Find Your Joy in Both Talking and Listening!
Who's Listening, Anyway?
Alex Morton

Asheville, NC
Saturday, April 27, 10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Babbling is a core InterPlay form that makes story telling easy, short and sweet. This workshop will offer plenty of opportunities for babbling, interspaced with periods of movement! Babbling can be an anxiety-free way to talk - and listen - and discover wonderfully interesting topics and ideas when you least suspect them!
In this workshop you will find uncharted joy in both talking and listening, and looking forward to more of both. See what it's like to talk and listen without your critical judgment whirling away in the background! InterPlay offers a safe affirming environment of community building.
We will cover many different variants of babbling, including some that have yet to be discovered! Depending on weather, we may even use downtown Asheville as our backdrop for this workshop.
This experience will be lead by Alex Morton, Certified InterPlay Leader
No Experience Needed! Everyone Welcome!
Cost: $10 - $15
Registration/Information: Alex Morton - 834/881/1595
Venue
Movement Learning Center, above French Broad Food Co-op
90 Biltmore Ave, upstairs
Asheville, NC 28801
Located downtown Asheville; see site page for map. Park in the French Broad Food Co-op upper or lower lot. Walk pass the storefront to door at far end of building. Upstairs! Bathroom access. Closest food sources: the Co-op, Mamacita's across the street, and other cafes etc on Biltmore.
Leaders
Alex Morton
Dr. Alex Morton is currently Professor Emeritus of Pharmacy and Clinical Sciences in the College of Pharmacy and retired Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the College of Medicine Department of Psychiatry at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, SC., where he taught and practiced for 34 years. He currently has a private practice where he consults in clinical psychopharmacology and is a guest lecturer at MUSC. He is board certified in Psychiatric Pharmacy Practice, and is one of 587 practitioners worldwide.
He taught psychopharmacology full-time in both Medicine and Pharmacy programs at MUSC. His extensive research investigations have focused primarily on the psychopharmacological treatment of mood, anxiety, and substance disorders. He has testified as an expert witness in psychopharmacology in over 60 capital murder cases regarding the effects of drugs on the brain. Leisure activities include InterPlay and slow, long distance running, having completed over 130 Ultra Marathon runs.