Podcasts about everone

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Best podcasts about everone

Latest podcast episodes about everone

Frisch gemischt! Der deutsche Magic Podcast
Die neuen Bans - braucht Magic überhaupt Bans?

Frisch gemischt! Der deutsche Magic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 69:46


Es gab wieder neue Bans und nach dem Newsblock beschäftigen sich eure Gastgeber Shibby, Sol4r1s und Ormus damit. Brauchen Kartenspiele wie Magic: The Gathering Bans, gibt es Alternativen und was ist unnötig gebannt? Wir freuen uns auf eure Meinung! Viel Spaß mit der Folge.VERLOSUNG: Schaut bei YouTube vorbei und kommentiert unter dem Video, welches Deck ihr gewinnen möchtet - sponsored von Wizards of the Coast, danke!☕ Unterstützt eure Podcasts Hosts direkt via ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Ko-Fi⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠! ❤️☕Falls ihr uns und den Podcast anderweitig unterstützen möchtet, dann schaut gerne via unserem ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠sponsored Link bei HOLY⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ vorbei und gönnt euch aus dem umfangreichen Sortiment an Energy, Iced Tea und HOLY Hydration. Mit den Codes FRISCH5 (5€ Rabatt) oder FRISCH (10% Rabatt) könnt ihr dabei auch sparen. Danke! Links zur Folge:Arena State of the Game 2025Deadpool Secret Lair im LGSSecret Lair Deck "Everone's invited"Tarkir Limited bei 17LandsBans und Unbans vom 31. Märzalle gebannten KartenBans Timeline

Shirley Baptist Church Solihull, Sermons
Fishing Isn't Everone's Cup of Tea

Shirley Baptist Church Solihull, Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 35:09


In Luke 5:1-12 Jesus invites fishermen to drop their nets and catch more fish than they can imagine, and then He says '...from now on you will fish for people.' But what does fishing for people mean? It is what some people call evangelism. But evangelism, like fishing, is not everyone's cup of tea. For many people it is a word with negative connotations. So, is there a different way to view evangelism? Perhaps as something relevant to everyone, because it is a way of life and not simply an activity that you turn on and off like a tap?

Beyond The Blinds
220. Pop Culture Kiki With Kara Berry!

Beyond The Blinds

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2024 94:22


Welcome to another Pop Culture Kiki episode! This week we are joined by our friend Kara Berry the host of Everone's Business (But Mine)! Please use the time stamps below and we hope you enjoy! 00:00 - Announcement 3:02 - Sexiest Man Alive 7:06 - Housewives Corner (RHOC, RHONY, RHOSLC, & Rihanna) 24:55 - Landon Barker 27:01 - Justin Bieber 28:34 - Ads 37:18 - Tupac 39:22 - Hannah From Love Island Arrested 42:43 - Audrina Patridge 43:48 - Rita Ora 44:52 - Salma Hayek & Nicole Kidman 50:18 - Raven Symoné 51:55 - Demi Lovato 53:23 - Sneex 56:23 - Shawn Mendes & Camila Cabello Corner 1:00:48 - Ariana Grande 1:05:13 - Brat Album Remix 1:07:08 - Kanye West (TW) 1:15:45 - Julia Fox 1:21:43 - Outro Live show link - https://thebellhouseny.com/event/a-holiday-party-with-beyond-the-blinds-and-everyone-s-business-but-mine Get more content by joining our Patreon! - patreon.com/Beyondtheblinds Now for our sponsors! VIIA! If you're 21+, head to Viiahemp.com and use the code BLINDS to receive 15% off. First Aid Beauty! The dry skin cycle ends here, demand more from your moisturizer… order First Aid Beauty's Ultra Repair Cream today! And we're excited to share a special offer available right now, just for our listeners! Get 20% off when you visit FirstAidBeauty.com/BLINDS and use our promo code BLINDS! LolaVie! Check out all LolaVie products at their website at lolavie.com. As our loyal listeners you'll get an exclusive 15% off your entire order when you use code BLINDS at checkout. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

GEROS Health - Physical Therapy | Fitness | Geriatrics
Everyone Dies, Not Everone Lives

GEROS Health - Physical Therapy | Fitness | Geriatrics

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 16:22


Everyone dies; not everyone lives - #GeriOnICE @jmusgravept shares how by being too quick to limit risk for our patients we can expedite deconditioning, worsen social isolation and mortality of our patients. *If you want more helpful content to better serve older adults, sign up for our MMOA Digest = Free Bi-Weekly Email packed with helpful links, posts, & research relevant to your work. Link In Bio or PTonICE.com **Looking for CEU's & courses that will change your practice? Check out our MMOA Course Offerings (Online & Live) Link In Bio or PTonICE.com #physicaltherapy #geript #homehealthpt #pt #dpt #dptstudent #physiotherapy #physicaltherapist #physiotherapist #physicaltherapystudent #newgradpt #physiotherapystudent #physicaltherapyassistant #physicaltherapyassistantstudent #geript #geriot #OTs #OTA #occupationaltherapist #ottreatmentideas #otstudent #otastudent #occupationaltherapyassistant #oldnotweak #ptonice #icetrained

ceu everone ptonice
Business Anchors
E169: Marketing Lessons From Campaigns EVERONE is Speaking About

Business Anchors

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 35:52


In this episode, we dissect recent VIRAL marketing campaigns, from Specsavers' van stunt to subtle celebrity endorsements from David Beckham. We also discuss how AI programs, like Sora are allowing small-budget campaigns to challenge their high-budgeted competitors.Learn how brands leverage creativity to capture attention and gain valuable insights for your own business.

Westbridge Community Church
Everone Is Included // Christmas @ Westbridge 2023

Westbridge Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2023 30:05


It's the most wonderful time of the year! And the reason it's the most wonderful time of the year is because God came to be with us to make his home among us! Christmas is the reminder that EVERYBODY IS INCLUDED! If you've ever felt like a misfit, Christmas is the reminder that God came so that YOU could be included! • Westbridge Church is people helping people FIND and FOLLOW JESUS! We believe that no matter where you are in your faith, there's always a next step you can take to grow in your relationship with God. As a church, we are committed to continually growing and encouraging others to grow in their faith, connect in community, share God's grace, serve others, and live generously. • Connect with us! https://westbridgechurch.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwS0EdEdcMUt6_czbEPaVXw Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/westbridgechurch Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/westbridgechurchmn/ Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/MyWestbridge

Watched It, Let’s Talk
Love Is Blind Season 5 Reunion

Watched It, Let’s Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2023 30:39


Everone is back for the reunion....or are they????

The Illusion of Consensus
Episode 5: Unraveling The Destructive Censorship Industrial Complex

The Illusion of Consensus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2023 100:39


Censorship Podcast AgendaOverview: Throughout the pandemic, opponents of lockdowns, school closures, mask mandates, vaccine mandates, and other pandemic restrictions have felt the decks have been stacked against them in sharing their message on social media, especially Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, and YouTube.Detailed show notes of podcast:Early pandemic censorship* Zuckerburg email to Fauci offering to help* Aaron Ginn and AJ Kay censorship in March / April 2020. They both argued a hypothesis that covid had spread more widely than public health realized then, and that the infection fatality rate was likely lower than the case fatality rate. Medium censored their essays for being dangerous for public health.* In April 2020, Santa Clara study I went on NPR to explain the results. The reporter asked me if I was worried that people would intentionally seek out getting covid (e.g. covid parties).* In late April/May 2020, I gave an interview where I mentioned that contact tracing was largely useless given the mode and ease of spread of covid. The Stanford human subjects review board – for a study that had nothing to do with contact tracing – mentioned this interview as a potential human subjects violation in a bid to silence me.* In 2020 Ontario Canada, doctors who wrote about natural immunity on twitter (e.g. Dr. Kulvinder Gill) faced censure from medical boards with risk of losing license.* Heavy censorship of early treatment options in online settings. Discussion about whether this was appropriate. Some of the early results for cheap, safe drugs were promising. Why not let people try them for a disease that was deadly in older people?* The clear purpose of these censorship efforts was to create fear in the population and gain compliance regarding lockdown orders.Censorship of the GBD* GBD signed on October 2020* Collins email to Fauci / fringe epidemiology / devastating takedown* WHO says no such thing as herd immunity* Google deboosted search results / hit pieces came first* Facebook took down the GBD page for a week without explanation* Reddit slapped down accounts mentioning the GBD and limited discussion of it.Censorship and Propaganda in 2021* With the advent of the vaccine, propaganda and censorship efforts by governments intensified.* Government officials vastly overstated the results of the clinical trials re: infection blocking. This included Fauci, Walensky, etc.* Governments engaged celebrities. FB highilghted posts of young attractive people bragging about getting vaccinated early, even while millions of older people who would have benefited more did not get a vaccine until late.* DeSantis Roundtable March 2021. Masking children Youtube pulls the video* Severe censorship of vaccine discussion online (e.g. Alex Berenson on effectiveness of the vaccine vs. disease spread; Naomi Wolf on menstrual problems caused by the vax)* Twitter files blacklistGovernment Role in Censorship* As 2021 rolled on, the vaccine campaign fizzled out. The government turned to censorship and mandates to fix the problem.* In Berenson case government officials like Andy Slavitt directly wrote to Twitter to ban Alex.* Missouri vs. Biden.  Dozen federal agencies involved in the censorship effort, including the White House, CDC, Office of the Surgeon General. The government threatened section 230 status. Direct line of communication from white house to twitter, FB regarding censsorship. Topics inlcuded true facts (e.g. ineffectiveness of vaccine at blocking infection).* Even the White House itself caught up in censorship J&J pause* Censorship efforts often informed by Stanford virality project & a “disinformation” team at the University of Washington* Use of AI algorithms, with word lists sent by the government, for widescale censorship* Roots of censorship apparatus linked to national security concerns. Obama signed “On Dec. 23, 2016, he signed into law the Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation Act, which used the language of defending the homeland to launch an open-ended, offensive information war.”Government as #1 source of misinformation* Indiana AG letter* Overcounting covid cases* Questioning natural immunity* Covid vax prevents transmission* School closures effective and costless* Everone equally at risk of dying from covid infection* No policy alternative available to lockdown* Mask mandates effective in reducing covid spread* Mass asymptomatic testing and contact tracing effective in reducing covid spread* Eradication of covid is a feasible goal. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.illusionconsensus.com/subscribe

