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Rochester, MI May 2026

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Ladies Who Lead

Ladies take the lead this issue.

May feels like momentum. Not rushed, but intentional. The kind that comes from knowing what you are building and continuing to move forward.

Across our community, women are doing exactly that.

Inside, you will find a local salon that has created more than a beauty destination. It is a business built on connection, trust, and a strong sense of com munity. We also feature a single mother who performs the national anthem for professional sports teams while running her own business, a reflection of what it looks like to show up with consistency and confidence.

You will meet a young children’s book author whose perspective brings something fresh to this issue, and we are also featuring the women behind this magazine. Their work, creativity, and attention to detail are what bring each issue together.

What connects all of these stories is not one path, but a shared mindset. These women are building, leading, and creating in ways that work for their lives.

That is something I relate to. My path from corporate leadership into business ownership, while raising my children on my own, has shaped how I approach both work and life. And it is a reminder that there is more than one way to build something meaningful.

That includes the women building their lives at home. The ones managing households, raising families, and creating the foundation that everything else is built on. That role carries just as much impact.

This issue celebrates women who are showing up, building, leading, and creating in ways that are entirely their own.

Warmly,

May 2026

PUBLISHER

Jordan Sakalian | jordan.sakalian@citylifestyle.com

MANAGING EDITOR

Jennifer Lee | jennifer.lee@citylifestyle.com

STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Jessica Snow | hello@jessica-snow.com

MARKET SUPPORT DIRECTOR

Kyrstyn Dean | KyrstynDeanMBA@KyrstynDean.com

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Kiki Pape, Jennifer Lee

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Jessica Snow

Corporate Team

CEO Steven Schowengerdt

President Matthew Perry

COO David Stetler

CRO Jamie Pentz

CoS Janeane Thompson

AD DESIGNER Evan Deuvall

LAYOUT DESIGNER Kirstan Lanier

QUALITY CONTROL SPECIALIST Marina Campbell

Proverbs 3:5-6

Herniated

Applied

Nutrition

Sports

Pediatric

Diversified

Prenatal

Thompson SOT

Activator Method

city scene

WHERE NEIGHBORS CAN SEE AND BE SEEN

1-7: GIRLS WHO GOLF BRAND SHOOT + LAUNCH EVENT. Follow @girls_who_golf_for monthly meetups.
Photography by Detroit Promotions

business monthly

Lulu's Flower Bar

This spring, we launched  A Year in Bloom , a monthly design series centered around moments that matter.  Each arrangement is thoughtfully composed in our Rochester studio using seasonal blooms, sculptural movement, and refined vessels. Each arrangement is designed to feel personal, intentional, and unforgettable. As we move into May’s theme,  Gather, we look forward to continuing to create florals that bring people together around the table and in celebration.

Available Homes

1051 E Avon Road, Rochester Hills

1055 E Avon Road, Rochester Hills

Model homes & lots available by appointment. Schedule today to bring your dreams to life.

ZOOM! Professional Whitening Promo at Revive Dentistry!

Brighten your smile this May with a limited-time offer! Get  $100 off ZOOM! Professional Whitening, now just  $250 (regularly $350). As a bonus, every patient who takes advantage of this promotion will receive  custom whitening trays and  take-home whitening gel to keep your smile glowing long after your visit. Spots are limited—call today to schedule your appointment and  mention this ad to claim your discount! (586) 265-2004 revivedentistrymi.com

Scan to read more

Specializing in custom homes and renovations, our team delivers exceptional craftsmanship with close attention to detail, communication, and care

Honest process Beautiful results

Let’s bring your vision to life

QUALITY CUSTOM CARE

The Spa MD Mother's Day Promotion

We are featuring our Mother's Day Gift Card, available in any value you choose! With the purchase of a gift card, you'll receive $50 off any treatment booked using the card, along with a complimentary computerized skin analysis and a full size skincare lotion. 1886 W Auburn Rd Suite 200, Rochester Hills, MI 48309 Phone: (248) 606-0000 plasticsurgeryarts.com

Photography by Jessica Snow

Ruby + Clover

ARTICLE BY JENNIFER LEE | PHOTOGRAPHY BY JESSICA SNOW
Where Beauty Meets Belonging

Step inside Ruby & Clover and something shifts almost right away. It’s not dramatic or overdone—it’s subtle. The lighting is soft in a way that feels natural, not staged, and the whole space carries this easy, lived-in energy. There’s no stuffy, formal front desk moment. Someone nearby will smile, say hello, welcome you in—but it feels genuine, not rehearsed. If you arrive early, you might settle into the sitting area and casually browse the mix of beauty products and small goods nearby, the kind of light, effortless shopping that just fills the time without you noticing.

