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![]() Reweaving the Social Fabric... Lessons from Loving Traumatized Children.
Feb 09, 2021 7:15 AM
Pippa Jarvis is Managing Director of TLC Children’s Home, based in Southern Johannesburg. For 27 years she has worked in every area of the organisation, coming to a deep understanding of the operations before taking on the leadership role in 2015. After completing a bachelor’s degree in education, Pippa devoted her life to the mission of the organisation, advocating enthusiastically for the rapid, responsible placement of over 900 children into permanent, loving families. In 2010 Pippa was voted as one of the Top 200 Young South Africans to take to lunch by The Mail and Guardian. She has participated in the Common Purpose Navigator program for Leadership development and completed a Certificate in Social Entrepreneurship at the Gordon Institute of Business Studies. Over the years, Pippa has developed a passion for learning, networking and supporting collaboration in the NGO space. Participating in many Forums, online courses and always seeking opportunities to grow and learn more. Committed to ensuring no child fell through the cracks of the broken placement system, Pippa is now the mother to 14 adopted children, 9 boys and 5 girls (aged 5 to 21). She is dedicated to investing in the fundamental yearning each of us has, to truly belong. Her current personal development is focussed on learning as much as she can about Trauma Informed Parenting and Conscious Discipline as methodologies that could be put into impactful practice in the residential care of babies and children. She hopes to help develop a support platform for mothers at risk of losing their babies to the System, and thereby stem the flow of babies coming into long term residential care settings. She is an accomplished speaker with a wide repertoire of experience to draw on. From parenting, to special needs, to life in an adoptive family, and running an NGO in the South African context, Pippa is able to share fascinating insights into a multitude of issues facing humanity today. |
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![]() Volunteering & the Partnership with Downtown Sun Prairie
Feb 16, 2021 7:15 AM
Provided by Colleen Burke |
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![]() "State of the City" Address
Feb 23, 2021 7:15 AM
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![]() David Benjamin Talks About His Books Set in Wisconsin
Mar 02, 2021 7:15 AM
David Benjamin, prolific author and founder of the oft-honored Last Kid Books, has lived all over the world, creating richly detailed stories set in Tokyo (Black Dragon), Paris (Skulduggery in the Latin Quarter) and even Wisconsin (Jailbait, the first Jim Otis mystery). His ten titles, published since April 2019, so far have won ten awards from independent press organizations.www.lastkidbooks.com. Benjamin will discuss his latest books which happen to be set in small town Wisconsin. Since he last talked to the Rotary Club, his newest version of his classic memoir recounting his life as kid growing up in Tomah, Wisconsin. Those who loved “The Life and Times of the Last Kid Picked, can devour a brand new, updated version of the Madison author’s beloved book, originally published by Random House in 2002. Regarded as a masterwork of storytelling, the book shadows the life — often in laugh-out-loud detail — of a kid coming of age in mid-20th century Wisconsin. Do you remember when the local dime store was filled with every possible thing a child would long for from comics to scrapbooks, coloring books and crayons, colored chalk, sticker books and matchbook cars, balls of all kinds, and baseball cards? Or Chiclets, licorice whips, cap guns, kites and model planes? Kids could also find Testors paint, airplane glue, wind-up toys, yo-yos, hula hoops, rubber snakes, wax mustaches, and chocolate cigarettes. If you have memories like this or you want to hear author David Benjamin describe his slice of life memoir, join the Zoom talk on March 2 at Sun Prairie Rotary. Benjamin will be speaking at the DeForest Library about how he regained the copyright from Random House (not an easy task) to publish the new book under his own Last Kid Books imprint. Crime-stopping Series Set in Wisconsin Benjamin’s newest and 11th book Bastard's Bluff, is set in the fictional town of Hercules in the LaCrosse area of the state. This is the second book in a series of four books (the next two books in the series will be released later this year) in the Jim Otis mystery series. In the latest thriller, Jim Otis, a former sharp-eyed policeman must revive his detective skills and solve the town’s mystery before hardboiled FBI agent Flint Hardesty turns Bastard’s Bluff into another Ruby Ridge. Maureen Holtz, author, The Last Resort— “… says, The book is a page-turner of a novel! Jim Otis’ relationships with the town’s citizens—from gumptionless weasels wanting power to intolerant bigwigs, to women with brains and no fear—are richly entertaining. We learn that Jim’s teenage daughter, Natalie, is an effervescent chip off the tough old block. Let’s hope she joins her father in future exploits. Beautifully paced and plotted with smart dialog and lively characters, Benjamin’s books never disappoint! I can’t wait for the next one.” |
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![]() How to write a memoir
Mar 09, 2021 7:15 AM
Vivian Probst is an author and will be talking to us about HOW do you write a memoir, how to start, tips for making it fun, interesting, and how to get friends and family involved. Discussing what you learn about yourself (patience or not) when you undertake such a task? and a bit about writing in WEnglish, her gender neutral language. The Woman Who Forgot Who She Was is based on a fictional Wisconsin bank president ...but it mirrors Vivian's own life. Written in WEnglish,a new 'language' Vivian has developed over 10 years ...to be gender-neutral ..with its own separate Glossary. Vivian has also written a mystery that is based on her own life, called The Woman Who Forgot Who She Was. That book is coming out in English but she's also written a second book, the same story but in a new language--WEnglish that is a gender-neutral way of writing and reading. As a linguist she spent 10 years working on this project --WEnglish is a trademark now of this new way of writing and reading English. Below is a link to a recent story in the Deforest Times about her and her recent library event. .."Discovering Who You Are" Provided by Daniel Darrow |
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![]() Digital Media, Innovation and Strategy
Mar 23, 2021 7:15 AM
Provided by Philip Frei |
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