Podcasts about Fibonacci

Italian mathematician (c. 1170–1245)

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Latest podcast episodes about Fibonacci

Conspiracy Clearinghouse
A Numbers Game: Mathspiracies

Conspiracy Clearinghouse

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 47:59


EPISODE 139 | A Numbers Game: Mathspiracies Guest: Gary Arndt, writer and host of the Everything Everywhere Daily podcast We aren't really very good with numbers, so naturally we've come up with a lot of wacky ideas about them. Gary Arndt talks about numbers of all sorts, like why Pi is stupid, why prime numbers are cool, why the Fibonacci sequence isn't all that, when math leads to murder and much more. Like what we do? Then buy us a beer or three via our page on Buy Me a Coffee.  Review us here or on IMDb. And seriously, subscribe, will ya?  SECTIONS 02:25 - Numeracy rates, gambling is (usually) a sucker's bet, numerology, the Bible Code, p-hacking, Equidistant Letter Sequencing (ELS) 13:09 - The Hidden Hand of Mathematics, the Ultraviolet Catastrophe and the birth of quantum physics, the Fibonacci sequence and the Golden Ratio 20:05 - Pi, tau, the Cult of Pythagoras, irrational numbers, transcendental numbers, squaring the circle, Alex Jones and math, the real number of the Beast 28:51 - Why people believe conspiracy theories 30:13 - Angel numbers, the "meanings" of numbers 33:43 - Numbers stations 37:25 - Prime numbers, Prime Target TV series, trapdoor functions in cryptography, Al-Khwarizmi, double entry bookkeeping, the idea of zero, zero and null are different 43:20 - Base-10, base-12, base-60, and our timekeeping and calendar systems Music by Fanette Ronjat More Info Everything Everywhere Daily podcast The Bible Code book review in Notices of the AMS The Significance of The Number Forty-Two (42) by By Rabbi Dr. Hillel ben David (Greg Killian) Magic Apologetics: Equidistant Letter Sequencing in the Christian Research Journal Assassinations Foretold in Moby Dick! THE UNREASONABLE EFFECTIVENSS OF MATHEMATICS IN THE NATURAL SCIENCES by Eugene Wigner The Ultraviolet Catastrophe and the Creation of Quantum Mechanics episode of Everything Everywhere Daily What is the Fibonacci sequence? on LiveScience Fibonacci Sequence on Math Is Fun Composing Balanced Images: The Golden Ratio on ProGrade Digital Everything You Need to Know About Pi episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Why Tau Should Replace Pi episode of Everything Everywhere Daily The Cult of Pythagoras episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Irrational Numbers episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Squaring the Circle episode of Everything Everywhere Daily e: Euler's Number episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Pi Is Encoded in the Patterns of Life Alex Jones and 666 video A Guide to Angel Numbers and What They Mean Numerology Numbers 1-9: Exploring the single digit numbers in Numerology on Numerology.com Numbers Stations episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Number Stations on Priyom.org Number Station Recordings - Creepy radio broadcasts from unknown origins (video with over 4 hours of recordings) All About Cryptography episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Prime Numbers episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Prime Target TV series on IMDb Zero, My Hero episode of Everything Everywhere Daily Zero and NULL values  What is the Base-10 Number System? Base 12: An Introduction Babylonian Mathematics and the Base 60 System Follow us on social: Facebook Twitter Bluesky Other Podcasts by Derek DeWitt DIGITAL SIGNAGE DONE RIGHT - Winner of a Gold Quill Award, Gold MarCom Award, AVA Digital Award Gold, Silver Davey Award, and Communicator Award of Excellence, and on numerous top 10 podcast lists.  PRAGUE TIMES - A city is more than just a location - it's a kaleidoscope of history, places, people and trends. This podcast looks at Prague, in the center of Europe, from a number of perspectives, including what it is now, what is has been and where it's going. It's Prague THEN, Prague NOW, Prague LATER   

EDENEX - La Radio del Misterio
Dalí y el último teatro de la memoria - Un artículo de Javier Sierra - EDENEX -

EDENEX - La Radio del Misterio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2025 8:55


En una brillante mañana de diciembre de 1974, Salvador Dalí, en su finca de Port Lligat, se preparaba para una aparición más en el NO-DO. Frente a las cámaras, lanzó una de sus enigmáticas frases: «Es evidente que hay otros mundos, pero están en este». Aquellas palabras no eran improvisadas, sino una declaración velada de su visión artística y filosófica, materializada en su mayor obra: el Teatro-Museo Dalí de Figueres. Javier Sierra nos guía a través del simbolismo oculto de ese "teatro de la memoria" que Dalí construyó como réplica surrealista de su mente. Inspirado en los tratados de alquimia, la cábala, la geometría sagrada y los principios esotéricos del Renacimiento, el museo fue concebido como un portal hacia otro nivel de percepción. Cada elemento –desde la cúpula de 2.160 triángulos de cristal hasta el escafandrista de la entrada– esconde un mensaje deliberado, diseñado para provocar una transformación interior en el visitante. Cincuenta años después, con el Rey Felipe VI como testigo en una celebración íntima, Sierra revive la experiencia de recorrer ese espacio hechizante, descubriendo nuevos significados entre geometrías sagradas, farolas parisinas y espirales de Fibonacci. Comprende entonces que el museo no es solo un homenaje al arte, sino un verdadero "teatro de la memoria", como el que imaginó el poeta Simónides hace siglos. Con una narración envolvente de nuestro querido amigo Jones y la delicada música de Alberto Guzmán como telón de fondo, esta pieza nos invita a descifrar el enigma daliniano, a aceptar el reto de mirar más allá del absurdo aparente y a reconocer que, como susurra el propio museo, «hay otros mundos, pero están en este». ¿Te atreves a entrar? https://www.edenex.es

Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler
DIVINE FREQUENCY UNLOCKED! How to Manifest From Perfect Alignment (Not Force) Colette Baron-Reid

Inspire Nation Show with Michael Sandler

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2025 50:53


Struggling to manifest in chaotic times? You're not alone. In this electrifying episode, Colette Baron-Reid reveals why the Law of Attraction seems to "fail" when we need it most—and how to shift into Perfect Alignment (hint: it's not what you've been taught!).   You'll Discover:  The #1 mistake people make with manifestation (it's not about "thinking positive")  How to stop forcing outcomes and start allowing miracles (Colette's "circle technique")  Why fear hijacks your manifesting power—and how to rewire your nervous system fast  The surprising link between ancient symbols (like the Fibonacci spiral) and modern manifestation  How to detach from collective fear and become a magnet for your soul's desires   Find more from Colette Baron-Reid: https://www.colettebaronreid.com/     To find out more visit: https://amzn.to/3qULECz - Order Michael Sandler's book, "AWE, the Automatic Writing Experience" www.automaticwriting.com  - Automatic Writing Experience Course www.inspirenationuniversity.com - Michael Sandler's School of Mystics Join Our YouTube Membership for behind-the-scenes access - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVoOM-cCEPbJ1vzlQAFQu1A/join  https://inspirenationshow.com/ https://www.dailywoohoo.com/ - Sign up for my FREE daily newsletter for high-vibration content. ……. Follow Michael and Jessica's exciting journey and get even more great tools, tips, and behind-the-scenes access. Go to https://www.patreon.com/inspirenation   For free meditations, weekly tips, stories, and similar shows visit: https://inspirenationshow.com/   We've got Merch! - https://teespring.com/stores/inspire-nation-store   Follow Inspire Nation, and the lives of Michael and Jessica, on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/InspireNationLive/   Find us on TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@inspirenationshow

Conversations with Musicians, with Leah Roseman
Heather Taves: her Beethoven Journey, Fascinating Research, Developing Creativity

Conversations with Musicians, with Leah Roseman

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2025 79:17


Heather Taves is an acclaimed Canadian pianist, also a composer, improviser, educator and writer.She spoke to me about her unique and inspiring Beethoven Journey, her popular weekly blog which she started in 2023 , paired with performances of all of Beethoven's 32 piano sonatas. We talked about getting to know Beethoven as a person and her fascinating research about many women that are part of this history. We also talked about Heather's work as an educator, developing creativity and approaching teaching music from different angles. She spoke about her mentors including pianist Gil Kalish and writer Diane Shoemperlen, and her experiences travelling around the world by herself. You can also watch this on my YouTube channel, transcript and complete show notes with suggested episodes too on my website! Heather Taves website It's a joy to bring these inspiring episodes to you every week, and I do all the many jobs of research, production and publicity. Buy me a coffee? Podcast merchNewsletter sign-up Waves Play from East Coast SuiteArabesque in C major by R. Schumann photo: Terry Manzo(00:00) Intro(02:25) Beethoven Journey, Nanette Streicher, sonata cycle(08:32) Jan and Jean Narveson, Anton Kuerti, women interpreters research(17:52) clip of R. Schumann Arabesque in C major (album linked in show notes)(19:30) Heather's childhood(22:11) East Coast Suite, Toccata based on Fibonacci series(23:14) Waves Play Toccata by Heather Taves from East Coast Suite(25:49)Creative Projects, helping students to find their voice(32:44) getting to know Beethoven the person(38:39) performing from memory(41:20) Gil Kalish(45:48) other episodes you'll like and ways to support this series(46:42) Beethoven journey blog(59:18) writing mentor Diane Schoemperlen(01:043:23) Dame Myra Hess(01:07:54) Heather's life as a composer, her father(01:11:35) world trip, questioning identity(01:16:48) final reflections on the life of a performer