“Every decision was made with intention,” says the owner, Andrea Miller. “There’s no formal greeter. Whoever is closest welcomes you, because that’s who we are. It’s not a script—it’s a culture.” And that’s exactly what it feels like—something built, not performed. You notice it before anyone ever explains it.

Ruby & Clover was never meant to feel like a typical salon. The goal was always something more personal, more familiar. “I wanted women to walk in and feel like they could exhale,” she says. “Like they’ve arrived somewhere that’s theirs—welcomed, seen, heard, and loved.” The feeling she comes back to is simple: like walking into a friend’s kitchen and finally sitting down after a long day. Comfortable, easy, real.

Of course, the work itself is anything but casual. The salon is known for precision bobs and soft, lived-in blonding—styles that require a high level of skill and attention to detail—but even that isn’t really the point.

“It’s built when someone feels understood. When a woman knows she’s been heard, the confidence that follows is real—and it’s hers.”

“Hair is the vehicle,” she says. “But it was never really about the hair.”

What matters more is what happens while you’re sitting in the chair. It’s that moment where you pause, take a breath, and let someone take care of you for a little while. Conversations start naturally, sometimes light, sometimes deeper than expected. There’s a shift that happens when you feel like someone is actually listening.

“The transformation in the mirror matters,” she says. “But the transformation that happens when a woman feels truly seen—that’s what stays with her.”

You can see it when clients leave. It’s not just the hair—they carry themselves differently. A little lighter, a little more grounded.

For Andrea, opening in Rochester wasn’t about strategy. It was personal. “Rochester is home,” she says. “I can walk to work and stop by my parents’ house along the way. You can’t replicate that kind of connection

with a business plan.” That sense of home shows up in how the salon runs. The people who walk in aren’t just clients—they’re neighbors, familiar faces, part of the same community.

“When you’re from the community you’re serving, it changes how you show up,” she says. “There’s a deeper level of care.”

That same grounded approach carries into how she thinks about being a woman in business. “It means being someone worth watching,” she says. “Not for recognition, but for what it might unlock in another woman.”

After nearly 30 years in the industry, multiple salon locations, and even mentoring women in Nepal—many of whom now own their own salons—her impact has stretched far beyond her own chair.

“If another woman looks at my life and thinks, ‘If she can, maybe I can,’ then it’s all worth it.”

She’s never really seen being a woman as a disadvantage. “I’ve always just walked into rooms ready to do the work,” she says. “The challenges weren’t because I’m a woman—they’re because building something is hard. For anyone.” If anything, she sees it as an advantage.

That mindset shows up in the space itself. The building is over 100 years old—and she owns it. “It takes real attention, real care,” she says. “Ownership isn’t just about being in a space—it’s about taking care of it.” It’s not always easy, but that’s part of it.

And over time, that idea of ownership became more personal too. “For a long time, I played smaller than I was,” she says. “I waited for permission that was never coming.” Eventually, something shifted. “I realized the permission was mine to give.”

Now, owning your space doesn’t feel like a big, loud moment—it’s quieter than that. It’s in the everyday decisions. “The moment you stop shrinking and start owning, everything shifts,” she says.

Inside the salon, that confidence translates into the overall energy. It’s steady, welcoming, and real. “It’s electric in the most grounded way,” she says. “When women feel safe with each other, something opens up.”

You hear it in the conversations, see it in the way people interact. There’s laughter, but there are also real moments—honest ones.

Part of what shaped that perspective was her work mentoring survivors of human trafficking in Nepal. What started as teaching hair cutting turned into something much bigger. “Many of those women now own their own salons,” she says. “It changed everything for me. It reminded me that it’s never just about the hair— it’s about what happens when someone believes you’re worth investing in.”

That belief carries into how she runs Ruby & Clover. The culture is intentionally supportive, not competitive. “There’s enough success to go around,” she says. “When women support each other, everything changes.”

That same thinking shows up in how she works with clients, too. “I listen first,” she says. “Really listen.” Because confidence doesn’t come from someone just telling you that you look good. “It comes from feeling understood,” she says. “When someone feels heard, the confidence that follows is real—and it’s theirs.”

For women thinking about starting something of their own, her advice is straightforward. “Start before you’re ready—but build it the right way.” She opened her first salon in 2006, and those early lessons shaped everything that came after. “You don’t have to figure it out alone,” she says. “Find a mentor. Learn from someone who’s done it. And then, later on, do that for someone else.”

