Omiyale Jubé is the CEO and Founder of Navigate Your Existence, an organization designed to open new portals of understanding for those who desire to “Take Control of their Life’s Destination.”
Omiyale, also known as Anika Johnson, was born and raised on 125th street in Harlem, New York. Early in life, at the whim of the New York City school system, she was labeled culturally deprived, underprivileged, and emotionally disturbed. She is a survivor of abusive relationships and an attempted suicide. Her journey began searching for answers. Omiyale’s discovery of her rich African heritage restored a sense of being, a step towards claiming self-worth. Yet, still looking externally for answers and not feeling in control, the quest continued. Searching for answers on a spiritual level opened doors to understanding her being on a more profound level, her very existence.
Omiyale’s journey consisted of a series of “aha” moments that simplified the most complex and sometimes misunderstood concepts of life, converting them to tools of empowerment fueling her transformation.
She possesses an uncanny ability to provide answers to those yet unanswered, nagging questions about life, provide new perspectives with which to view the world, and guide individuals to look within for direction.
Sharing these “aha’ moments affords an extraordinary connection to her audiences as she guides them to ignite the power within. She utilizes her journey to teach others how to find their internal compass, and chart their course of destination. Omiyale’s journey as an acclaimed speaker and commitment to service has won her numerous awards and recognition from various organizations and persons of distinction.
Currently, Omiyale resides in Las Vegas, Nevada. Amongst her accomplishes, she is an Author, Inspirational Speaker, Personal and Spiritual Coach, and Reiki Master. A retired school administrator, she has always been inspired to share knowledge, effect change, and champion the evolution of humanity. Her speaking and coaching series is dedicated to the resurrection of mind, body, and soul, and to the ascension of consciousness for the human collective.
Bob Linscott is assistant director of the Boston-based lgbt aging project. In that position, he works to make certain that aging people with alternative life styles have an opportunity to enjoy as much support as anybody else might. He also works to bring together intergenerational groups. That can become quite a challenge considering the vast social changes that have occurred in the past few decades. At one point, gays, lesbians and others were obligef to hide their identities. Now, young children claim, for example, that they are girls even though they have been designated as being boys.
Innumerable books have been written about care giving for the elderly. But Carolie Warren's volume - But Mama How Come Grandpa Get's To Put His Feet Up on the Couch?" talks a fresh approach. it is written to help children better understand the need to remain patient and loving when dealing with the elderly. How can they become part of a circle of love that surrounds and supports this person?
An important part of this message: This elder deserves respect becaue of the work they have done on this earth and the fact their efforts helped support many poeple.
Ms. Warren is a principal at a middle school so she has viewed aging from two perspectives: Young people coming into their maturity and aging people leaving their final mark.
John Stewart and Maggie Shetz have been combining their unique blend of spiritual and intellectual talents since 2007. Motivated by a love for learning and a deep interest in human consciousness, they have studied and developed skills in a range of holistic modalities. Their individual expertise and unique talents create a balanced perspective which offers clients a truly holistic experience.
John and Maggie offer services Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and many services are also available by Email, phone or Skype.
Services include hypnotherapy, past life regressions, intuitive readings, mediumship, Ioshi Card readings and Reiki healings. We also offer the scientifically proven tool of Controlled Remote Viewing.
Sean Caulfield iss one of the founders of Artists for Alzheimer’s. The organization brings art to people and people to art. It facilitates visits to museums where participants, some of them people living with Alzheimer’s plus their care partners, are asked to comment on the works they see. And It also brings art, often in vans, to senior living facilities.
Nicholas Brink is the author of The Power of Ecstatic Trance: Practices for Healing, Spiritual Growth, and Accessing the Universal Mind.
License and Certificates:
Pennsylvania License PS001028-L
Diplomate In Clinical Psychology, American Board of Professional Psychology
Council for the National Register of Health Service Providers in Psychology
1982 - Present: The private practice of psychology. Services offered: Individual, family, and marital psychotherapy and hypnosis. Evaluation and therapy for emotional, family and marital problems, sex abuse, stress reduction, pain and other physical/psychosomatic problems.
Fall 1989: Adjunct professor, The Pennsylvania State University, taught introductory psychology.
1974-1982: Staff psychologist and (Beginning Jan. 1980) Director of Psychological Services at Danville State Hospital, Danville, PA. Administrator and supervisor of psychology department, started family therapy program, directed student internship program and provided psychotherapy for patients.
Summer 1981: Adjunct professor at Bloomsburg University, Bloomsburg, PA. Taught intelligence testing.
1972-1973: Director, Strawberry Fields, a state funded small group home for retarded adolescents, State College, PA.
1970-1972: Research Associate, University Division of Instructional Services, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. Consulted with faculty on classroom evaluation, test construction and research.
Victor James Zammit, B.A.Grad. Dip.Ed. M.A. LL.B. Ph.D, worked as an attorney in the Local Courts, District and Supreme Courts in Sydney Australia. For many years his main interest was in human rights and social justice. Around 1990 he began to experience spontaneous clairvoyance and clairaudience which led him to begin a systematic investigation of the afterlife. He was astonished to discover a hidden world of research that he felt provided overwhelming evidence for life after death. Since that time his priority has been sharing his discoveries on his website where an earlier version of his book was viewed by more than a million people.
AS AN AUTHOR Victor Zammit wrote A LAWYER PRESENTS THE CASE FOR THE AFTERLIFE (National Library of Australia Card No. and ISBN 0-9580115-0-8), which is on the internet. This book has been translated into Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Russian, French, Dutch and now is in the process of being translated into German.
Victor's partner Wendy Zammit has been researching the evidence for the afterlife with him for more than twenty years. She is the co-author of "A Lawyer Presents the Evidence for the Afterlife" and the Friday Afterlife Report that is sent weekly free of charge to thousands of subscribers all over the world.
Noam Chomsky is sometimes referred to as "The Father of Modern Linguistics."
Noam Chomsky was born in Philadelphia to immigrant Russian parents, both of whom were Hebrew scholars and teachers. A child of the Great Depression, Chomsky's political consciousness developed early: He saw women strikers being beaten outside a textile factory and rag sellers peddling their pitiful wares door-to-door in his neighborhood. To the 10 year-old Chomsky, the 1930's were "a time of political activism, debate, and great fear of Hitler conquering Europe. I saw the world as a complicated, frightening place."
He studied linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard and in 1957, while a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he published Syntactic Structures a theory of "generative grammar" that transformed linguistics from an obscure discipline into a major social science. Outside of academia Chomsky is better known as a political activist-a role that he vigorously assumed as an early and outspoken critic and protester of the Vietnam War.
In the 1966 essay, "The Responsibility of Intellectuals," Chomsky challenged intellectuals "to speak the truth and expose lies," and he carried his protests beyond the printed page: he became a tax resister and he was arrested in 1967 at the Pentagon while protesting military involvement in Southeast Asia.
Chomsky's criticism of U.S. governmental policies has continued unabated since that time. In Deterring Democracy (1992) and in other books he has focused on trade and economic issues and accuses the Government of being a "rogue superpower." "I'm a citizen of the United States," says Chomsky, "and I have a share of responsibility for what it does. I'd like to see it act in ways that meet decent moral standards. It's back to moral truisms: it's of little value to criticize the crimes of someone else-though you should do it, and tell the truth. I have no influence over the policies of [other countries] but a certain degree over the policies of the U.S. It's not a matter of expectation but of aspiration."






