
Christine's Corner
Christine is a consultant, coach and collaborator. After working in the Learning and Development/Change Management space for most of her 20+ year career she realized the power and importance of Ahh-Ha Moments. She also recognized those moments are often not fully leveraged because they aren’t nurtured into course altering actions.
Her vision is a tool to nudge people towards the insights that are just out of reach; connecting their deeper thoughts and truest selves to make big leaps forward. A place that life-long learners, like herself, could go to and tuck away their notes, thoughts and big insights for easy, accessible safe keeping.
Cue Maple.
While bringing Maple to life she became its first Proof of Concept, finding a life path that combines her passion for personal growth with technology that helps enable it. As Maple takes root and grows Chris hopes to connect with people, further encouraging and enabling them as they move ahead. Onward!
Articles from Christine
Blogs by Christine:

The Power of Authenticity in Surviving 2020
Staying connected and supporting each other is essential right now, but what about tuning into your own wellness? Begin to embrace your self care with one simple question.

The Many Shapes of Self Care
I believe there are misconceptions that “self-care” means pampering yourself or participating in specific activities, for example: meditation or a day off. For me anything that helps or supports you physically, mentally, spiritually or emotionally is self-care.

Bubbling Insights
Like many people I thought I was too cool and put together to journal. However, right from the first entry I could tell it was an important building block towards self-learning.

Seeing Yourself In Reflection
I often recommend that folks begin with a Reflection Package when they tell me they want to journal but have no idea what to write. Yes, our Reflections can serve as a starting point or a journaling prompt, but they are also meant to get you thinking deeply.

Making Friends with Sleep
Rather than rely on my wearable to tell me exactly how many hours of sleep I had, I found that reflecting on what time I feel asleep and how often I thought I woke up had a bit of a Zen-like effect.

What Can I Do?
These days I find myself asking (often) How can I help during the pandemic? What assistance can I offer? My bright idea was in front