My Worst Investment Ever Podcast
Harvey Sawikin – Do Your Own Homework

My Worst Investment Ever Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 36:35


BIO: Harvey Sawikin is the co-founder and co-manager of Firebird. Launched in early 1994, Firebird's funds were the first dedicated to the stock markets of Russia and the former Soviet Union.STORY: Harvey invested twice in a bank and a vodka company without due diligence. Instead, he believed that other companies who had invested in those investments had done the job of verifying their viability. Harvey lost huge amounts in both investments.LEARNING: You'll fail if you rely on someone else's due diligence and work. The most dangerous time to invest is when it's the easiest to invest. “Relying on someone else's due diligence is a mistake because you never know what's going on or when stuff starts to go wrong.”Harvey Sawikin Guest profileHarvey Sawikin is the co-founder and co-manager of Firebird. Launched starting in early 1994, Firebird's funds were the first dedicated to the stock markets of Russia and the former Soviet Union. Harvey also co-founded the Amber funds, which do private equity in the Baltic States. Before Firebird, he was an M&A lawyer at Wachtell Lipton after attending Harvard Law School and clerking for a Federal judge. Harvey's novel, about a young lawyer who becomes an inside trader, was published by Simon & Schuster in 1995. He lives in Manhattan with his wife of 32 years and a neurotic 15-year-old cockapoo.Worst investment everOne of the largest banks in Kazakhstan, BTA Bank, approached Harvey's company with an investment proposal. Another fund in the region had taken a position in it. The bank was supposedly very close with management and had excellent insight into how the company would build. The company looked cheap, with a reasonable price to book, and the economy was performing well. So Harvey invested in the bank.It turns out the bank's loan book was crooked, and there was a lot of self-dealing. The guy who was the main power behind the bank was arrested for misappropriating millions of dollars from the bank through bad loans. The bank was put into bankruptcy and was taken over by another bank. The shareholders were almost wiped out. Harvey's company had invested $20 million and got under a million back.In another incident, Harvey was very interested in getting involved in Ukraine. When a vodka company was brought to their attention, they became keen on investing in it, especially since a famous hedge fund in New York had bought a direct position. The fund said they had maxed out how much they could take and were willing to sell Harvey part of their stake.Harvey's company made its investment, and within two or three weeks, the vodka company released gross earnings. Its financial results were 40% below where they were supposed to be.Harvey believed they had been duped by the hedge fund and wound up litigating against them. He eventually dropped the case due to the ruinous litigation costs in England and where the loser pays. He surrendered to losing that investment.Lessons learnedYou'll fail if you rely on someone else's due diligence and work.Be careful when investing during a bubble because it becomes invisible to you when you're inside it.Andrew's takeawaysDo your own due diligence.Don't overestimate the knowledge, skills, and persistence of other investors.The most dangerous time to invest is when it is the easiest to invest.Harvey's recommendationsHarvey recommends Twitter as a source of real-time information as long as you follow the right...

Progressive Voices
Karel Cast Podcast #175 Biggest Crime In USA; Don't Fear AI; Dealing with Tragedy

Progressive Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 30:22


Karel Cast Podcast #175 Biggest Crime In USA; Don't Fear AI; Dealing with Tragedy After watching Flint Patrol on Netflix, Nightwatch on A&E and countless other cop shows I have discovered the biggest crime in America: Poverty. And it is punishable by law. Everone is afraid of AI, why I have no fear of it whatsoever; and a little too close to a tragedy for comfort as a plane goes down in Nevada. Watch on YouTube and listen wherever you get your podcast. Subscribe at YouTube.com/reallykarel @ReallyKarel is all social media and website reallykarel.com The Karel Cast is heard three times a week on all your favorite streaming services and the video can be seen on Youtube. Karel is a history-making #LGBTQ talk show host currently living in Las Vegas with his pup Ember. The Karel Cast App is free and is the best way to watch and listen. Get it at reallykarel.com or any App Store

Broad Street Bullied
172-ToD-Everone Loves Big Chests

Broad Street Bullied

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022


Drunk Women Solving Crime
196 Chantal Feduchin-Pate & The Car Guy

Drunk Women Solving Crime

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 65:25


This episode of Drunk Women Solving Crime was recorded in front of a live zoom audience, and what a night it was for EVERONE present, not least because of the wonderful comedian and podcaster, Chantal Feduchin-Pate, who opened the show with a story of the unluckiest flat in London, which will have you reaching for a beer in sympathy. The gang then grapple with a car crash of a case, which although briefly features a briefcase, is far from a brief case as it celebrates some pretty epic women whose literal job was to trail blaze. We then hear from one of our live zoom audience members, who delivers a crime with suspects galore, but who did our team of detectives chose as the culprit? Well, there's only one way to find out...The Drunk Women are appearing LIVE all over the UK in 2022!They will be at The Underbelly Festival in London on 21st July At this year's Edinburgh Fringe from 5th - 14th August. The Everyman in Liverpool on 10th Sept The Wardrobe in Leeds on 16th Oct The Hen and Chicken in Bristol on 24th Nov The Glee in Birmingham on 25th Nov The Salford Lowry on 26th Nov And at Leicester Square London on 8th DecFor full details and tickets, head to drunkwomensolvingcrime.com, or directly to the venue. You can also support Taylor, Catie and Hannah on Patreon and have access to live Zoom records, ad free eps, shout-outs and more! patreon.com/drunkwomensolvingcrime See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

BSD Now
455: Ken Thompson Singularity

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2022 45:21


OpenBSD is the Perfect OS post Nuclear Apocalypse, Multiprocess support for LLDB, porting the new Hare compiler to OpenBSD, Writing my first OpenBSD game using Godot, FreeBSD 13 on Thinkpad T460s, and more. NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines OpenBSD is the Perfect OS post Nuclear Apocalypse (https://confuzeus.com/shorts/openbsd-nuclear-apocalypse/) Multiprocess support for LLDB (https://www.moritz.systems/blog/multiprocess-support-for-lldb/) News Roundup I ported the new Hare compiler to OpenBSD (https://briancallahan.net/blog/20220427.html) Writing my first OpenBSD game using Godot (https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2022-04-28-writing-a-game-with-godot.html) FreeBSD 13 on Thinkpad T460s (https://www.tumfatig.net/2022/freebsd-13-on-thinkpad-t460s/) Beastie Bits Open Source Voices interview with Deb Goodkin (https://www.opensourcevoices.org/29) Tachyum Successfully Runs FreeBSD in Prodigy Ecosystem, Expands Open-Source OS Support (https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/tachyum-successfully-runs-freebsd-in-prodigy-ecosystem-expands-open-source-os-support/) MidnightBSD Minor Update 2.1.7 (https://midnightbsd.org/security/index.html#a20220404) LibreSSL 3.5.2 Released (https://bsdsec.net/articles/libressl-3-5-2-released) OpenBGPD 7.3 is out (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20220414091532) Playing the game Bottomless on OpenBSD (https://videos.pair2jeux.tube/w/jheVDTPmBTQzkmSpNSvk8J) Windows Central: OpenBSD already has a version for Apple Silicon (https://windows11central.com/en/openbsd-already-has-a-version-for-apple-silicon/) OpenBSD Webzine #9 is out (https://webzine.puffy.cafe/issue-9.html) In the "Everone makes mistakes catagory" : I forgot to enable compression on ZFS (https://dan.langille.org/2022/04/28/i-forgot-to-enable-compression-on-zfs/) "Ken Thompson is a singularity" ~Brian Kernighan (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fL2QwyxcJ5s) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Feedback/Questions Ben - Securing FreeBSD (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/455/feedback/Ben%20-%20Securing%20FreeBSD.md) Dave - BSD certifications (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/455/feedback/Dave%20-%20BSD%20certifications.md) Sam - maintaining a port (https://github.com/BSDNow/bsdnow.tv/blob/master/episodes/455/feedback/Sam%20-%20maintaining%20a%20port.md) Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv) ***

90 Day Fiance - Coupled with Chaos
E239 90 Day Fiancé – Inside Scoop 91

90 Day Fiance - Coupled with Chaos

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 8:17


Episode: E239 90 Day Fiancé – Inside Scoop 91 Description: Intro: Jibri is peddling his pants Subscription Content: Bilal has secrets, Geoffrey is EVERONE'S pay in the slammer along with Andrew & Amira, Memphis & Hamza, KIMBALLY, Deavan, Love After Lock-Up, some Unexpected and Love in the Jungle?!?!?! Coupled with Chaos full episodes and bonus content subscriptions are available here: Premium Content, including Additional 90 Day Fiancé episodes, The Real Housewives Content, and the personal podcast available by subscription at: Supercast: https://coupledwithchaosnetwork.supercast.tech/ Patreon:  https://www.patreon.com/coupledwithchaos Apple: Coupled with Chaos Channel: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/coupled-with-chaos/id6442522170 Listen to our other podcasts: Real Housewives – Coupled with Chaos covering all things Real Housewives on Bravo Coupled with Chaos – Personal podcast about our actual life, marriage and dealing with the world.   Contacts us: Email: Coupledwithchaos@gmail.com Web site: https://coupledwithchaos.com Facebook: @Coupledwithchaos Instagram: @Coupledwithchaos Twitter: @CoupledwChaos