The Beats with Kelly Kennedy
The Lymphatic Flow of Freedom: Healing the Emotional Ocean with Kelly Kennedy

The Beats with Kelly Kennedy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2025 36:15


“Lymph is not just a drainage system. It's your emotional ocean, your gateway to freedom.” ~ Kelly KennedyWhat if your symptoms weren't just physical - but energetic and emotional, too?In this special solo episode, Kelly Kennedy - known as the “Lymph Queen” - dives deep into the often-misunderstood world of lymph. Far beyond just drainage, the lymphatic system is a bridge between your physical and non-physical self. It's where your emotions, immune system, fascia, and flow all intersect.Kelly shares her story, her clinical experience, and her framework for lymphatic healing - including the truth about top node pumping, the science of structured water, and how heart-centered living is the key to real regeneration.In This Episode: 00:00 Introduction to the Energy FLOW Podcast 02:00 The original COVID-inspired lymph training with Desiree 04:30 Lymph: the true bridge between energy and the body 07:15 Why top node pumping is only the beginning 09:10 The connection between emotions, fascia, and lymph 13:00 Flow, fear, and the choice to feel 16:00 The Sound of Soul and the science of frequency 18:30 Parasympathetic vs sympathetic waters 20:10 Nature, seasons, and energetic expansion 23:00 The Fibonacci sequence and the flow of energy 25:45 Scar release, fascia, and stored trauma 29:00 True freedom: emotional release and lymphatic flow 32:00 Etch-a-Sketch your old stories, claim your space 35:00 The lymph as your path back to YOUConnect with Kelly Kennedy:

The Voice of Early Childhood
The Cornish Curriculum

The Voice of Early Childhood

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 39:13


In this episode… Mandy Richardson, owner of Naturally Learning nurseries in Cornwall, talks to us about how she created the Cornish Curriculum with her team. Mandy shares with us the details of her curriculum and some challenges along the way, including challenging Ofsted, practicalities of an outdoor nursery, defining what school readiness means to you, the ‘Cornish Connection', teaching diversity in a ‘non-diverse' area, authentic cultural representation and more…   Read Mandy's article here: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/the-cornish-curriculum/   This episode is sponsored by Funding Loop: Funding Loop automates the process for nurseries of collecting funding forms from parents and typing that information into council portals. Funding Loop is used by over 2000 nurseries including over 80% of the top 25 nursery chains in the UK including Busy Bees. To find out more visit: https://www.fundingloop.co.uk/home   Listen to more: If you enjoyed this episode, you might also like: ·       Early years curriculum: Provision for 2-year-olds – Charlotte Norman: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/early-years-curriculum-provision-for-2-year-olds/ ·       It's not really about dinosaurs: What are children learning from your curriculum – Jan Dubiel: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/early-years-curriculum/ ·       What is an early years curriculum? Ruth Swailes & Jan Dubiel: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/what-is-an-early-years-curriculum/ ·       Enquiry led learning: A curious classroom – Stuart Cloke: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/enquiry-led-learning-a-curious-classroom/ ·       Education Durham curriculum project: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/projects/education-durham-project/ ·       Early years curriculum: Building sequences of learning – Paige Hutchinson: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/early-years-curriculum-building-sequences-of-learning/ ·       Early years curriculum: Building sequences of learning – Paige Hutchinson: https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/early-years-curriculum-building-sequences-of-learning/   Get in touch and share your voice: Do you have thoughts, questions or feedback? Get in touch here! – https://thevoiceofearlychildhood.com/contact/   Episode break down: 00:00 – Welcome! 02:00 – Naturally Learning settings in Cornwall 03:55 – The ‘Cornish Connection' 06:00 – Challenging Ofsted 07:45 – Where do we begin when structuring a curriculum? 10:00 – Inspiration from the Fibonacci sequence 12:00 – The 7 areas of the Cornish Curriculum 14:00 – What does school readiness mean to you? 16:00 – How can we be diverse in a ‘non-diverse' area? 18:00 – Authentic cultural representation 21:00 – Building the foundations of respect & curiosity 22:40 – Pedagogy or curriculum? 28:00 – Skills vs knowledge 31:00 – Practicalities of an outdoor nursery 32:50 – Risk assessing with children 35:00 – Risks that have been assessed For more episodes and articles visit The Voice of Early Childhood website: https://www.thevoiceofearlychildhood.com

Estrategias de mercado
Comprar ahora, con indicadores tensionados, es ignorar la ecuación rentabilidad-riesgo que debería regir toda decisión operativa sensata

Estrategias de mercado

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 11:39


Este capítulo cuenta con la colaboración de ford.es."Comprar ahora, con indicadores tensionados, es ignorar la ecuación rentabilidad-riesgo que debería regir toda decisión operativa sensata"La sobrecompra en la mayoría de índices es elevada y peligrosaNi hablar de nuevas compras hasta que no veamos una corrección seriaQué hacer hoy si invierte con EcotraderPese a que las grandes referencias bursátiles de Europa se anotan alzas cercanas al 20% desde los mínimos del mes de abril, justo antes de que el presidente de EEUU, Donald Trump, anunciara una tregua en la guerra arancelaria desatada frente a todos y cada uno de sus socios comerciales, de momento, es precipitado dar por concluida la actual fase alcista que desarrollan las principales bolsas de Europa y EEUU. Así l entiende Joan Cabrero, analista y estratega de Ecotrader, que , en el último episodio del podcast estrategia de mercado asegura que "asistimos a una recuperación robusta que superó el temido 61,8% de Fibonacci de la caída desde los altos del año, que en Wall Street bauticé como el Techo de DeepSeek, lo que confirmó que no estábamos ante un mero rebote dentro de un mercado bajista, y me permitió revelar que seguimos dentro de una tendencia de fondo alcista". No obstante, eso no significa que haya que comprar en plena conga. Ni hablar de nuevas compras hasta que no veamos una corrección seria, con una caída de al menos un 38,2% o un 50% de toda la subida desde abril", advierte el experto, que recuerda que "a corto plazo dudo que asistamos a una corrección relevante sin que antes los índices toquen los altos del año, situados a un escaso 4% de distancia". De hecho, en su comentario estratégico semanal, Cabrero asegura que en caso de las bolsas busquen dichos niveles "en línea recta, sin consolidaciones ni pausas, sería una invitación a recoger beneficios parciales". Hasta entonces, Cabrero recomienda paciencia infinita y recuerda que "el mercado puede estar de fiesta, pero los que ganan a largo plazo no son los que más bailan, sino los que saben cuándo sentarse".

