How To Host A Fun Team Event At Altitude Trampoline Park

trampolineGroup events are important because they improve team relationships and strengthen bonds among team members. The best kinds of group events include activities that improve physical, mental and emotional health.

Schools, colleges and corporations hold events periodically because they know the importance of learning the social skills  required to build strong relationships among team members.

Altitude Trampoline Park is perfect for organizing events for colleagues or kids.  Event hosting doesn’t cost much, unlike other places where you have to pay huge sums to host events of any size. When you’re with family, friends and colleagues fun is your ultimate goal, and you don’t have to splurge to get there.

Why host team building events?

Exercise

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Where Do We Go When We “Die?”

deathArjun Walia – What happens when we die? Who really knows? But to deem these questions completely unanswerable is absurd in light of all the evidence that’s emerged over the past view decades. Sure, contemplating what happens after death can be a little too ‘out there’ for some people, it can even contradict long-held belief systems that we’ve been holding on to for so long, with a tight grip, so much so that it can be hard to even entertain an alternate perspective that’s backed with some type of credible evidence. It’s called cognitive dissonance.

There is nothing wrong with discovery, and throughout all stages of human history new discoveries have always been denounced and ridiculed before they eventually make their way into the mainstream. This is exactly what we are seeing with non-material science.  Continue reading

Hitting Rock Bottom Frees Us From Negative Emotions

rock bottomApril McCarhty – We’ve all heard it said, “When you hit rock bottom, there’s nowhere to go but up.” This can prove especially true in business, where bottoming out as a result of job loss can be necessary before finding the radical solution that will lead to a new work identity, according to new research from the University of Notre Dame.

“Hitting Rock Bottom After Job Loss: Bouncing Back to Create a New Positive Work Identity,” was published this month in Academy of Management Review by lead author Dean Shepherd, the Siegfried Professor of Entrepreneurship in Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business, and Trenton Williams of Indiana University.

“On the way down, we frantically do all sorts of things to try and repair the situation, and suffer as they fail,” Shepherd says. “Bottoming out frees us from the misconception that the problems can be fixed, and in the process, frees us from other constraints and negative emotions and provides the conditions necessary to find a viable solution.”

Individuals who eventually hit rock bottom come to realize their identity has been lost, and that realization can lead to one of two paths: toward recovery or toward dysfunction.

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Love for the lost

soulsThe Angels – You live in a one room schoolhouse upon your earth. There are spiritual graduates, and spiritual kindergärtners. There are star students, and there are those who skip class entirely. There are kind students and bullies. You are all in school together. You are all family.

So what do you do when you witness violence on your news… or in your own lives? How can you reconcile the fact that every soul carries within them the light of God, and yet there are some who hurt, kill, and devalue other life? We know it is not easy to be upon the earth right now. It is a time of grand and glorious change, a time when emotions are bubbling up in human hearts, sometimes with volcanic proportion.

The beauty of this time is that so many of you are finding new passion, inspiration, or a desire to release the past. The sad side to this movement is that there are more who “coming unglued” as you say, and hurting others out of their own unbearable pain. All are family. Even those who kill, hurt, and devalue others are family. They are lost, but they are still part of you. They need your prayers. Continue reading