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Happy World Bee Day! Let's give thanks for these tiny hardworking pollinators who play a huge role in our ecosystem. They are vital to our food supply and biodiversity. Bees can sense electric fields and navigate using the sun, and have to visit millions of flowers to produce just a pound of honey. Remarkably intelligent, they have excellent memories, they perform a waggle dance to guide each other to nectar, and can even recognize human faces. Yet they are increasingly threatened by climate change. Rising temperatures, shifting blooming seasons, and extreme weather events disrupt their life cycles and food sources, putting both wild and managed bee populations at risk. Without bees, many of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts we rely on would disappear. As we face a changing climate, it's more important than ever to protect them. By planting pollinator-friendly gardens, reducing pesticide use, and taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, we can help bees thrive and ensure a healthier planet for all.Noah Wilson-Rich, Ph.D. is co-founder and CEO of The Best Bees Company, the largest beekeeping service in the US. He is a 20-time published author and 3-time TEDx speaker. He's on a mission to improve pollinator health worldwide as a means to support our global food system and support the transformation of urban areas from gray to green. He is the author of The Bee: A Natural History.“I was originally drawn to bees because they're social creatures. And as humans, I always wanted to know about ourselves and how we can be our healthiest selves and our healthiest society. Bees and wasps, and all of these organisms have been around for so long. Bees especially have been around for 100 million years.”Episode WebsiteTheir blog offers many resources:https://bestbees.com/blog/www.pollinator.orgGreen roof companyColumbia Green Technologies columbia-green.comNoah-Wilson Rich's website:https://www.noahwilsonrich.comwww.creativeprocess.info/podInstagram: @creativeprocesspodcastPhoto by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Happy World Bee Day! Let's give thanks for these tiny hardworking pollinators who play a huge role in our ecosystem. They are vital to our food supply and biodiversity. Bees can sense electric fields and navigate using the sun, and have to visit millions of flowers to produce just a pound of honey. Remarkably intelligent, they have excellent memories, they perform a waggle dance to guide each other to nectar, and can even recognize human faces. Yet they are increasingly threatened by climate change. Rising temperatures, shifting blooming seasons, and extreme weather events disrupt their life cycles and food sources, putting both wild and managed bee populations at risk. Without bees, many of the fruits, vegetables, and nuts we rely on would disappear. As we face a changing climate, it's more important than ever to protect them. By planting pollinator-friendly