Posts Tagged ‘tent’

Vibration Training: Experience the benefits here at The Aspen Club!

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

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Research has confirmed that the benefits of one hour of strength training is possible in only 20 minutes and the newest addition to The Aspen Club is the way to do it. It’s called Vibrogym and it was the world’s first commercial whole body vibration training platform.

The Vibrogym generates vibrations that are transferred from the platform onto the body. Muscles contract and expand 30 to 50 times per second causing numerous benefits such as increased explosive strength, flexibility, bone density, metabolic rate as well as reduction in joint pain and cellulite to name a few.

The private sessions at the Aspen Club are 30 minutes long and can be purchased by session or in packs of 5 or 10. Contact Richard Fantini for more information or to book a session!

White Phéonix Kung Fu moves to The Aspen Club!

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

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This month, The Aspen Club continues to add to its current fitness lineup by bringing White Phéonix Kung Fu to its already expansive programming options.

Although White Phéonix has made its home in Aspen for some time, it will now move its studio to our fitness facility—providing 10 classes a week as well as private lessons. Joel Castillo, only the seventh grand master of the secretive system dating back to the 1600’s, will be teaching private lessons at the club along with five other certified instructors.

White Phéonix’s rapid circular movements of the hands and feet and accompanying rapid snapping strikes are what distinguish it from other traditional martial arts. The system was designed for street confrontation, in which a person’s aim is to dispatch an opponent in the least amount of moves.

A special White Pheonix membership is required to access the classes. Kid’s classes are also available. Please call Erin in membership for rates and availability. (970) 920-5849

Spa specials give you something to look forward to in off season!

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

head-massage.jpgYes, the summer is over. But the fun is just beginning. Whether you are a local who had a long and work packed summer, or you are a guest taking advantage of a quiet off season, The Aspen Club & Spa is here for you!

From now until November 30th, we are offering a great special in the spa. One person can get 10% off their first service, 20% off two services and 30% off three services. This includes massages, scrubs, facials, body treatments and waxing. Come spend the day with us…for a great deal!

Call 925-8900 for reservations. Mention the special when booking. Some restrictions apply. Offer not good with any other discounts.

dip, dive, DODGE!

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

When the Noon Groomers signed up for their first Dodgeball Tournament, they probably didn’t think their misfit 80’s costumes would lead them to victory in The Aspen Club’s 2nd Semi-Annual Dodgeball Tournament on Saturday. Not only did they walk away with the title of Best Dodgeball Players in Aspen, they also won for best costume—a complete domination!
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The Little Nell’s Five Stars were one dip, dive and dodge away from a trophy, coming in second for the second time in a row. The “stacked” team of athletes from The Aspen Club couldn’t compete. Not only did they not make the finals, they were losers in the loser’s bracket. (But capitalized on their other many talents in the food/beer area of the deck). dodgeballnell.jpg

The Noon Groomers weren’t the only ones who walked away with a great prize after the kegs were emptied and everyone headed to Cantina. As part of a new texting marketing campaign, self proclaimed “I never win anything” local Olwen Linehan won a year’s membership to The Aspen Club for texting a code the week before. Meanwhile, Kim Moore and Anders Head received a free massage for their texts.
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Thanks to everyone who came out to play. It was a great time and the perfect way to spend a sunny off-season Saturday. To everyone who didn’t make it out, remember, “if you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball”—so we will see you next time.

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Help Leah

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

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Next Trip: October 25th 2008 – November 25th 2008

The date was set before I left NuTech Hospital last July. I had a meeting with both Dr. Geeta Shroff and Dr. Ashish Verma together we made a plan that would best help my body return to life. I feel the time is now and we must continue to push on in order to gain knowledge of what is actually possible in this day and age. Together we can work to bring stem cell therapy closer to home.

After the first trip and my three month journey I feel more prepared, more confident and I know what to expect. I have friends, doctors and healers waiting to pick up where we left off. New energy and new movement. New Cells for the winter. It’s all waiting for me and I’m excited as I set my sights on what is to be. I have the drive, desire and spirit to heal. I just need the finances to make it happen.

