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Some of Our Friends

SOURCE YOGA CENTER

http://www.sourceyoga.net/

1 door west of North Star front door in our building upstairs.
8609 E. 116th Street-Fishers,Indiana (317)915-YOGA (9642)

Source Yoga Center is an oasis of calm in the center of downtown Fishers. From the minute you walk into the space your body breathes a sigh of relief. You have entered a space that nurtures and inspires you to new levels of awareness. Soothing colors and the sound of water await you. A spacious studio overlooking green spaces inspires you to give back to yourself. Yoga is the unshakeable deliverance of heart and Source Yoga invites you to open your heart to the possibilities in your life!

Tausha Luttrell Massage Therapist

http://www.healingrootsmassage.net/

Taush works upstairs in the Yoga Studio. 317-709-4559 One of Pam’s favorite massage therapists.  Tausha specializes in deep tissue massage without pain! Her training was from the renowned Alexandria School of Massage Therapeutics where she graduated in 1997 with an added specialty in Pfrimmer Technique. Her massages get deep into the belly of the muscles in order to release tension at a deep level. The Pfrimmer technique is a patented healing modality that improves circulation to speed the bodies natural healing processes.

Rita’s Backyard   Garden Shop in Fishers

http://www.ritasbackyard.com/

12244 East 116th    Fishers  (about 7 min drive east of North Star)

Opening April 1st 2011.  Garden Center & Gift Shop:  Monday-Saturday 9-6  Sunday 11-3   Tea Room:  Lunch Tuesday-Saturday  11-2   Sunday Brunch Starting April 10th  9:30-2. and with Spring begins another year at Rita’s our 19th!.

Women Drum

Next Woman’s Retreat May 20-22 (1 hour from North Star) (Pam and Sherri are going)

http://www.womendrum.org/wp/wdw/

Sally Childs-Helton put down the flute and picked up drum sticks at the age of 14, after being told earlier that “girls don’t play drums.” In her mid-teens she received a drum set from parents who believed that girls could indeed play drums. She also went to Hawaii, where she discovered musics unlike any she had ever heard. She was infatuated. While her peers played rock in high school, Sally played jazz and classical music. She majored in music education and percussion performance as an undergrad, and then spent way too much time in graduate school at Indiana University studying ethnomusicology, not because it was a good job move, but for the sheer love of it.