gardens, reducing pesticide use, and taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, we can help bees thrive and ensure a healthier planet for all.Noah Wilson-Rich, Ph.D. is co-founder and CEO of The Best Bees Company, the largest beekeeping service in the US. He is a 20-time published author and 3-time TEDx speaker. He's on a mission to improve pollinator health worldwide as a means to support our global food system and support the transformation of urban areas from gray to green. He is the author of The Bee: A Natural History.“I was originally drawn to bees because they're social creatures. And as humans, I always wanted to know about ourselves and how we can be our healthiest selves and our healthiest society. Bees and wasps, and all of these organisms have been around for so long. Bees especially have been around for 100 million years.”Episode WebsiteTheir blog offers many resources:https://bestbees.com/blog/www.pollinator.orgGreen roof companyColumbia Green Technologies columbia-green.comNoah-Wilson Rich's website:https://www.noahwilsonrich.comwww.creativeprocess.info/podInstagram: @creativeprocesspodcastPhoto by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
扫码关注我的视频号上午10点直播间学摄影早安,我是叶梓,今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家的2442天。春天来了,花开了,我知道很多同学都去拍花去了。你有没有发现拍花其实是个挺难的事情,每次拍完的画面就乱七八糟的,花朵就那一朵还是挺好看的,但是整体画面看上去就没有那种柔美浪漫,那种干干净净清清爽爽的感觉了。那怎么样去拍花会更好看一点呢?我提供三个思路:Photo by Maxx Gong on Unsplash第一个思路是站在远处来拍,把整棵树的树冠形状都给拍下来,如果那个树比较大,那就会更好看了。想想在河滩上或者在山上有那么一棵圆不隆冬的粉色的树,多好看啊,在草地上它也挺好看的,对不对?但是,很快我们就发现了第二个问题,就是拍完整的树冠的这种拍法会比较难,因为那么好看的树肯定不止你一个人发现了,周围肯定有很多的游客都在拍那棵树,很多人肯定是挡在你的镜头前的。Photo by Henry & Co. on Unsplash所以这个时候呢,我们就可以用第二种拍法了,就是拍摄树的局部,不要拍那么大的一个范围,这样就更容易躲掉那些游客们了。拍局部的时候你可以使用2倍、3倍或者相机里的50mm以上的中焦或长焦镜头来拍照,越长的镜头就越容易去拍出一个简洁的画面来。负面案例,朝树干方向拍摄,树枝太乱但是,如果你真的试着拍过的话,你会发现没有那么简单,因为花儿它不是只有花儿啊,它是长在树干上面的。如果这个树它当时还没长叶片就更糟糕了,就是除了花以外,它的背面有很多很多的乱七八糟的树枝,这些树枝往往是深色的,而且它们横七竖八的没有什么规律,所以拍到画面中就是个干扰项。柔软的、浪漫的颜色好看的花,和那种生硬的不近人情的横七竖八的树枝搭配在一起,那不是一个互相矛盾的结果嘛。Photo by Anders Jildén on Unsplash所以应该怎么办呢?你可以这么来思考这个问题。如果你是站在树的树冠的外围,然后往树的方向拍照片,你拍到任何一朵花是不是背后都会有树干有树枝啊?但是如果你站在树的下面,仰头再来拍树梢的那些花的时候,它的背景是什么呢?是天空,对吧?同样的,你也可以去拍树梢,但是用地面的绿色的草地当背景,或者用红墙、黄墙、白墙来当背景,这个时候就会特别好看了。Photo by Xianyu hao on Unsplash再进一步,你甚至可以用这个树背后的古建筑的屋檐来当背景。当然了,屋檐因为也挺漂亮的,所以你就得把它模糊一点、虚化一点,用点大光圈或者手机里的人像模式把背景模糊掉,这样你的背景就足够好看了。不过这里要注意一个细节,就是你一定要拍树梢,要拍树梢,要拍树的最外围的尖尖上的花,只有这样你才可以选到最好看的背景。如果你是站在树外往里拍的话,那你这个背后的树枝真的是会很麻烦的。Photo by Cody Chan on Unsplash第三种拍花儿方法就是干脆拍微距的照片。如果你的手机有长焦微距或者说微距能力很强,你可以贴得很近很近的去拍一朵花。这个时候由于你贴的太近了,所以背后就会出现非常明显的模糊,即便有树枝也无所谓了,反正模糊到根本不知道它的存在了。这种拍法呢,好处是能够让花朵本身的美发挥到极致,坏处也有,就是有点单调,因为它毕竟只有一朵花或者是两三朵花,对吧?Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash如果你在花上能找到一点小蜜蜂啊或者其它的一些小虫子什么的,那或许也能给这个照片增添一抹故事感。这里唯一要注意的就是贴得太近去拍照的时候,你手机可能会对焦对不上,这个时候你要离远一点,因为不能近于手机的或者相机的最近对焦距离。还有就是枝头在风吹动下会晃得比较厉害,如果实在不行就伸只手把着那个枝头,让它别到处乱晃,不然的话你在微距的情况下,可能拍着拍着那个花就跑了,也不好对焦,也不好构图。好吧,今天我们就分享了三种有关春天拍花的小技巧,从远到近三个距离,希望对大家拍花有一些启发和收获。那么如果有更多的摄影问题,想学什么都可以在其底部给我留言,我会尽力为你解答。今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家的第2441天,我是叶梓,每天早上6:30,微信公众号“摄影早自习”以及喜马拉雅的“摄影早自习”栏目,不见不散。
