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The inaugural series of the BAPEN Podcasts has been dedicated to bringing to life the British Intestinal Failure Association (BIFA) top tips. This second episode, hosted by BAPEN Education Officer and Consultant Dietitian - Anne Holdoway, explores the topic of Refeeding Syndrome with two leading experts: Consultant Gastroenterologist, Dr Aminda de Silva and Clinical Specialist Dietitian, Peter Turner.
After Yosef interpreted the dreams of Pharaoh informing him that there would be seven years of plenty followed by seven years of famine, he then advised Pharaoh to appoint an איש נבון וחכם to oversee the storage phase. Rabbi Eliyahu Lopian asked, why was it necessary to get a נבון וחכם for the simple task of gathering and storing grain. Wouldn't an ordinary individual suffice? The Rabbi answered, in general to store grain did not require such a wise man, but this situation was unique. It is known that in times of plenty, especially when there is an overabundance, people tend to waste and not value food the way they should. On the opposite side, when there is famine, every single kernel of grain becomes so precious. When someone has to store food properly during a time of plenty for a time of hunger, he has to be able to imagine himself as if he is in the days of hunger while he is gathering the food. And for that, a נבון חכם was necessary. A חכם is someone who is רואה את הנולד. He doesn't just keep the future in mind, he is able to see himself in the future right now. The same is true of our stay in this world. We live in a place with an abundance of mitzvot opportunities available to us. And we are to gather as many as we can, because in the Next World there will be no more opportunity. It will be like a hunger for mitzvot. The wise person is able to live here and imagine already what it will be like there. There is no greater pleasure to be had than the ones reserved for the future life, but they will only be given to the ones who stored up enough mitzvot here first. We say every day in the Aminda , ותן שכר טוב לכל הבוטחים בשמך באמת – a request for Hashem to give the good reward to those who are bote'ach in Him. Why does it say the good reward? Is there a reward that is not good? The Bet Tefila explains, the good reward referred to here is the ultimate reward that we can possibly get in this world and that is more opportunities to do great things and acquire more mitzvot and bring more satisfaction to HaKadosh Baruch Hu . Our entire purpose in this world is to amass fortunes of Torah and mitzvot and so, every extra opportunity in gaining more of them is the ultimate reward. Sometimes people pray for things for a long time and don't see the responses they are hoping for. They may feel that they are wasting their time and efforts by praying because seemingly their tefilot aren't working anyway. There could be nothing further from the truth. The greatest gain they could possibly get is praying another heartfelt tefila . That is what will stay with them forever. And if Hashem enabled them to pray for a longer period of time with sincerity, that in essence was the greatest gift He could have given them. When people take upon themselves to do extra mitzvot in the merit of receiving what they want and they don't get what they want, they should not, chas v'shalom , feel that they worked hard for nothing. They got the greatest reward possible – the mitzvah itself. And if they continue growing and praying without receiving what they are hoping for, that makes the mitzvot and tefilot infinitely greater. Although it may not appear that way to us, that's only because we don't have the spiritual eyes to see what happens each time we do a mitzvah. But they are the שכר טוב and we should utilize every moment that we have in this world to grab as many of them as we can.
“If you are going to beat yourself up, put down the sledgehammer and pick up a feather first.” Through recovery, we learn to stop beating ourselves up for our past mistakes. Cutting yourself some slack is one of the first steps in this process. In this week's episode, our guest host, Aminda L., talks to us about her journey of growth, self fulfillment, and forgiveness. Whether you have 24 hours or 24 years, you won't want to miss this episode! Connect with Aminda on Instagram and Facebook @amindasjourney and @amindasrecovery. To hear previous episodes, check us out on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music (Alexa), Google or other streaming services as well as on our YouTube channel. We thank you for joining us on this journey through early recovery! Please like, subscribe and review our show by connecting with us on your platform of choice by using our LinkTree (https://linktr.ee/sobersolutionspodcast). We'd love to hear your thoughts!
Ronski Speed & Jennifer Rene, Calvin O'Commor, Aly & Fila with Deirdre McLaughlin and many more. This is Ganorium Voyage 555. Check www.davechimny.com for all episodes, tracklists, dates and news.
Banyak privileges yang ada di luar sana tentang orang yang sukses. Tapi, menurut Aminda banyak juga orang yang sukses tanpa punya privilege tersebut. Kira-kira sukses menurut Aminda sendiri seperti apa ya? langsung aja temukan jawabannya di Music Extra episode kali ini!
lagu terbaru Aminda yang berjudul "Tiada Cinta Selain Kamu" didekiasikan untuk mengapresiasi orang-orang yang selalu mendukungnya. Dengerin cerita selengkapnya hanya di episode ini!
Amindana Chinikana, atau yang biasa disapa Aminda, penyanyi berbakat Indonesia ini kembali hadir dengan single keduanya 'Tiada Cinta Selain Kamu' dan kali ini, Bangkit Soemargo ngobrol langsung bareng Aminda, dan ternyata Aminda itu.......