Kapital
K180. José Ignacio Latorre. Mecánica cuántica

Kapital

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2025 83:00


El éxito con Pep Martorell me confirmó que hay lugar para la ciencia en este podcast. Si Kapital está funcionando es porque hago lo que quiero, no lo que me pide la audiencia. A fin de cuentas, ¿qué es la audiencia? ¿La opinión mayoritaria entre unos oyentes? ¿Por qué deberían ellos tener razón y no el resto? ¿No sería una locura organizar las decisiones de la sociedad siguiendo este sistema? Los dos capítulos más escuchados de Kapital, el de Raggio y el de Recuenco, no eran a priori los más pedidos. El éxito es siempre una consecuencia, cuando alguien comparte un producto genuino.Este episodio sobre ciencia y matemáticas es ya uno de mis favoritos de las cuatro temporadas de Kapital. La mecánica cuántica es un concepto complejo (quizá imposible de comprender) pero José Ignacio lo describe con palabras que te permiten acercarte a él. Así arranca Cuántica, su tratado sobre la mayor revolución científica hasta la fecha. “El postulado I de la mecánica cuántica establece que la información que tenemos sobre un sistema físico viene descrita por un objeto matemático que llamamos función de onda. Podemos predecir, por ejemplo, lo que hará un electrón, pero no lo que es un electrón en su esencia más íntima. Tampoco sabremos por qué existe un electrón. Solo sabremos manipular la información que lo describe. Parece difícil de comprender. Repitámoslo: la función de onda contiene toda la información que podemos disponer de un sistema. Toda. Hace falta caminar despacio.”Y esto es lo que escribió el loco de Labatut en Un verdor terrible: “Mira la mecánica cuántica, por ejemplo, la joya de la corona de nuestra especie, la teoría física más precisa, hermosa y con mayor alcance que hemos inventado. Está detrás de internet, de la supremacía de nuestros teléfonos celulares, y ofrece la promesa de un poder computacional solo comparable a la inteligencia divina. Ha transformado nuestro mundo hasta volverlo irreconocible. Sabemos cómo usarla, funciona por una suerte de milagro, y sin embargo no hay un alma en este planeta, nadie vivo o muerto, que realmente la entienda. La mente no puede lidiar con sus paradojas y contradicciones. Es como si la teoría hubiese caído a la Tierra al igual que un monolito proveniente del espacio, y nosotros sencillamente gateamos a su alrededor como simios, jugando con ella, lanzándole piedras y palos, sin ninguna comprensión verdadera.”Kapital es posible gracias a sus colaboradores:⁠Indexa Capital⁠. Gestión pasiva en fondos indexados.No es fácil encontrar un lugar seguro para tu dinero. En un mercado lleno de productos tramposos, me gusta colaborar o poner el micro a los pocos gestores, pasivos o activos, con una propuesta honesta. La fortaleza de Indexa Capital, que entraría dentro de la gestión pasiva, es una cartera de bajo coste y diversificada. Dos de sus fundadores, Unai y François, han pasado por el podcast. Si te interesa, aquí tienes mi enlace de registro para ahorrarte la comisión sobre los primeros 15.000 euros. Son tiempos inciertos en los mercados y esto significa que debes buscar opciones serias para tu dinero. Indexa Capital es sin duda una de ellas.Índice:1:30 Abandonar una posición de catedrático.11:09 El gran salón de la inspiración.21:25 Aprender a aprender.24:31 That's the story.32:41 Corrupción del incompetente.40:01 Paseos de Bohr por Copenhague.48:35 La ciencia va a la velocidad de la ciencia.55:05 El primer 0 y su posterior prohibición.1:01:24 Belleza en la secuencia de Fibonacci.1:05:15 Radiación de cuerpo negro.1:15:56 Determinismo estricto.1:21:21 Dios no juega a los dados.Apuntes:Cuántica. José Ignacio Latorre.Ética para máquinas. José Ignacio Latorre.La última voz. José Ignacio Latorre & Maite Soto-Sanfiel.Un verdor terrible. Benjamín Labatut.MANIAC. Benjamín Labatut.La utilidad de lo inútil. Nuccio Ordine.Tiempos de incertidumbre. Tobias Hürter.Donald en el país de las matemáticas. Walt Disney.El diablo de los números. Hans Magnus Enzensberger.

ลงทุนแมน
อธิบาย Fibonacci ตัวเลขมหัศจรรย์ ที่ใช้คาดการณ์ราคาหุ้น แบบเข้าใจง่าย ๆ | ลงทุนแมนจะเล่าให้ฟัง

ลงทุนแมน

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 6:24


อธิบาย Fibonacci ตัวเลขมหัศจรรย์ ที่ใช้คาดการณ์ราคาหุ้น แบบเข้าใจง่าย ๆ | ลงทุนแมนจะเล่าให้ฟัง โค้งของเปลือกหอย วงของทางช้างเผือก ไปจนถึงสัดส่วนในภาพโมนาลิซา ทั้งหมดคือ มหัศจรรย์ของตัวเลขที่เรียกว่า ฟีโบนัชชี (Fibonacci) ความน่าสนใจคือ ลำดับตัวเลขนี้ไม่ได้มีแค่บทบาทในธรรมชาติหรือศิลปะเท่านั้น แต่ปัจจุบันนี้ ยังกลายมาเป็นเครื่องมือสำคัญ ในการคาดการณ์แนวโน้มราคาหุ้น ที่นักลงทุนสายเทคนิคใช้กันอย่างแพร่หลาย แล้ว Fibonacci ช่วยคาดการณ์ราคาหุ้นได้อย่างไร ? ลงทุนแมนจะเล่าให้ฟัง

Estrategias de mercado
LVMH, Grifols... Valores para operar en un mercado con un suelo fiable y un techo cada vez más claro

Estrategias de mercado

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2025 14:51


Este capítulo cuenta con la colaboración de ford.es.Primero fue el Ibex 35. Luego fue el EuroStoxx 50 y los índices fuertes de Europa. Y ahora, ya podemos decir que también en Estados Unidos, Wall Street lo ha conseguido. Y es que, en este último rebote -desde los mínimos del pánico que vimos el 7 de abril, que todos recordarán- ya se han recuperado en todos los grandes índices de uno y otro lado del Atlántico más allá de un 61,8% de Fibonacci de toda la anterior caída."Ahora, una vez tenemos esa información tan valiosa, ya sabemos que en una próxima corrección de mercado va a ser más improbable que perdamos los mínimos de abril. Vamos, de todas, todas, esos niveles se han convertido en una divisoria que separa el bien del mal", afirma Joan Cabrero, analista técnico y estratega de Ecotrader en el último episodio del Podcast Estrategia de mercado.Es decir, el mercado parece muy canalizado con esos mínimos del 7 de abril actuando a modo de stop y con los máximos del Techo de DeepSeek por encima, como resistencia a la que aspirar. "En este contexto, para poder identificar los próximos niveles de compra, hay que esperar pacientemente a que se digiera esta fuerte subida de las últimas semanas", señala Cabrero.Hasta que no se forme esa digestión, el experto de Ecotrader no es partidario de volver a comprar bolsa y asegura que "dependiendo de donde frene el actual rally los niveles óptimos para comprar irán cambiando, por lo que hay que permanecer atentos". Y en Europa ocurre igual. Desde un punto de vista operativo, la recomendación actual pasa por esperar una corrección parcial del último tramo de subida del EuroStoxx 50, para obtener una mejor ecuación rentabilidad-riesgo."Sabemos que una eventual caída tiene escasas probabilidades de profundizar bajo los 4.545 puntos, que es donde se sitúa el stop tendencial de referencia", afirma Cabrero, que al igual que en el caso de la referencia española asegura que es necesario esperar a que se confirme el final de la actual fase alcista -que sigue en desarrollo- para identificar los niveles de compra óptimos. "No descarto incluso que el índice busque de nuevo los máximos anuales, lo que implicaría un potencial adicional del 3,50% desde los niveles actuales", recuerda Cabrero, quien señala que "para que haya alguna evidencia técnica que sugiera un agotamiento comprador el EuroStoxx 50 debería de perder al menos los 5.319 puntos".Valores en los que 'picar'No obstante, hasta que eso ocurra, y para poder mantener una exposición que ahora mismo puede estar al 50-60% en la cartera modelo de Ecotarder, "hay valores que no me importaría mirar con una visión compradora y que que no me importaría que tuviéramos en cartera", destca el experto.LVMH y Grifols son dos de ellos. Por los sólidos fundamentales que el consenso de mercado ve en ellas y por lo atractiva que se ha puesto la ecuación rentabilidad-riesgo tras las últimas caídas que han sufrido.En el caso de la firma de moda estaríamos comprando después de que el título haya corregido la mitad de la subida de los últimos tres lustros. "Estamos ante una posibilidad muy bonita para poder poner un pie en esta compañía si cae a la zona de 500, 480 euros, donde abría un hueco alcista días atrás", afirma Cabrero.En el caso de la compañía española, todo hace indicar que el hueco alcista que abrió la semana pasada, tras presentar resultados desde los 8,40 es bastante atarctivo. "Yo una vuelta a la parte inferior de este hueco, 8,40 o incluso los 8,60, la veo como una oportunidad para comprar Grifols. Eso sí, con stop, en 8 euros", destaca Cabrero

20 Minutes of Banter
478: King Of The God Of War

20 Minutes of Banter

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 20:54


Bad My Fair Lady, Cease and Deez Nuts, and Austin the Fibonacci man.