加入摄影早自习群,请加微信:nihaoyelaoshi (暗号:喜马拉雅)早安,我是叶梓,今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家第2384天。Photo by Jeremy Thomas on Unsplash秋天已经来了,我的很多学生就在练习拍摄秋天,这时候发现了一个问题,大家对秋天的理解,拍摄的对象都是非常统一的,好像就是拍摄枫叶或者拍摄银杏叶。当然了,他们是很典型的秋天的季节性的代表,但是实际上我们能拍的东西却远远的比这个要多。Photo by Kristian Seedorff on Unsplash我举几个例子,比如说在城市里,落叶就是一个非常好的拍摄对象。落叶看上去是比较杂乱的,或者说是我们视它为垃圾,但实际上当你贴在地上拍照时,你会发现每片叶片都有它独特的一种美感。虽然它是褐色的,但它在逆光的条件下依然会有自己的光泽光芒,有自己的颜色,有自己的质感。你可以找一片比较好看的落叶,然后蹲低,贴地,去拍摄它。当你把自己的所谓的高度放低到那么低的角度再来看它们的时候,你会发现它们的整个形态都变了,小小的生命甚至变得高大了起来。Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash当然了,光是落叶可能不够好看,所以你还要注意一下你的远景是什么样的东西,虽然远景可能会是模糊的,但是它们依然很重要。Photo by Jason Leung on Unsplash除了叶片以外,其实你还可以拍摄一些秋天的花儿。在各个城市都有自己的菊花展或者是菊花的小花坛,菊花本身也是秋天的代表,当然了,还有桂花等等秋天开放的花儿。Photo by Cala on Unsplash除此之外还有果实、水果,比如说一见到枝头上挂满了红柿子,那么这就是秋天,这柿子也不一定要挂在枝头,它就全摘下来了,放在竹筐子里,或者是放在路边卖水果的三轮车上,它也是能够代表秋天的,这个时候三轮车前可能有人物正在买卖。你也可以去拍农民直接在农田里劳作的情况,秋收嘛,在逆光时你去拍摄金黄的麦田,是不是很有秋天的感觉?逆光呢不仅可以让树叶变得更鲜艳,花朵变得更漂亮,也可以让麦田变得更加的金灿灿。Photo by Federica Galli on Unsplash而且光线本身它也是有季节变化的。你比如说在北方的秋天秋高气爽,因为干燥,所以它就空气比较通透,蓝天比较多,你可以多用这种阳光去表达一个秋高气爽的感觉。当然有同学说老师我在南方,南方它不一定秋高气爽,有时候还挺挺多雨的,对吧?这个时候我们就可以利用比如说树枝的枯枝来表达秋天。你可以在一大片林子中找到那么一棵枯树,它可能不是因为秋天才枯的,它可能就是因为它病了或者死了以后,剩下了一个枯枝,但是你只要拍到枯枝,它也会给人这种秋天的感觉。Photo by Harli Marten on Unsplash另外,秋天还经常会见到露水露珠,温度再低一点,早上可能还会打霜。Photo by Maria Hossmar on Unsplash还有小动物们到了秋天也会不一样,会比较肥,至少麻雀是这样的,到秋天就把自己吃了个圆滚滚的好过冬嘛。Photo by Ole Kloth on Unsplash不仅是麻雀的衣服变厚了,其实人的衣服也是。比如说你拍一个姑娘站在水边,金黄色的逆光洒在她身上,她穿的是件大衣,这不一看就是秋天嘛。或者把这姑娘换成一对老人,互相搀扶着在小路上走着,他们的年龄也是对应着这季节里的秋天,也是很美的。这个时候我们就是利用了秋天的意象,而不只是具体的事物来表达这个主题。Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash所以秋天真的是有好多好多可以拍的东西,而我们不要光顾着去拍枝头的金黄的或者火红的树叶,你也可以动动脑筋,在下方留言来告诉我你所在的城市,你观察到的秋天会有什么样值得拍摄的对象。最后我再提醒一下,在这个月的30号,就是我们今年的艺卓杯摄影大赛的截稿日期,欢迎同学们来参加,你可以点击语音底部的海报或者是第二条图文链接进来了解比赛详情。今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家的第2384天,我是叶梓,每天早上6:30,微信公众号“摄影早自”以及喜马拉雅的“摄影早自习”栏目,不见不散。
Thank you to Earl, Dave, and Don for being part of the service. Happy birthday this week to Ellis and Heather, and happy anniversary to Debby & Len. Songs from this service: We Praise Thee O God - https://youtu.be/I2M3CjpV_Wc -- All The Way My Savior Leads Me - https://youtu.be/ekUELQCnQlM -- The Power Of The Cross - https://youtu.be/9x8DXzLwN48 -- King Of Kings - https://youtu.be/IVumVrkbq4s -- I Stand Amazed - https://youtu.be/3YmthQUL0EY Scriptures from this service: Communion - Psalm 118:27-29. Reading - Proverbs 18:18-20. Sermon - Matthew 11:6 (NKJV); Matthew 9:35 (NIV); 9:35-36; 9:36-38; Hebrews 13:5; Matthew 28:20; Acts 17:26; Romans 1:14-15; 1:16; Hebrews 13:5; Matthew 28:20; Romans 3:20; Hebrews 10:4; Romans 3:21-22; 3:22-24; Hebrews 13:5; Proverbs 3:5-6; Hebrews 13:5; Matthew 28:20; 1 Peter 5:7; Jeremiah 1:5; Acts 17:26; Matthew 28:20; 1 Peter 5:7; 5:10; James 4:8; Luke 6:36; Matthew 28:20; Revelation 21:1-3; Matthew 28:20; Revelation 21:5; Titus 3:3-6; Galatians 5:22-23; 5:6. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash [accordion][accordion-item title="NIV Copyright" state=closed]Scripture quotations marked (NIV) taken from The Holy Bible, New International Version© NIV© Copyright © 1973 1978 1984 2011 by Biblica, Inc. TM Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.[/accordion-item][accordion-item title="NKJV Copyright" state=closed]Scriptures marked NKJV taken from the New King James Version©. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.[/accordion-item][/accordion]