And when it comes to risk, she doesn’t hesitate. “The risk of not trying is always greater than the risk of failing.”

She feels the same way about balance. “I think balance is a myth,” she says. “Life moves in seasons.” Some seasons require more from your business, others from your family, others from yourself. “It’s not about doing everything perfectly—it’s about being present where you are.”

At the end of the day, what Ruby & Clover really offers goes beyond the service itself. “Permission,” she says. “Permission to slow down, to be taken care of, to invest in yourself without guilt.” And in a world where most women are constantly giving to everyone else, that matters more than it might seem.

The work reflects that same balance—precision bobs that are structured and timeless, paired with soft, natural blonding that feels effortless. And then there’s the Japanese Head Spa, which takes the experience even further. “It’s not just a service,” she says. “It’s a chance to fully relax, to let go for a bit.”

And that feeling stays with you long after you leave, a quiet reminder that you too, are allowed to take up space.

SOME WRITERS INTEND TO BE AUTHORS. Kiki didn’t.

FEELINGS INTO PURPOSE.

BLOOMFIELD HILLS CREATIVE; SHAPING CHAOS, QUESTIONS, AND

Growing up, Pape remembers hearing the same phrase over and over: “It’s okay not to feel okay.” But to her, that sentence always felt unfinished. What happens after that? What do you actually do when “not okay” isn’t temporary, but something that quietly follows you around every day?

Before she ever imagined becoming a writer, Pape found her first outlet in journaling while attending Bloomfield Hills Schools. Reading had been difficult for her growing up, and the idea of becoming an author felt unlikely. But writing became the one place where overwhelming thoughts finally had somewhere to go.

“If I couldn’t find the words to speak, I could write it down, and it didn’t have to make sense to anyone else other than to me,” she says.

There was also Abby, her golden Labrador, emotional support system, and constant companion. Abby’s quiet presence gave Pape a sense of grounding when everything else felt chaotic. Ironically, Abby felt a little anxious as well.

When Pape left Michigan to attend the University of Colorado Boulder, that quiet disappeared. Suddenly, she was far from home and the distance amplified everything she had been carrying emotionally.

Somewhere in that homesickness, making friends at tailgates, and writing in her sorority house, the idea for The Worry Wags began to form. It wasn't about publishing or selling a book. It was about creating tools for children so they wouldn’t feel the way she did growing up.

Pape teamed up with illustrator Ellyana Wills, whose compelling artwork brought her imagined characters to life. Together, they navigated the process during college, figuring things out without a roadmap but with a shared belief in the story. After endless drafts, setbacks, and unanswered emails, they made the bold decision to self-publish to retain creative control. On July 28, 2025, The Worry Wags officially entered the world.

When Pape held the finished book for the first time, the moment was overwhelming. When words usually came easily, there were none.

“There were tears,” she says. “Tears for my younger self, for Abby, and for the coping tools I had to fight to build.”

At the heart of the book is Poppy, a yellow Labrador Retriever learning to manage anxiety with the help of her best friend, Frankie.

struggles and the pressure of choosing a “practical” career made the creative path feel uncertain.

Turning The Worry Wags into a real book meant learning everything from publishing logistics to marketing and finances, often with little guidance.

Persistence and a stubborn creative instinct kept her going, along with the people around her who reminded her the book was making a difference.

“I’m very proud to be known for being undeniably myself.”

The story validates big emotions while introducing simple, accessible tools for when feelings become overwhelming. But the impact didn’t stop with the book. After sharing it, Pape launched a Worry Wags book drive, focused on getting children’s books into classrooms, libraries, and community spaces where kids can access them. For her, storytelling isn’t just about creating something beautiful—it’s about making something useful.

Still, becoming an author wasn’t linear. Pape didn’t grow up confident in her words. Early reading

One of the most meaningful moments came when a child brought The Worry Wags to her mom during a stressful moment and said, “Let’s read this. It will help you feel better.”

That’s when Pape realized the story had grown beyond its original audience.

Today, her creative work extends beyond children’s literature. She writes essays for her blog and online publications, creates content, and is currently working on a fiction novel inspired by the emotional highs and lows of the COVID-19 era. Told with humor and honesty, it explores mental health, friendship, and the chaos of young adulthood, weaving in both negative and unexpectedly positive moments. Journaling, once her personal outlet, remains a central thread. Alongside writing, Pape uses photography to capture emotions words sometimes cannot. Across everything she creates, one thing remains consistent: radical honesty.

