Beautiful Office Space Tip
Beautiful office spaces don’t have anything on the floor expect for the office furniture. Organize your office by getting all your files, piles and stuff off the floor from the Structural part of your brain and you will be creating an inviting space to hold your team and customer meetings.
Karen Lang
Nate Solder Patriots # 77 Super Bowl Story
Nate Solder Super Bowl Story – 2012 Super Bowl Game - Patriots Against the Giants
Nate Solder # 77 is a Patriot Super Bowl Football Player AND he was the # 17 first-round draft pick in 2011, started in 13 of 16 regular season games in his rookie year playing football in the NFL, allowed only three sacks in 880 snaps, and now playing in his first Super Bowl in his first career year in the NFL. AND Nate Solder grew up in my hometown of Buena Vista, Colorado. WOW, what a great Rookie NFL Super Bowl story.
I took the above picture of Nate Solder in the Patriot huddle on game day when the Patriot’s were in town playing the Bronco’s in Denver, Colorado.
I would also like to share another story about Nate Solder. Nate graduated in 2006 from Buena Vista High School and he had a classmate with a mental challenge. Nate was one of the students who always made an effort to stop and say hello to Brandi when they would pass each other in the hallway or in class. Someone even took a picture of Nate and Brandi when they were in high school and Brandi still keeps this picture posted on her refrigerator door at home.
How do I know about this story? Because I volunteer and visit with Brandi Bushnell every Friday afternoon to help her with her reading skills. Brandi has been telling me about Nate since I met her AND before he was drafted into the NFL. I’m thrilled Brandi gets to watch Nate Solder play football in the Super Bowl on Sunday as she is a mighty FAN.
I have been coming to Buena Vista for years to hike in the mountains and raft on the Arkansas River and for the past two years I have been very lucky to call Buena Vista, Colorado my home. I will also be cheering for Nate Solder on Super Bowl Sunday along with his coaches, teachers, friends, parents and the whole town of Buena Vista, Colorado!
Karen Lang
Rosettes in the Mind
February is when we begin to start thinking about Roses for Valentine’s Day. Interesting your cerebellum houses presynaptic terminals that attach to neurons & create a flowerlike ‘rose’ shape. Spanish physician & scientist Santiago Ramón Y Cajal (1851-1934) and known as the father of modern day neuroscience, coined the terminals ‘rosettes’.
Cajal was honored with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1906.
You may view a bouquet of rosettes in Carl Schoonover’s book, Portraits of the Mind, pg 95. I invite you to visit Schoonover’s website at www.carlschoonover.com
Happy Valentine’s Day!
Karen Lang – Sharing information for your brain
Dr. James D. Watson is Mr. DNA
James Dewey Watson, MD., PhD., and Author was born in 1928 and lives in Cold Springs Harbor, NY.
When I hear myself say, I’m busy, I like to think of Dr. James Dewey Watson’s bio on Wikipedia. I have nicknamed Dr. Watson, Mr. DNA, because he (along with Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkings) discovered deoxyribonucleic acid commonly called DNA. What is so remarkable is that Watson was only 25 years old when he made this discovery with Crick and Wilkins. This is a perfect example of the success you can have when working together on a team as each of these men received a Nobel Prize Medal in 1962 for their DNA discovery.
Watson made a career in the field of genetics as a molecular biologist, geneticist and zoologist. I bet Dr. Watson gets a chuckle everytime he hears the phrase ‘Let’s get a DNA sample’ when watching CSI on TV.
I invite you to just take a look at Watson’s bio, compliments below from Wikipedia, along with his awards to give you encouragement to continue to make your own discoveries in your life and work. Remember when feel the urge to say you are too busy, just know you can accomplish much by organizing your time from the Structural part of your brain.
James D. Watson Awards and Decorations
|
|
Honorary degrees received
|
|
Professional and honorary affiliations
|
|
Selected books
- Watson, J. D. (1968). The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA. New York: Atheneum.
- Watson, J. D. (1968). Gunther S. Stent. ed. The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-95075-1. (Norton Critical Editions, 1981).
- Watson, J. D.; Baker, T. A.; Bell, S. P.; Gann, A.; Levine, M.; Losick, R. (2003). Molecular Biology of the Gene (5th ed.). New York: Benjamin Cummings. ISBN 0-8053-4635-X.
- Watson, J. D. (2002). Genes, Girls, and Gamow: After the Double Helix. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-375-41283-2. OCLC 47716375.