Some words about grief, and about grief's intelligence, and what it might be here to teach us both when it arrives in full force and when we 'catch a glimpse of it' in the moments with those we most cherish and love. How might grief - and its inevitability - open us to receive the life we are in the midst of right now, and how might it move us to take care of what and who we care about the most? Hosted, as always, by Lizzie Winn and Justin Wise of Thirdspace. Join Our Weekly Mailing: www.turningtowards.life/subscribe Support Us: www.buymeacoffee.com/turningtowardslife Turning Towards Life, a week-by-week conversation inviting us deeply into our lives, is a live 30 minute conversation hosted by Justin Wise and Lizzie Winn of Thirdspace. Find us on FaceBook to watch live and join in the lively conversation on this episode. You can find videos of every episode, and more about the project on the Turning Towards Life website, and you can also watch and listen on Instagram, YouTube, and as a podcast on Apple, Google, Amazon Music and Spotify. Here's our source for this week: What Grief Wants I only want one thing. I want you to pay attention. I want you to look in her eyes, now, While there is time, while there is Still breath, while the magnolias unfold Into flower, quietly, in the garden. I want you to feel, all the way through, What it is like as she looks back at you, While she still can, while you are here to Receive, to be seen. I will be ready to hold you, flood you, Carry you, when all the gazing is done. I want you to receive your life, While there is life to receive. We will wail together about its loss In good time. But now is not the time for that. It is not the time for turning away, For trying to avoid anything, For trying not to feel. There will be a time when you have No choice but to be turned away. But that time is not now. I want you to feel what it is like to Release your desperate grasp around What you could never hold onto anyway. To delight in the living flow with its Everyday beginning and its always endings. I want you to feel the shining aliveness of Everything you will lose While it is still here. Justin Wise justinwise.co.uk Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash Another Immersive Week at Duke is complete. I'm enrolled in the Master of Divinity program at Duke University. It is in a hybrid format, so I travel to Durham three weeks of the year to start each term and then have weekly zoom classes. I'm a senior looking forward to graduation in May 2025. This term I'm taking a class in Old Testament in