March 20, 2026 Club Meeting

March 20, 2026 Club Meeting

Midtown Clayton TI Club #283:
Word of the Day: Galvanize (verb) – to spark energy; to create a sense of urgency or movement.
Attendance
Members: Susan, Mitch, Jaja, HK, Dora, Cheyenne, Tom, Rosemary, Mike, Chris, Andrea, SJ
Guests: Cameron, Jeana, Bashar, Jinal, Peggy
Opening
HK opened the meeting by reviewing the club mission.
Dora served as the Toastmaster of the Day and introduced the meeting agenda and roles:
  • Ah-Counter/Grammarian: Susan
  • Timer: Rosemary
  • Ballot Counter: Mike
Prepared Speeches
1. Cheyenne – Ice Breaker: “From Accent to Impact” 10:10
  • Journey from textbook English to real-life American English (“like a fast-moving train”).
  • First experience ordering food in English became a story of learning to express needs.
  • Despite knowing English, small talk and corporate presentations were long-time challenges.
  • After 25 years in the U.S., listening is no longer difficult.
  • Key insight: Speaking well isn’t just about pronunciation—it’s about being understood and felt.
  • Motivation: To articulate her thoughts clearly and authentically.
2. SJ – Mastery Pathway: “When Performance Becomes Your Identity” 6:46
  • Opened with the question: Who are you when you are not winning?
  • Reflected on a career of driving growth across roles.
  • Discussed how success can become synonymous with performance.
  • As an athlete, endurance is helpful; in corporate life, excessive endurance can become a trap.
  • Identity built exclusively on performance can lead to misalignment and burnout.
  • After leaving corporate, starting over is not glamorous—but requires clarity and intentional alignment.
  • Personal story: her child asking, “Why don’t you take a job, Mom?” sparked reflection on aligning identity with purpose.
3. Tom – “What’s Your Happy?” 7:54
  • Began by handing a dollar to an audience member and asking, “Does this make you happy?”
  • Noted that some people wait for happiness, while others actively pursue it.
  • Used NBA players as an example of an “offense” strategy—knowing your skills and working on them.
  • Shared a personal example of his 24‑year‑old son wanting a new relationship but staying home instead of putting himself out there (defensive strategy).
  • Reflected on redefining his own happiness instead of dwelling on past achievements.
  • Concluded with the question: What is your happy, and what are you going to do about it?
Speech Evaluations (2 minutes each)
Chris evaluating Cheyenne 1:50
  • Strengths: excellent pausing and pacing, natural conviction, sincere tone, strong gestures.
  • Suggestions: more consistent eye contact; follow the speech template; keep practicing to build comfort.
Mike evaluating SJ 1:48
  • Strengths: strong opening question, relatable examples, clear takeaways, great eye contact; effective conclusion with “Who are you?”
  • Suggestions: engage the audience even more throughout the speech.
HK evaluating Tom 1:56
  • Strengths: conveyed genuine emotion, moved away from the lectern with confidence, strong eye contact and gestures.
  • Effective bookending: started and ended with a question.
  • Smooth delivery with relatable examples.
  • Encouraged Tom to speak again soon.
Table Topics (led by Mitch)
Prompts included:
  • What is the most memorable “yes” you’ve ever said? – Jaja: Yes to a summer camp in the US for a month 1:11
  • What did you risk that you would risk again? — Jinal: presenting to executives 1:19
  • If you had to give a TED Talk tomorrow, what would the topic be? — Susan: leadership 1:20
  • If your life had a theme song, what would it be? — Peggy: “What a Difference a Day Makes,” tied to making a difference in someone’s life 1:08
General Evaluation – Susan
Highlights:
  • Commended Cheyenne’s conversational language.
  • For SJ: Noted smooth transitions, including reframing “resilience.”
  • For Tom: Observed that happiness was left intentionally undefined.
  • Common filler words: “um,” “ah,” “you know,” “so,” and “okay.”
Guest Introductions
  • Cameron Brown: Works in commercial cleaning; joined to learn.
  • Jeana: Here to overcome fear of speaking.
  • Barsha: Missed out on speaking but appreciated Tom’s logical storytelling.
  • Peggy: Fulfilling a personal promise to explore Toastmasters.
  • Jinal: Returning for his second meeting.
Awards
  • Best Table Topics: Peggy
  • Best Speaker: Tom
  • Best Evaluator: HK

Next Meeting:  In=Person Friday, April 17, 2026  7:15-8:30 am at Center of Clayton–Classroom A  (50 Gay Ave, Clayton, MO)