- Watson, J. D.; Berry, A. (2003). DNA: The Secret of Life. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-375-41546-7.
- Watson, J.D. (2007). Avoid Boring People and Other Lessons from a Life in Science. New York: Random House. p. 366. ISBN 978-0-375-41284-4.
See also
Seven Attributes Defined
Seven Attributes Defined
1. Analytical thinking happens in the left hemisphere of the brain and is essential to making more objective, less biased decisions. As a leader, this is the function that helps you look at existing research and data, examine options, and question what will or will not work.
2. Structural thinking also takes place in the left part of the brain and ensures that you come up with a plan that is doable. It is the methodical, sequential process that helps maximize results, and minimize pitfalls.
3. Social thinking is a right-brain tendency that allows a leader to listen, build successful teams, relate to people, and develop and inspire others.
4. Conceptual thinking is right-brain, visionary thinking that jumpstarts innovation. Ideas that connect the dots and come out of left field can invigorate your organization.
5. Expressiveness is a behavior style you use to communicate your ideas. It affects how you relate to people and sets the course for the way you speak with others.
6. Assertiveness is a behavior style you use to put your ideas to work. An effective leader is assertive enough to make things happen, but not so assertive that others are stymied.
7. Flexibility is a behavior style you bring to the way you get things done. It determines not only your openness to other points of view, but also your ability to thrive in undefined (or very defined) situations.
Visit www.YourBrainPro.com to learn more about your brain by working with Karen Lang, Your Brain Pro
Playing Golf
Learn how to play golf from your brain’s perspective by using the Emergenetics Profile and having a conversation with me, Your Brain Pro, about how your brain enjoys playing the game of golf from a head perspective. For example, you might enjoy playing golf from an analytical point of view vs. social, structural or conceptual. I can also give you insights into how you like to express yourself while playing golf with your friends and business connections.
Emergenetics is a fun and scientifically proven way to learn more about how you prefer to think, behave and express yourself on the golf course AND in the office with your clients and co-workers.
Kelvin Redd Winner of the Singapore Emergenetics Brain Summit CORE Award
Kelvin Redd, Certified Emergenetics Associate, is winner of the Singapore Emergenetics Brain Summit CORE Video Award. CORE stands for Creativity, Optimize, Relate, Evolve.
Congratulations to my friend Kelvin Redd and I invite you to check out his video here:
And, below is a video from his competition…
And, one last video for your entertainment viewing more about information about Emergenetics and Your Brain…
To learn more about YOUR BRAIN in invite you to visit my website at www.YourBrainPro.com
Warmly,
Karen Lang, Your Brain Pro
How to Present Like Steve Jobs
I pulled the following presentation-tip-sheet by Carmine Gallo out of my file drawer from a few years ago as we all think about Steve Jobs and his life accomplishments …
How to Present Like Steve Jobs: 10 Tips for More Effective Presentations by Carmine Gallo
Steve Jobs is a masterful presenter, but he wasn’t always. Presenting is learned, just like typing or any other business skill. What makes Jobs so good? Communications expert Carmine Gallo has a few ideas.
In a recent Webinar sponsored by GoToMeeting Corporate, Gallo shared 10 presentation tips he learned from observing Jobs.
1. Make a plan on paper. Jobs’ presentations are planned out like movies, with story development and climaxes.
2. Set the theme. MacWorld 2008′s theme was, “There’s something in the air” – which built anticipation for the unveiling of the new MacBook Air™, but didn’t give away the surprise.
3. Show enthusiasm! Jobs shows genuine pride and excitement as he discusses Apple achievements, which inspires his audiences.
4. Provide a roadmap. Jobs gives his audiences an agenda to follow to help them remember his main points.
5. Make numbers meaningful. “Enough memory for 6 movies” is more impressive and easier to understand than “X number of gigabytes.”
6. Deliver a Spielberg moment. When Jobs pulls the MacBook Air out of the manila envelope, you know that’s the climax of his talk, because Jobs created such drama around it.
7. Keep slides simple. One bold image and very little text is enough for Jobs, and enough for the audience as well.
8. Sell the benefit (not the features). People care about what they can do, not what the product can do.
9. Rehearse. Jobs’ delivery seems effortless because he practices, out loud, for days before his event.
10. Don’t sweat the small stuff! Panicking just draws attention to a problem. When something goes wrong with a video, Jobs makes a joke and moves on.
I invite you to visit communications expert Carmine Gallo’s website at www.gallocommunications.com
Karen Lang
Founder, Your Brain Pro


