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Tag: retreats

  • From Stage to Startup: Ballet Pro’s Lucrative Side Hustle | Entrepreneur

    From Stage to Startup: Ballet Pro’s Lucrative Side Hustle | Entrepreneur

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    This Side Hustle Spotlight Q&A features Danielle Schultz, a ballet dancer at the Metropolitan Opera and founder of The Triangle Sessions, a corporate wellness company offering company retreats, interactive wellness classes and team-building events. She is based in the Greater Philadelphia Area.

    Image Credit: Devin Cruz.

    You’d been a dancer with the Metropolitan Opera since 2014 when Covid hit. How did your life and work change in those early days of the pandemic, and when did you know it was time to supplement your income with a side hustle?

    When Covid hit, I was in the middle of Die Fliegende Hollander and was slated to perform in Turandot a few weeks later. I had nurtured positions teaching fitness and ballet at New York City studios, which I continued via Zoom to stay financially afloat. However, I was also three months pregnant, and my husband was a full-time student. I had to get creative quickly. One of the first social impacts of Covid that everyone struggled with was isolation. It gave me the idea to start offering corporate wellness and team events to help employees stay connected in the newly virtual workplace.

    Related: Being an Entrepreneur Means Finding Profit in Your Passion

    How did your professional background inspire you to launch The Triangle Sessions? How did that skill set translate to your entrepreneurial journey?

    I graduated in 2009 from NYU Tisch with a dance degree and a minor in art history. It was a terrible time to graduate, especially with an arts degree. I turned down an apprenticeship with a small ballet company to perform as a dancer on a cruise ship and travel the world. Believe it or not, this was simply the more practical approach at the time. I was able to give up my New York City apartment, live expense-free and save money. This experience served as a crash course in travel and tourism, something that would come into play 10 years later when organizing a large-scale retreat for a national law firm.

    After my cruise ship contract, I danced with a small contemporary company while waiting tables at high-end restaurants. It was the New York City restaurant scene that provided excellent training in wine, spirits and food pairings. Like the cruise ship, I learned the value of customer service and how to connect with a wide variety of people. Waiting tables still goes down as the hardest job I’ve ever had, but it was too physically demanding while dancing.

    Related: Shift Your Perspective From Getting to Giving to Get Unstuck

    When I got my break at the Metropolitan Opera, a dream job for years, there was a catch…it still wasn’t full-time. So, I had to supplement my income in a way that would be easier on my body. I became a certified yoga teacher, certified nutrition counselor and Ballet Beautiful trainer for celebrity clients. All of these skills allowed me to share a deeper understanding of the human body with a wide range of people. It set me up beautifully for teaching corporate wellness.

    For years, I continued to perform at the Metropolitan Opera while juggling a slew of part-time work. It wasn’t until my aunt, a former ballroom champion and long-time business owner, told me something that I’ll never forget: “Dani, you already have the mentality of an entrepreneur in the way you support yourself. You have multiple income streams. Figure out how to work for yourself, not other people, so that you can share your knowledge on your own terms.” It was a lightbulb moment that got the wheels turning. It took a pandemic and a layoff from the Met Opera to pursue the endeavor full-time.

    What was your vision for The Triangle Sessions, and what were some of the first steps you took to get it off the ground?

    I wanted to implement the knowledge I developed in my professional dance career around healthy habits and performing at one’s best. I wanted to replicate the camaraderie I had experienced in the dance world through high-quality, purpose-driven experiences and apply it to the corporate world.

    When Covid first hit, I offered virtual wellness classes….yoga, meditation, desk stretching, etc., always with some type of social component. No one was interested. People just wanted alcohol and happy hours. I started incorporating educational wine and sake tastings WITH corporate wellness, and suddenly, there was interest! I found a fantastic vendor to help put together high-quality experience kits (and accommodate some of my wacky requests, like combining foam rollers with bottles of Prosecco and gourmet snacks), and I hit the ground running.

    Related: Side Hustles for These Times

    How did you approach continuing to build, and what does your revenue look like?

