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The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and to support independent ski journalism, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.WhoJeff Colburn, General Manager of Silver Mountain, IdahoRecorded onFebruary 12, 2025About Silver MountainClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: CMR Lands, which also owns 49 Degrees North, WashingtonLocated in: Kellogg, IdahoYear founded: 1968 as Jackass ski area, later known as Silverhorn, operated intermittently in the 1980s before its transformation into Silver in 1990Pass affiliations:* Indy Pass – 2 days, select blackouts* Indy+ Pass – 2 days, no blackouts* Powder Alliance – 3 days, select blackoutsClosest neighboring ski areas: Lookout Pass (:26)Base elevation: 4,100 feet (lowest chairlift); 2,300 feet (gondola)Summit elevation: 6,297 feetVertical drop: 2,200 feetSkiable acres: 1,600+Average annual snowfall: 340 inchesTrail count: 80Lift count: 7 (1 eight-passenger gondola, 1 fixed-grip quad, 2 triples, 2 doubles – view Lift Blog's inventory of Silver Mountain's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himAfter moving to Manhattan in 2002, I would often pine for an extinct version of New York City: docks thrust into the Hudson, masted ships, ornate brickwork factories, carriages, open windows, kids loose in the streets, summer evening crowds on stoops and patios. Modern New York, riotous as it is for an American city, felt staid and sterile beside the island's explosively peopled black-and-white past.Over time, I've developed a different view: New York City is a triumph of post-industrial reinvention, able to shed and quickly replace obsolete industries with those that would lead the future. And my idealized New York, I came to realize, was itself a snapshot of one lost New York, but not the only lost New York, just my romanticized etching of a city that has been in a constant state of reinvention for 400 years.It's through this same lens that we can view Silver Mountain. For more than a century, Kellogg was home to silver mines that employed thousands. When the Bunker Hill Mine closed in 1981, it took the town's soul with it. The city became a symbol of industrial decline, of an America losing its rough-and-ragged hammer-bang grit.And for a while, Kellogg was a denuded and dusty crater pockmarking the glory-green of Idaho's panhandle. The population collapsed. Suicide rates, Colburn tells us on the podcast, were high.But within a decade, town officials peered toward the skeleton of Jackass ski area, with its intact centerpole Riblet double, and said, “maybe that's the thing.” With help from Von Roll, they erected three chairlifts on the mountain and taxed themselves $2 million to string a three-mile-long gondola from town to mountain, opening the ski area to the masses by bypassing the serpentine seven-mile-long access road. (Gosh, can you think of anyplace else where such a contraption would work?)Silver rose above while the Environmental Protection Agency got to work below, cleaning up what had been designated a massive Superfund site. Today, Kellogg, led by Silver, is a functional, modern place, a post-industrial success story demonstrating how recreation can anchor an economy and a community. The service sector lacks the fiery valor of industry. Bouncing through snow, gifted from above, for fun, does not resonate with America's self-image like the gutsy miner pulling metal from the earth to feed his family. Town founder/mining legend Noah Kellogg and his jackass companion remain heroic local figures. But across rural America, ski areas have stepped quietly into the vacuum left by vacated factories and mines, where they become a source of community identity and a stabilizing agent where no other industry makes sense.What we talked aboutSki Idaho; what it will take to transform Idaho into a ski destination; the importance of Grand Targhee to Idaho; old-time PNW skiing; Schweitzer as bellwether for Idaho ski area development; Kellogg, Idaho's mining history, Superfund cleanup, and renaissance as a resort town; Jackass ski area and its rebirth as Silver Mountain; the easiest big mountain access in America; taking a gondola to the ski area; the Jackass Snack Shack; an affordable mountain town?; Silver's destination potential; 49 Degrees North; these obscenely, stupidly low lift ticket prices:Potential lift upgrades, including Chair 4; snowmaking potential; baselodge expansion; Indy Pass; and the Powder Alliance.What I got wrongI mentioned that Telluride's Mountain Village Gondola replacement would cost $50 million. The actual estimates appear to be $60 million. The two stages of that gondola total 10,145 feet, more than a mile shorter than Silver's astonishing 16,350 feet (3.1 miles).Why now was a good time for this interviewIn the ‘90s, before the advent of the commercial internet, I learned about skiing from magazines. They mostly wrote about the American West and their fabulous, over-hill-and-dale ski complexes: Vail and Sun Valley and Telluride and the like. But these publications also exposed the backwaters where you could mainline pow and avoid liftlines, and do it all for less than the price of a bologna sandwich. It was in Skiing's October 1994 Favorite Resorts issue that I learned about this little slice of magnificence:Snow, snow, snow, steep, steep, steep, cheap, cheap, cheap, and a feeling you've gone back to a special time and place when life, and skiing, was uncomplicated – those are the things that make [NAME REDACTED] one of our favorite resorts. It's the ultimate pure skiing experience. This was another surprise choice, even to those who named [REDACTED] to their lists. We knew people liked [REDACTED], but we weren't prepared for how many, or how create their affections were. This is the one area that broke the “Great Skiing + Great Base Area + Amenities = Favorite Resort” equation. [REDACTED] has minimal base development, no shopping, no nightlife, no fancy hotels or eateries, and yet here it is on our list, a tribute to the fact that in the end, really great skiing matters more than any other single resort feature.OK, well this sounds amazing. Tell me more……[REDACTED] has one of the cheapest lift tickets around.…One of those rare places that hasn't been packaged, streamlined, suburbanized. There's also that delicious atmosphere of absolute remoteness from the everyday world.…The ski area for traditionalists, ascetics, and cheapskates. The lifts are slow and creaky, the accommodations are spartan, but the lift tickets are the best deal in skiing.This super-secret, cheaper-than-Tic-Tacs, Humble Bro ski center tucked hidden from any sign of civilization, the Great Skiing Bomb Shelter of 1994, is…Alta.Yes, that Alta.The Alta with four high-speed lifts.The Alta with $199 peak-day walk-up lift tickets.The Alta that headlines the Ikon Pass and Mountain Collective.The Alta with an address at the top of America's most over-burdened access road.Alta is my favorite ski area. There is nothing else like it anywhere (well, except directly next door). And a lot remains unchanged since 1994: there still isn't much to do other than ski, the lodges are still “spartan,” it is still “steep” and “deep.” But Alta blew past “cheap” a long time ago, and it feels about as embedded in the wilderness as an exit ramp Chuck E. Cheese. Sure, the viewshed is mostly intact, but accessing the ski area requires a slow-motion up-canyon tiptoe that better resembles a civilization-level evacuation than anything we would label “remote.” Alta is still Narnia, but the Alta described above no longer exists.Well, no s**t? Aren't we talking about Idaho here? Yes, but no one else is. And that's what I'm getting at: the Alta of 2025, the place where everything is cheap and fluffy and empty, is Idaho. Hide behind your dumb potato jokes