Leadership with Dr. Ellen Davis. We had a great week with lots of reading, daily journals, and group-led discussions. I participated in the group that led the discussion on Thursday that was on the Book of Proverbs but the most meaningful lesson for me was the Friday lesson on the Book of Psalms. Our daily journal was different for Friday; we were asked to write our own Psalm. It was very different from studying the Psalms to determine the voice of the Psalmist as they both praise God and cry out for God's ear. But my Psalm was different. I had to put myself in the place of the Psalmist. For what was I crying out to God for? Was I still able to praise God in my time of need? Here's my Psalm. How would you frame words to God if you wrote your own? Psalm (Thanksgiving for time in waiting) Hear my case, O Lord; open your ears to my heart. You will find no deceit in me; my mouth continues to praise your name. A path has closed, but you are with me; You carry me on your shoulders to new lands. I trust in your faithfulness; like a mother bear for her newborn cub, you care for your children. I count the minutes;You see into eternity and the cosmos is under your tender control. As I wait, your name is on my lips;When I awake, I will be bathed in joy. Blessings, my friend,Agatha
加入摄影早自习群,请加微信:nihaoyelaoshi (暗号:喜马拉雅)早安,我是叶梓,今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家的第2348天。前两天我们一直在谈镜头的好坏,那就谈到了镜头的镜片数量的问题,一位叫苏雨新的同学,他提了一个好有意思的问题,我们今天来认真探讨一下。他说:想问一下人眼是几片镜片的镜头呢?Photo by bady abbas on Unsplash这个问题真的是非常的有价值,他开始把人眼和镜头放到一起比较。我们平时拍照还真得做这个比较,你真的得想这个事,因为一张照片好不好看,我们认为一张照片漂不漂亮、正不正常,不都是在跟自己的眼睛看到的世界做比对吗?所以这两个东西应该比。我简单讲几个我能想到的最大的不同或者是它们的相同之处。Photo by Fidel Fernando on Unsplash首先第一点,镜头的镜片数量是比较多的,一般没有一片镜片的镜头,当然你可以这么去做,但它成像效果不好。那人眼为什么只有一片这个镜片就可以做到呢,因为我们人眼的屈光度是可以随意调整的。晶状体它是可以被眼球里边的肌肉拉伸,它可以变扁,它可以变胖,它就一片玻璃可以随时变化,你知道吧?这个就已经是相当神奇了,于是它用一片镜片就可以完成对焦。但是你的相机的话就不行,你这个镜片又不能变,那你就只能改变它的位置啊,或者是加几片镜片再改变某几片镜片的位置——就是所谓的对焦模组来进行对焦,也比较复杂,你还需要一个马达在里面。感光元件是平面的 Photo by Mulyadi on Unsplash第二个重大的差异,是相机的感光元件或者是胶片它是平面的。视网膜是半圆形的 图片来源网络但是人的眼睛的感光的东西叫视网膜,对吧?它不是平面的,它是一个碗状结构,它整个眼球的后半部分它都有,它像是一个碗,像是一个锅,像是一个太阳能灶,像是一个卫星接收的天线,总之它是一个弧面的东西。这个影响蛮大的,你可以把它想象成一个弧形的电影银幕,对吧?你从中间点上投射出的所有光线,它可以均匀照在银幕的每一角,因为距离都相等,发光的位置(投影仪的位置)跟你银幕的每一个点它之间的距离都相等,那么是不是我这个光线它就比较均匀啊,它不会有暗角啊,对不对?而且它还不会容易有色散,边缘的光线的清晰度也不容易下降,这些都是我们在设计镜头或者设计相机的时候的一个老大难问题了。还有一个不同,是在相机里面感光元件它的像素是平均分布的,对不对?就是在你这片感光元件的任何位置,它都均匀的有着那么多的像素,所以它的分辨率是比较平均的。图片来源网络但人眼不一样,人眼它的视网膜分两种细胞,一种叫感光锥细胞,一种叫感光杆细胞。感光锥细胞是分辨率高的,它特别多又特别挤,但是它对光线不敏感。感光锥细胞分布在整个视网膜中间凹处大概2%的面积,那也就是说98%的面积都是感光杆细胞为主。那些感光杆细胞它分辨率低,这就导致了一个结果,就是你眼球看东西的时候,它永远只有中间那一个地方是清楚的,其他地方都是模糊的。你来看我这篇文章的时候,你的眼球要不要转呢?你从第一个字转到第二个字,转到第三个字、转到第十个字去看,对不对?没有真正的一目十行,那不是人类,对吧?因为我们的眼睛一次只能看清一个点,你得转眼球去观察世界。Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash当然啦,这种效果在相机里面要去模拟的话,我们就会喜欢大光圈效果嘛。反应过来没有,因为大光圈也是只能看清一个点的,周围是模糊的呀。准确的说不是周围啊,是比它更远和更近的地方是模糊的。这个跟眼球的视网膜的原理所形成的模糊还不太一样,眼球是即便看一个平面,也只能看清一个点,那相机是一个平面都是清楚的,只是它的更远和更近的地方是模糊的,它不一样。所以我很理解很多人特别喜欢大光圈的小景深效果,喜欢背景特别模糊,喜欢追求这个模糊效果,因为它像人眼 ,这个是很可以理解的。如果你要追问一下人眼为什么要进化成这样,为什么周围是感光杆细胞?