The Bridge Church - Cleveland Ga
Come and See -Everone is looking for a Savior

The Bridge Church - Cleveland Ga

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2022 51:13


The Bridge Church is located at 607 Hulsey Road, Cleveland Georgia. The church that "Connects Faith and Life". Download our app by searching "The Bridge Church, Cleveland” Apple App Store or GooglePlay Store. Bridge Streams live Sundays @ 9:00 and 10:45 am.  Streaming under CCLI License Number #CSPL072350

Drew and You Podcast
70: 50 Ways To Spot A narcissistic Parent

Drew and You Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 28:27


Visit www.mysoulcbd.com/drew and get 15% off your next order!   Here are 50 compiled signs of a narcissistic parent (NPD): 1.Constantly needing the conversation to be about them, often victim stories, their life is “hard” 2.Immature and selfish behavior 3.Bragging about your achievements to others, but rarely acknowledging you or supporting you emotionally 4.Blaming others for any problems you may have that actually stem from their own behavior 5.Snoop, spy, Internet stalk, will even go through drawers and closets seeking dirt on you, denying it every step 6.Deny personal privacy at every age and suggest it is their right as a parent 7.You feel you are essentially property, an extention, intended to bring them attention, pride and glory 8.Being well-liked and important to others, but controlling and harsh when no one is looking 9.Flirt with people that should be off bounds including others spouses, dates even extended family members 10.Divulge they are a potential interest or interested in people outside their relationship, they always have the idea of “ a back-up” 11.Making you feel bad for not doing what they want immediately 12.Making you feel guilty by boasting about how much they have done for you 13.Harshly opinionated at home but putting up a front for other people 14.Being ruthless and unforgiving, doing anything to be on top 15.Making you feel anxious and often lowering your confidence, often with sarcasm and “jokes” 16. Being absent for your life events 17.Making you engage in sports, musical lessons or other activities, despite your wishes 18.Failing to provide warmth and emotional nurturance in the relationship 19.Using you to attain personal gain 20.Being bothered and annoyed when you need time and attention 21.Making poor excuses to limit time together 22.Displaying sudden mood changes and volatile anger 23.Obsessive about their appearance and clothing, home and vehicle 24.Constantly tidying and attempting to have home visually perfect 25.Issues relaxing, must be busy 26.They are very well liked rapidly, they charm 27.They are often highly creative 28.They tell good stories where they get the hero attention 29.They are often upstanding in places like churches, schools and communities, pillars publicly 30.Grandiose unrealistic future visions where they will get recognition, wealth or fame 31.Using religion as a scapegoat for actual behaviors avoiding acknowledging wrong. God forgave them already what is your problem? 32.Children feel pitted against each other as goldens or goats 33.Gaslighting and denial of feelings of others 34.Discuss marital problems with kids or run down spouse behind their back 35.Do “takeaways”, ask for gift ideas and never get the thing you requested to keep you coming back 36.Love bombing- execute grandiose words/acts in early stages to win supply with kids and grandkids 37.Affection consuming- parents in early years often get affection from child to feed themselves then abandon affection once kids mature and gain other relationships. 38.Deal breakers, often make deals to get to do things then do not fulfill their end and blaming the child with a new wrinkle or rule. 39.Self-forgiving, expecting “I'm sorry for anything you might have thought I did that hurt you. I'm human. I always had good intentions.” - to whitewash any and all issues. 40.Blame reframing- Any issue brought to light is a result of you being hateful and unforgiving or “holding onto the past”. 41.There are “secrets” your parent expects to you keep 42.Money has always been hard to give but parent lives in style 43.They have friends they can outshine and cut down behind their backs, often other narcissists or simply supply 44.Wills and estates are used as bait and ransom to elicit behaviors 45.You have felt like a puppet often 46.Surprise punishments and groundings for kids are common when there are events that are inconvenient or parent doesn't like the idea of you attending 47.Friends are criticized, you are great but your “crowd”, not so much 48.There is no lie too bold to tell and double down on 49.The overt narcissist will not allow any child to outshine them, they discourage or hamper advancement 50.The covert narcissist will passively aggressively insult or demean success and acheivement, “you are going to get a fat head”   And finally, you will know it is all factual when they will acknowledge no actual errors, flaws or real genuine hurt they caused.   They admit nothing.   Everything is a misunderstanding. Yours.   They will never humbly apologize.   They will play hurt and the victim without end.   You are a hateful accuser that can't just let it go.   They will run from the responsibility of the past and may even cut you off, lash out, send flying monkeys to indimidate you and make you appear crazy or the bully.   They may sue you, cut you out of wills, and tell horrible and sometimes embarrassing true stories about your past.   They will attempt to poison your relationships if they have access to your friends, your spouse or your children. Everone is a pawn and they will make any move to appear a flawless victim.   At the center of all NPD's is shame and cowardice. They are underdeveloped emotionally most likely as a result of aloneness and rejection at or around ages 3-5. There may be a genetic link to a parent with NPD. They are small stunted people filled with shame, self-loathing and rage.   The only escape is walking away and grey rocking them.   The sick mind of sociopaths, psychopaths and narcissists cannot obtain the rational observation that they are sick. It is an unacceptable hypothesis to them. They cannot self-diagnose or see it. It will garner smugness, laughter, egoism, rage and condescention should you bring it up.   Expect them to run from the room, leave the table or hang up on you in anger. Confrontation about their ego will trigger a flight or fight response.   They may bark once, but then they will run because they cannot help it. They are cowards who feel deep shame at their core.   You can be assured their childish rage will have them plotting and working to destroy you in the shadows.   It is not a choice for them. It is a reflex.   The manipulations of a person with NPD are boundless and unique.   If 30% or more of the above applies to your parent or relative there is a high likelihood they are diagnosable by a professional as having NPD.  Only .5% of the population gets diagnosed due to avoidance.   They will never go.   Your only resolution is no contact.   It will feel like a death to you.   Narcissists only feed from empaths.   Like emotional vampires. They suck life. They know they are doing it. They are 100% aware and they loathe themselves yet can't stop. Thus they keep a busy schedule. Sitting and realistically reflecting is not an option.   Accept that you are worth loving, that's why they picked you.   Accept that THEY can't love you. That is unfortunately also why they picked you.   Whatever you do, don't hurt yourself.   Secretly once outed their great hope is you do, and they get to prove you were crazy and unstable and gain a whole new supply of attention and sympathy from the other suckers.   People with NPD must win at any cost.   The only way to beat them, Is to go live a great life without them.   One in a million will address their trauma that caused this but you as their source has a zero percent chance of making them see the light through their darkness. They are getting their light from you as the source.   You must leave them in the dark as an act of love for yourself.   Good luck   Follow Drew: @Twitter https://twitter.com/drewcanole @Instagram https://www.instagram.com/drewcanole/ @Facebook https://www.facebook.com/people/Drew-Canole/100044261357988/ Visit www.mysoulcbd.com/drew and get 15% off your next order!

Sermons – All Saints Peckham
Everone Gets to Play: Royal Priesthood Workshop

Sermons – All Saints Peckham

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2021


Jenny Dawkins introduces us to some practical work to discover more about our spiritual gifts. The post Everone Gets to Play: Royal Priesthood Workshop appeared first on All Saints Peckham.

I Am...by Dr.Pria D'souza
"Tales worth living " The old carpenter

I Am...by Dr.Pria D'souza

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2021 3:02


We all have been given the power to choose how we live.Everone has time to change to make the living, a better one.

Moonlight madness
Sarry everone

Moonlight madness

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2020 2:05


Sorry --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

How I Met Your Podcast
Sesong 3 | Episode 5 - How I Met Everone Else

How I Met Your Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 33:12


Er du glad i Harry Potter, gaming eller anime? Join Discord serveren vår! http://discord.nordremedia.no/ Støtt oss gjerne på patreon: https://www.patreon.com/spillkveld Sosiale medier: https://www.instagram.com/nordremedia/ https://www.facebook.com/filmkamerateneyoutube/ https://twitter.com/NordreMedia

Christadelphians Talk
Thought for June 19th June...'.for everone did what was right in his own eyes..'(Judges 21vs 25)

Christadelphians Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 3:43


Visit and Subscribe to our other main podcast here...https://cdvideo.org/podcast https://www.podbean.com/podcast-detail/ku3h2-a6b6f/Christadelphians-Talk-Podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/christadelphians-talk/id1448751691 https://christadelphianstalks.podbean.com/ https://anchor.fm/Christadelphians-Talk other thoughts on our site here https://bibletruthandprophecy.com/category/thought-for-the-day-2/

Dhadrianwale - Gurdwara Parmeshar dwar sahib
Give time to every relatio - Dhadrianwale

Dhadrianwale - Gurdwara Parmeshar dwar sahib

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2020 4:31


Everone must respect the value of personal time towards relations Every relation be in family or social must be given appropriate value respect and time Dhadrianwale wale speaks beautifully on this im

Ebadore Designed
Stop Reinventing The Wheel - How Simplicity Is Key When Building A Website | 1 Minute In Web Design

Ebadore Designed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2020 1:21


I'm currently dealing with a client that wants to remove the hamburger menu on their mobile website. The issue, it takes time and a huge headache not just for the designer but also the user. When you create unusual designs EVERONE has a learning curve. This can decrease conversation rates as well as cause a headache for your designer. Simple, just keep things simple and look at the most common designs and duplicate those.