Aminda found the rooms of AA after going to a rehab. Recovery was an obvious need in her life. Unity and Service on the other hand were elements she learned about and incorporated into her life over time. ". . . sometimes the good is the enemy of the best"ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS COMES OF AGE P- 101I think these words apply to every area of A.A.'s Three Legacies: Recovery, Unity and Service! I want them etched in my mind and life as I "trudge the Road of Happy Destiny" (Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 164). These words, often spoken by co-founder Bill W., were appropriately said to him as the result of the group's conscience. It brought home to Bill W. the essence of our Second Tradition: "Our leaders are but trusted servants; they do not govern." Just as Bill W. was originally urged to remember, I think that in our group discussions we should never settle for the "good," but always strive to attain the "best." These common strivings are yet another example of a loving God, as we understand Him, expressing Himself through the group conscience. Experiences such as these help me to stay on the proper path of recovery. I learn to combine initiative with humility, responsibility with thankfulness, and thus relish the joys of living my twenty-four hour program.Need the Daily Reflection Book?Visit our web siteRead about Recovery on our BlogVisit our Facebook GroupFollow us on TwitterSupport the Podcast:- On Patreon: https://patreon.com/dailyreflection- On PayPal: https://paypal.me/dailyreflection
Mistress Aminda is a 2 act play in Bulgarian about a romantic bound between a deaf mistress named Aminda Grethe and a giant anthropomorphic mouse named Roberti Levigo who came back to life 600 years after his death. Aminda grew up being an orphan in the forest of Denmark. The original concept of Mistress Aminda play was supposed to be about a deaf and or woman with autism who wanted the squeezing machine like Temple Grandin did but instead, Mistress Aminda hides herself in an igloo on a snowy mountain in Germany but Roberti Levigo wanted her to come out of an igloo. At 1st, mistress Aminda was sick of cold and then days later, Mistress Aminda got more sicker and Roberti found out that Mistress Aminda had plague so mistress Aminda died of plague fever.
Simon har intervjuat Aminda som är kurator på Bris och Stephani och Simon pratar om det dom lärde sig att Bris kan hjälpa till med.
Roy Wilkins: The Right to Dignity To watch this video please visit Public Access America https://youtu.be/VzztzLp_tHk Roy Wilkins (August 30, 1901 - September 8, 1981) was a prominent civil rights activist in the United States from the 1930s to the 1970s. Wilkins was active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and between 1931 and 1934 was assistant NAACP secretary under Walter Francis White. When W. E. B. Du Bois left the organization in 1934, Wilkins replaced him as editor of Crisis, the official magazine of the NAACP. Roy Wilkins was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He grew up in the home of his aunt and uncle in a low-income, integrated community in St. Paul, Minnesota. Working his way through college at the University of Minnesota, Wilkins graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in sociology in 1923. He worked as a journalist at The Minnesota Daily and became editor of St. Paul Appeal, an African-American newspaper. After he graduated he became the editor of the Kansas City Call. In 1929 he married social worker Aminda "Minnie" Badeau; the couple had no children. In 1950, Wilkins-along with A. Philip Randolph, founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and Arnold Aronson, a leader of the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council-founded the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR). LCCR has become the premier civil rights coalition, and has coordinated the national legislative campaign on behalf of every major civil rights law since 1957 In 1955, Wilkins was named executive secretary (the title was later changed to executive director in 1964) of the NAACP. He had an excellent reputation as an articulate spokesperson for the civil rights movement. One of his first actions was to provide support to civil rights activists in Mississippi who were being subject to a "credit squeeze" by members of the White Citizens Councils. Wilkins backed a proposal suggested by Dr. T.R.M. Howard of Mound Bayou, Mississippi who headed the Regional Council of Negro Leadership, a leading civil rights organization in the state. Under the plan, black businesses and voluntary associations shifted their accounts to the black-owned Tri-State Bank of Memphis, Tennessee. By the end of 1955, about $280,000 had been deposited in Tri-State for this purpose. The money enabled Tri-State to extend loans to credit-worthy blacks who were denied loans by white banks. Wilkins participated in the March on Washington (1963), the Selma to Montgomery marches (1965), and the March Against Fear (1966). He believed in achieving reform by legislative means; he testified before many Congressional hearings and conferred with Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, and Carter. Wilkins strongly opposed militancy in the movement for civil rights as represented by the "black power" movement. In 1967, Wilkins was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Lyndon Johnson. During his tenure, the NAACP led the nation into the Civil Rights movement and spearheaded the efforts that led to significant civil rights victories, including Brown v. Board of Education, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In 1977, at the age of 76, Wilkins retired from the NAACP and was succeeded by Benjamin Hooks. He died September 9, 1981. In 1982 his autobiography Standing Fast: The Autobiography of Roy Wilkins was published posthumously. The Roy Wilkins Centre for Human Relations and Human Justice was established in the University of Minnesota's Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs in 1992. Source Link https://archive.org/details/gov.archives.arc.2546045 Copyright Link https://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain/