其实它也非常有道理,就是中间部分我们负责集中注意力处理关键信息,就盯着那个清楚的东西看,想看清楚的东西看。周围部分它对光线很敏感,感光杆细胞相当于一个高感光度的细胞,你知道吧?它模糊,但是它感光度高,对光敏感,所以它就特别擅长捕捉运动事物。就比如说你在盯着我看的时候,旁边来了个狮子,那个狮子正扑上来,你的余光是更擅长去捕捉运动的,所以它会立刻感知到危险,然后你就把眼球转过去看那个狮子,发现它真的扑过来了,你就赶紧跑路,对吧?它是一个进化出来的结果。这个我们就不多谈了,我就想告诉你说,眼球的进化实际上是非常科学的。但是最后一个我一定要跟你说的一个差异,眼睛你不要小看它,你不要只把它比作相机,其实眼睛后边还有一个知觉系统,知觉系统后边还有大脑在处理你这个视觉信号,你可以把它简单的理解成一个自动的后期处理的系统。人眼可以自动校准色温的偏差(中) © 叶梓比如说对于白平衡的感知,我们的人眼相当厉害,你走在一个黄色的房间里面呆久了,你觉得这是白光了,你在一个蓝色的环境中呆久了,你也会觉得这是白光了,对吧?但这个时候用相机一拍,你会发现它其实严重偏蓝或严重偏黄,这就说明人眼对白平衡的处理,对这个色温的适应能力,是远远高于相机的,这些东西也不容忽视。好吧,这个问题今天肯定是讲不完,如果你有更多的兴趣,能想到什么在人眼和相机比对的时候觉得有些异常的地方、想不通的地方,都欢迎在底部跟我留言,我们一起来慢慢讨论。再次感谢苏雨新同学提的这个好问题。今天是摄影早自习陪伴大家的第2348天,我是叶梓,每天早上6:30,微信公众号“摄影早自习”以及喜马拉雅的“摄影早自习”栏目,不见不散。
Thank you to Rhonda, Glynnis, Jim, and Don for being part of the service. Happy birthday this week to Sellina, and happy anniversary to Glynnis & John, and Dorothy & Len. Tintern Bible Day Camp registration: https://vbspro.events/p/tinternbdc2024 Songs from this service: In Moments Like These - https://youtu.be/pB1oX8mIoH4 -- What A Friend We Have In Jesus - https://youtu.be/LarFhGeE-ac -- Abide - https://youtu.be/lwD5sgaM2ks -- Be Still And Know - https://youtu.be/oN5PW5WsdTY -- God Sees The Little Sparrow Fall - https://youtu.be/hmV5x_Yjj44 -- The Dinosaur Song - https://youtu.be/N-u6_iI4HrA -- Leaning On The Everlasting Arms - https://youtu.be/pUDX2d-ZRnw -- Praise (Let Everything...) - https://youtu.be/f2oxGYpuLkw Scriptures from this service: Communion - Genesis 1:27; Isaiah 66:13; Proverbs 31:27; Luke 1:38; Luke 13:34; Isaiah 66:12-13; Psalm 119:76-77; 119:81-8; 119:87; John 19:26-27; Luke 1:38; Psalm 119:114. Reading - 2 Corinthians 1:3-5. Sermon - 2 Corinthians 1:3-4; Hebrews 13:5; Matthew 28:20; 2 Corinthians 1:3-4; 1:6-7; 1:18-22; 3:7-9; 3:17; 3:17-18; 4:6; 4:7; 4:8-11; Hebrews 13:5; 2 Corinthians 4:13; Genesis 1:1; 2 Corinthians 4:16-17; 5:1-2; 5:7; Hebrews 13:5; 2 Corinthians 5:14; 5:17; 6:3-9; 9:12-13; 10:3-5; 11:13-15; 12:1-4; 12:4-5; Galatians 5:22-23; 2 Corinthians 13:5; 13:11; 13:12-14. Closing - Psalm 121:1-8. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Fi Mclachlan speaking on Talking with God as part of the series on Established in the Love of God Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Nixon vetoed the Comprehensive Child Development Act. Because helping kids is not American enough. Email: EverythingIsPublicHealth@gmail.com Instagram and Threads: Everything is Public Health Bluesky Social: @everythingisPHMastodon: @everythingispublichealth Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingispublichealth Photo Credit: Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplashhttps://unsplash.com/photos/selective-focal-photo-of-crayons-in-yellow-box-1zR3WNSTnvY?utm_content=creditShareLink&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplashReferences: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_panichttps://www.congress.gov/bill/93rd-congress/house-bill/1083https://time.com/6125667/universal-childcare-history-nixon-veto/https://time.com/child-care-crisis/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_panicSupport the show