All Over The Map
OTL 83 ITS FROZEN OUT SIDE 2! THIS WILL BE THE REAL TEST FOR THE COWBOYS. EVERONE STILL HAS A CHANCE AT THE PAYOFFS. EXCEPT THE BENGALS.

All Over The Map

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019 62:21


OTL With Mike and Pete
OTL 83 ITS FROZEN OUT SIDE 2! THIS WILL BE THE REAL TEST FOR THE COWBOYS. EVERONE STILL HAS A CHANCE AT THE PAYOFFS. EXCEPT THE BENGALS.

OTL With Mike and Pete

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 62:21


Create A Better You
The slippery banana: The art of letting go.

Create A Better You

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2019 13:11


This episode is about acepting yourself and not being so hard on yourself for making mistakes. Everone makes mistakes. Truth is we aviod making mistakes to make people think we are perfect. To aviod loss and rejection.

Technically Religious
S1E17: Pivoting Our Career On the Tip of a Torah Scroll

Technically Religious

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2019 29:45


In Yeshiva - a system of advanced learning in the orthodox Jewish world, there’s a saying: “Shiv'im Panim laTorah” - which means “there are 70 faces of Torah”, but implies that there are many equally valid ways of getting to a certain point. That idea resonates with IT practitioners, because there are many paths that led us into our career in tech. In this episode, Leon speaks with guests Corey Adler, Rabbi Ben Greenberg, and returning guest Yechiel Kalmenson about how that made that literal pivot, from yeshiva into the world of IT, and what their experiences - both religious and technical taught them along the way. Listen or read the transcript below. Leon: 00:00 Hey everyone, it's Leon. Before we start this episode, I wanted to let you know about a book I wrote. It's called "The Four Questions Every Monitoring Engineer is Asked", and if you like this podcast, you're going to love this book. It combines 30 years of insight into the world of it with wisdom gleaned from Torah, Talmud, and Passover. You can read more about it including where you can get a digital or print copy over on https://adatosystems.com. Thanks! Josh: 00:24 Welcome to our podcast where we talk about the interesting, frustrating, and inspiring experiences we have as people with strongly held religious views working in corporate IT. We're not here to preach or teach you our religion. We're here to explore ways we make our career as IT professionals mesh - or at least not conflict - with our religious life. This is Technically Religious. Leon: 00:48 In yeshiva, a system of a dance learning in the orthodox Jewish world, there's a saying: "Shiviim paanim laTorah,", which means "there are 70 faces of Torah". But it implies that there are many equally valid ways of getting to a certain point. That idea resonates with it folks, because there are many paths that led us to our career in tech. Today I'm going to speak to people who made that literal pivot - from yeshiva into the world of IT - and what their experiences, both religious and technical, taught them along the way. I'm Leon Adato, and the other voices you're going to hear on this episode are returning guest Yechiel Kalmenson Yechiel: 01:20 Hey, thanks for having me back. Leon: 01:24 No problem. And also his partner in coding crime, Rabbi Ben Greenberg. Ben: 01:29 It's great to be here. Leon: 01:31 It is wonderful to have you. And sitting across from me, because he's also a Cleveland-based Orthodox Jewish Geek, is Corey Adler Corey: 01:39 Live long and prosper, Papu. New Speaker: 01:41 There we go. Okay. So before we dive into the actual topic at hand, I want to let you all do a little bit of shameless self promotion. Everyone, take a minute and tell the Technically Religious audience a little bit about who you are and how they can find you on the interwebs. Corey: 01:58 So, hi, I am Corey Adler. I am a team lead engineer at Autosoft. You can find me on Twitter @CoreyAdler and I am the constant pain and Leon side, Leon: 02:08 Literally and figuratively, yes! Yechiel: 02:10 Well, uh, my name is Yechiel. I'm a software engineer at Pivotal. Um, on Twitter you can find me @YechielK. My blog is at RabbiOnRails.io, and I also co-author a weekly newsletter called "Torah & Tech" with Ben Greenberg. Ben: 02:26 And I am that Ben Greenberg that Yechiel just mentioned. I'm a developer advocate at Nexmo, the Vonage API platform. And I also am that coauthor of "Torah & Tech" with Yechiel, and you can find me on the Twitter world @RabbiGreenberg, or on my website at BenGreenberg.dev. Leon: 02:44 Great. And for those people who are wondering, we're going to have all of those links and everything in the show notes. And finally I should just to round out the four, uh, Orthodox people of the apocalypse, I guess? I don't know. Corey: 02:56 You've been watching too much Good Omens. Leon: 02:58 Right? I just finished binge watching it. Anyway. I am Leon Adato and you can find me on the twitters @LeonAdato, I did not attend to Shiva, which is a point that my children who DID attend yeshiva are quick to mention whenever I try to share any sort of Torah knowledge. I started out in theater. I know that comes as a complete shock to folks who wonder why I could do that if I'm so shy. It's almost as weird a path to IT as Torah is. And one that's definitely informed my understanding along the way. But again, we're focusing on this yeshiva path and that's where I want to start. I want to hear from each of you, where you started out, what your sort of, growing up experience was. Ben: 03:41 Uh sure. So I guess I'll start. So I grew up in San Diego, California, a little far also from the center of what seems like the center of Orthodox Jewish life in America, in New York City. But I moved to New York for Yeshiva and college at the same time. And I went to a yeshiva college called in English, the Lander college for Men, and in Hebrew, or in a New York accented Hebrew, The Beis Medrash L'Talmud, which was and still is in Queens, in a little neighborhood in Queens called Q Gardens Hills. And so I was there for four years, right, that simultaneously yeshiva and college. And then after I graduated that I said, "I'm not done with yeshiva." So I went for another four years to another yeshiva, this time to study for a rabbinic ordination. And I did that at yeshiva called - and they only have a Hebrew names so I apologize for the three words in Hebrew here - Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, which at that time was based near Columbia University in the upper west side of Manhattan, and is now in Riverdale, which is a neighborhood in the Bronx, also in New York City. Corey: 04:55 So I guess I'll go next then. I grew up, born and raised in Chicago. I went to Skokie Yeshivah, and that's yeh-shivuh, not Yeshiva. Why? It's that way. Nobody knows. Leon: 05:07 But they beat you enough until you just stopped saying it the other way. Corey: 05:10 You get shamed if you say it the wrong way there. After high school I went to tlearn in yeshiva in the old city of Jerusalem for two years at a place called Nativ Ariyeh. Afterwards I came back to the United States and went to New York University. Not "YU" Leon: 05:30 Yeah, NYU, not YU. I went to NYU also, although we didn't know each other because I'm old and you're a baby. Okay. So that means Yechiel you're bringing up the rear on this one. Yechiel: 05:43 Yeah. I'll round off the lineup. So, I was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, center of the world. But for yeshiva, I left town. I went to Detroit, I was there for five years after which I went to a yeshiva in a small village in Israel called Kfar Chabad. Then I came back to New York and I studied, for my Rabbinic ordination at the Central Chabad yeshiva in Crown Heights in New York. Leon: 06:10 Fantastic. Okay. So now we get to laugh at ourselves when we were young and idealistic and had no idea what the world was going to throw at us. What were your plans at that time? Like what did you think life was going to be like? You know, IT may not have been your ultimate life goal. So what did you think it was going to be? Yechiel we'll go backwards. We'll start with you this time. Yechiel: 06:32 I'm glad you can laugh because I actually look back to those days pretty fondly. So back then I was of course very idealistic. My plans were to be a Chabad rabbi. For those in the audience who don't know Chabad is a sect within Orthodox Judaism. And at least for the sake of simplicity all I'm going to say about them is that they're very strong into Jewish outreach and bringing Judaism to unaffiliated Jews, all Jews. So back then I had plans to be, to go out somewhere in the world and be a Chabad rabbi and that's what I was studying towards and what I was learning. And in fact after I got married, I even did live out part of that. I moved to Long Island for a few years and we helped a local Chabad house until eventually the bills caught up with us and we realized that it wasn't paying. Leon: 07:23 So Ben, how about you? Ben: 07:24 So I first of all, I do want to comment on the fact that only a Brooklynite would think "moving out of town" was moving to Long Island, New York. I do just want to make that comment as we're engaging in this conversation. Leon: 07:39 It is definitely the New York state of mind. Corey: 07:41 Yup. Ben: 07:42 And I also do want to say another wonderful thing about... well *a* wonderful thing about Chabad: In my role now is a developer advocate. I do a lot of traveling and I have encountered and have had the great fortune to spend, many Shabbatot and holidays - many Jewish Shabbats, Sabbaths - with Chabad houses around the world and have truly seen the diversity of both Jews and non Jews who attend Chabba for Shabbat meals, for Shabbat services. Just a couple weeks ago I was at Chabad in Venice in Italy and saw just really like every, every type of person. The whole spectrum of human life, it felt like, was present in the Jewish ghetto in the courtyard, celebrating Friday night services and dancing in the streets for Shabbat services with the Chabad. So it was really just quite beautiful. I had such a wonderful time in yeshiva for those eight years, I decided I actually wanted to be a rabbi and so I spent about 10 years of my life actually working as one. And I worked in Cambridge, Massachusetts as a campus Rabbi, A Hillel Rabbi, which is central for Jewish student life on campus. And then I went from there and I worked as a congregational rabbi in Colorado. And then I actually did some community organizing work after that in Chicago around gun violence and immigration reform. And so I kind of got to experience both nonprofit Jewish organizational life in the latter part of my career in the Jewish world. And then also in the beginning part, more traditional forms of being a rabbi, like a campus outreach and congregational rabbinate, the synagogue / pulpit rabbinate. So I actually did it for a bit and I feel fortunate that I've had that opportunity. Leon: 09:49 Wow. That was kind of the gamut. Okay. Corey top that! Corey: 09:54 For me, actually, I've known since fifth grade, pouring over old Tiger Direct catalogs Leon: 10:04 Oh that brings back..., Corey: 10:04 I've known for a long time that I wanted to get somewhere into the tech industry. But I always, I imagined myself originally going into programming video games. I loved playing Starcraft and Madden and all these fun games and I wanted to actually work for one of these companies and imagined it was going to be so much fun programming video games for a living. Speaker 1: 10:32 So, so you didn't, you didn't have visions of being a Chabad rabbi on Mars? Corey: 10:37 No. Leon: 10:38 Okay. All right. Okay, fine. So, um, along with that, along with what you thought was going to be, what was the part - because I know a lot of the folks who listen to Technically Religious don't have a window into this world. So what was the thing that you enjoyed the most; or the most impactful thing about that part of your life that, you know, the time that you were learning in yeshiva? What was it that that really just, you know, would have drawn you back? That you would've gone back again? That you look back most fondly. Ben: 11:05 So for me, I think there are very few spaces in life, or opportunities in life where you get to just sit and ask questions, meaningful questions, and engage in the pursuit of trying to figure out what... meaning: trying to figure out the intentionality behind why... why you do things, why you don't do things? And get engaged in just intense philosophical, theological questions ranging from sometimes the most pragmatic - like, "Is my dishwasher kosher?" And all the ramifications and permutations of that; To very theoretical questions around, "Well, who possesses greater reward for doing a good deed: somebody who is obligated to do that, or somebody who's not obligated?" And spending hours delving deeply into questions like that. Where else do you get the opportunity to do that, and just take the time? It was a precious gift to have that time and to have a carved out dedicated space for those kinds of ponderings and intellectual pursuits. Leon: 12:15 Nice. Nice. Corey, how about you? New Speaker: 12:19 For me it was the ability to stop thinking about the end result and focusing on those individual steps that lead to that end. Quite often we, as a society and as individual people, we end up trying to jump to the conclusion trying to find ... just go straight to the end, see what happens. But when you're learning, Talmud in particular, you may already know what the law is before you started learning a particular section. You may have read it in some law book else elsewhere before you even seen this discussion. But that doesn't mean you're going to know all the particulars. You don't know what all of the edge cases are, as we would say. Arguments for and against various positions. And even on something simple like, "hey, my animal just caused damage to your animal." Like, what do we do in this circumstance. Even that, just getting that ability to focus in and delve into the steps versus getting straight to the end. Leon: 13:25 Nice. Okay. Yechiel anything to add to that? Yechiel: 13:29 Yeah. For me it was actually, the fact that how yeshiva was a world where you're totally immersed in - like people I speak to are generally shocked to find out that a regular day for yeshiva boy, or yeshiva, bochur in our parlance, would start at 7:30 AM and go till 9:30 PM sometimes. And it's nonstop learning. You have a small break for eating, obviously for the three prayers every day. But other than that, it was just nonstop