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Nam Vu

SUPERPOWER KEIKI SUMMER CAMP

June 12, 2020

What is the Superpower Academy at the Hub?

Superpower Academy at the Hub is a collaboration between the Hub, a coworking space and Superpower Academy. The purpose of this program is to have an educational and fun summer camp for children while their parents take advantage of the professional work space at the Hub. The camp will take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays. It is a flexible hands-on summer program for children and parents can take advantage of a professional work space to focus on their work. The camp curriculum is used by elementary teachers and combines STEM with social and emotional learning. Again, this camp is to help working parents with a flexible, educational and fun child care solution for their keiki now. All superpowers will be taught by Alicia Donnelly, a current Kindergarten teacher at Kamiol’iki Elementary. This program is compliant with Hawaii Department of Human Services Guidelines.  Learn more about Superpower Academy at www.superpoweracademy.org.

How does it work?

The purpose of this program is to have an educational and fun summer camp for children while their parents take advantage of the professional work space at the Hub.  Drop off and pick up anytime Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 9am – 2 pm.  The program is first come first serve with a limit of 10 keiki per day. Parents can purchase day passes for flexibility around their schedule. Parents can also purchase a package of 5 days for a discount and select what days they want to have their keiki attend. Flexibility is offered based on your working schedule.  While you get your working hours in at the Hub, your keiki are engaged in friendly activities.

Upon registration or drop-off parents will have to sign a waiver & image release form.

Can you tell me more about the curriculum? 

Alicia Donnelly our Superpower Academy leader has been using the curriculum in her Kindergarten classroom. She loves it because she see’s that this has helped her students with learning to deal with frustration, manage their emotions, and help them develop a “don’t give up” attitude. The curriculum is also used in older children up to 5th grade. The curriculum helps with the following:
  • Fun STEM projects help kids build proven skills for lifelong success
  • Comics and stories of real heroes gets kids READING!
  • Hidden messages and other surprises make learning fun
  • Kinds learn lessons about emotions, empathy and making good choices
  • Kids earn Superpowers as they learn real powers

How do I reserve a spot for my keiki? 

Purchase a spot through this link here: Eventbrite Link

If you want to buy a 5 day-pack for your keiki please contact the Hub team for the discount code!

When does it start and how long does it go for? 

The camp is now starting on July 1 , 2020 and runs until July 31, 2020. Drop off and pick up anytime Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 9am – 2 pm.  Parents can choose day passes for added flexibility or multi day packs. Each week will have a theme and the Superpower Academy lessons will happen from 9:30am-11am.  If it is a success we may keep it going beyond July 31!

Who is this for? 

Keiki from Kindergarten through Fifth grade. Parents need to be working at the Hub while their children are at the camp. Parents can be members or purchase a day pass at the Hub.

How much is it and how do I pay? 

Flexible day passes are $50 per day. A five day package is discounted at $225. At this moment we are taking credit card and debit card purchases on site at the Host desk. We will be working on a way shortly to purchase online. Check back at this site for updates!

What about snacks and meals? 

The program will provide small snacks however parents are responsible for bringing lunch for their keiki.

Please check back on this page because there will be updates!

#HumansoftheHub: Diana Gremillion

June 8, 2020

Name: Diana Gremillion

Company: Successful Life Strategies 

3 Questions: 

  1. What work do you do?

I work as a life coach to help people in times of crisis and stress, in order to turn that situation into one of the best things that has ever happened to them. I am licensed by Mary Morrissey and Bob Proctor to teach courses that they have created. But I have also founded my own company called Successful Life Strategies, and the intent behind that is to really help professionals achieve next level success with less stress as they work smarter instead of harder.

 

 What’s your WHY?

I would say that my why is  that I have been through a lot of painful and difficult, traumatic things in my life. And one of the things that I always promised to myself and has helped me to keep going, has been the decision and the commitment that the pain/difficulty was not going to be bigger than me. I was going to turn it into something good. I have a very strong conviction in that as well and for my clients and people in general that whatever pain we go through is here to help us create greater good for ourselves, not to take us down. 