Two Blokes Trading - Learn to Trade Online
Why This Veteran Trader LOVES Bear Markets

Two Blokes Trading - Learn to Trade Online

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 51:33


In Episode 12 of the Two Blokes Trading Podcast, veteran trader Chris Tubby shares insights from over 50 years in the financial markets, explaining why bear markets are his favorite playground.From trading cocoa on chalkboards in the 1970s to calling the 2020 crash ahead of time, Chris has traded through every type of market and technological shift. In this episode, he unpacks his personal strategy for thriving in market downturns, explains how to build consistency through smart risk management, and offers guidance on trading psychology for both new and experienced traders.Listeners will learn why most retail traders fail, how to build emotional resilience, and how to manage positions during volatility. Chris also covers his views on global macro risks, including tariffs, inflation, and debt, and explains how these forces could shape the next potential crash.For traders seeking to improve, this episode provides a rare and unfiltered perspective from someone who has truly seen it all. Chris also shares details of his flagship Master Trading eBook, mentorship programs, and an exclusive 20% discount for Two Blokes Trading listeners.What You'll Learn in This Episode :This episode offers practical, experience-based insights that go far beyond technical setups. Chris Tubby explains how traders can build an edge by embracing rather than fearing bear markets. He outlines his core framework for risk control, including setting daily loss limits, trade journaling, and developing emotional detachment from trades.Listeners will discover the psychological traps that derail retail traders, the crucial difference between demo and live trading, and how asset class rotation helps identify a trader's ideal market. Chris also explores real-world scenarios from the commodity booms of the past to macroeconomic volatility driven by tariffs, inflation, and geopolitical tension.Chris explains why he prefers futures over CFDs, the tools he uses for timing (including pivot points and Fibonacci), and how he applies multi-chart setups like candlestick, Heiken Ashi, and point-and-figure analysis. He also shares a structured approach to entering and exiting trades in zones, scaling in and out, and managing stop-loss placement during market swings.With decades of experience and a direct, no-hype teaching style, Chris provides a high-value session ideal for serious traders looking to level up. He also offers a 20% discount on his 750-page Master Trading eBook and mentoring programs by using code 2BT25 before the end of August.

Estrategias de mercado
¿Rally ilusionante o trampa que sirva como trampolín bajista? Wall Street ante su momento más decisivo

Estrategias de mercado

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 13:37


Este capítulo cuenta con la colaboración de ford.es.Tras varias semanas encadenando ascensos, Wall Street se encuentra en una de las zonas de recuperación más críticas a la que se podía enfrentar. Las bolsas de EEUU se encuentran pegadas al rango de recuperación del 61,8/66% de la última caída, un nivel que tradicionalmente actúa como una frontera técnica que separa un simple rebote dentro de una tendencia bajista de una recuperación sólida y estructural."Solo si se supera con solvencia podremos pensar que estaríamos ante una señal técnica positiva de gran calado", explica Joan Cabrero, analista técnico y estratega de Ecotrader en el último episodio del podcast Estrategia de MercadoEste umbral técnico se encuentra en niveles de 20.300 en el Nasdaq 100, 18.300 en el Nasdaq Composite, 5.700 en el S&P 500, y 41.850/42.220 en el Dow Jones Industrial. Resistencias claras y bien definidas, cuya superación o rechazo ofrecerán pistas muy valiosas para la hoja de ruta de las próximas semanas.Y es que, si desde estos niveles vemos un giro bajista, "seguiré manejando la hipótesis de que todavía puede haber un nuevo susto de mercado, que llevaría a los índices a marcar nuevos mínimos del año, con el S&P 500 buscando la zona de los 4.500 puntos, que supondría replicar con precisión quirúrgica la estructura bajista del año 2022", señala Cabrero.La buena noticia es que Europa va por delante. Mientras Wall Street duda, el EuroStoxx 50 ya ha conseguido batir la resistencia del 61,8% y los 2/3 de recuperación de su última caída, lo que refuerza la tesis de que los mínimos del pasado 7 de abril fueron un suelo fiable.Pese al optimismo, este contexto no es propicio para la toma de posiciones en el mercado de renta variable. El inversor que quiera comprar debe esperar a que los precios le ofrezcan una mejor oportunidad. "De forma generalizada, el escenario más interesante para plantear nuevas compras lo situaría en estos momentos cuando hubiera una mejora sustancial de la ecuación rentabilidad-riesgo, sobre todo si tenemos en cuenta que, en este momento, el soporte clave (stop) que no debe perderse para mantener un contexto alcista se encuentra en los mínimos del 7 de abril en los índices que ya han superado el 61,8% de retroceso de Fibonacci de toda la caída desde los altos del año", aclara Cabrero.En el caso del selectivo español, "el escenario más interesante para plantear nuevas compras lo situaría en estos momentos en la zona de los 12.350 puntos, pero este nivel debería elevarse si el Ibex logra marcar nuevos altos", destaca Cabrero, que recuerda la cercanía actual del Ibex 35 a su zona de máximos y cómo hasta los mínimos de abril aún tiene un 14% de distancia.En Europa es similar la situación, con el EuroStoxx 50 a un 14% de los mínimos de abril, aunque eso sí, con algo más de recorrido hasta los máximos del año, un 5%.Cómo operar en Wall StreetEl hecho de que la bolsa de EEUU en todas sus referencias esté testeando resistencias invita a mantener la calma y observar con atención antes de tomar decisiones. "Si los índices logran romper al alza esta barrera, sería partidario de esperar una corrección proporcional del último rebote -entre el 50 y el 61,8%- para comprar con mayor confianza. Es decir, esperar el pullback clásico tras la ruptura de una resistencia clave", señala Cabrero."En cambio, matiz el experto, "si desde estos niveles vemos un giro bajista, seguiré manejando la hipótesis de que todavía puede haber un nuevo susto de mercado, que llevaría a los índices a marcar nuevos mínimos del año, con el S&P 500 buscando la zona de los 4.500 puntos, que supondría replicar con precisión quirúrgica la estructura bajista del año 2022. Y es que, ese nivel es el que está marcado en rojo como posible zona de ganga, una oportunidad táctica para cargar cartera si el mercado decide darnos otra vuelta de tuerca a la baja.

Estrategias de mercado
Cuatro compañías que no pueden faltar en el 'radar' de un inversor con visión estratégica

Estrategias de mercado

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 15:29


Este capítulo cuenta con la colaboración de ford.es.F. S. M.  madrid. Nuevo intento fallido de la bolsa europea en su afán por superar las primeras resistencias a las que se enfrenta. Los niveles de recuperación del 61,80% de Fibonacci y los dos tercios de toda la caída previa, de acuerdo con la Teoría de Dow, ese rango de resistencia que se sitúa entre los 5.175 y los 5.220 puntos, sigue sin conseguir ser batido por parte del EuroStoxx 50 pese a haber sido presionado durante las dos últimas jornadas.La superación de esa cota es clave para poder hablar de un giro sólido y fiable. Y es que, si finalmente consigue superar los 5.220 puntos, las probabilidades de que se pierdan los 4.545 puntos en un nuevo arreón bajista serían mucho menores. Es decir, un suelo de largo plazo estaría probablemente asentado. Por ahora, “el alcance de esa importante zona de resistencia la veo como una buena oportunidad para hacer limpieza de posiciones débiles que puedan tener en cartera, ya habrá tiempo de volver a comprar en próximas correcciones, sabiendo con más certeza donde están los límites de caída”, expresa Joan Cabrero, analista técnico y estratega de Ecotrader. Sin embargo, existen cuatro compañías que merecen estar muy presentes en el radar de cualquier inversor con visión estratégica. Son valores sólidos, con negocios bien posicionados, que aportan soluciones reales a retos globales. No hablamos de fuegos artificiales, ni de modas pasajeras: hablamos de compañías que construyen, que sostienen y que lideran y que, además tienen un potente recorrido por técnico. NutrienNutrien es un título que recomendé comprar meses atrás y que entiendo que podría formar parte de una cartera bien diversificada y equilibrada a nivel sectorial. Todo apunta a que el mayor proveedor mundial de insumos agrícolas, incluidos fertilizantes, productos químicos y soluciones tecnológicas, ha establecido un suelo en la zona de los 43,80 dólares. La hipótesis es que recupere su tendencia alcista de largo plazo, tras su caída desde los 118 hasta los 43,80 dólares. Solo que recupere un 23,60 o un 38,20% de Fibonacci de esa caída supondría ver alzas hacia los 60 y 72 dólares, pero buscaría objetivos más ambiciosos como son los 90 y 100 dólares. EnagasHay que vigilar el título porque si supera los 14 euros, es cuestión de tiempo que en próximos meses vuelva al techo del movimientolateral de los últimos diez años que son los 16,5 euros. Es cuestión de tiempo que en próximos meses vuelva a esa cota. No es un potencial tan elevado como elde Nutrien pero un valor estable que ofrezca un 20% de revalorización en los próximos meses con esos dividendos se presenta como una opción a tener en cuenta.AirbusSe tarta de un título que en las últimas semanasha replicado la caída que tuvo lugar el año pasado. De los 177 a los 128 euros ha vivido una caída idéntica a la que vimos entre los 172 y los 125 el año pasado. El alcance de la base de este canal, que se puede canalizar perfectamente, ha sido una oportunidad para comprar Airbus. Y si alguien no la tiene en cartera o quiere comprar, la zona de 130, 135, es idónea en busca de al menos el techo del canal, los 180 euros. Estamos hablando de un potencial del 35%, y por encima de los 180 euros entraría en subida libre absoluta, la situación técnica más artista que existe. CelnexLos mínimos que marcó en octubre del 2023, en los 26 euros han sido un suelo y desde entonces está sentando las bases de una reconstrucción alcista que en próximos meses debería llevar al valor a volver a sus altos históricos que están en la zona de los 62 euros, que son los máximos del 2021. Estamos hablando de un recorrido del 70%. Tendremos pistas de que el proceso de reconstrucción alcista estaría ganando enteros si supera, los 37/37,5 euros. Si bate esa resistencia, se confirmaría un patrón de giro alcista clarísimo, en forma de hombro cabeza y hombro invertido que sugiere alzas al menos a 55. 