sitting and learning for over 12 hours a day. And that's something that you don't find anywhere else. It was, I think, a totally life transforming experience Leon: 14:07 You know, for those folks - and again, I didn't attend any of that, but I watch, I'm watching my kids go through it - and it's a very different thing than sort of the secular educational system where the goal of every school child is, "how do I get out of this as fast as possible? How do I skip as much as I can? How can I just memorize the questions for the test." This is a culture, this is a world that, as I like to tell folks, it's almost that nobody cares about the answer. The highest praise, the highest reward you can get from a teacher is "you asked a really good question." And that says something about the attitude that's there. That we enjoy this, we enjoy the playfulness with ideas. Yechiel: 14:51 And to add to that, that's actually a big difference between studying in a yeshiva for example, or studying for a degree or for a certification or whatever. Whereas in most cases you're studying, you're trying to gain a piece of knowledge. You want to... you're learning for your degree, so you want to know all that. Let's say you're learning for your law degree or for your computer science degree, wheatever it is - there's a certain piece of knowledge which you want to acquire. In yeshiva it's not about learning the subject, it's about, like I said, it's about the journey, not about the destination. It's about spending the time learning. It's not like if you can finish the tractate of Talmud quicker, then like, "okay, that's it. You can go back to you know, to your house and go to sleep." That's not what it was about. It wasn't about gaining a particular piece of knowledge. It was about the process of learning. Leon: 15:38 And the joyfulness of... taking joy in the process. Given that: Given how wonderful it was and how exciting and fun it was, what made you decide that you are going to pivot away from it? That you weren't going to become the Chabad rabbi, Yechiel. That after 10 years as a pulpit rabbi or organizational rabbi, you're going to make a move and specifically into IT What, what was it that got you to that direction? Yechiel: 16:04 Okay, so I'll take this one. So as I mentioned earlier, for various reasons we wont' get into, the rabbinate didn't work out at the time and got to a point, you know, a growing family, bills don't pay themselves., food doesn't put itself on the table. So I started looking outside of the rabbinate for other sources of income and tech was a pretty natural choice for me. When I was a kid I was that kid in the back of the classroom with the mechanical pens taking it apart, breaking and trying to figure out how the spring worked. Or anything. I don't know how many watches my parents bought me that ended up in like a mess all over my desk. So that was always something I enjoyed, figuring how things worked. And when computers, when I started getting access to computers, that was like a whole new world for me to take those things apart. I, I'm not one of those kids like wrote code at the age of 10, but I did enjoy figuring out like, you know, what tick, what made computers take, how they worked on what was going on under the hood. So when I was looking for something to do, my first job actually out of the rabbinate was doing tech support. Which was great for me because I was learning these different systems and how they worked and how to troubleshoot them and how to debug them. And it slowly progressed from there. Eventually programming was just the logical next step and haven't looked back since. Leon: 17:25 So Ben how about you? Ben: 17:26 So I've always been a bit of a geek and I've always loved tech. In fact, so this is my second career, but in many ways it's also my third career because when I was in high school, I founded a hacker conference with my friend and partner in crime at that time. And we actually just celebrated its 20th year of the Hacker Conference in San Diego, and it's one of the largest infosec conferences in southern California to this day. And we had our own little network penetration, security testing company back then as well. We didn't necessarily use those words back then because then the mid to late nineties, it was all kind of new and everything was evolving at that point. We were kind of right on the cusp at that point. And so it was actually a really exciting time to be in it. And so when I decided that it was time really to take a break from the rabbinate take a break from the clergy life - 10 years in the clergy is kind of like 40 years in another career. And I was ready for a bit of a break and it was also correlating with the desire of my family and I to think about a move out of the States into Israel. And to start thinking about ways in which we would support ourselves in Israel. And the idea of going back to a career in tech, which was something I was always interested in to begin with. And I had a bit of a history in it, albeit a very old history at that point because tech has moved and has continued to move to move really fast. So things that I was doing in the 90s like writing some code in Perl for example, would be like totally... Right? Leon: 19:11 Perl! Everyone else: 19:11 (general mocking of both Leon and Perl) Ben: 19:16 So one of the conference I was at a few months ago was at FOSDEM, which is one of the largest open source conferences in the world. Totally a free conference. Unbelievable amounts of people are there. It's in Brussels or, at least was that year. And literally every sector of the tech community is under that roof, including Perl associations and Perl groups. Leon: 19:39 Ahhhhh. It's my happy place! Ben: 19:39 And it was so beautiful to see that, it brought back so many memories of my childhood. And so tech felt like a good place to go back to. And it's a very good career and a good career path where I live now in Israel. So it just, it made a lot of sense, Corey: 20:00 Dear God, you guys are old. Everone: 20:01 (laughter) Leon: 20:05 OK Corey. All right. So what about you? Corey: 20:08 Well, I second the idea of being a total geek as you well know, Leon. But for me yeshiva was always just the first step in a journey. I knew I was going to end up in IT, but I knew that the whole yeshiva experience was something that I needed for myself in my life, it helped me become more independent. It helped me figure out a lot of things about myself along the way. So I knew I needed that. I knew what I wanted to get out of it and needed to get out of it, but it was not the permanent solution for me. I knew that eventually I was going to come back down to Earth as it were and... Leon: 20:48 Oh yes. Come down from on high, the Crystal Tower of Yeshiva and back down to down to the dust, in the gutter, Corey: 20:57 Which is better than the dark tower. Leon: 20:58 Well, okay. Corey: 20:59 Of Perl for example. Leon: 21:01 Oh See, okay. See we had to go there. Al right. So I'm curious about this because again, it was such a pivot. Were any of you resistant to the idea at first? You had this opportunity, you each had a predilection for technology, so you saw that it could work. But was anything in you saying, "Nah, that just... Oh, you know, what will the neighbors think? What will my mother think?" Was there anything that held you back? Yechiel, how about you? Yechiel: 21:27 So yeah, actually I was pretty resistant to the idea at first. Like I mentioned, I've always seen myself going into community service, going into adult education. Teaching is something that I really enjoy. I still enjoy it. I try to incorporate it into my tech career. Like the Torah & Tech newsletter and my blog and also at work mentoring, mentoring interns. Teaching is in my blood. And I always thought that I would be someone who taught, who led, who spoke. And in addition I was also, I was raised on the ideals of community service. So going off to the other direction was tough for me. Though what helped me come to terms was going again back to when I was a kid, a particular genre of stories that I really lovedwas stories from the old country, from the shtetl. There were the Jewish towns with a Jewish shoemaker and the Jewish tailor. And there's actually like a class of Great Torah scholars who could have easily gotten a position as a rabbi or in some yeshiva teaching. But they specifically did not want to use their Torah as a means to support themselves. And as a kid that was something that really touched me and I sort of romanticized it. So now when I started looking away from the rabbinate towards working for myself and I realized that actually technology nowadays is the blue collar work of today. Today's programmers and developers and sysadmins - those are today's shoemakers and blacksmiths. And you know those are the people that make the world run. And the idea of supporting myself through my own handiwork started appealing to be more and more. Leon: 23:11 It's an interesting thought. I have met one rabbi who is also an auto mechanic, but that's not the typical career path that you find for folks. So yeah, I like the idea that, IT is the next tradesman for, especially for itinerant scholars. Ben: 23:27 I will say though that now having lived in Israel for about a year, this is an area where there are, I do believe there is a cultural divide between American Orthodox Jewry and Israeli Orthodox Jewry. And the fact that in my own neighborhood, I know somebody, for example, who has a Ph.d in Academic Bible from Hebrew University and works with his hands all day as a craftsman. And it just brings back to mind stories of maybe some famous Jewish carpenter from 2000 years ago that some people might have been around... Leon: 24:03 Wow. We're just going to throw little shade. Yechiel: 24:07 Pretty sure this is your first all Jewish panel. So we had to, you know... Leon: 24:11 Yeah, we had to at least take one shot. Ben: 24:14 But I say that as a joke, but there's so many people like that in my neighborhood and my community who have ordination or I would advance degrees in Jewish studies or both and who are not working in that field, who are not working in Jewish communal service. And yet they volunteer. They give classes at night or on weekends on Shabbat. They teach they offer sermons. Our community is basically... Our personal community, where we go to synagogue, our community in Israel is essentially lay-led. And so people take turns signing up an offering words of Torah on Shabbat and holidays and a lot of those people who do that are, those possessing rabbinic ordination. Or, if not rabbinic ordination, having spent years of their life in yeshiva and who had decided to pursue a career as opposed to making the Torah or Jewish life their career. And a part of that is just the economics of the country, that it's just hard to sustain oneself in Jewish communal service in Israel. So people end up taking other jobs. But it's also, I think there's part of an ideal here of, we would call maybe "Torah v'Avodah" of Torah being combined with a job - of Torah and some kind of occupation going hand in hand. And that not being a less than ideal, but that actually being the ideal. So just an interesting reflection as I'm listening to this conversation and thinking about how I situate myself and sit where I sit now and can see both sides. And I've lived in both sides and the differences between those two. Leon: 26:02 Nice. Okay. So Ben as long as you're going, how about you? What was the challenge pivoting away from the rabbit into a career in coding? Ben: 26:10 I think it's a challenge that a lot of people who are going into a second career often face regardless of what their own particularities are, which is letting go of what others think; or what you think others are thinking. And for me that was a challenge. Leaving the rabbnic world was challenging because you - especially if you go to a hyper-focused mission driven rabbinical school, which I went to - there is, uh, a real sense of serving the community and that being the passion and drive of one's life. And switching to another career can feel like you're letting down your teachers, your mentors, your rabbis, your peers, your fellow alumni, you're a co collegial community. But recognizing that what helped me was the recognition that all of those people that I just mentioned, they also care about you and they wants what's best. They want what's best for you as well. And if they don't, they probably are not somebody you want to be invested in a friendship with to begin with and you shouldn't be necessarily taking their opinion to heart to that extent. That anyone who cares about you, who wants what's best for you, will recognize that maybe it's time. Will recognize along with you, and honor the fact that you expressed the idea that maybe it's time to switch careers and maybe it's time to move to something else. And I think getting to that point where recognizing that others value you and care for you and are not looking down upon you or critiquing you. And if they are, it's okay to say, "enough of you, you're out of my life." It's okay to do those things and to put your life first. And what's best for you and your family. Those were some major hurdles, but once I got over them became it became pretty straightforward. Leon: 28:18 Nice. Corey! Corey: 28:20 For me wasn't too difficult because, as I previously mentioned, I knew I was gonna go into IT all along. For me, the most difficult part - was because I had grown up and been in some religious schooling system for my entire life - It was the idea, of leaving the cocoon as it were. And you know, now not everybody I'm going to meet is orthodox. Not everybody that I'm going to have to deal with in school or in work is going to be, you know, a member of the tribe as it were. You know, so there was a little bit of trepidation, but I knew it was gonna happen. Leon: 29:12 Got It. Leon: 29:13 We know you can't listen to our podcasts all day. So out of respect for your time, we've broken this particular discussion up. Come back next week where we continue our conversations about "Pivoting Our Career On the Tip of a Torah Scroll." Roddie: 29:25 Thanks for making time for us this week. To hear more of Technically Religious, visit our website, https://technicallyreligious.com, where you can find our other episodes, leave us ideas for future discussions, and connect to us on social media. Leon: 29:38 So there's these three rabbis that walk into a bar. Ben: 29:40 Uh, that's not how it goes. Yechiel: 29:42 I think you totally ruined that joke. Corey: 29:44 This is how that joke goes.    