    Initially, the vast majority of business came from my own network, referrals and word-of-mouth. After some time hosting virtual team-building and wellness events, I became a small fish in a large pond. So, I partnered (and still continue to partner) with larger team-building event companies in which my services are offered. They have a dedicated sales team, and it provides steady revenue, all while nurturing my own clients and relationships. Annual revenue for 2022 was $110,000.

    What were some of the biggest challenges along the way, and how did you navigate those?

    The biggest challenge is trying to anticipate the needs of organizations and their employees without straying too far from our own mission. Employee well-being and community are at the backbone of The Triangle Sessions. I keep an open mind and experiment to see where there’s interest. In 2020, happy hours were in vogue. This last year it’s been all about wellness and creativity. Luckily, I enjoy this process and love having an open dialogue with clients to learn about their needs. Many of our signature events, like our Build-A-Terrarium workshop, which combines plant care with self-care, have been inspired by client requests.

    Personally, I’ve struggled to find the balance between running The Triangle Sessions and wanting to continue to dance. Dance is my first love, my identity since I was three years old. I returned to the Met Opera part-time in 2021 and scaled back on the number of productions I usually perform to focus on building The Triangle Sessions. However, keeping my foot in the door at the Met sometimes leads to losing momentum. It’s a risk I’m willing to take for now since I have the best of both worlds. Martha Graham once said, “A dancer dies twice—once when they stop dancing, and this first death is the more painful.” These words ring true, but I’m grateful to be building another satisfying career around community, connectivity and high-quality performance.

    Related: These High School Best Friends Achieved Their Dream of Being Their Own Bosses. Their Next Step? Starting a Wellness Revolution.

    Do you have any advice for other professionals who want to start a side hustle or full-time business?

    Lean into your strengths. Learn your core values. Reflect on what makes you different. From there, assess how these skills can benefit others and bring out the best in communities. It may take a bit of experimentation and creativity, but the process can be surprisingly satisfying. Sometimes, you just need to start somewhere and see what happens. Celebrate the small wins and run (or dance!) at your own pace.

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    Amanda Breen

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  • Sacred Surrogacy Launches New Brand Identity, E-Commerce Platform, and Website

    Sacred Surrogacy Launches New Brand Identity, E-Commerce Platform, and Website

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    Press Release



    updated: Mar 31, 2017

    Leia Swanberg, CEO of Sacred Surrogacy is proud to announce the launch of our new brand identity, e-commerce platform, and website. “Our Sacred Surrogacy program has been growing so quickly we thought it was time to more closely realign the brand with our message”, said Leia Swanberg CEO of the company.

    The new brand identity was the shared vision of Leia Swanberg, and Creative Director, Kiley Werezak. “The logo with it’s varied line widths, and softened corners, imitate the hand-drawn art during our Honoring Ceremonies at our Sacred Surrogacy Retreats”, said Kiley Werezak.

    Our Sacred Surrogacy program has been growing so quickly we thought it was time to more closely realign the brand with our message.

    Leia Swanberg, CEO Sacred Surrogacy

    WHAT IS SACRED SURROGACY?

    The Sacred Surrogacy movement offers a deeper way to view this remarkable journey. It is a way to embrace the beauty that is inherently a part of the pregnancy and birth process, and to navigate the path of alternative family building. Through our courses intended parents and surrogates learn self care practices, as well as ways to connect to the process in a soul fulfilling and meaningful way.

    Sacred Surrogacy is both online classes and weekend retreats for surrogates and intended parents. We have also recently launched the Sacred Donation subscription box, which allows intended parents to thank their known or anonymous egg donor for the beautiful gift she is giving.

    WHY WE STARTED SACRED SURROGACY

    Leia Swanberg and Anni Daulter, the creator of Sacred Pregnancy, teamed up to create these programs to bridge the disconnect in the industry between surrogates and the beauty that was available to them. The goal was simple, to honour and celebrate each of these women for the extraordinary gift she is giving. Our hope is that when a surrogate participates in a spiritual practice that honours her, it will in turn honour the relationship with her intended parents.

