 25 military Personnel and 30 civilian volunteers. Andre Moxie was stationed at Beale Air Force Base in California, 15th Air Force, Strategic Air Command. While stationed at Beale AFB, Andre Moxie enrolled at Golden Gate University in 1988 where he earned a MS degree in Human Resources Management. In 1991 Andre Moxie completed his service commitment and received the United States Air Force Commendation Medal for Meritorious Service.

Turning the corner and heading toward a professional carrier in the private sector, Andre Moxie was recruited in 1991 by Pfizer Pharmaceuticals. The company hired Andre Moxie as a sales representative for the pharmaceutical giant to cover the Orlando, Florida territory. In 1995 Andre Moxie left Pfizer for Merck & Co. and was a representative in the Hollywood, Florida territory in the Florida Region.

In 1996, Andre Moxie was promoted to Headquarters for Merck and Company’s. Initially serving as a Field Communications Coordinator for VASOTEC, Andre Moxie acted as a field communication specialist responsible for all field sales communications for Merck’s cardiovascular products. Again advancing in 1997, Andre Moxie accepted the position of Product Trainer HT/HF Market Integration Team Same Sales Trainer at Merck and Co. In that position Andre Moxie was responsible for training representatives about Merck’s cardiovascular products.

In January 1999, Andre Moxie was appointed as Business Manager for the Miami District for Merck and Company. Continuing through the ranks of management, Andre Moxie found himself serving as Acting Senior Director Field of Implementation Team for Hospital and Specialty in 2005. Andre Moxie was entrusted to support and coordinate among sales management, marketing, and direct reports to achieve brand success for all Hospital and Vertical products. Filling yet another management need Andre Moxie accepted an appointment within Merck and Company in 1996 to the position of Senior Director of Training Planning and Brand. In this position, Andre Moxie collaborated with sales and marketing units within the company to fully develop one year and three year training plans, with emphasis on high-quality, value-added programs and resources that affected appropriate behavioral objectives.

Beginning in 2006 and continuing into 2008 Andre Moxie filled the position of Senior Director of Neurology Sales at Merck and Co. for the Southern United States. Andre Moxie was again advanced late in 2008 to the position of Director of Commercial Operations for the Mid South Joint Venture Sales force, Merck and Co.

From January 2010 to the present Andre Moxie has served as the Director of Commercial Operations for the New South Region, Merck and Co. Andre Moxie currently resides in the Metro Atlanta, Georgia area.

Foot Care from Dr. William Knudson | Understanding Athletic Shoe Design

In his work as a podiatrist, Dr. William Knudson frequently treats foot problems that could have been avoided or mitigated with the proper footwear. In our image conscious society, says Dr. William Knudson, people often chose shoes that are fashionable but unhealthy. Dr. William Knudson reminds his patients that their feet are more important than they think.

When it comes to walking and running shoes, explains Dr. William Knudson, shoe designers produce three categories of footwear. The three types of walking and running shoes, continues Dr. William Knudson, are motion control, stability and neutral shoes. Motion control shoes, says Dr. William Knudson, resist twisting and bending. They generally have a straight shape, adds Dr. William Knudson, and are best fit to people with low or flat arches.

Stability shoes are designed with a slight curve in their shape, points out Dr. William Knudson, and are best suited to people with medium arches. This is what podiatrists usually refer to as “normal” arches. The neutral design, says Dr. William Knudson, is a rigid shoe with a curved shape. Dr. William Knudson adds that neutral shoes are suited for feet with high arches.

Regardless of the style of shoe Dr. William Knudson’s patients end up choosing, there are some basics that apply to all footwear. Choose a shoe with a removable insole, recommends Dr. William Knudson, so you have the option of using your own insole or orthotics to further customize the fit. Make sure the shoes have a snug heel, notes Dr. William Knudson, and a toe box with about half an inch of play, so that it is easy to comfortably wiggle the toes. Another good sizing rule with athletic shoes, says Dr. William Knudson, is to try new shoes on late in the day. Due to circulation, feet expand and contract over the course of a day, says Dr. William Knudson, and they are typically at their biggest by late afternoon.

