08/24/2021
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Loretta Stern Seiden is an Empowerment and Communication specialist for over forty years in Manhattan. She is the Founder of Stern Life Seminars offering custom communications workshops. She specializes in the Art of Communication Skills Modeling in a non-threatening atmosphere. The Do You Really Listen Chart addresses: how to say what you want and have it heard as you intended; how to understand your own modality of listening and learning. The Do You Really Listen Chart is the third component of the Stern System and is available separately.
Ms Seiden’s private practice is focused on dealing with stress and self understanding utilizing her self-help guide book for everyday living, Will The Real Me Please Stand Up, offering a deeper understanding of the authentic you. Available on Amazon.
Inside the book is the the Balance Your Life Chart, which is a tool to help you pin point which emotions are influencing your behavior at any given moment. Score what percent in that moment you had an open state of mind.
In addition, when working without the book, the alternative Balance Your Life Chart also helps you pin point which emotions are influencing your behavior at any given moment. It alternatively offers Positive Practical Tips providing examples of positive behavior.
Over the last forty years Ms Seiden has engaged in diverse business and life experiences. She is a licensed Real Estate Broker since 1975. She is a past President of the Executive Forum. an affiliate of New York University Stern School of Business, having served on the board for 20 years. Her charity work included serving on the Board of Directors of the Jewish Guild for the Blind for twenty years, W.A.I.F. (the children’s division of Travelers Aid Society of America), which placed orphans in the United States, and Dance Aspen in Aspen Colorado, which funded scholarships for music and art students. She is the mother of two children whom she raised in Manhattan. She now lives in Florida.
Ms Seiden says, “The quality of our lives depends on the quality of our communications.
Stress and tension show up in our health and in how we communicate with each other.”