PHOTOGRAPHY PROVIDED

BECKY HILLYARD

From Side Hustle to Style Empire

The power of taste, trust, and the courage to “just start.”

She didn’t have a business plan, a media budget, or even a name anyone could pronounce. What Becky Hillyard had was taste, a young family, and the instinct to just start. Today, her lifestyle brand Cella Jane commands an audience the size of Vogue’s, she’s nine collections strong with Splendid, and she’s built it all while raising three kids — refusing to sacrifice one for the other. In an exclusive conversation for the Share the Lifestyle podcast, Becky shares what it really takes to build a brand, a career, and a life you love. Read the highlights below, then scan the QR code for the full conversation.

Q: WHEN DID YOU KNOW CELLA JANE WAS MORE THAN A HOBBY?

A: Two moments. Women started emailing me saying they bought something I recommended and felt amazing — asking me to help them find a dress for a wedding. That felt incredible. Then I looked at my affiliate numbers for one month and realized I could cover our mortgage. I thought, I can actually do this. I never set out to build a business. I started it because I genuinely loved it.

Becky in Splendid x @CellaJaneBlog Spring 2026 Collection

Q: WHAT WAS THE BIGGEST RISK YOU EVER TOOK WITH THE BRAND?

A: Designing my own collection. It’s easy to point at items on a website and say I love these. But to create something from scratch, put your name on it, and wait to see if people connect with it — that’s terrifying. I had an incredible partner in Splendid, and women loved the pieces. It was the biggest risk and the biggest accomplishment.

Q: HOW HAS INFLUENCER MARKETING CHANGED SINCE YOU STARTED?

A: When I started, brands didn’t know whether to take it seriously. Now it’s a legitimate line item in their marketing budgets — sometimes bigger than TV. Because what we’ve built is trust. People trust a real recommendation from someone they follow far more than a commercial. There’s no question about it now.

Q: YOU’RE A MOM OF THREE RUNNING A FULL BRAND. WHAT DOES YOUR DAY ACTUALLY LOOK LIKE?

A: I try to get up at five and not hit snooze — that first hour before the house wakes up is the most productive, most peaceful hour of my day. Then it’s all hands on deck with the kids and school drop-off. After that I work — planning content, connecting with my team, editing. After pickup, the day shifts completely and it’s all about them. I’ve learned to protect both halves fiercely, because both matter.

Q: WHAT WOULD YOU TELL SOMEONE WHO WANTS TO BUILD SOMETHING OF THEIR OWN BUT KEEPS WAITING?

A: Don’t wait. Don’t wait for the perfect camera, the right strategy, or enough followers. We find every excuse to stay comfortable. Just start, be consistent, and be authentically yourself. The right people will find you — and they’ll stay.

This conversation is just the beginning. Becky goes deeper on the risks that almost stopped her, the design process behind her latest Splendid collection, and what she’d tell her 2012 self today. Scan the QR code for the full, exclusive City Lifestyle interview on the Share the Lifestyle Podcast.

“Trust is the only metric that actually compounds.”
— Becky Hillyard

MEET Monica Notaro

Building MIROH, Motherhood, and a Life on Her Own Terms

For Monica Notaro, MIROH didn’t begin as a perfectly mappedout business plan. It started during a deeply personal chapter of her life—one defined by transition, responsibility, and resilience.

At the time, Notaro was working in pharmaceutical sales while adjusting to life as a first-time single mom with a newborn. With a background in biochemistry and a strong understanding of nutrition, she began preparing meals that felt nourishing, intentional, and elevated—something she felt was missing from her own routine.

“I didn’t start MIROH with this huge vision,” she says. “It was really personal.”

The name MIROH reflects that. It’s derived from her daughter’s name, Mila Rose, who has been at the center of everything since day one. What started as a small side hustle out of her home kitchen quickly gained traction as demand steadily increased.

As momentum built, Notaro made the decision to leave her fulltime job, transition into a commercial kitchen, and eventually open her own brick-and-mortar location. It was a major risk, but one she felt ready to take.

Today, MIROH Meals serves clients across Metro Detroit and partners with major companies including GM, Mercedes-Benz, Stellantis, LinkedIn, and the College for Creative Studies. What once felt like a small, personal project has grown into a trusted and recognizable brand.

But the early days were far from easy.

“I was doing everything myself,” Notaro explains. “Cooking, packaging, deliveries, customer communication, menu creation—on top of being a mom and still pursuing music.”