Dr. Randall Alifano PhD Discusses the Evolution of Image Making from Painting to Photography

Photography is a democratic art form, says Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, putting the power of image creation in the hands of anyone with a wish to do so. While photography is accessible to nearly everyone, continues Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, it remains an art form with many conventions of substance. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD explains that this means that there are agreed-upon methods for creating good pictures.

Photographic techniques, says Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, have developed over time as photographic technology has evolved. There are some simple themes to bear in mind, however, when arranging subjects for photographs and snapshots. All photographs convey some kind of message, and Dr. Randall Alifano PhD says that composition is one of the ways that a photographer shapes the message.

The nature of photos, as two-dimensional representations of reality, lends the medium to certain conventions. People have been making images for millennia, states Dr. Randall Alifano PhD. During that time, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD explains that certain compositional similarities have emerged. When it comes to composition, or the arrangement of objects in a picture, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD says that many of the rules that worked for painting in previous centuries are still applicable to photography. The saying that the eyes are the window to the soul is quite applicable in photography.

Modern photographic developments, points out Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, have inevitably added new considerations to good composition; things that painters never had to think about. These new technical considerations, says Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, include shutter speed, focus and depth of field, which work together to help determine the mood and meaning of a photograph. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD encourages students of photography to remember that the only thing that makes these into “rules” of composition is artistic consensus over time. Over the generations, explains Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, certain types of images, like portraits and landscapes have proven immensely popular. Consequently, the images themselves set certain rules of composition. But these “rules” of composition can be broken at any time, concludes Dr. Randall Alifano PhD, which makes them even more useful as tools for creative direction.

About the Author

In 1985, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD received a Master’s degree in Psychology from Antioch University. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD completed his studies for a PhD in Clinical Psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies in 1986. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD chose CIIS because it was the school he believed offered the best blend of the study of psychology and spirituality.

In October of 2002, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD became an Ordained Minister of The Association of the Integration of the Whole Person (AIWP). Dr. Randall Alifano PhD always had a sense that he would be a counselor. When other children were talking about how they wanted to be police officers or baseball players, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD already knew he would be listening to people being curious about how they lived their life. His first class in Psychology was in high school. The teacher and Randall Alifano would talk long after the last bell, debating things like empathy and altruism and the nature of healing.

At this time Dr. Randall Alifano PhD was already counseling friends and acquaintances and was known as a person that others could speak to about their concerns. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD received a BA in Psychology from SUNY Albany and while there, volunteered on the crisis hotline. Typically reserved for graduate students, he was the only undergrad student given permission to do one on one counseling with students and he supervised the other phone counselors. He also worked at a residential treatment program for emotionally challenged children at this time.

After graduation in 1976, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD hitchhiked through Europe for 8 months questioning himself and others about the existence of God and studying various religions. Back in New York, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD worked at the Coalition for Abused Women in NY, getting an education in violence and gender issues before traveling to San Francisco and beginning graduate work. Interviewing at San Francisco State University, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD told a well-known Philosophy professional that his interest was in finding integration between Psychology and Spirituality. That person, rather disdainfully, responded that they were two distinct traditions and were impossible to bring together.  Dr. Randall Alifano PhD did not end up attending that university.

Antioch University offered a course of study which was profoundly and personally challenging for Dr. Randall Alifano PhD. Encounter groups led by Will Schutz were meant to confront and shatter defenses. They did just that. One learned that being honest and vulnerable did not come naturally, as one tends to hide whatever is believed to be judged and prejudiced. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD also learned that Christ’s statement that “the Truth will set you free” had practical application. Dr. Randall Alifano PhD believes strongly that there is a freedom that results from learning to exercise the choice of saying what is true rather than communicating from habituated, unexamined, defensive patterns.