How are we to steward the new life that God has given us? Pastor Jason Fest preaches. Listen above or download the audio file here. Photo by Aaron Burden on […]
Continuing our series inspired by the Psalms, Hayley & Vince share experiences of music and song connecting them with God. (Photo by Aaron Burden via Unsplash)Join our live chat! https://discord.gg/MNXJSM8New here? http://brownlinechurch.org/connectResources http://brownlinechurch.org/resources Donate http://brownlinechurch.org/donate
Continuing our series inspired by the Psalms, Hayley & Vince share experiences of music and song connecting them with God. (Photo by Aaron Burden via Unsplash)Join our live chat! https://discord.gg/MNXJSM8New here? http://brownlinechurch.org/connectResources http://brownlinechurch.org/resources Donate http://brownlinechurch.org/donate
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 6:19-7:5 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 6:5-19 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 6:1-12 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 4:25-5:32 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 4:17-26 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 4:10-16 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 4:7-11 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 4:1-7 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on January 8, 2023)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 3:17-24 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on December 11, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 3:9-16 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on December 4, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 3:1-11 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on November 27, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 2:18-3:6 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on November 13, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 2:4-18 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on October 16, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 2:18-3:1 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church. (Originally recorded on November 6, 2022)https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Weather follows Bob around. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash.
Join Sarah Holmes for part two of Rest and Restore. In today's program Sarah explores restoration, relaxation and the plants who support us in this process. Fund drive. The third Tuesday of each month during 2022 we will air an episode of The Herbal Highway from our early years that hasn't been heard since it originally aired. Join us in our 25th anniversary celebration! Follow us on Instagram @theherbalhighway and Facebook. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash The post Rest and Restore: Part 2 – December 13, 2022 appeared first on KPFA.