Here Is How YOU Can HELP!
In order to get back to India for my second treatment this IS what I need:

$6,000 for the treatment
1 business class ticket to India
1 airline ticket for caretaker to India

Here is a breakdown of the cost and expenses:

2nd TREATMENT                                   $15,000
Expenses                                                +$2,000
Total                                                   $17,000
Leah’s funds as of September 2, 2008 -$11,000 (donations and August 12 benetif funds)

Funds Needed                                       $6000 still needed

*All donations to NTAF are tax-deductible. To make a secure, online contribution, log onto
www.transplantfund.org. Click: Contribute Now. Find a patient: Roland, Leah.

*Make checks payable to: Leah Roland or Stem Cell Therapy.
Send to: 605 W. Hopkins #102 Aspen, CO 81611
Questions/Concerns: email me: leahroland@hotmail.com or call: (970)618-4349
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Basalt OR Bust! Bike Cruise

I’m happy to announce that Cathy Mann has offered to assist with fundraising for my return to India. Together we are planning a bike cruise September 25th starting at noon from The Aspen Art Museum to Riverside Grill in Basalt in the name of Stem Cell Therapy and Awareness. Everyone is welcome to ride, as always, the more the merrier. (Donations NOT necessary to ride.) This cruise to Basalt will prove to be the farthest that I have ever biked, a total of 18 miles. Come cheer, support, and ride. Let’s push these baby stem cells Aspen Style and see what they can REALLY do! (Flyer Attached)

Thank you in advance. More Info and updates at www.leahpotts.com.

With gratitude and healing light,
Leah

Dodgeball Sept 13th

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

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Join now!

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

fitness-center.jpgAlthough most of us will be less than thrilled to say goodbye to the long summer days where the sun is always shining and the warm air heats our skin, it will soon be time to put away our hiking shoes and concentrate on the upcoming winter season. With the slopes opening in just over 100 days (wooohooo!), now is the perfect time to get in shape for those treacherous Highland’s bowl hikes and unbelievable powder days.

With the conceptual approval of our Aspen Living Project, changes at the club are in the near future. The Aspen Club is proposing to establish a healthy living community that will be an internationally renowned model for sustainable, healthy living development. With this, the club will be revamped and redone, allowing it to remain the valley’s premiere health club and spa. As we head into the future, we will begin to limit our membership so that can continue to live up to the reputation our members have come to expect. Now is the time to join our community and get a membership!

As a member of The Aspen Club & Spa, you will get your muscles moving in a setting that will make you want to work hard for your health. Member privileges include discounts on personal training, spa and salon services, boutique purchases, tennis and private Pilates. We have a full cardio deck with cardio theater, a massive weight area, a heated lap pool and over 50 fitness classes a week!

We have a membership for anyone’s needs. Please see Erin or Robert in membership to get in on this amazing opportunity!

It’s official! Dodgeball September 13th

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

The CEO of Dodgeball has set the date for our next Aspen Club and Spa dodgeball tourny – Saturday Sept. 13th.

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Registration is at noon and play starts at 1pm. Double elimination with a losers bracket as well. Free Beer, Free Food and a DJ.

We will be playing outside on our tennis courts.

Prize to the winning Team in the tournament and a Prize to the best dressed Team.

Call Erin Robinson for details – 920.5849 or email her at erobinson@aspenclub.com

Tuesday night with Michael

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Last night was a huge success, THANK YOU!!

Mark your calendar for  August 26th Neighbor to Neighbor , Cancer Survivor Center, Fat City Farms

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Michael Fox was unable to attend last night but here are his words for “Michaels Angels”

My Dearest Amanda, Leah and Kasie,

I am sorry I am not able to be with you in Aspen tonight. If I was there, I would be able to tell you how proud I am of all of you. I would be able to tell you how in awe of I am of all of you. I would be able to tell you how inspired I am by all of you.

