PlayReflections™

In the Press

 
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The Berkshire Edge

“The Power of Play“

JULY 13, 2020

Bassis strives to bring a sense of playfulness and “lighthearted curiosity” to the table while encouraging others, regardless of age, “to be more playful from the inside out.”

 
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CHP Berkshires Health Matters

Creating Opportunities for Early Childhood Development

Jeanne Bassis revitalizes childhood and family experiences through her playful, impactful playgroups in the Berkshires. Adapting to the pandemic, she creatively sustained this support online. Learn more about her inspiring journey in the full article.

 

The Artful Mind

Jeanne Bassis: A Serious Player

Click the link below to read the full interview by Harryet Candee with Jeanne in the September 2016 issue of The Artful Mind Magazine. The magazine has been dedicated to the arts for over 26 years.

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Our Berkshire Green Magazine


Jeanne Bassis * Playing for Real *


Click the link below to read the full article on Jeanne in the September 2010 issue of Our Berkshire Green Magazine, dedicated to creating an ever-expanding unified network of holistic and environmentally conscious individuals, businesses, organizations, and services in the community.

Healthy Life (Greenfield, MA)

Summer 2002

Adult Play Program can Lead to Laughter, Reassessment, Joy

It's no fun living in a world of uptight, upscale, upwardly striving "human doings" who've forgotten what it feels like to be caught up in a joyful moment, says Jeanne Bassis, who's devoted her life to teaching adults how to play all over again.

Parenting Magazine

May 2001

Recharge: A Guide for Moms: 10 Tips for Putting More Love, Time and Meaning into Your Life


“The responsibilities of parenthood often strip people’s lives of fun and lightness,” says Jeanne Bassis. “But you can learn a lot from your children about living in the moment, letting go of everyday stresses and forgetting about what other people think.” You’ll be surprised how
(such) play lightens your mood and changes your approach to tedious grown-up stuff.

The Artful Mind (MA)

November 2000

Jeanne Bassis: PlayReflections 

Helping others to communicate through play allows Bassis to play, too. She proves that if a person can play, regardless of age, they will be able to deal to deal effectively with adversity.

 

The Advocate (MA)

April 1997

Playing around is important family work 

We were boosting self-esteem. The games grew broader, and the circle widened then contracted into a tight network of humanity.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)

August 2000

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Bassis, whose clients (during the past 16 years) have included teachers, women’s shelters, and a correctional institute, said, “Play is really at the heart of how people get to feel good about themselves. It juices us”, she said. “Then, we can handle whatever the world is throwing at us.”

Erie Times-News (PA)

February 2000

Who Needs a Fountain of Youth? 

Active adults pick up new skills to set childhood regrets to rest Jeanne Bassis, the Mass-based founder of PlayReflections, which teaches adults the joys of play, also sees a trend afoot. “I think a lot of people work really hard to get to the top, and when they get there they say, ‘I’m not having much fun.’ I think people want to enjoy life more.”

 

myprimetime.com

February 2000

Playing to Dream

Who are the dreamers? Children. Why do they dream so well. Because they play. When the first Chief Executive Dreamer (CED) is hired at AT&T, you’ll know play has become serious business. Get a head start. We contacted Jeanne Bassis, shaman of silliness and owner of PlayReflections®.

Vegetarian Times

June 1999

Playing for Keeps 

We were there in search of play. In that room I was given permission to regain the freedom I knew as a child...It was a childlike silliness - the kind you can only feel when you cast aside concerns of how others perceive you.

The St. Albans (VT) Messenger

September 1997

Local childhood professionals aid flood victims 

Jeanne used the healing power of play to create a sense of well-being in all who participated in the playshop. Jeanne made it easy for the teens to be carefree for a few hours; to delight in childish pleasures and put the flood’s terrible woes aside or a while.

 

Incentive Magazine

April 2000

Managing & Marketing Through Motivation Acting Out: Employees take the stage in training programs. 

The Inner Child is the Best Motivator. According to Jeanne Bassis, silliness in the workplace is the key to success. How do you keep that spirit of competition out of your workshops? “If you take a known game where’s there’s a winner and a loser and shift it into an activity where everybody wins, the fun and joy of it comes through the experience of doing it, not in the result. People get a visceral feel of what not being so end-product oriented could be like; that isn’t to say that productivity isn’t important — we all have things we need to get done. But along the way it doesn’t have to be such serious business.”

Boston Globe

June 1988

Grownups are better teachers for children when they learn how to play...

Ten minutes into Jeanne Bassis’ workshop on play and Creativity, ...professionals are gasping in hilarity, rubbery as a troupe of toy Gumbys and giggling like 3-year-olds.

“I never felt so comfortable being a child before — even when I was a child.” 

Scott Jaquith, Teen Leader, Nashua, NH