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Achieve Awareness Hypnosis Opens Doors E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

Jacqueline Siples recently opened Achieve Awareness Hypnosis, a new business in downtown Safety Harbor. Siples is a Certified Master Hypnotist, Certified NLP Practitioner as well as Certified Handwriting Analyst with more than 20 years experience in helping others.

“The primary business is teaching people to remove obstacles in their lives that prevent them from achieving their goals,” Siples said. “Those goals are different for different people but hypnosis works for everyone.”

Hypnosis is a natural state of heightened awareness where the conscious mind takes a break and the subconscious mind takes over, she explained. “Have you ever been driving down the highway in your car and realized you missed your exit, and wondered how that happened?” That is a form of hypnosis, she said.

“Some people think you can’t hear in hypnosis or that you are unconscious. In reality you hear everything, you are just in a heightened state of awareness where all your senses are at their sharpest. Some people think hypnosis is mind control. You will never do anything against your values. You would not tell any secrets, or do anything you would not normally do. Unlike stage hypnosis you not cluck like a chicken or quack like a duck unless of course, you really want to. Stage hypnosis is for entertainment,” Siples said.

Hypnosis has many applications. It reduces stress, helps people quit smoking, control their weight, become more motivated to exercise. It has been known to lower blood pressure which can be accomplished while working hand in hand with your medical doctor. A medical referral is necessary for some services such as lowering blood pressure, hypertension or pain management.

Call Siples at 727-796-1932. Achieve Awareness Hypnosis is located at 108 4th St. S., Safety Harbor.

 

FAQs About Hypnosis
by Jacqueline Siples

What is hypnosis?
Hypnosis is an acute normal state of awareness. The critical thinking is bypassed and positive suggestions can be accepted for positive change in an individual. Hypnosis provides a way to change our attitudes. In this state, we are extremely responsive to positive suggestions for remarkable change. Hypnosis strengthens us to make better choices for ourselves, and can help us to a happier and more comfortable life.

Can anyone be hypnotized?
Yes, anyone can be hypnotized. We go in and out of trance everyday. Have you ever missed your exit on the freeway? Do you cry at sad movies? The movie is not real but our subconscious does not know the difference between real and imagined.

Will I hear everything?
Yes, you are acutely aware of everything being said. The senses are enhanced in hypnosis. Remember daydreaming in school? We could hear the teacher, and class noises but we were somewhere else. That was hypnosis.

Can I become stuck in Hypnosis?
No, the worst thing that could happen, you may fall asleep. You would awaken naturally as if from a nap.

Will I tell my secrets?
You are in control at all times. You have the choice to accept and reject any suggestion give to you. The subconscious mind only reveals what you want to reveal for your better good. Hypnosis gives back your personal power and control.

What does hypnosis feel like?
Hypnosis is a common experience and different for everyone. Many people say they haven’t been that relaxed in years. Others say they feel calm and passive. Some emerge with a new way of thinking about a certain issues that will beneficial to them. Hypnosis is a safe, pleasant, rewarding experience.
 

 
Safety Harbor Begins Summer Competition To Benefit Food Bank E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

Safety Harbor’s downtown merchants are engaging in a friendly competition to benefit the food bank at the Safety Harbor Neighborhood Family Center, which helps struggling local families and is experiencing unusually high demand.

From now until 3rd Friday in September, each month’s 3rd Friday Music Series event at the Gazebo in John Wilson Park will feature a weigh-in of food collected. Participating Safety Harbor businesses are collecting non-perishable food donations at their business locations and bringing the collections to the Gazebo on 3rd Fridays during July, August and September for the official measurement.

All foods collected will be distributed through the Safety Harbor Neighborhood Family Center following each event. A $100 cash prize is being offered to the business that collects the most during the three months and a secondary competition has begun among businesses to pledge where the cash prize will be donated.

To participate ask any downtown business or contact Art Designs & Interiors at 727-726-8303 for more information.

 
Tours On Old Tampa Bay Promote Safety Harbor History E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008
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 Tropical Breeze photo by Sue Suby
 
Safety Harbor Museum Docent Ron Fekete, foreground, tells passengers about the history of Philippe Park, the original homestead of Pinellas County’s first settler, Odet Philippe. Safety Harbor resident Carl Speck points toward the Indian mound, which is listed on the National Registry of Historic Places, as Fekete tells how Philippe’s family fled to the top of the mound to escape the floodwaters of an 18th century hurricane. The tours already are being booked into the fall. Call 727-726-1668 to make reservations. 

by Floyd Egner
Publisher, Tropical Breeze

Dolphins leaping out of the water and boys jumping into it from the roof of the Safety Harbor Pier were among the highlights as staff members of the Safety Harbor Museum of Regional History kicked off a new venture offering pontoon boat tours of the city’s waterfront.

Sailing out of the marina aboard a pontoon boat from Safety Harbor Sailing Charters, guests are provided a unique vista on the oldest settlement in Pinellas County. Museum docent Ron Fekete offered a running commentary on the role the waterfront has played in the city’s development from a center of pre-Colombian native American culture to the home of world-famed mineral springs to a modern community in the center of the Tampa Bay metropolitan area.