Think N Become
The Sammyj, Quit try to sell everone

Think N Become

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2019 16:20


If your closing rate is less than 5 out 10 then you need to reevaluate your process. Start by looking at yourself and be honest. Do you love your product? Do you love your people? Are you truly trying to help your customers? If the answer is no to any of these questions then you need help. Listen and learn.

LIFE IS WHAT !?!
2. 3D vs Sauceman Rj

LIFE IS WHAT !?!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2019 31:05


Everone go follow ya boi on Instagram @wzupn LET'S GET IT‼️‼️‼️ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/WZUPN/support

Sakura Radio
やすことLunch Break (太鼓フェスティバルPart2)

Sakura Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2018 28:25


「やすことLunch Break」毎週月曜と火曜New Yorkから放送!ユニークなトピックやニュース、気になる人などが登場する楽しい30分。さくらラジオキャスターの沼田靖子がお届け。ニューヨークのコロンビア大学で開かれた太鼓フェスティバルの熱く盛り上がる様子をパート1パート2にわけて紹介!7チームが参加しています。We will introduce Taiko Festival 2018 in Columbia University! Everone in 7 team are so passionate about playing Taiko. Enjoy the program of "Lunch Break with Yasuko"

Sakura Radio
やすことLunch Break (太鼓フェスティバルPart1)

Sakura Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 25:52


「やすことLunch Break」毎週月曜と火曜New Yorkから放送!ユニークなトピックやニュース、気になる人などが登場する楽しい30分。さくらラジオキャスターの沼田靖子がお届け。ニューヨークのコロンビア大学で開かれた太鼓フェスティバルの熱く盛り上がる様子をパート1パート2にわけて紹介!7チームが参加しています。We will introduce Taiko Festival 2018 in Columbia University! Everone in 7 team are so passionate about playing Taiko. Enjoy the program of "Lunch Break with Yasuko"

The Paul Leslie Hour
#146 - Robert Davi

The Paul Leslie Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2018 50:20


Robert Davi is a singer-extraordinaire. This interview was taped back in 2014 and broadcast on the radio and was published in La Revista, a bilingual international magazine. The interview focused in part on his 2011 debut studio album "Davi Sings Sinatra: On the Road to Romance" produced by the legendary Phil Ramone. Of course many know him for the versatile actor that he is, but in my heart and mind I think of him as a singer first. However, Robert Davi is a man of many interests. His columns on political subjects and current events have appeared in online and print news publications. He's not afraid to share his point of view. He's also shared his commentary on the AM and FM airwaves as a radio talk show host. Everone thinks of a different movie when they recall one of the more than 130 films he has starred in ranging from The Goonies, Die Hard, Predator 2, Licence to Kill and Showgirls just to name a few. He was also featured as a main character in the music video of Bob Dylan's take on "The Night We Called It a Day" a song made famous by Frank Sinatra. Most recently, Robert Davi has been in the news because of the release of the documentary film Davi's Way. Directed by Tom Donahue, the film chronicles Davi's quest to honor and recreate Frank Sinatra's October 13, 1974 "Main Event" concert at Madison Square Garden. This interview with Robert Davi is being presented on the podcast as a good foundation for listeners of who the man himself is. Don't touch that dial, Robert Davi is next and it's only on The Paul Leslie Hour. Support The Paul Leslie Hour by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/the-paul-leslie-hour

Inside Out Security
Geneticist and Founder of Protocols.io, Lenny Teytelman (Part one)