 

Though this is not my passion project, this is what I do full time and I love what I get to do, and I am fully passionate about it. I love teaching, sharing with people and inspiring them. There is really no better feeling than when somebody’s face lights up as they start to understand these concepts, start to apply them to their lives and actually see what a difference it makes. 

 

What do people not know about you?

I think people will often look at me and think that what i’ve achieved or where I am has been easy. I think that’s a really common mistake that many people make when they are looking at somebody else’s life. They think, ‘oh it must have been easy for them’ or ‘oh it is because they have all these things’ and the truth of the matter is that it is not easy for any one of us. We all have our own internal battles that nobody else knows about or understands. You have to bring forth compassion for yourself and for others in those kinds of battles. We are all dealing with difficulties that we might not know. For example, I think that people will think that talking to others is easy for me because of my profession, without knowing that I was extremely introverted and socially awkward and anxious for pretty much my whole life. Or people will look at me and think wow it must be easy for you to lose weight or not be overweight when they might not know that I struggled with my weight for decades. So to me it is important to remember that literally all my current life is a result of growth and decisions I made to face fear over and over again. 

 

Diana is a fairly new member of the Hub. She began her membership in February and has begun to love the community she has grown into. She admits that joining was a new concept to her because she struggled with being socially awkward for so long and the Hub presented itself as a place where she felt comfortable interacting with people. 

 

She wanted to pair her workspace with an event space that she thought wanted to make a positive impact. The Hub, or Impact Hub Honolulu as it was known at the time did exactly that. It created a space for small business owners, freelancers, and entrepreneurs to basically build a dream. Diana adds that “it is a space to support what I do which involves a lot of helping people build dreams out of adversity and difficult times. It felt very much aligned and I have really enjoyed the events that I have had an opportunity to host there”. 

Her favorite thing about the Hub is the people. Everyone she has met at the Hub has been very nice and very open and she thinks that, it is just a wonderful way to learn about the different things that people do. There are so many people that get stuck in the nine-to-five office kind of job, and I think it is so fascinating to know people who are willing to step outside of that. I myself have done it but it is still so inspiring to be around people who are willing to let go of that nine-to-five and the 401K and those kinds of things in order to pursue something that they are passionate about”.

 

In true life coach fashion, Diana left the interview with this:  

 

“This is not the last crisis we are going to go through. From a standpoint of ‘this too shall pass’; this is not the last time we are going to go through something like this. Therefore I think it is important that everybody realizes that while ‘yes there is this and we are going to get through it’ there is at some point going to be another catastrophe and it is worthwhile to know how to handle crisis so that it doesn’t have to hurt next time, and it doesn’t have to be as painful. That way, they can turn it into something that really shapes you into the next evolution of you instead of having this time be something that shakes you to the core”. 

#HumansoftheHub: Luke Assenmacher

June 1, 2020

Name: Luke Assenmacher
Company: Reel World Film Makers

 

Get to know Luke Assemacher from Reel World Films!

Filmmaker Luke came to the Hub about two years ago when he first approached the Hub team about some video projects. At the same time, he just moved out here to Hawai’i and he describes the hub as a landing pad for him. He says that, “besides having a brother out here, the community was rad, and was a large part of why I stayed out here and stayed motivated”.

In the interview, Luke stated that he loves working at the Hub because of the diversity of people. You never know who you’ll meet or what you’ll learn. Part of that is the kitchen social zone too. Luke admits that in a lot of coffee shops, it’s kind of weird to talk to people. But in the Hub’s kitchen area, it’s where you can push all phones, internet and whatever else aside and just talk to people if you want to.

As for his work, the production company, Reel World Filmmakers, is made up of a team of motivated individuals with the belief that by owning less, you can live a little more. They connect sustainable communities through sharing their stories in films, commercials, documentaries, and corporate marketing strategies. Currently, he has been helping Chef Hui document their work in feeding people and helping local restaurants faced with the hard effects of COVID-19.  You can learn more about this, Luke and his work here, and watch Reel World Filmmakers videos here.