all you want, but you can't argue with this lineup:“Ummm, Grand Targhee is in Wyoming, D*****s.”Thank you, Geography Bro, but the only way to access GT is through Idaho, and the mountain has been a member of Ski Idaho for centuries because of it.Also: Lost Trail and Lookout Pass both straddle the Montana-Idaho border.Anyway, check that roster, those annual snowfall totals. Then look at how difficult these ski areas are to access. The answer, mostly, is “Not Very.” You couldn't make Silver Mountain easier to get to unless you moved it to JFK airport: exit the interstate, drive seven feet, park, board the gondola.Finally, let's compare that group of 15 Idaho ski areas to the 15 public, aerial-lift-served ski areas in Utah. Even when you include Targhee and all of Lost Trail and Lookout, Utah offers 32 percent more skiable terrain than Idaho:But Utah tallies three times more annual skier visits than Idaho:No, Silver Mountain is not Alta, and Brundage is not Snowbird. But Silver and Brundage don't get skied out in under 45 seconds on a powder day. And other than faster lifts and more skiers, there's not much separating the average Utah ski resort from the average Idaho ski resort.That won't be true forever. People are dumb in the moment, but smart in slow-motion. We are already seeing meaningful numbers of East Coast ski families reorient their ski trips east, across the Atlantic (one New York-based reader explained to me today how they flew their family to Norway for skiing over President's weekend because it was cheaper than Vermont). Soon enough, Planet California and everyone else is going to tire of the expense and chaos of Colorado and Utah, and they'll Insta-sleuth their way to this powdery Extra-Rockies that everyone forgot about. No reason to wait for all that.Why you should ski Silver MountainI have little to add outside of what I wrote above: go to Silver because it's big and cheap and awesome. So I'll add this pinpoint description from Skibum.net:It's hard to find something negative about Silver Mountain; the only real drawback is that you probably live nowhere near it. On the other hand, if you live within striking distance, you already know that this is easily the best kept ski secret in Idaho and possibly the entire western hemisphere. If not, you just have to convince the family somehow that Kellogg Idaho — not Vail, not Tahoe, not Cottonwood Canyon — is the place you ought to head for your next ski trip. Try it, and you'll see why it's such a well-kept secret. All-around fantastic skiing, terrific powder, virtually no liftlines, reasonable pricing. Layout is kind of quirky; almost like an upside-down mountain due to gondola ride to lodge…interesting place. Emphasis on expert skiing but all abilities have plenty of terrain. Experts will find a ton of glades … One of the country's great underrated ski areas.Some of you will just never bother traveling for a mountain that lacks high-speed lifts. I understand, but I think that's a mistake. Slow lifts don't matter when there are no liftlines. And as Skiing wrote about Alta in 1994, “Really great skiing matters more than any other single resort feature.”Podcast NotesOn Schweitzer's transformationIf we were to fast-forward 30 years, I think we would find that most large Idaho ski areas will have undergone a renaissance of the sort that Schweitzer, Idaho did over the previous 30 years. Check the place out in 1988, a big but backwoods ski area covered in double chairs:Compare that to Schweitzer today: four high-speed quads, a sixer, and two triples that are only fixed-grip because the GM doesn't like exposed high-elevation detaches.On Silver's legacy ski areasSilver was originally known as Jackass, then Silverhorn. That original chairlift, installed in 1967, stands today as Chair 4:On the Jackass Snack ShackThis mid-mountain building, just off Chair 4, is actually a portable structure moved north from Tamarack:On 49 Degrees NorthCMR Lands also owns 49 Degrees North, an outstanding ski area two-and-a-half hours west and roughly equidistant from Spokane as Silver is (though in opposite directions). In 2021, the mountain demolished a top-to-bottom, 1972 SLI double for a brand-new, 1,851-vertical-foot high-speed quad, from which you can access most of the resort's 2,325 acres.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
In the premiere episode of Entertainment Unscripted, host Mia Fernandez sits down with filmmaker and content creator Hannah Colburn – known online as thathannahshow – to talk about breaking into the entertainment industry, creating viral behind-the-scenes content and navigating the world of independent filmmaking. From working on The Jennifer Hudson Show to premiering her short film "Lacuna" at the Beverly Hills Film Festival, Colburn shares insights, inspiration and advice for anyone dreaming of a career in film. A transcript is available at dailybruin.com/category/podcasts.
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Book a 90 Minute Financial Health Consult to get an actionable plan to better manage your finances. – In this episode of the Dollars and Dumbbells podcast, host Justin Green, a Certified Financial Planner™, sits down with Zakk Colburn, a business coach and the founder of PTBI, to discuss how he manages his business and personal finances. Zach shares insights on maintaining business cash flow, personal investments, and the practicality of renting vs. buying a home. The conversation addresses the importance of having an emergency fund, understanding the difference between making money and managing money, and the often overlooked aspects of personal finance for online coaches. Zach opens up about his journey of keeping expenses low and strategically investing profit to ensure a balanced lifestyle. This episode highlights the critical need for coaches to align their business strategies with their personal financial goals. Connect with Justin Green Schedule a 1:1 Free Coaching Call Connect with Zakk Colburn on Instagram – 00:00 Introduction and Guest Overview 01:13 Disclaimers and Episode Start 01:45 Catching Up with Zach Colburn 02:11 The Importance of Personal Finance for Entrepreneurs 04:16 Building an Emergency Fund 07:46 Mindset and Financial Goals 21:19 Early Financial Struggles and Frugality 26:11 The Emotional Car Purchase 26:28 The Pressure to Look Successful 26:46 The Dangers of Buying Beyond Your Means 29:10 Moving to Austin: Renting vs. Buying 31:05 Challenges of Getting a Mortgage as a Business Owner 32:05 The Real Cost of Homeownership 39:35 Balancing Business and Personal Finances 42:01 Introducing the New Financial Course 48:56 The Importance of Financial Transparency 50:53 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
Join us on this episode as we chat with Adam Colburn, a real estate expert from Raleigh, NC. Adam shares his journey in real estate investing, from wholesaling and flipping houses across the East Coast to his unique approach with sober living homes in Tennessee. Learn about his strategies for finding deals, including the power of direct mail and cold calling. Whether you're new to real estate or looking to diversify your portfolio, Adam's insights are sure to inspire! ================================== Want to grow your real estate investing business and portfolio? You're in the right place. Welcome to the Property Profits Real Estate Podcast
Meet Kate Kuncova Colburn in this episode of the, "Women in Telemark Skiing" series. Kate is one of the featured ski athletes in the women only Telemark ski documentary, "Telemarkeras" produced by Diana Rivera. Kate is from the Czech Republic and splits her time living between The Czech Republic and New Hampshire, USA. In this episode Kate tells us about her youth skiing, how she was introduced to telemark skiing and her adventures in globetrotting and ski instructing. Enjoy!
