About Me

Business Summary

Company
Behind The Scenes Management Inc.
Summary
Principal partner in Behind The Scenes Management Inc. which is a management company that owns and operates Tim Hortons locations in Ontario, Canada, specifically in the Hamilton and Stoney Creek areas. We also provide innovative leadership training programs for organizations who want to develop and grow their business.

We are currently leveraging several network marketing ventures, focusing on home based business.

Business Details

Business Website
http://www.btsmgmt.com
Business Phone
(905) 385-6785
Occupation
President/Principal Partner

Personal Information

About Me
Married to a beautiful wife named Maria and have a wonderful 5 year old son named Aidan. We have a great business and have abundance in our lives!
My Location
Hamilton ON Canada
Hometown
Newmarket
Personal Website
http://www.core4weightloss.ca
Gender
Male
Interests
Wellness, mountain biking, volleyball, baseball, graphic design, leadership coach
Relationship Status
Married

Contact Me

Mobile Phone
(905) 320-3344
Address
25 Rymal Road West
City / Town
Hamilton
State
Ontario
Country
Canada

Education

Degree
Abundance
Graduation Year
Still attending
College / University
University of Life
Jeffrey Bell

Jeffrey Bell

Certainly, a leader needs a clear vision of the organization and where it is going, but a vision is of little value unless it is shared in a way so as to generate enthusiasm and commitment. Leadership and communication are inseparable.
- 3 years ago
  • Karma
  • Member since
  • Tuesday, February 24, 2009
  • Last online
  • 1 year ago
  • Profile views
  • 638 views

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  • 17 May 2013

    Freshly Pressed: Friday Faves

    An ode to a father, a story of growing up with two mothers, a request for a cloak of visibility, and a reflection on goodbyes. Here are four Freshly Pressed standouts from this week — all quite personal pieces that have resonated with many readers. Go ahead and dive in:

    Why I Don’t Diet — An Ode to My Father

    My father spent his years fighting his size, wishing he was smaller, weaker, less of a giant. He was taught to hate his body, and he was ashamed of the amount of space he took up. But he passed his strength to me, and I won’t squander my inheritance. I will not let myself be diminished.

    Image from More Cabaret.com

    Image from More Cabaret.com

    Tiffany Kell, a contributor and dancer at More Cabaretreflects on her father’s recent passing, and his long struggle with his weight and health. She describes him vividly — “born larger than life” and of a family made of “Viking stock” — and creates a strong, invincible man in our minds.

    “But he didn’t want to be a giant,” she writes. “He wanted to be thin.”

    She recounts the experimental diet programs he tried, his obsession with calorie counting, his celiac disease, and — finally — his last year: wasting away, becoming a shadow of himself. This post isn’t simply an ode to her father, but an intimate, powerful piece about who she is and where she comes from — and ultimately becoming comfortable in one’s own skin.

    “Aunt”s and Other-Mothering in a Queer Household

    As Queer Black women, we don’t have many role models. The connection and communication with our elders is rare. It’s important to recognize and honor the LGBTQ women in our lives who have come before us, blazing trails that we may not have ever known we’d walk.

    This week, we read a number of posts celebrating Mother’s Day, from reflections on motherhood to interpretations on “mother.” Nitra at Wise Edits tells a bold and moving story about growing up in an unstable household of drugs and abuse — and finding happiness and a haven through her Aunt Dee. But this woman disappears from her life, and it’s not until Nitra is older, and comes out to her family, that she learns who Aunt Dee really was, and is.

    Beautifully told, Nitra’s piece celebrates the connection between mother and child, unbreakable bonds over time, and the queer household. We appreciate her warm, honest voice and tribute to the women in her life.

    The Lip Pencil of Invisibility — And a Grown-up Woman’s Request for JK Rowling

    Women of a certain age.

    Something happens.

    No need for an invisibility cloak.

    We just vanish.

    Ping.

    The author at Memoirs of a husk muses on a number of issues in this poignant post: Beauty. Womanhood. Aging. She writes about what happens when you “fray around the edges”: when you need a lip pencil and clear mascara to get noticed, yet no matter what you do, you’re no longer you: “You start to see just that — a woman, nothing more,” she writes. “No past, no personality, no added dimensions.” At the end, she asks JK Rowling for assistance — to invent a cloak of visibility, “not for our fraying lips and bushy eyebrows, comfy midriffs or laughter lines, but for us. Whoever we are.” We like this blogger’s voice: it’s fresh and unique, and her style is quiet yet sharp — we’re curious to read what she tackles next.

    On Goodbyes

    Of course there are friendships that reside far beyond geography’s lethal grasp, laughing in the face of distance. “A friendship that can be ended didn’t ever start,” wrote the French poet Mellin de Saint-Gelais. Philia, or the platonic love between friends, is perhaps not as sexy as its cousin eros – romantic love, but it’s the purest of all the loves. No sex or jealousy to muddy the waters. No mandatory filial piety. No professional incentive. Just the pure joy of voluntarily shared company, of dipping into each other’s souls every once in a while.

    Nick Ashdown, the blogger at Advokat Dyavola, has lived in Russia, Turkey, and Rwanda, so he knows a thing or two about goodbyes. Yet they never get any easier. Here, he discusses the word “goodbye” (which he finds absurd, as “nothing feels good about it at all”), and its euphemisms (“see you later” and “let’s stay in touch”). In his reflections, he describes the different connections we have in our lives: people we may never see again, but also those friendships that last, despite the distance.

    In a time when some of us wander the world as nomads, and many of us communicate and maintain relationships online, Nick’s thoughts on goodbyes and friendships are at once timely and timeless — and relatable to others.

    Did you read something in the Reader that you think should be Freshly Pressed l? Leave us a link, or tweet us @freshly_pressed.

    For more inspiration, check out our writing challengesphoto challenges, and other blogging tips at The Daily Post; visit our Recommended Blogs; and browse the most popular topics in the Reader. For editorial guidelines for Freshly Pressed, read: So You Want To Be Freshly Pressed.


       
  • 16 May 2013

    New Theme: Snap

    Happy Theme Thursday! Sharing and managing your work online should be easy, and today I’m thrilled to announce a new theme from our friends at The Theme Foundry that helps you do just that!

    Snap is a responsive, lightweight, and minimalist theme that makes it easy to feature your projects. Snap’s clean grid based blog layout and configurable page templates also make it incredibly flexible.

    Snap: Home Page

    Snap: Home Page

    Read more about Snap in the Theme Showcase, or test drive it for yourself by going to Appearance → Themes in your Dashboard.


       

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