    The movement has now grown significantly, and branched into a program specifically for intended parents, who also benefit from the practice of being honoured while they walk this journey. We now serve over 400 families across the world each year through our retreats, online classes, and subscription boxes.

    About Leia Swanberg​​

    Leia’s passion for alternative family building began at age sixteen, when she was a birth mother to a daughter placed in an open adoption. Since then, she has had four children of her own – ages 19, 11, 3, and a new baby. She has been a gestational surrogate twice and an egg donor several times. Leia’s approach to surrogacy is simple – taking a holistic approach to ensure that all parties are supported, encouraged and protected.

    She has made great industry connections and working partnerships with professionals worldwide to ensure that she can help to develop the fertility plan that best suits your needs. Having founded Canadian Fertility Consulting in 2007, she has had the opportunity to help hundreds of couples become parents. Leia’s previous experience as a small business owner and background in management and small business development has helped her grow CFC into Canada’s foremost surrogacy consulting service.

    Leia and CFC have been featured many times in Canadian media, including Canada AM and The National Post, helping to depict third-party reproduction as a tangible and approachable subject in the country. 

    Source: Sacred Surrogacy

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  • Unusual Marriage Counseling Retreats on Nautical Odysseys Re-Launched

    Unusual Marriage Counseling Retreats on Nautical Odysseys Re-Launched

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    Love Odyssey Charters has just re-launched their ship “Dragon Lady” for a new season. Their private marriage counseling retreats offer 2 to 7 days of intensive assessment and skills training while sailing each couple to different ports along the rivers and sounds of North Carolina.

    Press Release


    Apr 6, 2016

    ​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​Love Odyssey Charters has announced that it is ready to start booking new marriage counseling retreats. They have re-launched their pilothouse sailboat “Dragon Lady” after its annual maintenance. The company offers an intensive marriage intervention service for couples seeking to revive their troubled relationships. More than a gimmick, the service is based on sound neuroscience according to Dr. Bryce Kaye, psychologist and author of the book “The Marriage First Aid Kit.” He explains: “We keep them moving and out of their stuck roles. We sail them from port to port where they stay in quaint B&B’s, explore the historic towns and enjoy the down-east restaurants. They are surrounded by beautiful natural scenery on the rivers and sounds of North Carolina. The marriage counseling retreats take place in a cozy teak-lined pilot house of a Finnish-made sailboat. All of this puts them into an exploratory state in which their minds are more receptive to new ideas.”  

    The new ideas to which Dr. Kaye refers are taught by him and his wife of 34 years, Helen Kaye. The Kayes work as a team with one couple at a time. Their approach is more complex than merely teaching communication and closeness. They have observed that the highest functioning couples will adaptively reverse their emotional states between closeness and autonomy. They point out that most couples communicate just fine at the start of a relationship. It is when a couple begins to share decisions about childcare, money and other responsibilities that emotional damage can accumulate. According to Dr. Kaye, each partner has an unconscious system that inhibits reflexes. This inhibitory system can shut down affection and communication if it is not well managed. Toward the end of this process is someone who feels like he or she is “suffocating”, “drowning” or “doesn’t know who they are anymore.” The Kayes call this “relationship depersonalization” and it accounts for many failed marriages and illicit affairs.

    The paradox is that autonomy protects intimacy.

    Dr. Bryce Kaye, Captain

    During their marriage retreats, couples are counseled and trained to reverse the damage from accumulating inhibition. They are trained in techniques to strengthen both autonomy and intimacy. Dr. Kaye emphasizes that both are necessary for a good relationship because true autonomy protects intimacy. He explains how this occurs in his on-line book chapters.

    As a finale on the longer retreats, each couple is guided through a sunrise resentment burial ceremony on a remote island beach. Wild horses are often seen grazing nearby. Each partner downloads his or her list of resentments to the other for a full half hour without rebuttal. Afterward, the couple cremates their lists together in a hole dug in the sand. Following the burial a ceremony of new marriage vows is officiated by the captain and champagne is served as the sun rises. While this finale is not strictly neuroscience, Dr. Kaye explains that he tries to leave some room for old fashioned romance as well.

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