Nadia Colburn joins Let's Talk Memoir for a conversation about by tuning into our bodies to discover what we need to say, creating different cultural conversations about surviving trauma, tapping into our subconscious, coming out of secrets, how poetry can help us access material, not needing to share work until we're ready, what we learn from being in community with other writers, and her signature online course Align Your Story for Women. Also in this episode: -mitigating shame -how our bodies remember -meditation and dreamwork Books mentioned in this episode: -The Diary of Anne Frank by Anne Frank -The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk -Trauma and Recovery by Judith Lewis Herman -Educated by Tara Westover -Nothing Holds Back the Night by Delphine de Vigan -The work of Annie Ernaux Nadia Colburn is the author of the poetry books "I Say the Sky" and "The High Shelf", and her poetry and prose have appeared in more than eighty publications, including The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, Spirituality & Health, Lion's Roar, Los Angeles Review of Books, and The Yale Review. She holds a Ph.D. in English from Columbia University, is a yoga teacher and serious student of Thich Nhat Hanh and is the founder of Align Your Story Writing School, which brings traditional literary and creative writing studies together with mindfulness, embodied practices, and social and environmental engagement. The school has a community of over 30,000 mindful writers. Nadia is passionate about helping her students reclaim their stories, come out of secrets, listen to their bodies, and embrace and step into their full creative voices, on and off the page. Nadia lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her husband and two children. She is currently at work on a full-length memoir on pregnancy and early motherhood. Find her at nadiacolburn.com, where she offers meditations and free resources for writers. Connect with Nadia: Website: https://nadiacolburn.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alignyourstory Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nadia.colburn/ Free 5-Day Meditation & Writing Challenge: https://nadiacolburn.com/free-mindful-writing-challenge/ Free Resource Library for Writers: https://nadiacolburn.com/free-resources/ "I Say the Sky" on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Say-Sky-Poems-Contemporary-Poetry/dp/081319864X "I Say the Sky" from Kentucky Press: https://www.kentuckypress.com/9780813198637/i-say-the-sky/ 7-Day "I Say the Sky" Companion Meditation and Writing Challenge (free with book order -- just input book order number): https://nadiacolburn.com/7-day-new-year-practice/ Align Your Story for Women (Nadia's signature online course): https://nadiacolburn.com/align-your-story/ – Ronit's writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The Rumpus, The New York Times, Poets & Writers, The Iowa Review, Hippocampus, The Washington Post, Writer's Digest, American Literary Review, and elsewhere. Her memoir WHEN SHE COMES BACK about the loss of her mother to the guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and their eventual reconciliation was named Finalist in the 2021 Housatonic Awards Awards, the 2021 Indie Excellence Awards, and was a 2021 Book Riot Best True Crime Book. Her short story collection HOME IS A MADE-UP PLACE won Hidden River Arts' 2020 Eludia Award and the 2023 Page Turner Awards for Short Stories. She earned an MFA in Nonfiction Writing at Pacific University, is Creative Nonfiction Editor at The Citron Review, and lives in Seattle with her family where she teaches and edits memoir and is working on her next book. More about Ronit: https://ronitplank.com Subscribe to Ronit's Substack: https://substack.com/@ronitplank Follow Ronit: https://www.instagram.com/ronitplank/ https://twitter.com/RonitPlank https://www.facebook.com/RonitPlank Background photo credit: Photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash Headshot photo credit: Sarah Anne Photography Theme music: Isaac Joel, Dead Moll's Fingers
In this episode of WDx, Sharmin, Yaz, and Kaylin are joined by Dr. Laila Woc-Colburn. Tune in to hear Dr. Woc expertly discuss a case of a young woman with a worsening headache, followed by a roundtable discussion about what drew her to infectious diseases and her passions in medicine and life. Bio: **Laila Woc-Colburn,… Read More »Episode 370: WDx #33: Clinical Unknown Discussion with Dr Laila Woc-Colburn
On this episode i sit down with an amazing friend, Dr Jeff Colburn. This is an "acoustic" conversation on life and God. If you are a school owner or help people in any way, you need to hear this conversation. Want to submit a question or topic?? https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/QLY37CF want to be a guest? Contact information: Email: nicktaberfitness@gmail.com IG: taberfitnessacademy Real Talk with Sensei Nick will be posting on Monday mornings as of now, subscribe and share everywhere as you can --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nick-taber/support
This week, Gregg Colburn, co-author of "Homelessness is a Housing Problem," joins Nick and Goldy to dissect the complex factors fueling America's homelessness crisis. Colburn presents compelling evidence that challenges common misconceptions around homelessness, revealing that it stems primarily from the rising costs of housing rather than issues like addiction or mental illness. He explains that evidence shows comprehensive strategies—combining affordable housing, rental assistance, and supportive services—can meaningfully reduce numbers in the unhoused population. While acknowledging the long-term nature of the challenge, Colburn reframes housing as essential infrastructure, calls for big investments in building more housing units, and offers a compelling, data-driven case for rethinking America's approach to homelessness and housing affordability. Gregg Colburn is an associate professor of real estate at the University of Washington's College of Built Environments. He publishes research on topics related to housing and homelessness and is co-author of the book Homelessness is a Housing Problem: How Structural Factors Explain U.S. Patterns. Professor Colburn is co-chair of the University of Washington's Homelessness Research Initiative and is a member of the National Alliance to End Homelessness Research Council. Further reading: Homelessness is a Housing Problem: How Structural Factors Explain U.S. Patterns Website: http://pitchforkeconomics.com Instagram: @pitchforkeconomics Threads: pitchforkeconomics Bluesky: @pitchforkeconomics.bsky.social Twitter: @PitchforkEcon, @NickHanauer, @civicaction YouTube: @pitchforkeconomics LinkedIn: Pitchfork Economics Substack: The Pitch
The WildStory: A Podcast of Poetry and Plants by The Native Plant Society of New Jersey
Episode 17 features poet Nadia Colburn (03:47), who joins Ann Wallace from Massachusetts to speak about her new collection, I Say the Sky, published this year by University of Kentucky Press. Nadia's collection is a work of meditative healing, moving from silence into power. She invites us to see ourselves reflected in nature, and that poetry, in the words of Audre Lorde, indeed is not a luxury. Next up, Kim Correro speaks with Sarah F. Jayne (0:37:29)about her new book Nature's Action Guide: How to Support Biodiversity and Your Local Ecosystem. Sarah's book, a companion to Doug Tallamy's Nature's Best Hope, outlines fifteen actions we can and must take for creating healthy, functioning ecosystems where we live, work, and play. Each action includes a checklist, step-by-step instructions, recommended resources, and informative tips. And in our final segment, Kim and Ann talk with Doug Tallamy, (057:39)bestselling author and co-founder of Homegrown National Park, about his new book, How Can I Help: Saving the World with Your Yard, forthcoming from Timber Press on April 8, 2025. In the new book, Doug shares compelling and actionable answers to questions he most often receives from gardeners and homeowners. Topics range from ecology and biodiversity, conservation and restoration, native plants and invasive species, to pest control and support of wildlife at home. Doug offers important advice on what we can do as individuals to support biodiversity. He also stresses the importance of voting and making our values known to public officials. Thank you for joining us on The WildStory. Follow us on Instagram @Thewildstory_podcast
My guest this week is Dr. Nadia Colburn, a poet and author of a new book of poetry entitled I Say the Sky (affiliate link). Topics we discussed included: Developing greater interest in poetry later in life Turning to poetry as a spiritual or devotional practice The ability of poetry to express or point to things that are difficult to capture The emotional connection that poetry can inspire Presence that exists outside of traditional narrative Readings from Nadia's books Wanting to live and yet forgetting we're alive right here and now Mistaking the world for a task Making the body more spacious so it can contain more The ongoing life of the past into the present The dialogue between writing and meditation Letting go of the desire to show that we're good and acceptable Nadia's description and evocation of the experience of anxiety in her poem “Anxiety” The missingness of poetry, according to Kieran Setiya Nadia Colburn, PhD, is also the author of The High Shelf. Her poetry and prose have appeared in more than 80 publications, including the New Yorker, American Poetry Review, Kenyon Review, Spirituality & Health, Lion's Roar, and the Yale Review. Nadia holds a PhD in English from Columbia University. She is the founder of Align Your Story writing school, which brings traditional literary and creative writing studies together with mindfulness, embodied practices, and social and environmental engagement. Learn more about Nadia at her website, where you can also find meditations and other free resources.