Inside Out Security

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 15:49


Reminder: it's not "your data".It's the patients' dataIt's the taxpayers' dataIt's the funder's data-----------------If you're in industry or self-fund the research & don't publish, then you have the right not to share your data. Otherwise, it's not your data.— Lenny Teytelman (@lteytelman) July 16, 2018 A few months ago, I came across Protocols.io founder Lenny Teytelman’s tweet on data ownership. Since we’re in the business of protecting data, I was curious what inspired Lenny to tweet out his value statement and to also learn how academics and science-based businesses approach data analysis and data ownership. We’re in for a real treat because it’s rare that we get to hear what scientists think about data when in search for discoveries and innovations. Transcript Lenny Teytelman: I am Lenny Teytelman and I'm a geneticist and computational biologist by training. I did graduate school in Berkeley and then post-doctoral research out at MIT. And since 2012, I have been the Co-founder and CEO of Protocols.io, which is a GitHub Wikipedia-like central repository of research recipes, so for science methods detailing what exactly scientists have of found. Cindy Ng: Welcome, Lenny. We first connected on Twitter through a tweet of yours, and I'm going to read it, it says, "Reminder: it's not 'your data.' It's the patient's data, it's the taxpayers' data. It's the funders' data. And if you're in an industry or self-funded the research and don't publish, then you have the right not to share your data. Otherwise, it's not your data." So can you tell us a little bit more about your point of view, your ideas about data ownership, and what inspired you to tweet out your value statement? Lenny Teytelman: Thank you, Cindy. So this is something that comes up periodically, more so particularly, in the past 5, 10 years in the research community as different funders and publishers starting more and more intentions of reproducability challenges and published research, and including guidelines and policies that encourage or require the sharing of data as a prerequisite for publication or as a condition of getting funding. So we're seeing more and more of that, and I think the vast majority of the research community, of the scientists, are in favor of those then this time that it's important, then this time that it's one of the pillars of science to be able to reproduce and verify and validate out the people's results and not just to take them at their word. We all make mistakes, right? But there is a minority that is upset about these kinds of requirements and I, periodically, either in person or someone on Twitter will say, "Hey, I've spent so long sailing the oceans and collecting the data. I don't want to just give it away. I want to spend the next 5, 10 years publishing and then it's my data." And so that's the part that I'm reacting to it. There are some scientists that forget who's funding them and who actually has the rights to the data. Cindy Ng: Why do they feel like it's their data rather than the patients' data or the taxpayers' data or the funder's data? Lenny Teytelman: So it's understandable because, particularly when the data generation takes a long time, so imagine you go on an own expeditions two, three months away from family, sampling bacteria in oceans or digging in the desert, and it can take a really long time to get the samples, to get the data, and you start to feel ownership, and it's also the career, your career, the more publications you get on a given dataset, the stronger your resume, the higher the chances of getting fellowships, faculty positions, and so on. People become a little bit possessive and take ownership of the data, if you like, put so much into it, "It's mine." Cindy Ng: Prior to digitalizing our data, who owned the data? Lenny Teytelman: Well, I guess, universities can also lay some claim to the intellectual property rights. I'm not an attorney so it's tricky. But I think there was always the understanding in the science world that you should be able to provide the tables, the datasets that you're publishing on request. But then we got paper journals, there really just wasn't space to make all of that available. And we're now in a different environment where we have repositories, there's GitHub focal, there are many repositories for the data to be shared. And so, with the web, we're no longer in that contact author for details and we're now in a place where journals can say, "If you want to publish in our journal, you have to make the data available." And there are some that have put in very stringent data requirement policies. Cindy Ng: Who sets those parameters in terms of the kind of data you publish and the stringency behind it? Do a bunch of academics come together, chairman, scientists decide best practices, or they vary from publication to publication? Lenny Teytelman: Both. So it depends on the community. There are some communities, for example, the genomics community, back when the human genome was being sequenced, there were a lot of...and I mean before that, there were a lot of meetings of the leaders in the field sort of agreeing on what are the best practices, and depositing the DNA sequences in the central repository GenBank run by the U.S. government became sort of expected in the community and from the journals. And so, that really was community-led best practices, but more recently, I also see just funders putting out mandates, and when you agree to getting funding, you agree to the data-sharing policies of the foundation. And same thing for journals. Now, journals, more and more of them are putting in statements requiring data, but it doesn't mean that they're necessarily enforcing it, so requirements are one thing, enforcement is another. Cindy Ng: What is the difference between scientific academic research versus the science-based companies? Because a lot of, for instance, pharmaceuticals hire a lot of PhDs and they must have a close connection between one another. Lenny Teytelman: So there is certainly overlap. You're right that, I think, in biomedicine particularly, most of the people who get PhDs actually don't stay in academia and then outside of it. Not all of it is in industry. They go through a broad spectrum, all for different careers, but a lot do end up in industry. There is some overlap where you will have industry funding some of the research. So, Novartis could give a grant to UC Berkeley, or British Petroleum could be doing ecological research, and those tend to be very interesting because there may be a push from the industry side to keep the data private, like you can imagine tobacco companies sponsoring something. So there's some conflict of interest then usually universities try to frame these in a way that gives the researchers the right to publish regardless of what the results are, and to make it available so that the funder does not have a yea or nay vote. So those are on collaboratives side when there's some funding coming in from industry but, in general, there is basic science, there is academic science, and there is expectation there that you're publishing and making the results open, and then there is the industry side, and, of course, I'm broadly generalizing. There are things you will keep private in academia, there's competitiveness in academia as well, you're afraid of getting scooped. But broadly speaking, academia tends to publish and be very open, and your reputation and your career prospects are really tied to your publications. And on the industry side, it's not so much about the publications as about the actual company bottom line and the vaccines, drug targets, right, molecules that you're discovering, and those you're not necessarily sharing, so there's a lot of research that happens in industry. And my understanding is that the vast majority of it is actually not published. Cindy Ng: I think even though they have different goals, the thread between all of them really, is the data because regardless of what industry you're in, I hate this phrase, "data is the new oil," but it's considered one of the most valuable assets around. I'm wondering is there a philosophy around how much you share amongst scientists regardless of the industry? Lenny Teytelman: In academia, it tends to be all over the place. So I think in industry, they're very careful about the security, they're very, very concerned about breach and somebody getting access to the trials, to the molecules they're considering. The competition is very intense and they take the intellectual property and security very seriously. On the academic side, it really varies and there are groups that, even long before they're ready to publish their intel on science, they generate data, they feel like we've done the sequencing of these species or of these tissues from patients, and we're going to anonymize the patient names and release the information and the sequences of the data that we have as soon as we've generated it even before the story is finished so other people can use it. There are some academic projects that are funded as resources where you are expected to share the data as they come online. There might be requests that you don't publish from the data before we did if they're the ones producing it, so there can be community standards, but there are examples in academia, many examples in academia where the data are shared and simply as they're produced even before publications. And then you also have kind of groups that are extremely secretive. Until they're ready to publish, no one else has access to the data and sometimes even after they publish, they try to prevent other people from getting access to the data. Cindy Ng: So it's back to the possessiveness aspect of it. Lenny Teytelman: My feeling just anecdotally from the 13 years that I was at the bench, as a student, post-doc, is that the vast majority of scientists are open and are collaborative in academia and that it's a tiny minority that try to hoard the data, but I'm sure that that does vary by field. Cindy Ng: In the healthcare industry, it's been shown that people try to anonymize data and release it for researchers to do research on, but then there are also a few security and privacy pros who have said that you can re-identify the anonymized data. Has there been a problem? Lenny Teytelman: Yes, this is something that comes up a lot in discussions. Everone does when you're working with patient data, every one does go through concerted effort to anonymize the information, but usually, when people opt in to participating in these studies and these types of projects, the disclaimers do warn the patients, do warn the people participating that, yes, we'll go through anonymizing steps, but it is possible to re-identify, as you said, the anonymized, the data and figure out who it really is no matter how hard you try. So there are a lot of conversations in academia about this and it is important to be very clear with patients about it. There are concerns, but I don't know actual examples of people re-identifying for any kind of malicious purpose. There might be space and opportunity for doing that, and I'm not saying the concerns are not valid, but I don't know of examples where this has happened with genomic data, DNA sequencing, or individuals. Cindy Ng: What about Henrietta Lacks where she was being treated for...I can't remember what problem she had, and then it was a hospital... Lenny Teytelman: Yes, that's a major...there's a book on this, right, there's a movie. That's a major fiasco and a learning opportunity for the research community where there was no consent. Cindy Ng: Did you ever see this movie called the "Three Identical Strangers" about triplets who found each other? Lenny Teytelman: No, I haven't. Cindy Ng: And then they found that all three of those triplets were adopted, and then they thought, "Hmm, that's really strange." So then they had a wonderful reunion and then, later down the line, they realized that they're being used as a study. There were researchers that went in every single week to their homes, to the adoptee's homes, to do research on the kids, and knew that they're all brothers, but neglected to tell the families until they found each other by chance. And then they realized they're part of a study and they refused to release the data. And so, I found the Henrietta Lacks and this new movie that came out just really fascinating. I mean, I guess that's why they have regulations so that you don't have things like these scenarios happen, where you find out after you're an adult, that you're a part of a strange experiment. Lenny Teytelman: That's fascinating. So I don't know this movie, but on a related note, I'm thinking back…I don't remember the names, but I'm thinking back on the recent serial killer that was identified, not through his own DNA being in the database, but the relatives participating in ancestry sequencing, right, submitting personal genomics, submitting their cells for genotyping, and the police having access, tracing the serial killer through that. There certainly are implications of the data that we are sharing. I don't know what the biggest concerns are, but there are a lot of fascinating issues that the scientific community, patients, and regulators have to grapple with. Cindy Ng: So, since you're a geneticist, what do you think about the latest DNA testing companies working with pharmaceuticals in potentially finding cures with a lot of privacy alarms coming up for advocates? Lenny Teytelman: Yeah, so it has to be done ethically. You do have to think about these issues. My personal feeling is that there's a lot for world and humans to gain from sharing the DNA information and personal information. The positives outweigh the risks. That's a very vague statement, so I do, you know, I think about the opportunity to do studies where a drug is not just tested whether it works or not, but depending on the DNA of the people, you can figure out what are the percolations, what are the types of the drugs that will have adverse reactions to it, who are the ones who are unlikely to benefit from it. So there is such powerful opportunity for good use of this. Obviously, we can't dismiss the privacy risks and the potential for abuse and misuse, but it would be a real shame if we just backed away from the research and from the opportunity that this offers altogether, instead of carefully thinking through the implications and trying to do this in an ethical way.

