Marleta Black is an author, psychologist, and leader practicing as a life coach in Clearwater. She helps her clients by identifying road blocks to their best lives, specializing in Life Shifting Goals, Paradigm Change, Clear Communication, and Relationship Dynamics specializing in Family Businesses. Together with her husband and 80-year-old father, she is a caregiver to her 78-year-old mother with vascular dementia.

Marleta is married to Phil and lived in Australia for 30 years, raising 3 children, now adults, two of them still in Australia. She relocated to the states where her aging parents lived to help take care of them.

Marleta has written a book called “SAY… Something!: The Adventure of Finding the Right Words to Express Your Desires, Reduce Drama and Create Connection”.

hello@marletablackcoaching.com
www.MarletaBlackCoaching.com

Rick Incorvia was one of nine children growing up in the 70’s where controlled chaos was the status quo. In my family, if you didn’t create your own image you got lost in the crowd. “Admittedly, I was a bit of a trouble maker and sometimes liked being lost in the crowd, or at least unaccounted for. If I wasn’t scheming a plot to get rich, I was imagining myself as 007 or an Ocean’s Eleven participant”. To quote my father: “You sure can tell a whopper of a story. We should have named you MaveRick.” Since so many have found my stories entertaining thus far, I’ve decided to share them with the world. Welcome to the deepest, darkest corners of my imagination.”
https://authorrickincorvia.com

In his latest book “Bobby’s Cabin” – Rick, Jamie and Bobby were the best of buds. Now well into middle age, they enjoy frequent getaways into the mountains, leaving wives and responsibilities back home. A typical weekend at Bobby’s cabin might include long days of cutting and hauling firewood, landscaping or carpentry but always concluded with a big meal, target shooting, and a sunset viewed from the hot tub. Evenings were filled with poker, plenty of drinking and boisterous fun. However, recent break-ins during the many weeks the cabin was left unattended had Bobby angry, frustrated and on high alert. He suspected a sketchy character with a mangled hand who lived just a few miles through the woods. Despite the local cops’ warnings not to do anything stupid, Bobby had his own ideas about how to police his 50-acre slice of heaven. When an unintentional murder turns into a cover-up, the escalating pressure unmasks psychotic paranoia, and best friends battle over loyalties and right versus wrong. Suddenly, it’s every man for himself.

CAREGIVERS YOU ARE NOT ALONE