Picnic & opening of the terrace in Mitte & Red Talk Interview: Esther Seibt & Michéle Victor Adamski

Life goes on … finally !!!
Corona is not off the table – unfortunately – but also no longer the all-determining threat … at least when we are outdoors …
We will do that now and celebrate “outdoor” parties.
If the weather cooperates, we sometimes meet for two or three days in a row!
We don’t know how life (or the virus) plays out.
That’s why:

1st outdoor picnic on 06.06. from 1 p.m. in the garden
We’ll see each other with blankets, chairs, picnic baskets or rucksacks full of tasty little things in our luggage – flowers, drinks & champagne, deck chairs, tables and a total of 12 chairs are of course there … Therefore, everyone is allowed (and should bring a seat …) …

Here’s the picnic!

2. Ninety-nine Red Ladies on the Gendarmerie Terrace on June 11th.

99 ladies in red meet for asparagus, strawberries & champagne on the spacious terrace of the Gendarmerie restaurant … Photographers, video photographers and the Berlin public are there when the terrace season opens in Berlin’s hip gastro scene.
Motto: red dress or top or jacket …

Click here for the 99 Red Ladies Terrace Event !!!

In the interview I introduce two of our business members:
Esther Seibt & Michéle Victor Adamski
Esther Seibt
Esther is an actress, singer-songwriter, trained opera singer, author, studied business psychologist and works as a coach. Simply stunning and: stunningly personable …!
On Wikipedia it says:
Esther Seibt grew up in Greece. After her family returned to Germany, she began singing and dancing in her free time. Turning her hobby into a profession, she later trained in dance and singing. She graduated from the latter at the age of 23. From the late 1990s she appeared in German television series. She became known among other things for the role of Kerstin in the ARD -Line Under white sails . Later she turned to music and singing under the stage name Esther Niko. She is also trained and active as a freelance writer for BLONDE magazine and as a systemic coach.
Whoever hears them sing wants to hear more … https://www.estherseibt.com/singer
Michéle Victor Adamski
Michéle is a sound practitioner and works as a body therapist with singing bowls.
She is a trained matrix rhythm therapist based on mental relaxation methods, a highly decorated jazz singer, speaker, author and just a mega exciting person … I could listen to her for hours …
A couple of sentences from their website www.maison-victor.com.
Michéle is trained as a jazz singer at the Rheinisches Konservatorium and assisted directors and actors at theaters in Cologne and Bonn during her training. After a long time on the stage, she started organizing cultural salons in private homes and companies. Inspired by the milliner work of her grandfather, who organized fashion salons, inspired by the family’s collecting activities, she expanded her interest in the fine arts. She completed the Christies New York Auction House Certification, worked for collectors and visual artists, and organized and curated her own exhibitions. Their work later merged with the Kunstsalon Köln, in which the salon idea grew into a large festival that has presented hundreds of artists for 20 years and attracts well over 3,000 guests per festival.
Michéle moved to the emerging metropolis of Berlin in 2000, at the same time founded an association in Kabul-Afghanistan and helped to ensure that over 5,000 children got school places and medical care. At the same time, she was involved in setting up schools for international institutions in Berlin.
And now have fun with the interview
Red Talk 04 !!!
Many greetings
Michaela

And if you want to read something about female leaders now …
“Ardern is the counterpart of the male steamrollers in so many capitals around the world and is therefore successful. It is effective, free of ideology and without airs. A kind of anti-Trump in the green paradise at the end of the world. ”

Quoted from Focus online as an excerpt:
“When Jacinda Ardern reported the sixth case of Covid-19 in New Zealand on March 14th, the Prime Minister knew she was facing a disaster. Despite the low number of cases, the 39-year-old Social Democrat decided on radical measures faster than other Western heads of government. On the same day, she ordered that anyone wishing to travel to New Zealand must go into self-isolation for two weeks – further steps should follow.
The fact that the “Kiwis”, as the 4.9 million inhabitants of the two large islands call themselves, got through the crisis better than any other nation has a lot to do with the charismatic head of government. The corona pandemic is not the first catastrophe that Jacinda Ardern has survived in just two and a half years in office. The brutal attack by a gunman on two mosques in Christchurch a year ago cost the lives of 51 people and put the hitherto peaceful country into a collective shock.
Ardern turned to the Muslim relatives of the victims, demonstratively pulled on a headscarf, hugged a grieving woman for a long time and hit the right note with a single sentence. “They are us,” said Ardern, herself a mother of a little girl. With this message that “they”, that is, the Muslims, naturally belong to New Zealand, she undermined any ideology of exclusion. Semi-automatic rifles and other “war-like” weapons were banned immediately after the attack – against protests from the powerful hunting and weapons lobby in the country.
The head of government can be very compassionate, emotional and friendly, she reports daily on Instagram or Facebook and held a kind of daily consultation on television during the corona crisis. In a sweatshirt she talked to the citizens who were connected to her, in between her little daughter ran into the picture. Approachability, transparency and demonstrative normality are their most important weapons. But Ardern can also rule tough. She quarreled with China because she banned Huawei from building the 5G networks; to the annoyance of the US government, she wants to levy taxes on the profits of the large Internet companies in New Zealand, and she demanded early on that schoolgirls should also wear pants May wear skirts. Last but not least, Ardern ordered the slaughter of 150,000 dairy cows in order to stop the spread of the cattle disease Mycoplasma bovis – a decision that cost the world’s largest milk exporter.
Ardern is the counterpart of the male steamrollers in so many capitals around the world and is therefore successful. It is effective, free of ideology and without airs. A kind of anti-Trump in the green paradise at the end of the world. ”
Focus online from 2020/2020 Daniel Goffart

Read the full article here …

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