Capt. Mark Smith guided the pontoon boat on a gentle, hour-long cruise from the marina north to Philippe Park and then kicked it up a notch to return to the docks before ever-present summer squalls could move in over the bay. Weather always is a consideration, but tours already are being booked into the fall. Smith operates the pontoon boat and charters “Pretty Girl,” a 30-ft. Watkins sailboat based in the Safety Harbor Marina for day sails or evening tours.

The museum’s initial venture, Safety Harbor History Tours, uses the pontoon boat because of its stability and ability to comfortably hold a half-dozen or more guests in addition to the captain and guide. Rates are $25 per person and reservations may be made by calling 727-726-1668.

Among the facts discussed on the tour is how the bay was an abundant source of food for the earliest residents of the area, who left enormous mounds of shells from the oysters they harvested from the bay. One intact mound is a centerpiece of Philippe Park and was a ceremonial mound, not used for burials, Fekete noted. The museum actually is located on a native burial site, he said.

Safety Harbor and a number of other Pinellas locations were dotted with mounds when Spanish explorers first arrived about 500 years ago. When permanent settlement began in the 18th and early 19th century, the shell from the mounds frequently was harvested for road-building material.

Safety Harbor is known as the home of Count Odet Philippe, first European settler in Pinellas County and an entrepreneur credited with being the first to cultivate citrus in Florida. Although his last name has disappeared, his daughters have left descendents among the local population. The city first emerged as word spread of the healing springs just south of Philippe’s homestead. Col. William J. Bailey was the first to own and commercialize the springs in the decade of the 1850s.

Several health resorts and retreats developed in the general area of today’s Safety Harbor Resort & Spa, which traces its lineage to an era more than 100 years ago when waters from its springs were bottled and shipped around the world. Commerce led to the need for a commercial pier. Today’s picturesque Safety Harbor Pier is the most recent of several piers that have been built on the city’s waterfront. Several earlier piers were destroyed by hurricanes, most recently by Hurricane Elena in 1985.

Fekete told tour participants about the Florida boom years of the 1920s, when narrow rail tracks ran along the pier for carts that were used to load commercial vessels and ferries that made regular stops at the Safety Harbor Pier. Nearly all the cross-bay commercial boat traffic disappeared in the 1930s after the construction of the Gandy Bridge and what today is called the Courtney Campbell Causeway.

Commercial and tourism uses have changed over the years, but the waterfront still teems with life. Dolphins or manatee are nearly always sighted on a pontoon trip along the bay and fish, crabs and shellfish still are present, even if not as abundant as they once were. Fekete could have added a cautionary tale or two about jumping off the pier. More than one incident has occurred over the years in which a diver found the bay shallower than expected and was seriously injured as a result. On this tour, however, the boys daringly climbed to the roof of the Pier and jumped over the railing into the bay, oblivious to the adults holding their breath in hopes no one would be hurt.


To see a video of the test-run go to our Images and Video section on the front page.

 

 
Chef Peter Cipolla Featured At Gala E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008
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The Allegro at East Lake has announced the recent hiring of Chef Peter Cipolla as its new dining services director.

To officially welcome Chef Peter and introduce him to the community, The Allegro will host a “Gourmet Gala” 4:30-6:30 p.m. Wed., July 30. The public is invited to meet Chef Peter and sample an array of his specialties.  R.S.V.P. to 727-943-8878.

A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, NY, for the last 17 years Cipolla served as executive chef at Innisbrook Resort and Golf Club.

Chef Peter’s menus use fresh ingredients and herbs to create mouthwatering and wholesome meals. The Allegro provides an elegant lifestyle for seniors seeking independent or assisted living and is located at 1755 East Lake Rd., Tarpon Springs.   

 
Anna Marie Dunn Is Celebrating E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

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Safety Harbor resident Anna Marie Dunn is celebrating the completion of her bachelor’s degree in business management from University of Phoenix-West Florida. The 51-year-old credits the University with giving her the courage to leave her job of 14 years to launch her own research and marketing consulting business called AMD Research & Marketing. She hopes to encourage other adult learners to go back to school, regardless of their age. She said, “I keep telling my peers, ‘What are you waiting for?’ It is never too late to go back to school.” To date, Dunn has managed to grow her successful business through referrals alone. She values learning and plans to continue her education. University of Phoenix-West Florida has four area campus locations in Clearwater, Sarasota, Tampa and Temple Terrace in addition to its online offerings. Its annual commencement ceremony took place June 14 at the Tampa Convention Center for approximately 600 local graduates. Dunn had to miss her own commencement ceremony due to her father’s illness. 
 
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Tropical Breeze is published by Tropical Breeze Publications, Inc.  Editorial and Corporate Headquarters: 630 2nd St. S., Safety Harbor, FL 34695.  Editor & Publisher: Floyd E. Egner, III.  Typesetting & Graphics: Sue Suby, Synergy Associates.  Website Design: Dan Gerson.
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