"Walk & Talk"
"To keep your balance in life, you must keep moving." ~ Einstein

 

 

This walking and talking is a method of "loosening our best thinking" and harkens back to Ancient Greece--its method is over 2500 years old.*

Manlowe finds:  "Most people rarely feel heard and even more people never hear themselves or their unique 'calling' to the work they are here to do in the world." 

"Walking and Talking" is Jennifer's favorite way to hear her clients' stories. After beginning to walk in the park, clients say, "I feel relaxed and more able to communicate, it's not like therapy, I don't feel stared 'at' or as stuck as I do when I'm alone just thinking and worrying about what's next for me on this journey called life."

Manlowe goes onto say, "This kind of companionship -- a working partnership, really -- is what I delight in providing my clients and this action of walking and talking, openly and honestly, is what they tell me gives them a new kind of momentum."

What are clients saying:

"Jenn, I so appreciate this opportunity to work (and walk!) with you.  I am  so lucky to have found you and I would not be this far along with my life direction change if it wasn't for you. You really are a remarkable person in so many ways and I'm so excited to have  finally walked past the fork in the road." ~ Robinette

Manlowe claims both her clients and she, herself, have known the awkwardness of being between jobs, "At some time in all of our lives, we feel in-between worlds -- moving from the familiar into the unknown and back again to the familiar. Such moves require courage, encouragement and compassionate listening." 

Get started now by ordering my book: Polishing the Mirror: 90 Days to Vocational Clarity.

Be sure to schedule a 15-minute complimentary phone consultation as a sample of how we might work together. 

 

Make an appointment with me via telephone: (206) 617-8832 or email: jlmanlowe@comcast.net 

NOTE: If you decide to work together this E-book is yours for FREE!

 

*A little known fact: the term "peripatetic" means  "the ones walking about." Aristotle founded the Peripatetic School in 335 B.C.E. at the Lyceum; this very first school, just outside the walls of Athens, fostered a kind of "athletic play" and was called the Gymnasium. 

The Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard said,  "Above all, do not lose your desire to walk. Everyday I walk myself into a state of well-being.... I have walked myself into my best thoughts and I know of no thought so burdensome that one cannot walk through it."

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