3 Questions:
1. What work do you do?
I do full service video production. The way I explain what we do at Reel World Filmmakers is that we make engaging branded content through authentic documentaries set around perspective, experience, and community.

In real terms, I have a Marketing degree in the background which helps to create the full service video production. That means, we work all the way from content development, to producing the videos to the post production, which is editing, and then also to the distribution end. A lot of us here have a background in distribution, so we have the knowledge and the resources to do what the video is set out to do as far as the analytics side and having it land.

2. Do you have a Passion Project? OR What’s your WHY?
It’s such a funny question, especially as an entrepreneur because work, well video, definitely started off as my passion project as I traveled.

I took a few years to like travel, which  was a good way to meet different people and communities and get to hear what they are doing and I loved that. But I don’t really consider video as my passion now, it’s more of a profession.

For the ‘why’ in ‘why do I make videos’ I think it’s because in my opinion, everybody wants to do some good. And in that, hopefully we [as Filmmakers] can be there along with you to see you doing that good and therefore help spread the good  throughout your community. Whether the subject is an individual or a larger corporation I think everybody wants to do some good. So that’s what keeps me into making videos and keeps me passionate about it. I try to keep an optimistic attitude in all videos.

It seems like in quarantine, I have so many little passion projects going on. But spearfishing has recently become my newest quarantine hobby. I think it’s because of the unknown. As a traveler, which I was for several years, and even in work, just the aspect of the unknown is definitely cool and interesting to me. Underneath the water right now, everything is so unfamiliar to me as a white boy from Iowa growing up in cornfields, like, I couldn’t see the bottom of the Mississippi River, it’s always been a mystery and now I am in the ocean where you can actually see the bottom and it’s like ‘whoa’! So now definitely anytime I can gear up and go out there it feels amazing. Even with surfing, it’s the same way, I mean the ocean, period is just a new thing to me. Living here for the past couple of years i’ve tried so many things, like also learning the Hawaiian language, which has become another hobby recently, since I saw it on Duolingo.

3. What do people not know about you?
I pride myself on being a minimalist. Like to the point of having exactly 7 shirts, 4 pairs of underwear, 2 swim trunks, exactly 2 pairs of socks, 1 belt, 2 pairs of sandals, like that’s what I have. If anything else comes in, typically something has to go out. Not having a lot of things definitely transfers over to my filmmaking and I think what adds value to my production is that it’s just very minimal. I try to focus the videos and life on what’s important: family, health, love, you know things like that and the rest will kind of fall into place.

#HumansoftheHub: Jimmy Lin

May 11, 2020

Jimmy Lin has been a member of the Hub for about a year and a half now. He works as a physical therapist specializing in orthopedics and sports. He is immensely passionate in the work he is doing because it allows him to work with others, and form meaningful connections.

Through his work, he is able to help people in both their physical and mental capacity. After talking to Jimmy, I think that I now see physical therapy as more of a mental transformation that only a physical one. People have to overcome a setback or injury, let a therapist in, and all the and while, push themselves to get better. 

Jimmy sees this as well as he and his close friends are currently working on a project to help young boys in the fifth to eight grade develop self confidence in both their mental and physical abilities. The group is working to show young ones that having the importance of relationship building, especially as they move into their teenage years. 

To get in touch with Jimmy and his team, email him at jimmy@jimmylin.fit 

What work do you do?

I am a physical therapist by trade, and then I was a personal trainer before that so then I kinda melded the two, so i’m a physical therapist that does orthopedics and sports. I’m passionate about sports so I started getting into more training and now i’m getting more into coaching as well. I specialize in orthopedic injuries and I do a lot of sports conditioning, so now it’s kind of like fitness training/personal training as well. 

I worked for a training clinic up until 2017, and then I moved back to LA for a little bit and then I came back and now I just do things on my own. I see a couple clients out of CrossFit, a few out of their own homes, and a few we actually run, so  every time we meet up, it’s kind of a path that we go train on.