Ostensibly we are all here tonight to celebrate your individual journeys and to raise money and awareness for your ongoing stem cell therapy. This is all true and yet through your magnificent examples, we are also here for our own personal inspiration. We are here to remind ourselves of the multitude of possibilities in our own lives. We are here to remind ourselves that the naysayers, though plentiful in each of our lives, are rarely ever right. We are here to remind ourselves that what seems impossible is actually within our reach.

In this night, I hope that we will help each of you in you quest. In doing so, it will help each of us in our own individual quests. That is the amazing paradox at work here. We came here to help you, but in reality, you are truly helping us.

To keep this short, I want to finish up with one last thought . . . We love you, we believe in you and we are with you!

With Love and Admiration,

Michael

Adventures of ‘Michael’s Angels’

Monday, August 11th, 2008

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Adventures of ‘Michael’s Angels’

by Catherine Lutz, Aspen Daily News Staff Writer

They half-jokingly call themselves “Michael’s Angels” — after Michael Fox, co-owner of the Aspen Club, who has opened the Club’s doors to  help Amanda Boxtel, Kasie Burtard and Leah Potts in their fundraising efforts.

It’s an apt comparison to TV’s famous female trio. The local women are  every bit as tough as they are feminine, full of spunk and passion. But  instead of battling bad guys with guns, they’re fighting their way out of the wheelchairs and walking aids that have limited their movements for a combined 30-plus years, with human embryonic stem cells.

And it seems to be working.

The women’s challenges, however, are today almost more financial than  physical. All three have experienced marked physical improvements since  starting embryonic stem cell treatment at Dr. Geeta Shroff’s clinic in India. But with multiple trips costing tens of thousands of dollars  each (not to mention time off work and zero insurance coverage), fundraising has become as much of a key focus as everything else Boxtel, Burtard and Potts are doing to be able to walk again.

“This treatment is not available anywhere else in the world, and I see it as being injected with the divine gift of life,” said Boxtel, trying to summarize the complex process.

This Tuesday, the Aspen Club is once again hosting an evening of  awareness for “Michael’s Angels.” From 5-8 p.m., everyone is invited for live music, free food and drinks, and the opportunity to find out more about their unique experiences. There’s no ticket price but donations are of course encouraged and appreciated.

Progress

Most valley residents are by now familiar with the story of Boxtel,  co-founder of local nonprofit Challenge Aspen, who has been confined to a wheelchair since a skiing accident rendered her a paraplegic more than 16 years ago.

Last year, Boxtel became the first American woman to ever receive human embryonic stem cell treatment, and her experience — told on her Web site, via an e-mail blog and in a forthcoming book — has drawn intense curiosity and numerous inquiries from others with similar injuries.

Two of those people are Burtard and Potts, who followed Boxtel’s blog and  were taken under her wing as she explained and encouraged Dr. Shroff’s  pioneering work. An end-of-the-year fundraiser at the Aspen Club last  December raised $33,000 for each of the three women to either begin or  continue human embryonic stem cell treatment in India.

“Knowing Amanda did it and had huge success really helped,” Burtard  said at the time. “I’m so blessed that Amanda is in our valley and  introduced it, because otherwise it probably would be five more years  before I could convince my family to let me try it.”

Illegal in the United States, human embryonic stem cell treatment was  pioneered by Dr. Shroff, who developed a single embryo in a lab from which she created multiple stem cell lines. The treatment has been used  on a number of disorders, including terminal ones, and in the last two years 72 patients with complete spinal cord injuries have seen an average 63 percent improvement, said Boxtel. That level of improvement, she said, is astounding because most of these people were given no hope of even 1 percent improvement in their lifetimes.

In her own blog, Boxtel says her body has changed “miraculously” since  her first stem cell injection in June 2007. She writes of wiggling  toes, feeling her leg muscles and wearing a dress for the first time in 16 years while “standing proud” in leg braces.

“My legs are continuing to get stronger and my body is coming alive,” she wrote on July 24, and earlier this week she proudly showed off her ankles, which used to be in a permanent state of swollenness.