Custom Ecommerce Web Development
Unlock Your Unique Brand Proposition For Unlimited Success

Custom Ecommerce Web Development

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2018


A Conversation with Rafael Romis, The Unicorn Whisperer One of the most underrated components to selling online is as simple a unique value proposition! But what does that really mean and how do you come up with one? Everone seems to think that they are unique and different and honestly as far as people are […] The post Unlock Your Unique Brand Proposition For Unlimited Success appeared first on Custom Ecommerce Web Development.

The Home Video Hustle
Big Trouble in Little China (Brent & PJ Haven't Seen)

The Home Video Hustle

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2018 76:24


It's a big one this week! Everone wanted us to do it and PJ finally picked it, the John Carpenter classic "Big Trouble in Little China." There may or may not be a bit of controversy with this one, I wont say why though...Also in this episode we talk about the Starbucks incidents, Culture Vulture fights, we play a game of Vers: The Rap Card Game, Taylor Swifts terrible remake of "September" by Earth, Wind & Fire, Brent gives a shockingly good review to a new school album and more! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Youtube and here on Podbean! Intro Music: Doc Giggz / Outro Music: Trade Voorhees PROMOS - Pilots and Petards Podcast & Kung-Fu Drive In Podcast   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Wicked Theory Podcast
WTP ep. 131 - Everone Loves Edamame

The Wicked Theory Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2017 98:01


It's a full house with Bill, Bob, Dom, Ed and Uncle Jay! The Nerd News this week includes: a “new trilogy” for Star Wars, Disney is booting up a streaming service, Universal puts it's Dark Universe in the basement,  Metal Gear Solid gets a movie, more Kick-Ass soon, Jessica Chastain wants in on IT and finally more Shazam movie news to make Ed excited. Over in the Meanwhile section (reviews & recommendations); Netflix's Wheelman, What We Do in the Shadows, Ex Machina, Icarus, Geostorm, we digress into where Ed is from, then on to Murder On the Orient Express and a bit of Mr. Robot. PLUS: The Chatroom game: #Sci-fi menu items and Pitch vs. Pitch returns with Dom's title “The Drop”!

Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley
2017-07-02 Rich Stein - Everone needs core values - Audio

Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2017 45:18


Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley

Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley
2017-07-02 Rich Stein - Everone needs core values - Audio

Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2017 45:18


Calvary Christian Church - Napa Valley

Bozeman United Methodist Church
Room for Everone

Bozeman United Methodist Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2017 18:38


Scripture: John 14:1-14

Take Me Outdoors
09: Passion-Driven Purpose – Sarah Tescher of the Silverton White Out and Durango Devo

Take Me Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2017 34:33


The 3rd Annual Silverton White Out Fat (Snow) Bike Event/Gathering takes place Feb. 4, 2017. This episode of the Take Me Outdoors podcast celebrates the founder and director of the Silverton White Out, Sarah Tescher. Sarah is also the co-founder of Durango’s junior development cycling program, DEVO, an educator and entrepreneur, and mom of two boys. She’s also a wonderful friend of mine, and a complete inspiration to so many! Sarah does all of this with an intention to serve. Her MO is to get more kids and adults out to enjoy the incredible mountain backdrop that weaves together her four-season outdoor passions. What’s so unique about Sarah is that she’s driven to serve, and just plain gives back. Sarah has always inspired me and so many others to strive to do the same. And I couldn’t be more excited, or proud, to share her with you here today on the Take Me Outdoors podcast. Our conversation today starts with the Silverton White Out snow bike event, taking place Feb. 4 in Silverton, Colo. It was an absolutely visionary idea – a 10-hour, mid-winter fat (snow) bike ‘race.’ Put this event together with the amazing draw that is Silverton Mountain, and you have the ingredients to bring visibility and opportunity to what used to be the off-season in one of our state’s most pristine high-mountain hamlets in Colorado. The White Out delivers altitude, terrain and a big dose of bike culture. EVERONE is welcome! What I love most is the fact that Sarah and her team at Passion Productions (the production organization for the White Out), work to make this wintertime bike culture gathering mesh with the awesome locals of Silverton. This is a truly one-of-a-kind event – we hope to see you there! You’ll learn in this interview that Sarah is humble and does things in her life that she knows are the right things to do; she seems to be driven by love and by creating opportunities for so many who deserve it. It’s just who she is. This episode of the Take Me Outdoors podcast honors Sarah and her selfless, passion-driven lifestyle – way of living. I believe it’s an absolute inspiration to so many of us! Sarah is an educator – she’s highly educated in teaching and non-profit management. She’s also an entrepreneur and a professional cyclist. Aside from that, Sarah and Chad Cheeney founded Durango Devo, the country’s first and, in my opinion, most premiere junior development cycling programs. Bulletpoints: The third annual Silverton White Out, I’m pretty sure the World’s first 10-hour fat (snow) bike race, was founded by Sarah and a passionate crew of cyclists, operating under the name: Passion Productions. Check it out Feb. 4, 2017 (as in this Saturday), in Silverton, Colo. Sarah is also the founder of Durango Devo, along with Chad Cheeney, one of the best, and first, off-road junior development cycling programs in the United States. She’s not running it day to day anymore, but she’s one of the most effective coaches on staff for Devo. She’s also a former pro cyclist, and very likely one of the most humble Sarah is also an entrepreneur – she’s founded DEVO, the Silverton White Out, and also heads up Durango Academic Coaching, our communities’ top tutoring resource   Links www.silvertonwhiteout.com www.durangodevo.com www.durangoacademiccoaching.com    Ep. 9:  Passion-Driven Purpose – Sarah Tescher of the Silverton White Out and Durango Devo

ESPN Tallahassee Jeff Cameron Show
JCS 4-24-14 Hour 1

ESPN Tallahassee Jeff Cameron Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2014 36:12


1. Noles win. Gators lose. Everone is happy. 2. The Bucs get a tough draw. 3. NFL Football Schedules released.

TDYtennis Radio
Moore To Life

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2012 75:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life.  Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it.  We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics.  We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind how to change them as a recipe for success.  LET'S GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
"Moore To Life"

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2012 90:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life. Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it. We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics. We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind and how to change them as a recipe for success.  LETS GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
"Moore To Life"

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2012 13:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life. Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it. We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics. We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind and how to change them as a recipe for success.  LETS GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
"Moore To Life"

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2012 89:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life. Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it. We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics. We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind and how to change them as a recipe for success.  LETS GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
"Moore To Life"

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2012 89:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life. Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it. We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics. We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind and how to change them as a recipe for success.  LETS GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
"Moore To Life"

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2012 90:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life. Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it. We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics. We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind and how to change them as a recipe for success.  LETS GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
Life's Terms, My Attitude

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2012 66:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life.  Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it.  We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics.  We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind how to change them as a recipe for success.  LET'S GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
Life's Terms, My Attitude

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2012 62:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life.  Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it.  We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics.  We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind how to change them as a recipe for success.  LET'S GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
Life's Terms, My Attitude

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2012 61:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life.  Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it.  We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics.  We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind how to change them as a recipe for success.  LET'S GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

TDYtennis Radio
Life's Terms, My Attitude

TDYtennis Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2012 60:00


Come join us as we discuss life issues and how to find your own personal success and happines in life.  Everone has a key to success in life, and the trick is learning how to use it.  We will address all types of issues such as addiction, grief and loss, abandonment, resentments and forgiveness, stress and anxiety, spirituality, and many many more topics.  We will take a look at belief systems that are tucked away in the subconscious mind how to change them as a recipe for success.  LET'S GET HAPPY TOGETHER!!!

Watch your shadow.
HOW DO YOU STAND FOR ??

Watch your shadow.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2011 83:37


We are a young church and we are looking for partners in helping to feed the (((( CHILDREN )))of this world .We also would appreciate your help with this Ministry, Our goals are to feed not only children in our own back yards but also to feed the children of the world. ANY donation you can (( GIVE)) will be greatiy apperciated. Keep in mind that (((( YOUR )) help will change world (((HUNGER)) Our mission is to be generous, and feed the poor. Everyone should have food to eat and water to drink. Jesus feed many with only five loaves of bread and two fish. What can we do? We are under commandments and a covenent to feed all people if they are hungry. We want to feed all people spiritually and physicaly. If we can feed with food, water and the word of God: no one will go hungry. Thank You Send your donation to FEED THE CHILDREN, APOSTLES FOR CHRIST .INC PO BOX 3053 WHEELING WV 26003

Watch your shadow.
HOW DO YOU STAND FOR ??

Watch your shadow.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2011 83:37


We are a young church and we are looking for partners in helping to feed the (((( CHILDREN )))of this world .We also would appreciate your help with this Ministry, Our goals are to feed not only children in our own back yards but also to feed the children of the world. ANY donation you can (( GIVE)) will be greatiy apperciated. Keep in mind that (((( YOUR )) help will change world (((HUNGER)) Our mission is to be generous, and feed the poor. Everyone should have food to eat and water to drink. Jesus feed many with only five loaves of bread and two fish. What can we do? We are under commandments and a covenent to feed all people if they are hungry. We want to feed all people spiritually and physicaly. If we can feed with food, water and the word of God: no one will go hungry. Thank You Send your donation to FEED THE CHILDREN, APOSTLES FOR CHRIST .INC PO BOX 3053 WHEELING WV 26003