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The Faith-Full Mama: Christian Motherhood, Spiritual Growth, Stay At Home Mom, Time Management
Grief. It's something we all experience. Leslie knows it too well when she lost her mom when she became a mom. Through her trial, she has been able to use her pain to encourage other mama's who don't have their mom's in the capacity they would like as they navigate motherhood themselves. Leslie it an author and encourager. You can find her and her newest book at: https://lesliecolburn.com/IG:@lesliecolburn.writesTiktok: lesliecolburn.writesFB: @crossmyheartbooksAmazon Link:https://www.amazon.com/Twinkle-Littlest-Star-Leslie-Colburn-ebook/dp/B0D6PK2JCP/ref=sr_1_3?crid=1VW8XJVMRMIIP&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.-dnBX6HNdk6Wo5Wy1wcCpSbL_7eVRPr7JNrrloDjpUr0Be_QM5xSArjGBWb8LRXJIW1S768WpH4dkqQVM3wYqNZkylL8fnVxKCnMEHhFgKfLDuMp8Abe1dQ7v_w0AQrgKo9EyOefmCBdDx5Srykg9w.XyyUeBNU_dJp-J4c9lsOaAB5Cnk6b8G1xh4j_nNoFvg&dib_tag=se&keywords=leslie+colburn&qid=1724690248&sprefix=%2Caps%2C158&sr=8-3
In this episode, we met with Nadia Colburn to discuss her new poetry collection I Say the Sky! Deeply engaged with the ecological collapse happening around us while also reinvesting in our own existence, her poems range from the simplicity in appreciating the beauty of an onion to reassessing childhood trauma. We also talk through her multi-hyphenate pursuits and the continual search for the "symphony inside you". For more on Nadia: Website: nadiacolburn.com Email: nadia@nadiacolburn.com ASLE EcoCast: If you have an idea for an episode, please submit your proposal here: https://forms.gle/Y1S1eP9yXxcNkgWHA Twitter: @ASLE_EcoCast Lindsay Jolivette: @lin_jolivette If you're enjoying the show, please consider subscribing, sharing, and writing reviews on your favorite podcast platform(s)! Episode recorded July 22, 2024. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
In this episode I talk with Nadia Colburn. Nadia is the author of the poetry books, I Say the Sky and The High Shelf, and her poetry and prose have appeared in more than eighty publications, including The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, Spirituality & Health, Lion's Roar, and The Yale Review. She holds a Ph.D. in English from Columbia University, is a yoga teacher and serious student of Thich Nhat Hanh, and is the founder of Align Your Story Writing School, which brings traditional literary and creative writing studies together with mindfulness, embodied practices, and social and environmental engagement. The school has a community of over 30,000 mindful writers. Nadia lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her husband and two children. Stay tuned as we listen to Nadia read some poems from her book and talk about, among many other things: The relationship between Buddhist / meditation practice and writing. Poetry and literature as a companion or an offering as a mirror to yourself. Literature as a place where people can speak truths that are sometimes uncomfortable but not talked about all the time. Writing as therapy and healing. And much more! Sit back and enjoy the flow of conversation and poetry with the delightful Nadia Colburn. Buy the book (Amazon affiliate link): I Say the Sky Learn more about Nadia: https://nadiacolburn.com Free writing and meditation resources: https://nadiacolburn.com/free-resources/ Free 5-day meditation and writing challenge: https://nadiacolburn.com/free-mindful-writing-challenge/ Nadia Colburn Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nadia.colburn/ Nadia Colburn Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alignyourstory/ Become a patron to support this podcast and get special member benefits, including a membership community and virtual sangha:https://www.patreon.com/EverydayBuddhism Join the Everyday Sangha: Join the Everyday Sangha Join the Membership Community: https://donorbox.org/membershipcommunity Register for the next Introduction to Buddhism course (virtual-Zoom), beginning Thursday, August 29, 2024! Register NOW to get the first readings and reflections in your email, before the class! https://www.everyday-buddhism.com/p/introduction-to-buddhism-course-and-registration-1/ If this podcast has helped you understand Buddhism or help in your everyday life, consider making a one-time donation here: https://donorbox.org/podcast-donations Support the podcast through the affiliate link to buy the book, Everyday Buddhism: Real-Life Buddhist Teachings & Practices for Real Change: Buy the book, Everyday Buddhism Support the podcast and show your support through the purchase of Everyday Buddhism merch: https://www.zazzle.com/store/everyday_buddhism NOTE: Free shipping on ALL (unlimited) items (Everyday Buddhism merch or gifts from other stores) if you join Zazzle Plus for $19.95/year: https://www.zazzle.com/zazzleplus
In this episode, Brian Colburn dives into the crucial tools and software that every podcaster needs to create high-quality recordings. From beginners to seasoned podcasters, this episode covers the essential software options that can enhance your recording process and ensure your podcast sounds professional.Visit us at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of Podcast Mastery Minute, host Brian Colburn discusses the importance of utilizing analytics tools to track listener behaviors and preferences. He emphasizes analyzing data on episode plays, listener demographics, and engagement patterns to tailor content more effectively. Tune in daily for more tips on enhancing your podcast's success.Join the Private Facebook Group for Creatives. Creator's Collab Hub - https://www.bcolburn.com/creators-collab-hubFind me at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of 'Podcast Mastery Minute,' the importance of proper licensing for podcast music is emphasized. Resources like Epidemic Sound and AudioJungle are recommended for tracks with clear podcast licensing options.Join the Private Facebook Group for Creatives. Creator's Collab Hub - https://www.bcolburn.com/creators-collab-hubFind me at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of 'Podcast Mastery Minute,' the host advises podcasters to invest in a portable digital recorder and a high-quality Lavalier mic, such as the Zoom H5 or Rode SmartLav+, to enhance their mobile recordings with professional audio quality. Listeners are encouraged to upgrade their equipment to improve their podcasts and tune in for more tips in future episodes.Join the Private Facebook Group for Creatives. Creator's Collab Hub - https://www.bcolburn.com/creators-collab-hubConnect with me at https://www.accountables.network
This episode of 'Podcast Mastery Minute' delves into the benefits of using mixers in podcast production. It highlights how mixers allow control of audio levels, manage multiple microphones, and add real-time effects, making them especially useful for podcasts with multiple hosts or guests. Tune in for daily tips to enhance your podcasting success. Join the Private Facebook Group for Creatives. Creator's Collab Hub - https://www.bcolburn.com/creators-collab-hubFind me at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of Podcast Mastery Minute, host Brian Colburn discusses the importance of making podcast content accessible to a broader audience. He highlights the benefits of including transcripts, providing descriptive visual content, and using clear, jargon-free language. These steps expand the listener base and showcase a commitment to inclusivity. Tune in for more tips on boosting your podcast's success.Join the Private Facebook Group for Creatives. Creator's Collab Hub - https://www.bcolburn.com/creators-collab-hubFind me at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of Podcast Mastery Minute, host Brian Colburn discusses the value of incorporating user-generated content into your podcast. He emphasizes the importance of building a community and engaging listeners by featuring their stories, questions, and comments. This approach not only enriches the content but also fosters a stronger connection with the audience.Visit us at https://www.accountables.network