There was little separation between work and life. Long days often turned into longer nights, and problem-solving became constant. “I was figuring everything out as I went,” she says.

What kept her going was a combination of belief and purpose. “I believed in what I was building, and I could see the impact it was having on people,” she says. “But more than that, my daughter was watching. I wasn’t just building a business—I was building a life for us.”

There were defining moments that marked a shift. Opening her storefront made everything feel more tangible. Later, forming partnerships with large corporate clients reinforced that MIROH had grown into something with real reach and credibility.

“It’s about how people feel,” she says. “Everything we create is plant-based, but we focus just as much on flavor, quality, and presentation. I never wanted it to feel restrictive—I wanted it to feel effortless and elevated.”

Her goal is to make customers feel taken care of. “When someone opens their fridge, I want them to know they have something nourishing and ready for them,” she says. “It should feel easy.”

Running a growing business while raising a child means no two days look the same.

“There really isn’t a typical day,” Notaro says. “Some days I’m fully in the business, managing operations and working with my team. Other days I’m at my daughter’s school, at hockey practice, performing, or creating content.”

Her daughter has been part of the journey from the beginning. “It’s just been the two of us,” she says. “She’s seen everything—the hard work, the wins, and the challenges. She’s grown up alongside MIROH.”

Balancing those roles is something Notaro approaches with intention rather than perfection. “When I’m working, I’m focused. When I’m with her, I try to be fully present,” she explains. “She’s not separate from what I do—she’s part of it.”

As for the idea of balance, she’s realistic. “I don’t think it exists perfectly,” she says. “It shifts constantly. Some days are heavier on work, some are more focused on being a mom. For me, it’s about alignment.”

Motherhood and entrepreneurship, she says, have strengthened each other. “Motherhood has made me more patient, more driven, and stronger overall. It’s given everything I do a deeper purpose,” she explains. “Entrepreneurship has taught me resilience, independence, and confidence.”

In addition to running MIROH, Notaro continues to pursue music, something she describes as a core part of who she is.

“I’ve been singing for as long as I can remember,” she says. “It’s not something I chose—it’s just always been part of me.”

Her music career has included performing in a band for a decade, singing at Carnegie Hall, and performing the national anthem across major platforms including the NHL, MLB, NFL, NCAA, and more.

“Those experiences really shaped me,” she says. “And singing the national anthem is something I’ll never take for granted.”

Music offers a contrast to the structure of running a business. “Entrepreneurship is strategic and demanding. Music is emotional and freeing. It’s where I can just feel and be myself.”

That balance has helped shape her evolving definition of success.

Like many entrepreneurs, Notaro has faced moments of self-doubt. “Of course,” she says. “But I’ve learned to move through it instead of letting it stop me.”

That mindset extends to the advice she gives other women.

“You don’t have to do everything perfectly,” she says. “You’re allowed to feel overwhelmed. The most important thing is giving yourself grace.”

For those waiting for the right time, her advice is simple: start anyway.

“There will never be a perfect moment,” she says. “You figure it out by doing.”

She also emphasizes the importance of women supporting one another. “There’s so much power in that,” she says. “When we genuinely want to see each other win, it changes everything.”

At the core of everything Notaro does is a clear sense of identity and self-trust.

“To me, being a strong, independent woman means knowing who you are and trusting yourself fully,” she says. “It’s about creating your own path and building a life that feels true to you.”

And just as importantly, she adds, it’s about allowing yourself to evolve.

“Strength doesn’t mean being hard all the time,” she says. “It means being secure in who you are—and having the confidence to own it.”

Vegan meal delivery service offering takeout and catering of gluten-free meals.

miromeals.com | Delivered weekly to your doorstep.

DON’T WANT DELIVERY? BUT WANT CUSTOM MEALS? CLICK ON “PICKUP” BEFORE YOU PLACE YOUR ORDER AND WE WILL HOLD YOUR MEALS FOR TUESDAY PICKUP!

Order by SUNDAY @ 4PM each week for delivery the following Tuesday. Menu changes often, so check the website for more information. Text 248-568-0985 for questions.

2398 Franklin Road

Bloomfield Township, MI, 48302

** Located  SUGARBUSH PLAZA (large white plaza on the corner of Square Lake Rd + Franklin Rd***

STORE HOURS

Monday 12pm-4pm

Tuesday 8am-6pm

Wednesday- Friday 8am-2pm

Saturday CLOSED Sunday 12pm-4pm

ARTICLE BY THE CITY LIFESTYLE TEAM | PHOTOGRAPHY BY

JESS. JEN. JORDAN.

