Maureen focuses on coaching busy professionals and teams – to be the most productive in life and at work. Maureen has more than 20 years of experiencing in staffing and recruiting, and more than 10 years coaching and developing high performing people and teams in more than 36 countries. Maureen’s passion to inspire people to lead with their strengths is at the heart of every individual and group coaching engagement. Maureen has extensive experience as a Coach and Facilitator, with expertise in a Positive Psychology approach, and as a Gallup Certified-Strengths Coach, Licensed Practitioner for Everything DiSC Workplace (including DiSC Agile EQ, DiSC Management, DiSC Productive Conflict), Licensed Practitioner & Accredited Facilitator for The 5 Behaviors of a Cohesive Team (from Patrick Lencioni’s Five Dysfunctions of a Team) and Certified EQ 2.0 practitioner among other tools and methods of coaching. In addition, Maureen is a certified Integrative Heath Coach with specialties in Whole Person Health, Detoxed Living, and Emotional Eating. Maureen is also a Unified Mindfulness Level 2 Coach in training as a Level 3 Teacher. Maureen is the Owner of Full Life Coach, her Mission is Flourishing People and Workplaces.
Julianna received her BA in psychology from Duke University. As founder, president, and head trainer of Unified Mindfulness, she is dedicated to disseminating Shinzen Young’s comprehensive mindfulness meditation system through the creation and presentation of educational programs and teacher-training certification programs.
Dr. Hunter serves as associate professor of practice and is the founding director of the Executive Mind Leadership Institute at the Peter F. Drucker Graduate School of Management, Claremont Graduate University. He also serves as visiting professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, where he developed and co-teaches the Leading Mindfully executive education program..
Dr. Eisendrath serves as chief psychologist and president of the Institute for Dialogue Therapy, P.C., where, as a Jungian analyst, she offers psychotherapy with individuals and couples, psychoanalysis, supervision, and training.
Dr. Vago serves as the research director of the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine and the director of the Contemplative Neuroscience and Integrative Medicine (CNIM) Laboratory at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He is an associate professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and the Department of Psychiatry.
Stella is a psychologist, professor, and Zen practitioner. She became a formal student in 2008 in the Soto Zen tradition. She teaches courses in mindfulness based psychotherapies and the psychology of compassion at the Union Institute & University. She also co-facilitates a family program and young adult program at Shao Shan Temple, in Woodbury Vermont.
Dr. Creswell serves as a tenured associate professor in the Department of Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University. He is also the director of the Health & Human Performance Laboratory at Carnegie Mellon University.
Dr. McCormick currently serves as director of education at Unified Mindfulness. In 1975, he received a B.A. in psychology from the University of California Santa Cruz, where he was part of Dr. Elliot Aronson’s research team that examined cooperative approaches to reducing interracial conflict and academic performance problems in newly integrated school, and made Honors in Psychology, College Honors, and Thesis Honors.
UnifiedMindfulness.com is the official teacher training platform for Shinzen and the Unified Mindfulness System.
Created over 50 years of research and testing by Shinzen Young, Unified Mindfulness is a system of meditation that’s easily researchable by science, with clear terminology and rigorous precision around concepts and procedures.
The Unified Mindfulness system is a comprehensive, robust and refined support structure that any individual at any stage of meditation practice can rely on to go deeper in their insight and their ability to share it with others. It is also a secular form of meditation, which means it’s not religious in any way so anyone, of any faith, can do it.