Join us today in this conversation with Cathy Colburn as we discuss gaining perspective, different ways of listening, changing our beliefs and much more. Cathy is an energy coach and healer with a variety of training. Her background includes a degree in engineering, Yoga teacher certification, and a Core Belief Restructuring Practitioner and Energy Healer. That combined with life experience that includes project managing her children's serious illnesses, and her three years traveling the world with the then-healthy children that have changed her perspectives many times over. What she has learned has helped her to help others face some pretty dark times and come out of it and back into the light. If you would like to connect or work with Cathy you can go visit her website at https://www.themetaphix.com/ and you can find her book, The Metaphix on Amazon. Are you interested in becoming a private client or joining the 2024 Mastermind? I invite you to book a complimentary 30 minute call with me at HERE so we can connect and talk about what you want for your life and business. Do you find yourself unsure or stuck? Connect with Debbie at www.thelituplife.com and schedule a 30 minute clarity call. She can help you become crystal clear about what you do want in your life and help provide tools so you can show up as your best self. Debbie helps entrepreneurs make a lot of money, doing what they love without sacrificing what's important to them, so they can live the life they desire. She is passionate about helping other entrepreneurs lead their businesses instead of the business running their lives, so they can have their hopes, wishes and dreams come true. She also is an adjunct professor at Gonzaga University.
In this episode, we discuss the importance of planning your podcast's long-term success with a content roadmap. We outline significant themes, key topics, and important dates such as guest appearances or special events. This approach ensures that you have enough content and consistently deliver value to our valued audience, whose role is not just important but integral to our podcast's operations.Visit us at https://www.accountables.network
In this episode, we dive into the essentials of mastering episode flow. Keeping your podcast smooth and engaging is crucial for retaining listeners and boosting engagement. We discuss the importance of starting with a strong introduction, laying out the episode structure early on, and transitioning smoothly between topics. These techniques will help create a more engaging podcast and contribute to a growing audience. We also highlight the significance of ending with a summary and a solid call to action to leave your audience wanting more.Visit us at https://www.accountables.network
Today, as the final installment in our Edges series, I am joined by writer, poet, memoirist, teacher, yogi, activist, and mother - Nadia Colburn.Nadia has recently released her newest book of poetry, I Say the Sky - and y'all know how much I love exploring the intersection of poetry and mindfulness. As a start, I want to share one of the review blurbs about Nadia's newest book because I feel that it so perfectly sums up her work:"From the opening poem and on through this glorious book, Nadia Colburn strikes the difficult balance between celebrating the splendor of the world we inhabit and acknowledging the grief and devastation that none of us can escape. As much a book of love songs as a book of elegies, I Say the Sky is a heart opening and mind sharpening collection." ~Camille T. DungyI couldn't agree more.In our conversation today, Nadia,who feels like an old friend, and I discuss:Writing from the bodyAgency in times of distressMeeting edge places in a state of opening rather than contractionWe talk of generative, supportive action and of course we explore mindful writing practices to support ourselves in times of change. Grab your journal and join us!Learn more about Nadia Colburn here: https://nadiacolburn.com/Lear more about Project Regeneration here: https://regeneration.org/ Thank you to Brianna Nielsen for production support of this episode. https://www.instagram.com/brianna_podcastpro/Please sign up for my newsletter at merylarnett.substack.com to access these meditations as stand-alone audio files for your daily practice. Make a donation or learn more about my free offerings and live classes by visiting merylarnett.cominstagram.com/merylarnettyoutube.com/@themindfulminutepodcast
What is our relationship with our bodies? Our past? The planet? The rest of humanity? We speak with Nadia Colburn about how she weaves together a yoga practice, mindfulness, writing, and activism to explore these questions. “Our writing, our living, our experiencing is deeper when we can come from a bigger perspective and bring all the awarenesses,” she says. We speak about common obstacles to creative practice, ways to include the body, how teaching affects her writing practice and how she came to write her most recent collection of poems. Writer, yogi, activist and teacher Nadia Colburn is author of two books of poetry, The High Shelf and I Say the Sky and her poetry and creative nonfiction have been published in The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, Spirituality & Health, and dozens of other journals. She's been a professor at MIT, Lesley, and Stonehill College, and she is currently the writer-in-residence at Northeastern's Center For Spirituality, Dialogue and Service. She's also the founder of the Align Your Story School for writers which combines a traditional academic background with a more holistic, mindful approach. Nadia ColburnI Say the Sky This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit emergingform.substack.com/subscribe
About the show In the first half, Dr. Joel Wallach addressed the human body's ability to achieve healing through natural remedies that aid in the recovery from chronic conditions that plague Americans today. Referencing biblical figures like Adam, Noah, and Methuselah, who were said to have lived for hundreds of years, he connected their longevity to the notion that they inhabited the "land and milk honey." Wallach suggested that this milk was "glacial milk"-- ground-up rocks at the top of glaciers that released white silt, heavy in minerals that flowed into streams, which the biblical-era figures drank, and this greatly increased their lifespans. Wallach announced the publication of his new book on metabolic syndrome (related conditions said to increase the risk of heart disease, stroke, and diabetes). About 1/3 of American adults have the syndrome, he reported, but rather than a genetic problem, he attributes it to nutritional deficiencies and not avoiding the "bad stuff," which he listed as fried foods, processed meat, oils, gluten soy, wheat, barley, rye, oats, buckwheat, sugar, and carbonated drinks. In response to a caller's inquiry about Bell's palsy, Wallach said he believes the condition is due to the cramping of a cranial nerve from osteoporosis and can be reversed with the proper nutrients that rebuild the myelin in the brain and spinal cord. ------------------ Chemist Steve Colbern, who specializes in materials science, says that he and his wife displayed evidence of being visited and implanted by the alien Greys. In the latter half, he shared his research about Mars-- he believes that plant life and past civilizations on the Red Planet have been covered up and also updated his work with the late Dr. Roger Leir, whom he initially contacted for the removal of an alien implant in his toe. Regarding Mars, Colbern asserted that evidence for plant life has been seen clearly in the Orbiter mission photos, as well as huge trees near the planet's south pole. In the rover photographs, there's what looks like foundations of buildings, as well as metallic junk and crash debris, he added. One Roper poll reported that about 3% of the public has been affected by alien abduction at least once, and according to Colburn's research, about .1% of the population "are Class II experiencers that are actually part of the alien program." Hybrids are the primary purpose of the program, he continued, though abductions seem to be decreasing in number. The hybrids, raised aboard their ships, look mostly indistinguishable from regular humans, he noted, and the Greys' agenda is to use them to repopulate our planet after a devastating war or pandemic. "But they're not going to do anything to us; they're going to wait for us to do it to ourselves," Colburn clarified. He shared that the Greys have said they hail from planets within 100 light years, and are part of an alliance of seven similar species. In addition to the alien implant he had removed, he believes he still has several others embedded in him, including one "that started giving out radio signals when I was doing a Japanese TV show." During the last half-hour, George featured his 6/28/21 interview with hypnotherapist Barbara Lamb on children's ET encounters. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/georgenoory/message
Today we are joined by Gregg Colburn who co-wrote “Homelessness is a Housing Problem”. Colburn also shares with us his findings about causes of homelessness, his views on the situation, and some solutions that could remove the problem.