Podkast Rowerowy
#215 Jak LT1, satysfakcja, tlen i glukoza zmieniają podejście do treningu? gość: Paweł Pietrzak

Podkast Rowerowy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2025 58:48


W niewielkim Suszcu, na Śląsku, powstało miejsce, które zmienia myślenie o kolarskim treningu. Na torze o wdzięcznej nazwie Fibonacci spotkali się Piotr Peszko i Piotr Gryszka, Paweł Pietrzak — inżynier kolarstwa, który udowadnia, że prawdziwy rozwój to nie tylko więcej watów i szybsze czasy. To także satysfakcja z jazdy, głęboka świadomość ciała i radość, która płynie z mądrego wysiłku. Dzień spędzony razem był nie tylko lekcją techniki, ale i podróżą w głąb tego, co naprawdę buduje mistrzostwo na rowerze.Paweł Pietrzak — inżynier kolarstwa, który udowadnia, że prawdziwy rozwój to nie tylko więcej watów i szybsze czasy.Link do książki: https://www.amazon.com/All-Road-Bike-Revolution-Comfortable-Reliable/dp/0976546051Produkcja Oryginalna Earborne Media

New: Football Clichés
Accidental FIFA commentary, Newcastle's Fibonacci fate & Premier League cliche analytics

New: Football Clichés

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 62:57


Adam Hurrey is joined on the Adjudication Panel by Charlie Eccleshare and David Walker. On the agenda: Wembley's drum-beat woodwork, the most "mid-2000s FIFA game" commentary of the season, why Newcastle now must win 21 league titles in a row or the world will implode, the textbook FA Cup final pairing, and mapping Manchester United's doldrums era to that of Liverpool's 1990-2020. Meanwhile, the panel contemplate the Club World Cup, live on Channel 5, and absorb a listener's deep data dive on Premier League press-conference cliches. Adam's book, Extra Time Beckons, Penalties Loom: How to Use (and Abuse) The Language of Football, is OUT NOW: https://geni.us/ExtraTimeBeckons Visit nordvpn.com/cliches to get four extra months on a two-year plan with NordVPN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Estrategias de mercado
¿Qué tendría que pasar para que los bajistas claudiquen definitivamente y cómo operar si sucede?

Estrategias de mercado

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 11:49


Este capítulo cuenta con la colaboración de ford.es.El rebote que acumulan las bolsas de Europa y EEUU ha llegado a rondar, en casos puntuales como el que protagoniza el Nasdaq 100, el 16% desde que el pasado 7 de abril se alcanzaron los últimos mínimos. A pesar de los vaivenes y la volatilidad, las bolsas han encadenado ganancias que les permiten alejarse de las cotas marcadas en los momentos más críticos del mes al calor del avance en las negociaciones entre EEUU y sus socios comerciales para limar las barreras arancelarias impuestas al comercio internacional desde el pasado 2 abril -el famoso Día de la Liberación-.Sin embargo, "necesitamos que el rebote actual logre superar el 61,8% de retroceso de Fibonacci de toda la caída desde los altos del año" para darle más fiabilidad, explica Joan Cabrero, analista técnico y estratega de Ecotrader en el último episodio del podcast Estrategia de Mercado."A día de hoy, solo el Ibex 35 ha conseguido hacerlo y el FTSE Mib italiano está a un pasito de lograrlo. En cambio, el S&P 500 y el Nasdaq 100 aún deben superar resistencias claves en la zona de 5.650/5.700 y 20.000/20.300, respectivamente, lo que implica avances del 4 y 6% adicionales", detalla el experto. En Europa, el EuroStoxx 50 debería batir la zona de 5.175/5.220 para enviar esa misma señal de fortaleza estructural.Cómo operar si se baten esas resistenciasMuchos inversores tienden a pensar que, en caso de que se superen esos niveles técnicos, "lo adecuado es comprar sin pensárselo, pero yo no soy partidario de hacerlo", expresa cabrero, que señala que si se superan resistencias, "la información que tendremos es valiosa: los mínimos del 7 de abril habrían sido un suelo y eso nos permitirá esperar con paciencia una nueva corrección para entrar, ya con la tranquilidad de saber que ese nivel probablemente no será perdido"."Ya habrá tiempo de comprar en cuanto haya otra onda bajista. Una aproximación a la zona de resistencia de los 5.175/5.220 puntos la vería a priori como una oportunidad para deshacerme de valores que fueron comprados fechas atrás pensando que la tendencia alcista podía seguir imponiéndose y no han reaccionado de la manera que se esperaba de ellos", considera el experto.

