Posts

Father's Day

Image
     New Member Idris Rasheed contemplates how he will respond to Glenda's prompt in table topics.      Toastmaster Rei Fuller gave insights into her Father’s Day theme.  The eyes and ears team was composed of the following:  Grammarian, Katherine Alford;  Timer, Tony Kombol, timer.      Stan Coss’s speech was titled “Speaking of Father’s Day. . . .”   He tried to encourage Father’s Day memories in his audience with three sets of memories of his own:  lessons in humility, self-control, and productivity.  His tales included a run-in with poison ivy, impact with spinach, a CB handle of “Red Eyes,” and “Crying in the Bucket.”  This was from the Entertaining Speaker manual, project three of Make Them Laugh.       Alicia Hughes’s speech was titled, “If It Could Talk.”  “What does it mean to touch history?” she asked.  She then described aspects of the Battle of Gettys...

Historical Events in May

Image
      Toastmaster Alicia Hughes had us “flip our slides” for an interesting journey down memory May lane.  Members had individual mini-print-outs and Alicia had us look at a set of photos as she provided introductions and transitions.  These past May events included the Hindenburg airship disaster of May 6, 1937; the Supreme Court ruling unanimously that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional on May 17, 1954; the founding of the American Red Cross  by Clara Barton on May 21, 1881.       The eyes and ears team was composed of the following:  Stan Coss, ah-counter; Alicia Hughes; grammarian as well as being “agog” as word master; Tony Kombol, timer.         John Bowen’s speech was titled “I Hate this Speech.”  His entrance was a pugnacious one that included foot stomping, hand banging, and a kicked chair: just the sort of response a school system gets in requiring teachers to w...

How to Listen Effectively

Image
Advanced Toastmasters practiced advanced listening skills as Toastmaster Tony Kombol spread enlightenment about the whole “April showers bring May flowers” scenario, with some science, some history, and some Old English to boot. The Eyes and Ears team was composed of the following:  ah-counter and grammarian, Alicia Hughes, who also offered “insipid” as the word of the day, meaning “uninteresting”;  timer, John Bowen. Rei Fuller’s presentation was titled “How to Listen Effectively.”  This was from the Success Communication Series, which normally runs 2-3 hours.  As this was an advanced club, she was done within 50 minutes time.  The workbook for this project was filled out by all audience members in the process of listening to all the information given.  Some group exercises were also completed. These were the techniques for better listening that were explained: L— Like to listen I — Ignore distractions S— Summarize T— Tame emotions E...

Brian Woolf's Workshop on Evaluation and an Open House

Image
Greetings to our 10 guests for the open house!!  We hope you'll visit again any time.  If you join a local Toastmaster club, then before long you could soon join us, too, as a full-time member.  Check out the toastmasters.org site and search for a club near where you live.  As you can see in the map below, there are eight clubs in the immediate Asheville area. This will not be the traditional set of minutes as it was a non-traditional meeting.  Guest Speaker Brian Woolf has sampled the two sessions he led and has graciously approved the recordings to be put online.  These are on Youtube separately with the headings at the very bottom, and then all three are featured on the Speechmojo website.  The first video of the tools is 30 minutes; the second is the eight-minute test speaker, Stan Coss; the third is 26 minutes of the audience critique of the tools' use. President Rei Fuller acted as Toastmaster. The meeting began with a joke by Tim Edw...

The Westminster Dog Show

Image
Toastmaster Katherine Alford whipped out her car keys and dog leash and had her audience’s ears perked and mouths salivating.  She is a dog lover, and it showed with her relish in describing the Westminster Dog Show theme. Two shared “Tiddlebits” included the Best in Show:  the smallest was the four and a half pound Pomeranian and the largest was the 150 pound Newfoundland. The eyes and ears team was composed of the following:  ah-counter, Alicia Hughes; grammarian, Katherine; timer, Stan Coss, who has given the times below. Dada Maheshvarananda’s speech was titled “The Best Advice I Ever Received.”  His project was practice for the international speech contest.  “It’s hard to believe,” he said, “but at age 21, I was rather normal.”  He took a free yoga class and began meditating twice a day to overcome stress.  He said all people want three things: be happy, be loved, and feel peace.  (He advanced to the area contest to repr...

A Toast to New Beginnings

Image
Toastmaster Tres Magner led on the theme of New Beginnings.  He had the eyes and ears team explain their roles:  Glenda Teams-Edwards as ah counter, Linda Pierce as grammarian and introducer of the word of the day (auspicious), and Bob Pierce as timer.   Tres then followed up on his theme.  His speech was titled “A Toast to New Beginnings,” and he toasted  Rei Fuller, our founder and president, for her vision to get our club up and running. He had members toast Rei with juice boxes.  He also toasted every individual member present by noting a memorable speech, image, or contribution each had made.  Then he toasted the club itself and encouraged members to find “the quiet ones to share their story.”  This was from the manual of  Special Occasion Speeches, “Mastering the Toast.” Rei’s speech was “From the Big Bang to the Present.”  She dealt with the eight fundamental thresholds of big history.  The first four ...

It’s the Holidays!

Image
Toastmaster Rei Fuller introduced the theme of “It’s the Holidays.”  The room had been configured for the holidays due to Earth Fare’s need of  some meeting space for special packaging.  It wasn’t quite as dire as fitting a square peg into a cylinder hole, but as our first speaker said of Apollo 13, the new mission was accomplished. Guest Kathleen Klawitter’s speech was “A Successful Failure.”   She gave the background story of Apollo 13’s fuel tank explosion, the aftermath in switching from module to capsule, and the mission to return safely to earth.  She used objects to suggest the box and cylinder that had to be engineered to supply life-sustaining oxygen.  And, yes, duct tape, was revealed as a real life saver.  Her project was from the advanced manual on Storytelling, Project Five, Bringing History to Life. Tres Magner’s speech was titled “Dive in!  The Water’s Fine.”  It featured  Tres’s experience as a lifeguard at t...