In this episode, we discuss how scripting can enhance structure and engagement. From outlining main points effectively to writing conversationally, captivate your audience. Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
In this episode, Brian Colburn emphasizes the importance of strategic guest selection in boosting your podcast's growth. By choosing guests who not only have expertise but also bring a unique audience, you can significantly enhance your podcast's reach and influence. Learn how aligning guest participation with your content themes and marketing goals can help you take control of your podcast's direction and ensure long-term success.Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
In this episode, Brian Colburn discusses the importance of using historical data to shape future podcast episodes. By analyzing past episodes for downloads, listener engagement, and positive feedback, you can identify which topics, formats, or guests resonate most with your audience. Learn how to leverage these insights to plan compelling future content and enhance your podcast's success.Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
In this episode, Brian Colburn explores the critical role of consistency in the success of your podcast. From maintaining a regular release schedule to ensuring high-quality content and engaging audience interaction, consistency is key. Learn how providing valuable and engaging content, whether through well-researched topics, interesting guest interviews, or unique perspectives on popular subjects, can help your podcast resonate with your target audience.Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
In this episode, Brian Colburn delves into the importance of creating a comprehensive content repository for your podcast. By developing a repository filled with content ideas, research notes, and potential interview opportunities, you can ensure a steady stream of quality material, maintain consistency, and overcome creative dry spells. Learn effective strategies to organize and continually update your repository, putting you in control of your podcast's success.Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
In this episode of Podcast Mastery Minute, Brian Colburn discusses the importance of using teasers, previews, and exclusive glimpses to engage potential listeners. He explains how short, intriguing clips can pique interest and draw in an audience. Brian suggests sharing these clips on social media and at the end of episodes to keep listeners hooked and coming back for more.Key Takeaways:Engaging Potential Listeners: Use teasers, previews, and exclusive glimpses to attract and engage listeners.Creating Intriguing Clips: Craft short, intriguing clips to pique interest.Sharing Strategies: Share these clips on social media and at the end of episodes to keep your audience returning for more.Production Services - https://www.sitchradio.com1-on-1 Coaching - https://www.bcolburn.comAccountable's - https://www.accountables.network
Today, we speak with Jamestown artist Kaycee Colburn, who recently was featured in a story you can hear on our website about the arts and culture center KayCo. Through an award from Creatives Rebuild New York, Colburn was placed as an artist-in-residence on the campus of Jamestown Community College. She sits with Jay Moran for an in-depth conversation about her upbringing and how her heritage fueled her work and words.
Writing and mindfulness together can help us come into more aligned stories about who we are, both individually and collectively. In today's interview, Nadia Colburn is here to share about the art of writing, poetry, her path of following her interests back to her purpose [not as planned!]. Now she's blending so many elements of who she is including her talents, passions, and her personal life story to help others do so much of the same.Flowing through points on finding one's voice, taking words beyond the words and into the body, writing for creative expression and attention, the rise {again} of poetry, using meditation as a writing tool for block removal and creative access, and so much more!Her latest publication, poetry book 'I Say the Sky' weaves in Nadia's own journey of mindfulness, writing, healing trauma, along with noticing the injustices and the environmental destruction around us, and how they all come into this process of awakening individually but also collectively. And, from there, coming to a place of peace, acceptance and, ultimately, also, a place of greater action.ABOUT NADIA: Nadia Colburn is the author of the poetry books 'I Say the Sky ' and 'The High Shelf', and her poetry and prose have appeared in more than eighty publications, including The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, Spirituality & Health, Lion's Roar, and the The Yale Review. She holds a Ph.D. in English from Columbia University, and a BA from Harvard, is a kundalini-trained yoga teacher, a serious student of Thich Nhat Hanh and is the founder of Align Your Story Writing School, which brings traditional literary and creative writing studies together with mindfulness, embodied practices, and social and environmental engagement. The school has a community of over 30,000 mindful writers. Nadia lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her husband and two children. MORE ON NADIA ::: buy 'I Say the Sky' book here & receive a 7 day meditation and writing challenge! :: her website [https://nadiacolburn.com/] - free meditations and resources for writers and more!:: free 5 day mindful writing challenge_______________________________________________REBEKKA'S LINKS :*NEW* MEDITATE IN MAY - FREE 30 DAY SUPPORT :: here*NEW* MEDITATE NOW - FREE VIDEO + WORKBOOK :: here
At 250 pounds, Colburn could barely do her job as a pilot car driver without pain. But this tiny 5'1" powerhouse had bigger goals - prepping for an intense bodybuilding competition while spending 10+ months a year guiding massive windmill blade trucks cross-country. How did Kelly achieve such a jaw-dropping physical transformation on the road? In this raw conversation, the gritty driver opens up about tapping into the same perseverance that makes drivers unstoppable to reclaim her health. You'll hear the real talk on Kellie's physical battles, crucial mindset shifts, creative meal preps and workout tactics that fueled her bodybuilding-level transformation. Get inspired by Kellie's journey proving that learning to user your driving skills a little bit differently, any goal is achievable out on the road.Tune in as Kellie shatters myths about limited nutrition and fitness for drivers. This is one ride towards total health you won't want to miss!TikTok - @kelliebfit81Instagram - @kellieb_fitEnjoying Life OTR, a community that champions: Adventure, Innovation and Well-being. Join the Movement! See the sights, enjoy the food, take the pic and share with our community! Make the most of the opportunity and share ways to save money doing it!If you have questions or would like information about being on our podcast, contact Cindy: EnjoyingLifeOTR@gmail.com. You are invited to share your journey with other drivers who are Enjoying Life OTR.Join "Heather Truckers" Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/share/juAyihrBSY5kALp6/?mibextid=lOuIew Join "Enjoying Life OTR" Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/share/RstyK3SgWaKLm9Qf/?mibextid=lOuIew#HealthierTruckers#EnjoyingLifeOTRContact our hosts:Cindy Tunstall: EnjoyingLifeOTR@gmail.comMalinda Fox Wellington: Malinda@NomadTLC.org
We are back with the Law Dog, Nathan Colburn. We talk about stuff, but of course, it comes back to discussing law since he's our favorite lawyer. We have a good time at the original East Nashville Yacht Club, though. Very fortunate to have him around. You can find us on Instagram at instagram.com/eastnashvilleyachtclub and email at eastnashvilleyachtclub@gmail.com. You are more important than you know.