 

Do you have a Passion Project? OR What’s your WHY?

I think it’s a little bit of both. I really do love what I do- from the relationship development aspect, to the fact that I really have to try to understand people in order to help them. Actually, I think that’s a growing realization that I am starting to see. That is, in order to really help somebody, they have to really believe that you truly understand them and you really have to understand them. I think through this thought process, on both levels, the personal training side and the rehab/healing side, they’re kind of one and the same and that’s why I love doing what I do. 

Now, I do that as my primary job, but I am working right now with a couple of colleagues, who are also close friends, on a project that is geared towards helping young men, around fifth to eight grade- that’s kind of around the age we are targeting right now- to help them learn to develop self confidence in both their mental and physical abilities. We are all physical therapists with specializations in orthopedics and sports, plus strength and conditioning. We are also all strength and conditioning certified and I think it further emphasizes the importance of being in a situation where you love working with the people that you are around since we’re close friends-and we see the physical importance of relationship building. I think having that as adolescents become teenagers is something that we want to develop for them so that they can help each other/support each other through their kind of psychologically adventurous years. 

What do people not know about you?

I don’t know I am a pretty open book. I think most people know everything about me. Well, I play the guitar (sort of) I like music, so I try to play some music. I like everything-I don’t know if people know that about me. I pretty much like everything. I find the world and people fascinating. And literally when I say I like everything, It’s hard for me to name things that I really dislike. 

#HumansoftheHub: Nathalie Champion

April 27, 2020

Nathalie is a member of the hub that has two ways of reaching out to her community. The first, is that she is a realtor for NextHome KU Realty. In this, Nathalie focuses on making peoples’ experiences meaningful and positive.

 

Her background in psychology has opened her eyes to see that the realty process is actually a pretty emotional one for most people. Because of this, she navigates her work by putting the customer over her sale-to make sure that the client is able to transition to a place where they are happier than before they began, regardless of where they started. 

On the other hand, Nathalie is the founder of Sparked, an authentic relationship game for women. Participants usually gather in someone’s home, the Still and Moving Center on Queen St. and at the Hub. She has started to launch meetings on Zoom, where women can still engage in a meaningful online conversation, sharing their stories, and learning how to deliver their stories to other women. 

Besides Sparked, Nathalie is also involved in Womanspeak, a woman-safe space to learn and implement best practices for public speaking. While Sparked is to get you more comfortable to share your story with a group of women, Womanspeak gets you used to talking to a bigger group. Nathalie helps participants focus on their breathing, their body, and getting out of their heads. That way, women can become more accustomed to speaking about their core values and their ‘why’. She hopes to have women avoid getting stuck in that negative feedback loop of panic that stirs when someone is presented with the opportunity of public speaking, and instead be able to articulate what they want to shine and convey to their audience. 

In all of this, Nathalie finds ways to help others from a place of service. After speaking with her, I was undoubtedly met with a rush of confidence and positivity. Before ending the call, when asked what message she wants to highlight to readers, Nathalie said that she hopes to underscore the importance of being kind to one another- especially right now. 

To get in touch with Nathalie, please email nathalie@nathaliechampion.com

Meet Nathalie Champion

NextHome KU Realty

3 Questions:

  1. What work do you do?

I am a residential realtor. I focus on buying, selling and investing instead of property management all over O’ahu. I have found that there are a lot of realtors, but I feel that I know and trust you will find your people. 

      2. What’s your WHY?

I love real estate because it is such a huge and daunting process. I have been blessed to have  two experiences: one, having a realtor that was awful and one that was amazing. The difference in the quality of my life during the transaction was something that made me go,  “wow this is so important that I want to come in from the service side”. I have a psychology degree and I feel that it’s important because realty is such an emotional process and for a majority of people they don’t realize that. To me, it doesn’t have such a fiduciary duty because here, it is one of the few jobs where you have to put your customer over your sales-unlike other sales positions. This is something that I take very very seriously, and I really find joy in being able to midwife someone through the transition into someplace where they fall in love or even a transition out from a place where they were unhappy. I think that this is especially important now because it is such an unprecedented time where it’s important to really be kind- because a lot of people’s lives are really being shifted out of their comfort zone. It’s remarkable how much changes and how you can make a difference for someone. 