Buscadores de la verdad
UTP354 Los constructores de números segunda parte

Buscadores de la verdad

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 122:15


En nuestro anterior podcast grabado precisamente el 21 de abril, fecha en la que oficialmente murió el papa Francisco les empezamos a hablar de los constructores de números. No encontramos casual que el papa falleciese exactamente ese dia, ya que no es un día cualquiera. Es el Natalis Romae, el aniversario fundacional de Roma, ciudad que desde hace más de dos mil años ha sido el epicentro del poder político, religioso y simbólico de Occidente. Y precisamente hoy, en esta fecha cargada de ritual y resonancia, muere el Papa Francisco. En plena resurrección de Jesucristo, uno muere y el otro renace. ¿Casualidad? En este podcast, ya sabéis que no creemos en ellas. Hoy, en Buscadores de la Verdad, vamos a descifrar lo que muchos pasarán por alto: la profunda e inquietante importancia del número 8 en la vida, el legado y la muerte del Papa. Francisco fue el primer Papa jesuita, el primero procedente de América, el Papa de la Agenda 2030, de las vacunas, de la simplificación de los rituales. Un Papa atípico. Y, como veremos, un Papa marcado por el 8 desde el principio hasta el final. Nació un 17 de diciembre de 1936. Fallece un 21 de abril de 2025. 88 años y 125 días después. Un doble 8 y un 1+2+5 = 8. El símbolo del infinito. El equilibrio kármico. El reinicio del ciclo. Pero no acaba ahí: convertido en el octavo Papa enterrado en Santa María la Mayor, bajo un escudo papal alterado misteriosamente para exhibir una estrella de ocho puntas, su historia está plagada de estos guiños numéricos que parecen trazados por una mano invisible. En este episodio vamos a hablar de arquitectura oculta, de rituales milenarios, de cómo la elite que gobierna entre bambalinas utiliza los números y los símbolos como herramientas para construir la realidad. Y en este caso, el número 8 aparece como la clave de todo. Porque cuando entiendes el lenguaje oculto de los que mandan, sabes que todo está diseñado. Desde las fechas, hasta los funerales. Desde los escudos hasta los silencios del Vaticano. El 21 de abril, Roma celebra su nacimiento... y el Vaticano entierra a su Papa más simbólico. La era de Francisco se cierra en un ciclo perfecto, sellado con un 8. ¿Qué se abre ahora? ¿Qué nuevo paradigma se está gestando en la sombra? Prácticamente desde el principio de este podcast, en el UTP8 Universo fractal ya tratamos la importancia de los números y como estos crean la realidad que vivimos. Son, como dijimos en el anterior podcast, los ladrillos del universo. Leere unos pasajes de la tesina “Los conjuntos numéricos a través de la historia” de Veronica Valdez: “En el pasado la matemática fue considerada una ciencia relacionada directamente a las cantidades, en relación con las magnitudes (desde la geometria); a los números (desde la aritmética) o a la generalización de los dos (desde el álgebra). Las primeras nociones de número y la acción de contar datan de la prehistoria. La causa que originó el desarrollo de este conocimiento en el hombre primitivo fue su necesidad de proteger sus bienes, la adaptación a los ciclos que la madre naturaleza le imponía le aseguraban su alimentación. El hombre prehistórico plasmó los primeros indicios matemáticos en sus vasijas (dibujos geométricos) y sus primeros sistemas de cálculos se basaron en el uso de los dedos de las manos o la utilización del cuerpo, este método resulta evidente al ver que muchos de los sistemas de numeración son de base 5 o 10.” Fueron los egipcios en el tercer milenio antes de cristo los que desarrollan unas matemáticas más avanzadas llegando a plantear problemas complejos como el calculo de superficies, lo cual era vital para el reparto de la tierra fértil fecundada por las crecidas del Nilo. La tierra se movia y cambiaba ligeramente de aspecto y era imprescindible para que reinase el orden que dicho reparto fuera lo mas ajustado a derecho posible. Luego los romanos mejoraron hasta cierto aspecto el uso de jeroglíficos de los egipcios por simples letras. En ese momento se seguía utilizando todavía el sistema babilónico que consistía en escribir en tablillas de arcilla utilizando un palito en forma de cuña. Una cuña apuntaba hacia abajo y la otro hacia la izquierda. El problema consistia en que era un sistema con solo 60 números, lo cual limitaba mucho el calculo mental. Los babilonios utilizaban, eso si, la forma en que cada dígito tenia un valor disitinto dependiendo de la posición que ocupase. El primer sistema matematico que utilizo al mismo tiempo el principio posicional y el cero fue el sistema de los mayas. “En este sistema 1 kin (sol) representa un día, 20 kines forman un huinal. Como 20 huinales representan 400 días, lo cual es mucho mayor que la duración exacta del año (este sistema fue utilizado para cálculos astronómicos), los mayas llamaron tun a 18 huinales, o 360 días. Excepto por este nivel, el resto del sistema es vigesimal.” “No se tiene conocimiento con exactitud cómo surgió, pero se sabe que fue un sistema de numeración mejorado por los hindúes y los árabes lo llevaron a Europa. De esta forma a las cifras se las llamó árabes debido a su origen, de la misma manera que escribirlas de derecha a izquierda (unidad, decena, centena, etc.) Hacia el año 976 Gerberto Aurillac (futuro Papa) conoce las primeras cifras en España, que ya estaba influenciada por la cultura musulmana, pero su influencia fue limitada. En el siglo XII se conoce las primeras traducciones al latin de las obras de un matemático árabe al- Jwarizmi, de quien se conocen los términos algoritmo y guarismo; de esta forma las cifras árabes comienzan a introducirse en el círculo culto europeo. En el año 1202, Fibonacci publica el "Libro del ábaco" que acopía y amplia las cifras y los procedimientos de cálculo utilizados por los árabes. Durante este siglo se consolidó la aritmética decimal sobre todo en los concerniente a las actividades comerciales. Sin embargo el método árabe y sus ventajas para calcular debieron sortear varios inconvenientes por parte de los calculistas de la época que ante la amenaza de un nuevo método mucho más sencillo, que atentaba supuestamente a su fuente de trabajo, recurrieron a estrategias bajas como hacer correr el rumor que el sistema de cálculo árabe tan sencillo, debía tener algo de magia o un cierto poder demoníaco. Esta acusación fue astutamente utilizada en la época de la Inquisición. Recién a fines del siglo XVI con Montaigne comenzó a abrirse paso nuevamente el sistema de numeración árabe y finalmente se generalizó con la Revolución Francesa. A partir de dicho momento histórico se comenzó a utilizar al 10 como base del sistema métrico decimal.” Con todo este resumen vengo a comentar que el enorme poder de los números estaba en poquísimas manos hasta bien entrado siglo 16 y que para ese entonces muchos de los secretos y la simbología que escondían estos paso a ser solo aprendido en las sectas, en las logias y en las futuras universidades que estaban también creadas por los mismos. LA EDUCACION según Lord Bertrand Russell en su obra "La Perspectiva Científica", 1931, nos dice: "Los jesuitas proporcionan una clase de educación a los niños que han de ser hombres corrientes en el mundo, y otra distinta a áquellos que han de llegar a ser miembros de la Compañía de Jesús. De análoga manera, los gobernantes científicos proporcionarán un género de educación a los hombres y mujeres corrientes, y otro diferente a aquéllos que hayan de ser el poder científico. Los hombres y mujeres corrientes es de esperar que sean dóciles, diligentes, puntuales, de poco pensar y que se sientan satisfechos. Por otro lado, aquellos niños y niñas que estén destinados a ser miembros de la clase gobernante, recibirán una educación muy diferente. Serán seleccionados, algunos antes de nacer, otros durante los primeros tres años de vida, y unos pocos entre los tres y seis años. Toda la ciencia conocida se aplicará al desarrollo simultáneo de su inteligencia y de su voluntad. ….." Y es que para todos la ciencia ha sido creada supuestamente por científicos, ¿no? Uno de los parangones mundiales es la Royal Society fundada el 28 de noviembre de 1660 en Londres. Sus fundadores fueron un grupo de 12 científicos y pensadores, entre los que destacan Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, John Wilkins y William Petty. Lo que no nos cuentan es que el milenarismo y la cábala estaba en los orígenes de la Royal Society. Pero como escribió Boyle, los científicos, "sacerdotes de la naturaleza", habrían de adquirir, durante el milenio, "un conocimiento mucho mayor del que Adán pudo tener del maravilloso universo de Dios". Esta afirmación supone que, en la expectativa de Boyle, la ciencia permitiría alcanzar un estadio más avanzado que el presupuesto por la condición adánica, y acceder, en cierto modo, a la condición divina. Con palabras de la serpiente a Eva, ya había asegurado Bacon en la Nueva Atlántida que algún día los hombres serían como dioses, y ésta habría de ser, decía Lewis Mumford, "la meta final no declarada de la ciencia moderna”. (Noble 1999, pág 88). Dentro de la UNED (la universidad a distancia en España) podemos leer un texto titulado “LA ROYAL SOCIETY Y LA MASONERÍA” que dice asi: “La Royal Society se origina cuando doce hombres cultivados adoptaron la costumbre, poco después de 1640, de reunirse esporádicamente en Londres para conversar y discutir en la residencia de uno de ellos o bien en una taberna próxima al Gresham College. Al poco tiempo, bajo patrocinio del monarca, decidieron crear una asociación para el estudio de los mecanismos de la naturaleza. Para asegurarse de que los dogmas no fueran un obstáculo, desterraron de sus asambleas toda discusión de tintes religiosos y políticos. Y eso a pesar de que los doce fundadores diferían tanto en cuestiones políticas y religiosas, como en experiencia científica y rango social. Entre los nombres de los primeros miembros de la Royal Society se encuentran científicos que dieron nombre a sus descubrimientos; así, la Ley de Hooke, la Ley de Boyle, la construcción de Huygens, las leyes de Newton, el movimiento browniano, y esto sin contar a científicos de menor talla como Christopher Wren, John Eveyn, John Wilkins, Elias Ashmole, John Flamsteed o Edmund Halley. Sin embargo, los hombres que fundaron esta Sociedad no sólo fueron los primeros científicos, sino, al mismo tiempo, los últimos "magos". De hecho, Ashmole pertenecía a una sociedad de rosacruces y practicaba la astrología, Newton estudió y escribió acerca de los conceptos alquímicos de los rosacruces, y Hooke llevó a cabo experimentos con arañas y cuernos de unicornio.” Mucho antes John Dee, el asesor de la reina Isabel I de Inglaterra aunque no participó directamente en la creación de la Royal Society, su legado como defensor de las matemáticas, la navegación y el conocimiento empírico influyó en el ambiente intelectual que dio lugar a esta institución. Su reputación como "mago" y las acusaciones de nigromancia reflejan la percepción de sus prácticas herméticas y adivinatorias, que, aunque controvertidas, eran parte de su búsqueda de conocimiento universal. Recordemos que hoy dia podemos ver en el museo de Londres su piedra de obsidiana negra donde el mismo reconocía que veía a seres de otro mundo con los que decia comunicarse. Dee creo el alfabeto enoquiano, también conocido como el "lenguaje angélico" o "alfabeto mágico" desarrollado por Dee y su colaborador Edward Kelley durante sus sesiones de videncia (scrying) en la década de 1580. Mientras Isabel I valoraba a Dee como consejero (eligió la fecha de su coronación en 1559 basándose en sus cálculos astrológicos), otros lo veían como un charlatán peligroso. Su casa fue saqueada tras su partida a Europa en 1583, y bajo Jacobo I, enemigo de la brujería, Dee perdió ese trato de favor. Su imagen como "mago" inspiró personajes como Próspero en La Tempestad de Shakespeare y perduró en la cultura popular, como en la ópera de Damon Albarn o la canción de Iron Maiden “El Alquimista”. Termino esta entradilla con otro texto de Lord Bertrand Russell extraído de su obra, "El Impacto de la Ciencia en la Sociedad", 1951: "Aunque esta ciencia será estudiada con diligencia, deberá reservarse estrictamente a la clase gobernante. Al populacho no habrá de permitírsele saber cómo fueron generadas sus convicciones. Una vez perfeccionada la técnica, cada gobierno que haya estado a cargo de la educación por una generación, podrá controlar a sus sujetos de forma segura, sin la necesidad de recurrir a ejércitos ni policías. Actualmente, la población del mundo crece a razón de unos 58.000 individuos por día. La guerra, hasta ahora, no ha tenido un gran efecto en este crecimiento, que continuó a lo largo de cada una de las dos guerras mundiales... La guerra hasta la fecha ha sido decepcionante al respecto... pero quizás la guerra bacteriológica resultare más efectiva. Si una peste negra se propagare una vez en cada generación, los sobrevivientes podrían procrear libremente sin llenar al mundo demasiado... La situación seguramente sería poco placentera, pero, ¿qué importa?" ………………………………………………………………………………………. Imagina por un momento que entras en una antigua ciudad del sur de Italia, hace más de dos mil quinientos años. Calles de piedra, templos consagrados a dioses griegos... y una puerta. Una puerta modesta, sin adornos ostentosos, pero con una inscripción grabada con precisión geométrica: "No entre aquí quien no sepa geometría”. Estás ante la escuela de los pitagóricos, una de las sociedades más enigmáticas de la historia antigua. Fundada por Pitágoras de Samos, no era solo una escuela de matemáticas, como a veces se enseña en las aulas. Era una hermandad. Una especie de secta del conocimiento, donde los números eran algo más que herramientas: eran divinidades, principios cósmicos, claves para entender el alma del universo. Los pitagóricos creían que todo en la naturaleza —el movimiento de los astros, los ciclos vitales, incluso la música— respondía a proporciones numéricas. El número uno simbolizaba la unidad, el origen. El dos, la dualidad, lo femenino. El tres, la perfección. El cuatro, la justicia. Y el diez... el número perfecto, resultado de sumar 1+2+3+4. Un número sagrado. Este triángulo tiene cuatro filas y, si las cuentas todas, suma diez puntos. Ese número —el 10— era considerado el número perfecto por los pitagóricos, porque resultaba de la suma de los cuatro primeros números naturales: 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10 Pero esto no era solo una curiosidad matemática. Cada número tenía un significado simbólico y cosmológico: 1 representaba la unidad, el origen, el punto de partida de toda existencia. 