In this episode Nat interviews Zakk Colburn the owner of PTBI a company that helps online coaches go from 0-10K/mo. Discover: * Ad accounts shutting down and payment defaults * What type of business do you want to build * Finding fulfillment outside of business * Leadership and developing culture * What is your dream day Connect with Zakk: https://www.instagram.com/zakkcolburn/ Join our FREE Content & Lead Generation Community here: https://bit.ly/3PxLL64 If you're interested in learning how to build a front-end system that turns cold leads into “shut up and take my money clients”, apply here and let's see how we can help: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/natashastorm_/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thenatashastorm/
This week, Dalanie and Katie discuss the short film, The Last Repair Shop. IN THIS EPISODE PURCHASE OUR MERCH!: https://www.classicallyblackpodcast.com/store JOIN US ON PATREON! https://patreon.com/ClassicallyBlackPodcast SIGN UP FOR OUR MAILING LIST! https://www.classicallyblackpodcast.com/newsletter-sign-up FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA! https://linktr.ee/classicallyblack Donate to ISBM! https://fundraising.fracturedatlas.org/international-society-of-black-musicians Check out our website: https://www.isblackmusicians.com Woman was shushed during performance of Swan Lake so her husband broke shusher's eye https://metro.co.uk/2024/01/29/ballet-fan-repeatedly-punched-left-broken-eye-socket-swan-lake-20187994/ Peabody Conservatory to Meet Full Student Financial Need and Eliminate Loans https://hub.jhu.edu/2024/02/02/peabody-conservatory-student-financial-aid/ Colburn's Fortissima program - DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MARCH 15 https://www.colburnschool.edu/community-initiatives/fortissima/ Louisville Orchestra Creators Corps - DEADLINE MARCH 1 https://louisvilleorchestra.org/creators-corps/ Watch The Last Repair Shop https://youtu.be/xttrkgKXtZ4?si=kdtFYkN51xnu-wK8 FROM LAST WEEK: Register for Notes Noire https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeN56JaI89cmwv5xDcLq889kE5eRvoBFsh_GRoBfAdkwbYM-A/viewform Help Emanuel attend Violin Making School https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-emanuel-attend-violin-making-school?utm_campaign=p_lico+share-sheet&utm_location=FIRSTTIME&utm_medium=copy_link&utm_source=customer Black Excellence: Camden Bonsu-Stewart https://www.camdenmusique.com/ Piece of the Week: La Mer - Claude Debussy https://youtu.be/y1hWp4pQpAs?si=3Ll9T2FMulQ3zeFJ
Anne-Marie-Louise d'Orleans has been described by historians as having been one of the richest heiresses in history, as an insurgent, as unaccomplished, as an Amazon, as a writer, and as a fool. And she was sort of all of those things. Research: Barine, Arvede, and Helen Meyer. “La Grande Mademoiselle 1627-1652.” Putnam. 1902. Accessed online: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/50717/50717-h/50717-h.htm Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Anne-Marie-Louise d'Orléans, duchess de Montpensier". Encyclopedia Britannica, 25 May. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Anne-Marie-Louise-dOrleans-duchesse-de-Montpensier DeJean, Joan. “Against Marriage: The Correspondence of La Grande Mademoiselle.” Chicago University Press. 2002. “France's Mid-17th-Century Crisis: The Fronde (1648-1653).” University of Kentucky. https://history.as.uky.edu/france%E2%80%99s-mid-17th-century-crisis-fronde-1648-1653 Fraser, Antonia. “Love and Louis XIV: The Women in the Life of the Sun King.” Anchor Books. 2007. “La Grande Mademoiselle 1627-1693.” Chateau de Versailles. https://en.chateauversailles.fr/discover/history/great-characters/grande-mademoiselle Montpensier, Anne-Marie-Louise d'Orleans. “Memoirs of Mademoiselle de Montpensier, grand-dughter of Henri Quatre, and niece of Queen Henrietta-Maria.” London, Colburn. 1848. https://archive.org/details/memoirsmademois02montgoog/page/n10/mode/2up Sackville-West, V. “Daughter of France: the life of Anne Marie Louise d'Orléans, duchesse de Montpensier, 1627-1693, la Grande Mademoiselle.” Doubleday. 1959. Accessed online: https://archive.org/details/daughteroffrance00sack/page/30/mode/2up See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Unearth the hard truths behind the housing crisis and homelessness with our distinguished guest, Professor Gregg Colburn, from the University of Washington. His perspectives from his insightful book "Homelessness is a Housing Problem" gives us more than just an academic exploration of this pressing issue - it presents us with solutions. Ever wondered why homelessness is five times more prevalent in coastal cities like Seattle, San Francisco, and New York, compared to cities like Chicago and Baltimore? Join us on this journey as we debunk myths about weather, mobility, and housing stock, and confront the harsh reality of banishment policies. We also take a hard look at the impact of gentrification and the urgent need for affordable housing. Be ready to rethink how cities should be planned, as we delve into the importance of densification and how private developers can take the lead in solving the housing gap. As we wrap up, we bring you the stark contrasts between short-term and long-term approaches to affordable housing, the federal and local policies at play, and the potential power of subsidies. Learn from the success stories of veteran homelessness initiatives, and understand the critical role of political willpower and resource allocation. We promise, this conversation will leave you with a fresh perspective on homelessness and the inherent challenges, plus actionable suggestions to advocate for change in your own city. Get ready to be part of the solution!Support the showEngage the conversation on Substack at The Common Bridge!