Just before graduation, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD’s twin boys were born. Dr Alifano had to quit school and started a janitorial service, Snow White Assoc., to support his new family. Additionally he became the Clinical Coordinator of the Men’s Program of the Marin Abused Women’s Services, working directly with violent men, leading groups and organizing and training the volunteer counselors. By 1985, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD was able to finish the required course work, write a thesis, receive his Master’s degree and begin a private practice. Within four months, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD had a full practice.

In 1990 Dr. Randall Alifano began a PhD program in Clinical Psychology at The California Institute of Integral Studies. This was a school that not only believed that Psychology and Spirituality could be integrated, but they included it in their name. Here, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD could study Psychoanalytic theory alongside the mystical traditions of the Desert Fathers, read Jung and Kierkegaard and study meditation and personality testing.  Graduating in 1996, Dr. Randall Alifano’s counseling skills deepened as his theoretical base broadened and his listening became more refined.

In 2002 Dr. Randall Alifano PhD was ordained by The Association for the Integration of the Whole Person as a Minister specializing in Pastoral Counseling.  It was in that year that he began to make a shift away from traditional Psychotherapy and found a calling in Psycho-spiritual Counseling. The tradition of Psychotherapy is anchored in the medical model which assesses for pathology and then treats it. After 26 years of private practice, Dr. Randall Alifano PhD realized that this perspective is biased and that it frequently results in a profound limitation of one’s ability to listen to the complexity of what is being said. He found that when listening it is vitally important to quiet the mind so as to be completely receptive to the speaker.

In 2007 Dr. Kim Chernin, Dr. Renate Stendhal and Dr. Randall Alifano PhD developed and taught a year long program for therapists entitled Advanced Study in Intuitive Listening. They taught the art of listening and wrote articles articulating how one can refine listening skills and empathically surrender in order to hear what can be missed when one is listening through unexamined filters.

Dr. Randall Alifano PhD is grateful that he is, personally and professionally, living the life he had hoped for all those years ago; integrating psychology and spirituality. The individuals and couples that see Dr. Randall Alifano PhD are happy that they are not being diagnosed and treated along pathological lines but are regarded from a much broader perspective.

Dr. Randall Alifano PhD can be reached by email at randall@randallalifanophd.com or by phone at (510) 528-1201. For more information, visit his website at http://www.randallalifanophd.com.

Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz Discusses the Therapeutic Value of Nature

Educated and working in social services, Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz frequently searches for new opportunities and methods to help his clients resolve their troubles. One effective supplemental method, says Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz, is to go for a hike or long walk in a park or nature preserve. In fact, Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz is a firm believer in the beneficial effect of nature. He says that time spent in nature is one of the best ways to help bring peace and thoughtfulness when life becomes difficult.

An avid hiker, Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz offers a few tips to make the most out of a day in the country. To begin, Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz advises getting an early start on a day hike to avoid the heat of afternoon. A hike in hot weather means carrying more water, says Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz, thereby increasing carried weight.

Take infrequent breaks and don’t hurry, advises Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz, in order to maintain a sustained pace. He suggests traveling light when hiking, especially if you are an inexperienced hiker. Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz notes that traveling light also conserves the hiker’s energy. Hiking on developed trails, adds Yochanan Jonathan Berkowitz, also helps to reduce the need to carry items into the forest. [Read more…]

Mount Carmel Youth Ranch Helps Heal the Wounds of Children of Divorce

Mount Carmel Youth Ranch knows that when a young man experiences the divorce of his parents, the effects are often devastating. A variety of emotions from sadness to anger to despair are typically experienced, according to Mount Carmel Youth Ranch professionals. Many youth often need someone to talk to, but feel the absence of a person they deem trustworthy enough in whom to confide. Keeping things bottled up can lead to other issues, and this is what draws many families to Mount Carmel Youth Ranch.

At Mount Carmel Youth Ranch, dedicated staff work hard to help a young man process and free himself from the intense emotions he is experiencing. They often don’t make sense to him, explains Mount Carmel Youth Ranch. Because of this, he must be encouraged to take a step back and reassess the situation. [Read more…]