2 simbolizaba la dualidad: luz y oscuridad, masculino y femenino, arriba y abajo. 3 era la tríada perfecta, el equilibrio entre los opuestos (principio muy común también en filosofías orientales). 4 simbolizaba la estabilidad, los cuatro elementos (tierra, agua, aire y fuego), las cuatro estaciones, los puntos cardinales. Así, la Tetraktys se convertía en un resumen místico del universo: todo lo que existe puede explicarse a través de esta progresión sagrada. No era un simple dibujo. Los pitagóricos juraban sobre la Tetraktys, como otros juran sobre la Biblia o una constitución. Su fórmula era: "Juro por el que entregó a nuestra alma la Tetraktys, fuente que contiene en sí la raíz y fuente de la eterna naturaleza." ¿Lo notas? No están hablando solo de matemáticas. Están hablando de la naturaleza eterna, de algo fundamental que estructura el cosmos. Este juramento era una especie de sacramento, una alianza con la armonía universal. Utilizaban símbolos que aún hoy reconocemos. La estrella pentagonal, también conocida como pentagrama, era para ellos un emblema de perfección y salud. Cada ángulo de la estrella formaba la razón áurea, ese número casi mágico que sigue apareciendo en la naturaleza, en la arquitectura, en el arte… y, para algunos, incluso en el diseño de logotipos de poderosas organizaciones contemporáneas. Y aquí es donde la cosa se pone interesante. Los pitagóricos dividían a sus miembros en dos categorías: los akusmáticos, que solo escuchaban y obedecían sin cuestionar, y los matemáticos, que accedían a las enseñanzas ocultas. Este modelo jerárquico, basado en el secreto y la iniciación progresiva, suena familiar. Muy familiar. ¿A qué otras organizaciones te recuerda? Algunas sociedades secretas modernas —como ciertas logias masónicas— han heredado no solo la estructura iniciática, sino también muchos símbolos y conceptos pitagóricos. La estrella de cinco puntas, el ojo que todo lo ve, el uso de números y proporciones sagradas, la idea de que el verdadero conocimiento no debe estar al alcance de todos, sino reservado para una élite que lo custodia. La Tetraktys no desapareció con la caída de los pitagóricos. Su simbolismo se filtró a través de corrientes esotéricas posteriores. Por ejemplo: En la Cábala judía, el Árbol de la Vida también parte de una estructura numérica y jerárquica del universo. En la masonería, aunque no se usa directamente la Tetraktys, la idea del triángulo sagrado, la progresión simbólica del número y la veneración de la geometría sagrada están muy presentes. En el hermetismo y el neoplatonismo, se reutiliza el simbolismo pitagórico para hablar de los planos de existencia, del alma y del conocimiento secreto. Incluso en el mundo moderno, algunos investigadores creen que ciertos símbolos corporativos y arquitectónicos siguen patrones de proporción y estructura que tienen su origen, directa o indirectamente, en la Tetraktys. La Tetraktys no era un dibujo bonito. Era una clave esotérica. Un mandala numérico. Una representación del orden invisible que rige el universo. Para los pitagóricos, entenderla era un paso hacia la iluminación intelectual y espiritual. Y ahora, volvamos a los números. Porque hay una historia que suele pasar desapercibida en los libros de texto... Se cuenta que los pitagóricos sabían más de lo que enseñaban. Por ejemplo, que ocultaron deliberadamente conceptos como los números negativos. ¿Por qué? Porque esos números, que hoy usamos sin pensar, eran perturbadores. ¿Cómo podía existir algo menos que nada? ¿Cómo explicar al pueblo llano la idea de restar una cantidad mayor a una menor y obtener un resultado real, aunque invisible? La respuesta fue simple: lo escondieron. Evitaron esas operaciones, redefinieron los problemas, o simplemente los consideraron imposibles. Para ellos, un universo perfecto no podía contener números "erróneos", "oscuros" o "negativos". Así de poderosa era su creencia en la armonía matemática del mundo. Y ahora piensa en esto: ¿cuántas cosas damos hoy por verdaderas sin entenderlas? ¿Cuántas ideas nos han sido negadas por parecer “imposibles”? La sombra de los pitagóricos es alargada. Y si miras con atención, quizá todavía la veas en las instituciones que dirigen el conocimiento, en los rituales simbólicos que acompañan actos de poder, o incluso… en las matemáticas que se enseñan en nuestras escuelas. Porque como decía otro sabio antiguo: la ignorancia no es falta de información, sino la imposición del silencio. ………………………………………………………………………………………. Los terrenos donde se construyó Washington, D.C., eran parte de una zona conocida como "Rome" (Roma) antes de que se estableciera la capital de Estados Unidos. Este nombre se debe a que, en el siglo XVII, un terrateniente llamado Francis Pope, quien era propietario de una parcela en la zona, nombró su propiedad "Rome" en un guiño humorístico a la ciudad de Roma, Italia, y al río Tíber, comparándolo con el río Anacostia o el Potomac. Incluso se dice que Pope se autoproclamó "Papa de Roma" en tono jocoso. Cuando se decidió construir la nueva capital federal en 1790, los terrenos de "Rome" fueron parte de las tierras cedidas por Maryland para crear el Distrito de Columbia. Sin embargo, el nombre "Rome" cayó en desuso con el desarrollo de la ciudad planificada por Pierre Charles L'Enfant y la adopción del nombre "Washington" en honor a George Washington. El hombre que recibió el encargo de diseñar la nueva capital de Estados Unidos en 1791 fue Pierre Charles L’Enfant, un arquitecto y urbanista nacido en Francia que había luchado en la Guerra de Independencia estadounidense junto a George Washington. Era un apasionado de la arquitectura monumental y tenía una visión muy clara: la ciudad debía ser una representación del nuevo orden del mundo. Aunque no hay registros definitivos que lo identifiquen como masón —al contrario que muchos de sus contemporáneos como George Washington, Benjamin Franklin o Thomas Jefferson—, su diseño está repleto de símbolos que son clave en la tradición masónica y pitagórica. Esto ha llevado a muchos estudiosos a pensar que, si no era miembro formal de la masonería, al menos estaba fuertemente influenciado por ella. Cuando observamos desde el aire (o en un plano detallado) el trazado urbano de Washington D.C., comienzan a aparecer formas geométricas muy específicas que nos indican el uso de la geometría sagrada en el plano de la ciudad: La estrella de cinco puntas Una de las figuras más debatidas del diseño de Washington es la estrella pentagonal (el pentagrama), que muchos dicen puede verse trazando líneas entre la Casa Blanca, el Capitolio, y varios otros puntos clave como el Washington Monument y el Jefferson Memorial. El pentagrama es un símbolo ancestral que los pitagóricos veneraban como representación del equilibrio, la salud y la proporción áurea. Los masones lo heredaron y lo usan como símbolo del hombre perfecto, microcosmos del universo. La escuadra y el compás Estos dos instrumentos, esenciales en la arquitectura, son símbolos masónicos por excelencia. La escuadra representa la rectitud moral y el compás, los límites que uno debe imponer a sus pasiones. En el plano de Washington, las avenidas diagonales que cruzan la cuadrícula ortogonal tradicional parecen estar trazadas con escuadra y compás. Por ejemplo, Pensylvania Avenue y Maryland Avenue se cruzan formando ángulos casi rituales, como si fuesen dibujadas con instrumentos de aprendiz de logia. El triángulo y la Tetraktys Al unir algunos de los puntos clave de la ciudad se forman triángulos equiláteros y escaleno, que recuerdan tanto a la Tetraktys pitagórica como al Delta radiante masónico, el triángulo con el ojo que todo lo ve en su interior. Washington D.C. no fue construida al azar. Su disposición recuerda más a la de un templo iniciático que a la de una ciudad práctica. Cada monumento, cada calle y cada eje visual parece tener una función simbólica. La ciudad se convierte así en un espacio ritualizado, diseñado para canalizar no solo el poder político, sino el espiritual. Esto concuerda con la visión de muchos de los Padres Fundadores, que eran masones y creían en una forma de deísmo ilustrado, donde Dios no era el dios de una religión concreta, sino el Gran Arquitecto del Universo, la divinidad racional que había creado el cosmos a través de leyes matemáticas y geométricas. Hay quienes consideran todas estas conexiones como meras coincidencias. Pero otros —historiadores, ocultistas, arquitectos, e incluso funcionarios del propio Capitolio— han reconocido que la influencia masónica en el diseño de Washington D.C. no puede negarse. George Washington, masón de alto grado, puso la primera piedra del Capitolio en una ceremonia masónica el 18 de septiembre de 1793, vistiendo su delantal de logia. La colocación de monumentos, obeliscos (como el del Washington Monument) y referencias astrológicas refuerzan la idea de que la ciudad está alineada no solo con principios políticos, sino con principios cósmicos. Washington sigue siendo una ciudad codificada. Muchos de sus símbolos están a la vista, pero pocos los reconocen. El diseño original de L’Enfant fue alterado con el tiempo, sí, pero los patrones geométricos centrales permanecen. Y algunos sostienen que el espíritu de los antiguos pitagóricos, con su amor por los números sagrados y la geometría divina, vive hoy en las estructuras de poder moderno… solo que oculto entre calles, columnas y monumentos. ………………………………………………………………………………………. Bueno y me despido con algunas de mis ultimas Frases_UTP, ya saben, esas perlas que voy soltando de vez en cuando y que tienen agrupadas en Twitter bajo ese hastag: “Somos jockeys ocasionales de almas inmanentes, montando a galope los corceles efímeros de nuestra existencia terrenal, en un fugaz viaje donde el viento del tiempo susurra nuestra impermanencia y la tierra guarda el eco de nuestras huellas pasajeras." “Tanto el sabio como el ignorante pueden tomar malas decisiones, pero solo el ignorante no admite haberlas tomado.” “Si trabajas el presente nunca sentirás vergüenza por el pasado y te sentirás orgulloso en el futuro.” ………………………………………………………………………………………. Conductor del programa UTP Ramón Valero @tecn_preocupado Un técnico Preocupado un FP2 IVOOX UTP http://cutt.ly/dzhhGrf BLOG http://cutt.ly/dzhh2LX Ayúdame desde mi Crowfunding aquí https://cutt.ly/W0DsPVq Invitados Dra Yane #JusticiaParaUTP @ayec98_2 Médico y Buscadora de la verdad. Con Dios siempre! No permito q me dividan c/izq -derecha, raza, religión ni nada de la Creación. https://youtu.be/TXEEZUYd4c0 …. soros triplehijueputa @soroshijueputa2 En contra de un sistema corrupto al servicio de la élite globalista …. José Antonio @jasava7 Mensajero de la Nueva Era. Librepensador y escritor. Ciudadano del Mundo. Derecho Natural. DDHH. Paz, equidad y fraternidad. Jinete en lucha por un Mundo Mejor. …. SirGalahad @Sirgalahad79 Mi honor se llama lealtad. …. LaJessi @LaJessibot Donde hay bromas hay verdades | Qué no te engañen la pena es la novia del pene #NoTeRaye #TweetStar Filósofa del barrio #CBD No me llames cani o #tekillyulabida …. Ernesto @Ernesto22596980 A mi me paga Putin EXPEDIENTE ROYUELA …. Luz Madeleine Munayco @lecabel8 ………………………………………………………………………………………. Enlaces citados en el podcast: AYUDA A TRAVÉS DE LA COMPRA DE MIS LIBROS https://tecnicopreocupado.com/2024/11/16/ayuda-a-traves-de-la-compra-de-mis-libros/ UTP8 Universo fractal https://www.ivoox.com/utp8-universo-fractal-audios-mp3_rf_9991951_1.html El Papa y Roma… https://x.com/ElHiloRojoTV/status/1914235914999521647 Hilo sobre el papa https://x.com/tecn_preocupado/status/1914770003712467453 Féretro de papa Francisco como bandera de España https://x.com/ayec98_2/status/1915421017083711970 Capilla ardiente papa Francisco como sexo femenino https://x.com/ayec98_2/status/1915173455655215303 UTP268 Matematicas Vorticiales: Explorando el Tejido del Universo https://www.ivoox.com/utp268-matematicas-vorticiales-explorando-tejido-del-universo-audios-mp3_rf_121126662_1.html UTP272 Matemáticas Vorticiales: los vórtices de la vida https://www.ivoox.com/utp272-matematicas-vorticiales-vortices-vida-audios-mp3_rf_122197421_1.html ………………………………………………………………………………………. Música utilizada en este podcast: Tema inicial Heros ………………………………………………………………………………………. Epílogo ÚRSULA - AGUA DE LIMÓN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKfs8GIorhc

