Recommendations for Kathy Cleveland Bull
“Kathy Cleveland Bull helped develop the first “Who Moved My Cheese Learning Program” and her ability to help others succeed in changing times continues to impress me,” says Spencer Johnson, M.D. author of Who Moved My Cheese?
"Kathy's energy and warm presence on stage is complimented by her presence off stage. She talks to people, she laughs, she listens and she asks questions. She is a terrific speaker!"
Bobi Seredich, President
Equanimity, Inc.
"Talent, beauty, brains. What a rare combination, but you deliver it all! I am out looking for New Cheese because of your terrific skills. You were The Best at the Leadership Conference!"
John Pryor, President and Chief Operating Officer
Health-Mor
"For more than 10 years, Kathy Cleveland Bull has provided keynote addresses and presented workshops for ACT's National Enrollment Planners Conference. Consistent rave reviews and extremely positive feedback keep her at the forefront of our faculty pool. Kathy's sincerity and energetic style captures the trust of the audience. We have benefited significantly from headlining Kathy in the past, and we intend to engage her in the future!"
Tom Colaner, Principal Consultant
ACT, Inc.
"Surrounded by an array of the top speakers in the country, Kathy received high praise from our demanding attendees. Her content was rich and insightful, and her address engaging. She definitely exceeded our expectations and we look forward to continuing our relationship with her in the future."
Tom Crawford, Chairman and CEO
Leadership Network Corporation
Kathy Cleveland Bull's Blog
My towel rack fell down today. All on its own. What a great reminder of a natural law we all try to ignore. Every day we strive to “get it all together”, put things in order, get things tidied up, finished, completed. All well and good. But the natural order of things is impermanence, change, even (dare I say it) aging and death.
When things happen, (like the towel rack falls down, or your favorite pair of shoes wears out, or your new SUV gets a dent), this is not a personal affront but a unive…
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Posted on February 20, 2010 at 2:30pm —
Karen died on June 20, 2009. I had never heard the term “twinless twin” until after Karen died. Now I am encountering it everywhere. I’m not sure what it means or even if I can identify with it at all. I do know that right now I sense a deep hole that lies somewhere out in the distance, as yet out of reach.
Karen didn’t just live the length of her life - - but the width and breadth of it as well. Many people have remarked that at some deep level she must have known her life would be short. For…
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Posted on October 26, 2009 at 4:23pm —
I had the great good fortune last winter to participate in a retreat with Brother David Steindl-Rast and other wonderful modern day spiritual teachers. In our early exploration of the topic of Gratefulness, Brother David wisely noted that one of the conditions which prevents us from experiencing Gratefulness today is the “lack of lack”. We have too much.
Our lives are filled with stuff – and not just an over abundance of material possessions, modern conveniences and unnecessary luxuries. We are…
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Posted on October 26, 2009 at 4:17pm —
You won’t want to read this. Unless you prefer simple, plain talk. Straight from the heart. Unless you know that life is short, bitter and sweet, with the capacity for great joy and great suffering. And unless you realize, at some level, that it is the suffering in life that can move us to our greatest understanding and insight, reveal our deepest compassion, humble us, open our hearts and soften us.
My mother died of an early onset dementia that left her trapped in a body that no longer functi…
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Posted on October 25, 2009 at 4:00pm —
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