(L to R) Jessica Snow, Jen Lee, Jordan Sakalian

MEET

THE THREE WOMEN BEHIND ROCHESTER

CITY LIFESTYLE.

There’s something powerful about a room full of women who have lived a little — okay, a lot. Women who have built careers, raised babies, pivoted paths, and still show up every day with fresh ideas, ambition, and just enough caffeine to keep things interesting.

This Ladies Issue is a celebration of exactly that.

We are a team shaped by years of experience, stories, and strengthened by the balance of motherhood and ambition. We are the ones answering emails with one hand and managing full lives with the other. The ones who bring strategy and spontaneity. Big visions and evolving routines.

At the center of it all is Jordan Sakalian, Publisher, and a mother of two whose journey began in the fashion industry as a personal stylist while raising her children as a young mom. What started as a creative path evolved into a dynamic career across industries, spanning executive assistant and strategy roles, ultimately leading her into the role of head of brand marketing. She brings a sharp vision and entrepreneurial instinct to everything

she builds. She leads with resilience and intention, creating space for herself and the women around her to rise.

Guiding our voice is Managing Editor and Writer Jennifer Lee, who brings over 25 years of experience in hospitality and storytelling. As the founder of Chalet Creative, she is passionate about building community, creating meaningful collaborations, and crafting experiences that feel thoughtful and lasting. She brings a thoughtful, strategic approach to her work, blending creativity, curiosity, and intention into everything she touches.

Behind the lens, Staff Photographer and Creative Director Jessica Snow captures more than just images; she captures feeling. Rochester-born and raised, now rooted here with her family. Her perspective is connected to the community she captures. With a love for storytelling, her work now extends into brand photography that feels expressive and elevated.

This is just the beginning, thank you for being part of the ride.

Angelina Mueller Photography

MAY 2ND

Rochester Community Health + Wellness Fair

Rochester High School | 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

Join us for an exciting morning of whole-body wellness at Rochester High School! This family-friendly event will feature local health and wellness vendors, free food samples, free 30-minute fitness classes (with registration), a blood drive, vaccines provided by Oakland County, a fun kid zone, and free sports physicals. Learn more and sign up for classes at: tinyurl.com/rochhealthfair

MAY 9TH

Mother's Day Farm Stand Pop-Up at Good Grounds Coffee

126 N main St Almont, MI 48003 | 9:00 AM

Endress Acres is popping up at Good Grounds Organic Coffee! The Coffee shop will be open starting at 9:00 am. The Endress Acress Farm Stand will open at 10:00 am -- so come on over, grab a coffee, and up some special things for that special person in your life (or for yourself!) Learn more at endressacres.com Email endressacres@gmail.com

MAY 9TH

Mother's Day Blooms at Theory & Thread with Endress Acres

Theory & Thread | 12:00 PM

Build your own bouquet with blooms from Endress Acres while sipping some bubbly and shopping new arrivals at Theory & Thread in downtown Auburn Hills. Bouquet blooms available while supplies last.  3306 Auburn Rd. Auburn Hills, MI 48326 Phone: 248.564.2114

MAY 14TH

Create Your Own Arrangment at Lulus Flower Bar

Lulu's Flower Bar | 6:00 PM

Join us on Thursday, May 14th, for an intimate evening of floral design where you will create your own sculptural arrangement using seasonal blooms in a relaxed, guided setting. Call or text 248-705-7302 to reserve your seat (RSVP only).

MAY 16TH

Mac N' Brews

Brown Iron Brewhouse: 57695 Van Dyke Ave, Washington, MI 48094 | 12:00 PM

Join us this spring for Mac & Brews, a delicious fundraiser supporting RARA’s Adaptive Recreation Programs. Enjoy a gourmet mac & cheese bar paired with craft beers from Brown Iron Brewhouse. Gather friends, savor great food and drinks, and give back—every bite helps empower individuals of all abilities to learn, connect, and thrive. URL: rararecreation.org/events/mac___brews.php

MAY 22ND

Material Girls Tribute

The Roxy: 401 Walnut Blvd Rochester, MI 48307 | 8:00 PM

Back by popular demand! Don’t miss this show! The  MATERIAL GIRLS is a  HIGH ENERGY Musical Production backed by Studio Musicians that recreate the ladies that topped the POP CHARTS with all #1 HIT SONGS, like Adele, Lady Gaga, Madonna & Cher!  21 & up.  Get

Tickets: The Roxy - A Live Entertainment Venue

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