Once Ann Radcliffe retired from publishing, all kinds of rumors started to spread about her, including some that distressed her greatly. After she died, there was even more speculation. Research: Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Ann Radcliffe". Encyclopedia Britannica, 5 Jul. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ann-Radcliffe-English-author Radcliffe, Ann. “The Romance of the Forest, interspersed with some pieces of poetry.” London. 1824. Accessed online: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/64701/pg64701-images.html Radcliffe, Ann. “Gaston de Blondeville: Or The Court of Henry III. Keeping Festival in Ardenne, a Romance. St. Alban's Abbey, a Metrical Tale: with Some Poetical Pieces, Volume 1.” H. Colburn. 1826. Accessed online: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=vi03AAAAIAAJ&rdid=book-vi03AAAAIAAJ&rdot=1 Radcliffe, Ann. “A Journey Made in the Summer of 1794, Through Holland and the Western Frontier of Germany, With a Return Down the Rhine: To Which Are Added Observations During a Tour to the Lakes of Lancashire, Westmoreland and Cumberland, in Two Volumes.” G.G. and Robinson. London. 1795. Accessed online: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/62795/pg62795-images.html Facer, Ruth. “Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823).” Chawton House Library. 2012. http://www.chawtonhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Ann-Radcliffe.pdf Dugdale, John. “Happy 250th, Ann Radcliffe.” The Guardian. Oct. 31, 2014. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/oct/31/ann-radcliffe-gothic-pioneer-snubbed-horace-walpole-the-castle-of-oronto-250-years-celebrations#:~:text=Another%20250th%20anniversary%2C%20of%20Ann,sent%20up%20in%20Northanger%20Abbey. Flood, Allison. “Gothic fiction pioneer Ann Radcliffe may have been inspired by mother-in-law.” The Guardian. Jan. 30, 2014. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/jan/30/ann-radcliffe-gothic-fiction-mother-in-law McIntyre, Clara Frances. “Anne Radcliffe in Relation to her Time.” Yale University Press. 1920. Accessed online: https://archive.org/details/annradcliffeinre00mcinuoft/page/n3/mode/2up “Mr. Radcliffe … “ Sunday Dispatch/ London. October 30, 1825. https://www.newspapers.com/image/813446539/?terms=%22Ann%20Radcliffe%22&match=1 McKillop, Alan D. “Mrs. Radcliffe on the Supernatural in Poetry.” The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, vol. 31, no. 3, 1932, pp. 352–59. JSTOR. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27703650 Clarke, N. (2005). Anna Seward: Swan, Duckling or Goose?. In: Batchelor, J., Kaplan, C. (eds) British Women's Writing in the Long Eighteenth Century. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230595972_3 Norton, Rictor. “Mistress of Udolpho.” Leicester University Press. 1999. Thomas, Donald. “Queen of Terrors.” The Guardian. July 10, 1964. https://www.newspapers.com/image/259612656/?terms=%22Ann%20Radcliffe%22&match=1 Townshend, D., & Wright, A. (2014). Gothic and Romantic engagements The critical reception of Ann Radcliffe, 1789–1850. In D. Townshend & A. Wright (Eds.), Ann Radcliffe, Romanticism and the Gothic (pp. 3-32). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139507448.003 Schwertfeger, S. 'No spoilers, please': the crux of illustrating the explained Gothic without explaining the mystery. Palgrave Commun3, 16 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-017-0018-z Scott, Sir Walter. “The Lives of the Novelists.” London. 1906. Accessed online: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=DXPPAAAAMAAJ&rdid=book-DXPPAAAAMAAJ&rdot=1 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the space of a decade, Ann Radcliffe married, started writing, and had an incredibly successful career as an author. But after her 1797 novel, she retired, much to the confusion of her readers. Research: Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Ann Radcliffe". Encyclopedia Britannica, 5 Jul. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ann-Radcliffe-English-author Radcliffe, Ann. “The Romance of the Forest, interspersed with some pieces of poetry.” London. 1824. Accessed online: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/64701/pg64701-images.html Radcliffe, Ann. “Gaston de Blondeville: Or The Court of Henry III. Keeping Festival in Ardenne, a Romance. St. Alban's Abbey, a Metrical Tale: with Some Poetical Pieces, Volume 1.” H. Colburn. 1826. Accessed online: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=vi03AAAAIAAJ&rdid=book-vi03AAAAIAAJ&rdot=1 Radcliffe, Ann. “A Journey Made in the Summer of 1794, Through Holland and the Western Frontier of Germany, With a Return Down the Rhine: To Which Are Added Observations During a Tour to the Lakes of Lancashire, Westmoreland and Cumberland, in Two Volumes.” G.G. and Robinson. London. 1795. Accessed online: https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/62795/pg62795-images.html Facer, Ruth. “Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823).” Chawton House Library. 2012. http://www.chawtonhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Ann-Radcliffe.pdf Dugdale, John. “Happy 250th, Ann Radcliffe.” The Guardian. Oct. 31, 2014. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/oct/31/ann-radcliffe-gothic-pioneer-snubbed-horace-walpole-the-castle-of-oronto-250-years-celebrations#:~:text=Another%20250th%20anniversary%2C%20of%20Ann,sent%20up%20in%20Northanger%20Abbey. Flood, Allison. “Gothic fiction pioneer Ann Radcliffe may have been inspired by mother-in-law.” The Guardian. Jan. 30, 2014. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/jan/30/ann-radcliffe-gothic-fiction-mother-in-law McIntyre, Clara Frances. “Anne Radcliffe in Relation to her Time.” Yale University Press. 1920. Accessed online: https://archive.org/details/annradcliffeinre00mcinuoft/page/n3/mode/2up “Mr. Radcliffe … “ Sunday Dispatch/ London. October 30, 1825. https://www.newspapers.com/image/813446539/?terms=%22Ann%20Radcliffe%22&match=1 McKillop, Alan D. “Mrs. Radcliffe on the Supernatural in Poetry.” The Journal of English and Germanic Philology, vol. 31, no. 3, 1932, pp. 352–59. JSTOR. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27703650 Clarke, N. (2005). Anna Seward: Swan, Duckling or Goose?. In: Batchelor, J., Kaplan, C. (eds) British Women's Writing in the Long Eighteenth Century. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230595972_3 Norton, Rictor. “Mistress of Udolpho.” Leicester University Press. 1999. Thomas, Donald. “Queen of Terrors.” The Guardian. July 10, 1964. https://www.newspapers.com/image/259612656/?terms=%22Ann%20Radcliffe%22&match=1 Townshend, D., & Wright, A. (2014). Gothic and Romantic engagements The critical reception of Ann Radcliffe, 1789–1850. In D. Townshend & A. Wright (Eds.), Ann Radcliffe, Romanticism and the Gothic(pp. 3-32). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139507448.003 Schwertfeger, S. 'No spoilers, please': the crux of illustrating the explained Gothic without explaining the mystery. Palgrave Commun3, 16 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-017-0018-z Scott, Sir Walter. “The Lives of the Novelists.” London. 1906. Accessed online: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=DXPPAAAAMAAJ&rdid=book-DXPPAAAAMAAJ&rdot=1 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.