      3. What do people not know about you?

I feel that people don’t know how much of an introvert I am. I prefer being at home reading, versus networking and putting myself out there and meeting people. It’s funny because my job is so much of that, and so it has taken a lot of creativity to navigate that. 

I think that’s why I am so active in the community. Recently, I have become a part of Sparked, an authentic relationship game for women. My role is to hold space for this game to be experienced. Traditionally we would circle up in a woman only space at someone’s house, but nowadays we will meet on Zoom, spin a spinner, land on an awesome topic like “passion”, pick a card, and then answer the question. I feel that it is an insightful opportunity to get to know each other that fosters a deeper connection to one another than normal networking which focuses on one facet of who we are as human beings. Sparked allows you to share yourself in a way that’s important, and also helps you realize that, ‘other people have just as complex and rich a life as I do,’ because you forget that sometimes. 

#HumansoftheHub Intro & Patrick Gartside

April 13, 2020

Welcome to the #HumansOfTheHub campaign. This social media post/blog campaign is one of our efforts to bring us together in a time where we can’t all meet up in the Community kitchen for a member luncheon, or wave “hi” to each other in the office space. Our goal is to bring more of a human connection to the virtual world we have found ourselves in. 

It has been brought up in one of our zoom meetings that there has been such a surge in email, text, social, slack, and call notifications that at one point it all just seems to be chatter. And while it’s great that we all have the time to talk, we have yet to truly connect. We are sharing posts, documents, and news, but we are not sharing stories, experiences, and feelings. In launching the #HumansOfTheHub campaign, the Hub invites you to take a second and meet some of your community members so that hopefully, when we come out of all this, we can look upon familiar faces, say thank you to them for the work they’ve done, collaborate with them on an impactful project, or at least create new friendships.  

 

For the first human profile, the Hub team nominated Patrick Gartside to kickstart #HumansOfTheHub. Patrick has worked with the Hub since October of 2018 and he and his Work Now Hawaii team clean the spaces that we all use regularly. Work Now Hawaii is a nonprofit organization that was established to help people living with disabilities achieve independence through employment opportunities. His work is especially important as we live through COVID-19. The Hub remains open to our 24/7 membership holders, and on any given day there are a handful of people in the space to carry out their essential business. Regardless of the number of patrons, a community space like the Hub should be thoroughly cleaned and maintained; if not just for general upkeep, but for the day that we are all allowed to come in and occupy space once again. Patrick and the Work Now Hawaii teams are in the Hub twice a day, cleaning the facility to keep up with the health precautions given out by the Department of Health. WNH offers training programs that are designed to maximize individual’s strengths and abilities in a way that increases their confidence and productivity. Patrick emphasized that WNH makes it a point to match an individual’s interests and abilities with their occupation. The goal is to identify and create accommodations for employable, hardworking individuals with disabilities to be successful throughout their careers.

Get to know Patrick! 

Patrick Gartside- Founding Executive Director of Work Now Hawaii

Interview Questions: 

  1. What work do you do?

I have recently founded a nonprofit whose mission is to help people living with disabilities find success through employment.  Work Now Hawaii provides job opportunities, job training, and job placement to helping people to set and reach their employment goals.  We work to help individuals find opportunities that match their interests and abilities.

       2. What’s your WHY?

As someone who has struggled with employment in direct relation to mental health, I am committed to providing a pathway for others to overcome barriers and to reach their potential.

       3. What do people not know about you?

I eagerly started working at the age of 14, and have since held eight jobs (store clerk, dishwasher, restaurant front and back of house, pizza shop manager, food delivery person, web developer, and digital marketing consultant.) I have also started several small businesses. Everybody takes a different path in life, what matters is that we keep pushing forward and following our interests, developing our skills and contributing to our communities.

 

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