Disparate, Not Desperate: Mind Masseuse Helps Housewives Put The Sizzle In Suburbia
Mindfulness trainer Maya Talisman Frost is a suburban housewife--and she's got some surprising tools to teach other women how to find the magical in the mundane.
(PRWEB) November 26, 2004 -- "Desperate Housewives" is a hot new television series featuring sexy, scheming women and their not-so-dull lives on Wisteria Lane. Realistic...or just fantasy?
Both, according to Maya Talisman Frost, an Oregon woman who offers a signature mix of self-improvement tools through her company, Real-World Mindfulness Training. "The storylines are a bit far-fetched, but the angst is very real," says Frost, herself a happily married suburban mother of four teenage daughters. "These women look--and, more importantly, feel--a whole lot like many housewives across the country."
Frost is offering a "Desperate Housewives" series smack dab in the middle of suburban Beaverton, Oregon in an effort to help local women step back and see their lives with greater clarity--and a whole lot more humor.
"We're not so much desperate as we are disparate. What we have in common is the sense that we have nothing in common," says Frost, who publishes an online newsletter, the Friday Mind Massage, with subscribers in over 100 countries. Her workshops focus on putting the fun in what is fundamentally an isolated role--being a stay-at-home mom or one with a home-based business.
With more women staying home with their kids, they find themselves "longing to connect, not connive" says Frost. She offers weekday and Saturday morning seminars to help women blast through the "I'm-stuck-in-suburbia" syndrome and create a more sizzling sense of purpose.
"Let's face it--doing laundry isn't thrilling. But WE are. It's time to celebrate that," says Frost, with a wink. Husbands, beware!
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