Monday, June 1, 2009

Expert Offers Practical Tips On Love, Health, And Family



Dr. Beth is the host of "Relationships 101" on www.webtalkradio.net
and a psychotherapist for 30 years. She is a great expert who can offer your audience practical tips on love, health, and family.


Dr. Beth Erickson lives in Minnesota 1 mile from an NBC affiliate CNN uses
and also close to ABC and NBC in the Twin Cities. Her patients are
used to her media placements so she can re-arrange her schedule at a
moment's notice. I'd be delighted to coordinate an interview.

TV Clip: http://www.drbetherickson.com/Press_Room.html

Helpful links: Online press kit, and Book information:

Link to Press Kit: http://onealmediagroup.presskit247.com/Dr._Beth_Erickson

Book page: http://www.drbetherickson.com/Products.html

Here are Five Story ideas laden with insights that will keep your audiences riveted:

Health:

How To Live On Purpose, Not Just the Absence of Disease

Eight thousand baby boomers turn sixty every day. They must choose
whether to spend the rest of their lives living or dying, even if they
are not consciously aware of this dilemma. It is up to each individual
to choose to have a health span commensurate with this extended life
span. Dr. Beth provides tools to help audiences choose to connect with
their inner fountain of youth, claim their wisdom, transmit their
legacy, and age without fear.


Ten Tools For Tapping Your Inner Fountain of Youth

One hundred years ago, life expectancy in the U.S. was 47 years,
compared to 77.6 years in 2005. Skills not usually developed in
earlier decades are needed now to thrive and age vitally in these
bonus decades. What is more, the depth of questions is different now,
centering around surveying accomplishments, reshaping one’s purpose,
leaving a legacy, and facing death. Dr. Beth will teach the ten most
important tools to maximize and thrive in these unprecedented years.


Love:

Why Marriage Isn’t For Sissies: 7 Simple Keys To Unlocking The Best Part Of Your Life:

Dr. Beth helps couples navigate through potentially stormy relationships, identify their most destructive enemies, and overcome the battle- renewed and re-nvigorated via simple therapeutic approaches. Dr. Erickson can teach your audience how to have qualitatively different conversations with their spouses and themselves so they can enjoy the best part of their married lives.


“Attracting the Love You Want”

When single women concentrate on making themselves attractive to potential mates,
they place themselves in a passive position where they must wish for lovers to find them. Instead, Dr. Beth urges women to learn to actively attract a partner. Her guest, Kim Mylles, shares the charming story of the strategies she deliberately employed to find “Mr. Mylles,” while Dr. Beth shares her own story of how she met
her husband. If you’re single and interested in being in a relationship, you won’t want to miss the wise counsel of two women who have been highly successful in their careers and are now in their love lives.



“Secrets to a Long and Vital Marriage

Mat and his best friend since third grade, Jason Miller, were two bachelors in their twenties when they decided to study what makes long and successful marriages. Mat particularly was curious because his parents had divorced. So they traveled the country in a rented RV, interviewing couples who had been happily married for 40 or more years. What they found from their conversations, as couples’ stories unfolded, were the main ingredients of longevity in marriages. Some of the couples’ stories may surprise you. And some may warm your heart. And all will provide the anatomy of everlasting love.


“How Lesbian Love Is Like Heterosexual Love”

It is human nature to think of people who are different from oneself as being weird and even wrong. And while, of course, there are some significant differences between ethnic groups, generations, and heterosexual and homosexual relationships, there are also some significant similarities as well. And yet many people continue to focus on the differences. In this conversation, Dr. Beth, Dr. Joni, and Esther will discuss the similarities in homosexual and heterosexual relationships.



Family:

How To Bounce Back From Father Loss
Far from being disposable and optional as some believe, knowledge of
and contact with their birth father is essential for children’s
healthy development. Yet, far too many children experience a dad who
is not there even when he is home. Worse yet, others’ information
about who their father is distorted in the midst of divorce wars. Dr.
Beth will discuss the ways that relationships with both father and
mother are essential to the development of a child’s self-image and
what happens when that knowledge is missing.

When Dick and Jane Grow Up: Fathers, Sons, and Daughters
Boys get anointed man enough by their fathers, and girls get a safe
place to practice being a woman. What happens in adulthood when
children are deprived of a healthy relationship with their birth
father? That loss often sits like a lost Atlantis sunken in their
entrails. The relationships they create usually are highly
conflictual. Their parenting often goes from one extreme of smothering
to the other of emotional neglect. Dr. Beth will discuss emotional
sequellae of father loss and suggest strategies for its prevention.

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