Boxtel, who lives in Basalt and is a professional speaker and coach, has made three trips to India so far for embryonic stem cell treatment, part of a three-year plan that involves going back every four to five months for one month at a time. The fourth trip is booked and planned for Oct. 23-Nov. 26   — though she still needs to raise money for the $15,000 stay — and her budget for next year, she figures, is $78,000 for three treatments.

Asked whether she feels the money is being properly spent, Boxtel answers, “I can’t put a dollar amount on my ability to pee again.”

Boxtel has made it her mission to tout the treatment she so fervently believes is “life giving life.” She points to Burtard, who after her initial session in India can stand without leg braces by locking her knees.

Burtard, 26, is the youngest of the three women. A valley native and 2000 graduate of Roaring Fork High School, Burtard was in a serious car accident in 2002 that left her paralyzed from the waist down. Burtard is no stranger to traveling for treatment — for two years she traveled to Texas almost every other month for physical therapy — but India was a whole new ball game.

Comparing notes on treatments, Burtard said she hardly felt anything from a procedure that caused some pain in Boxtel and Potts. She giggles about her ability to eat fast food while the others expressed concern about their diets in India (especially since healthy food is a component of getting better). And she seems to be taking in stride her life being turned upside down again — while in India her landlord sold her apartment and she was homeless for one-and-a-half months.

But Burtard was the first to agree that such a drawn out course of treatment can try a person’s patience. Embryonic stem cells, like babies, take time to gestate, and while as many as half will die off, the others need time (about five years, it is believed) to fully integrate themselves into the body and cause the desired changes.

“When I was in India I wasn’t impatient, just frustrated that it wasn’t getting any better,” she said. “But I know it’s not going to get any better unless I try really hard.”

Burtard, who now lives in Silt and works as a nanny, is planning to go back to India in September.

Potts, who came back from her first three-month treatment just three weeks ago, joked that “by the end of it I felt half-Indian,” because of the sheer amount of time spent there and the fact that the 100 million stem cells a day she received as part of the treatment all come from one Indian embryo.

Potts, like Boxtel, was injured in a ski accident, but is a recovering quadriplegic who could walk with the aid of a cane — even before starting stem cell treatment she has defied her doctors’ expectations. But her body, which was changed so dramatically nearly 10 years ago, is coming back, she writes in her blog. Her posture is straighter; her balance is better; limbs and muscles are functioning more as they should; she has fewer spasms throughout her body; and she is completely off her pain medicine.

“I thought I would (see improvements), but it’s still hard to believe,” said Potts, who uses a recumbent bicycle to get around and exercise her legs at the same time. “It seems too good to be true, but it’s true not without dedication and sweat and tears.”

Potts, 32, lives in Aspen and works as a spinning instructor at the Aspen Athletic Club. (Known to many as Leah Rowland — Potts is changing her name because she’s getting divorced.) She is hoping to go back to India Oct. 27, depending on how fundraising efforts go.

On Wednesday, Boxtel, Burtard and Potts appeared on Jeannie Walla’s Channel 19 TV show, “Showcase Aspen,” and they retell their updated stories time and time again to friends and even strangers wherever they go. As far as being home versus being in India, there they were able to focus solely on themselves and their improbable journey. Here, they lead lives like most of us: having to work, cook, clean and walk their dogs — on top of raising more money and focus on an intensive six-day-a-week program of physical therapy, yoga, massage, standing in leg braces, and keeping on a healthy, nutritious diet. They’re gushingly grateful for the family, friends and therapists who help, often without compensation — and in particular for the caregivers who sacrifice so much to travel with them to India as required by the clinic.

And there’s a lot of crying and frustration, they say. But, as Potts puts it, “I choose to make this my lifestyle. This is what I do.”

For more information: www.amandaboxtel.com [1], www.leahpotts.com [2], www.helpkasieburtard.wetpaint.com [3]

lutz@aspendailynews.com