Aminda M. Smith‘s fascinating new book traces the history of transformations in the way that the PRC understood social control, deviance, and thought reform. Thought Reform and China’s Dangerous Classes: Reeducation, Resistance, and the People (Rowman and Littlefield, 2013) excavates the histories of thieves, prostitutes, and beggars from a wide range of letters, diaries, novels, films, memoirs, oral histories, media accounts, and classified government documents. Reintegrating vagrants into the history of reeducation changes how we understand the scope and nature of the Chinese Communist thought reform project. Smith takes us into the reeducation centers that served as laboratories where the rapidly changing ideas about the relationships between thought reform, labor, and individuals were worked out over the course of the early twentieth century. Taking readers from the countryside into urban centers and ultimately into Beijing, the book traces the emergence and metamorphosis of notions of the “People” over the course of this history, paying special attention to the central role that marginal figures of society played in definitions of this crucial concept. In addition to introducing some of the fascinating individuals that populate Smith’s account, in the course of our conversation we also talked about the opportunities and challenges of accessing those stories from an archive of “official sources.” Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Aminda M. Smith‘s fascinating new book traces the history of transformations in the way that the PRC understood social control, deviance, and thought reform. Thought Reform and China’s Dangerous Classes: Reeducation, Resistance, and the People (Rowman and Littlefield, 2013) excavates the histories of thieves, prostitutes, and beggars from a wide... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Aminda M. Smith‘s fascinating new book traces the history of transformations in the way that the PRC understood social control, deviance, and thought reform. Thought Reform and China’s Dangerous Classes: Reeducation, Resistance, and the People (Rowman and Littlefield, 2013) excavates the histories of thieves, prostitutes, and beggars from a wide range of letters, diaries, novels, films, memoirs, oral histories, media accounts, and classified government documents. Reintegrating vagrants into the history of reeducation changes how we understand the scope and nature of the Chinese Communist thought reform project. Smith takes us into the reeducation centers that served as laboratories where the rapidly changing ideas about the relationships between thought reform, labor, and individuals were worked out over the course of the early twentieth century. Taking readers from the countryside into urban centers and ultimately into Beijing, the book traces the emergence and metamorphosis of notions of the “People” over the course of this history, paying special attention to the central role that marginal figures of society played in definitions of this crucial concept. In addition to introducing some of the fascinating individuals that populate Smith’s account, in the course of our conversation we also talked about the opportunities and challenges of accessing those stories from an archive of “official sources.” Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Aminda M. Smith‘s fascinating new book traces the history of transformations in the way that the PRC understood social control, deviance, and thought reform. Thought Reform and China’s Dangerous Classes: Reeducation, Resistance, and the People (Rowman and Littlefield, 2013) excavates the histories of thieves, prostitutes, and beggars from a wide... Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/chinese-studies
Robin's Podcast Episode 012 mixed & selected by dj Robin 01. Orkidea "Beautifull (Orkidea whiteout remix)" 02. Tim Jirgenson "Get ready" 03. Cosmic Gate & Jes "Flying blind" 04. Danilo Ercole "Quasar (Styller remix)" 05. Cerf, Mitiska and Jaren with Rank 1 "Witness" 06. Moby "After (Ferry Corsten remix)" 07. Sun Liquide feat. Aminda "The beat (Rene Ablaze remix)" 08. Sergey Wednesday "5 steps" 09. Alex M.O.R.P.H. & Protoculture "Walking up the stars" 10. Facade & Q'Bass "Intensity (Q'Bass remix)" 11. Roger Shah feat. Inger Hansen "Dance with me (Tomas Heredia remix)" 12. Tenisha "Always love never forgotten - The day will come" 13. Delta3 "Asylum" 14. Andres Sanchez "Call to arms" 15. Talla 2XLC "Eternity" 16. Alexander Popov "Attractive force" 17. Sean Truby & Craig Purvis "Beyond the horizon" 18. Paul Oakenfold "Glow in the dark" Duration: 01h40m54s Filetype: mp4a Bitrate: 128kbps Frequency: 44100hz
Super Trance Sundays - May 23rd, 2010************************************************************Click to DownloadFirst State – As You Were (Extended VersionKyau & Albert – Once in a Lifetime (Club Mix)Nitrous Oxide – Far Away feat. Aneym (Club Mix)Mat Zo – The FoundAshley Wallbridge – ChimeraDresden – That Day feat. Nadia Ali & Mikael JohnstonSophie Sugar, Sunlounger – Lost Together (Armin Van Buuren Mashup)Karanda – On Hold feat. David Call (Aurosonic Remix)Hernandes – Without You feat. Stine Grove (Vocal Version)Ronski Speed – Denva (Paul Vernon Remix)Tritonal – Piercing Quiet feat. SotoJES – Love Song (Cosmic Gate Remix)Niklas Harding, Mac – When Time Comes feat. Sofia ElisabethMike Sonar, Solis – Firenova (Tritonal Air Up There Remix)Rafael Frost – FlashbackDNS Project – Mindful feat. Johanna (Ronski Speed Mix)Beat Service – Static feat. Manon Polare (Proglifting Mix)Beat Service – Hiding to Nothing feat. Emma LockPaul Hind – Cold AgainJordan Suckley – Patience feat. Aminda