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 2:1-8 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Jason Fest delivers a sermon, written and preached by the Reverend Charles Spurgeon in the 19th century, on salvation and the object of our faith. Listen above or download the audio file here. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Pastor Jason Fest delivers a sermon, written and preached by the Reverend Charles Spurgeon in the 19th century, on salvation and the object of our faith. Listen above or download the audio file here. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:31-2:1 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:26-31 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:26-27 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:24-27 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:6-23 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
Beginning a new series, Pastor Alec Fisher discusses Genesis 1:1-5 during the Sunday morning "Advanced Biblical Studies Group" at Christ Lutheran Church.https://alecfisher.org/Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashSupport the show
This week on the show, Breanne Lavallée-Heckert, the research manager at Indigenous Climate Action, talks about the importance of Indigenous stewardship in regard to the climate crisis and how people can support Indigenous Climate Action. Founded in 2015, Indigenous Climate Action is an Indigenous-led organization guided by a diverse group of Indigenous knowledge keepers, water protectors and land defenders from communities and regions across Turtle Island. The vision of the organization is “a world with sovereign and thriving Indigenous Peoples and cultures leading climate justice for all.” Indigenous Climate Action inspires action through the development of tools and opportunities created with, by and for Indigenous communities, with the goal of uplifting Indigenous voices, sovereignty, and stewardship of the lands and waters for future generations. Today, Breanne Lavallée-Heckert joins rabble audience editor Jillian Piper to talk about the idea of joy for Indigenous youth as an act of rebellion, defunding the police, and why climate solutions cannot happen without Indigenous governance. This podcast is part of rabble's series “The Boiling Point.” The Boiling Point examines the ways increasingly high temperatures due to the climate crisis are affecting our summers in Canada on a social, institutional, and ecological level. The series also explains how Canadians can take action against climate change and make real differences in their communities. Follow more stories here. If you like the show please consider subscribing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your podcasts. And please, rate, review, share rabble radio with your friends — it takes two seconds to support independent media like rabble. Follow us on social media across channels @rabbleca. Or, if you have feedback for the show, get in touch anytime at editor@rabble.ca. Photo by: Aaron Burden
Chris Friend (Kean University) talks with Brenna Clarke Gray (Thompson Rivers University) about finding hope in education, even—or especially—in today's world. Along the way, Brenna explains the importance of learning technologists, the dangers of cruel optimism, and the critical need for honesty at all levels in academia. A complete episode transcript is available. Our theme music is by Blue Dot Sessions. This episode's cover art is by Aaron Burden on Unsplash. The show is hosted on Anchor.fm, and you can subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. The full catalog of episodes, including show notes and complete transcripts, lives at hybridpedagogy.org/podcast.
Philip told Jesus, "Show us the Father and it will be enough." The world needs to see the Father as well as the Son and the Holy Spirit. How will they see them unless the Church shows them. If we show the world the Father it will be enough! Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Malachi closes out the Old Testament with the encouragement to live patiently for God and wait for the coming of the Lord. Peter does the same thing in 2 Peter. Let's heed their advice and wait patiently for Him and live Godly lives until that time. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Welcome back to Book Loving African American Queens, glad you could join us. Our October 2021 selection is The Ocean at the End of the Lane: A Novel by Neil Gaiman. Credits: Photo created with Canva and Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash. Chime in on the podcast via Anchor.fm/blaaq, Twitter, Instagram, or via blaaq.bookclub@gmail.com. We would love to have your feedback, questions, and suggestions. This podcast is available on the following streaming sites: Anchor, Spotify, Google Podcasts and Pocket Casts. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blaaq/support
Richard Nixon's legacy will be forever tarnished by the Watergate scandal that led him to become the first and only U.S. president to resign from office. But Nixon was also a political mastermind whose impact continues to resound in both domestic and world politics. John R. Price served on the domestic policy side of the first Nixon administration, eventually becoming Special Assistant to the President for Urban Affairs. He has written about his experience in a compelling new memoir and history, The Last Liberal Republican: An Insider's Perspective on Nixon's Surprising Social Policy. In this interview, Price talks about his background as one of the founding memoirs of the Ripon Society (a moderate Republican activist group in the 1960s), his efforts on behalf of progressive Republicans like Nelson Rockefeller and Jacob Javits, and his work in the Nixon administration for the eminent Harvard sociologist (and later U.S. Senator) Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Price describes his efforts with Moynihan and Nixon to create the Family Assistance Plan, a far-reaching welfare proposal that would have implemented a negative income tax for households with working parents. He makes the case that Nixon was in many ways a liberal — indeed the last liberal Republican president — and that his social welfare program, if it had passed Congress, would have put the country on a different and better trajectory. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Nick is nervous about writing. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash.
Letting go of your mistakes onstage and at work. Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash.
Since I just plopped down in your life and did a stream of consciousness recounting of my life in SEO, some of you may want to know a little more about the structure I have in mind for this adventure. My plan is grow this podcast while I prepare my course on Voice SEO or screen less SEO which will have a podcast aspect to it. I prefer to walk my own talk, literally. In this episode, I detail my ideas of seven (7) types of recurring segments that I think will permit me to continue to have content for episodes without boring you or me at the same time at least not too much. You can find me on Linkedin - Carolyn Holzman American Way Media AmericanWayMedia.com Austin, TX Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/confessions-of-an-seo/support