The Real Investment Show Podcast
4-23-25 Taking Risk Off the Table

The Real Investment Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 5:09


Markets were close to turning a short-term buy signal into a sell signal...but...yesterday's rally saved it, and a continuation of the rally today will also provide octane for buyers (presuming nothing goes wrong). Markets have been over sold by three standard deviations, and still remain depressed against their moving averages. Markets have gone through a 61% Fibonacci retracement, which is pretty deep for any type of a market move. If markets can continue to rally, we would consider taking some more risk off the table. Hosted by RIA Chief Investment Strategist, Lance Roberts, CIO  Produced by Brent Clanton, Executive Producer ------- Watch the video version of this podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7E7r7Qx48Q&list=PLwNgo56zE4RAbkqxgdj-8GOvjZTp9_Zlz&index=1 ------- Articles mentioned in this report: "Frontrunning Tariffs Boosts Economic Activity" https://realinvestmentadvice.com/resources/blog/frontrunning-tariffs-boosts-economic-activity/ ------- Get more info & commentary:  https://realinvestmentadvice.com/insights/real-investment-daily/ ------- REGISTER FOR OUR NEXT CANDID COFFEE (5/3/25) HERE:   ------- Visit our Site: https://www.realinvestmentadvice.com Contact Us: 1-855-RIA-PLAN -------- Subscribe to SimpleVisor: https://www.simplevisor.com/register-new -------- Connect with us on social: https://twitter.com/RealInvAdvice https://twitter.com/LanceRoberts https://www.facebook.com/RealInvestmentAdvice/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/realinvestmentadvice/ #MarketRally #MarketRisk #RiskOff #MarketLows #ReflexiveRally #DownsideRisk #MarketVolatility #InvestingAdvice #Money #Investing

Day Trading for Beginners
Momentum Trading - I'm Using This Strategy While I Wait to Day Trade

Day Trading for Beginners

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 15:52


Hi and welcome back to the Day Trading For Beginners podcast! I'm Tyler Stokes from StokesTrades.com, and this is Season 3, Episode 6. Today, I'm breaking down momentum trading, the strategy I'm using in my real money challenge from last week. I'm a beginner on a journey to become a full-time trader, but with my schedule, day trading's not something I can actively do at the moment. So I'm gaining experience with this strategy.Download the 6 Month Blueprint: https://stokestrades.com/blueprintTradingView Charting Software: Start a free trial hereTraderSync Trading Journal: Visit the official website hereResources Mentioned:Our Community on Skool: Come join us hereWhat I CoveredMomentum Trading Basics: What it is and how it differs from day trading.Why I Chose It: My schedule led me to this slower, less stressful approach.How It Works: Buy at support, ride the trend, hold for bigger moves.Tools I Use: Market structure, moving averages, and more—simple stuff!Key TakeawaysMomentum trading is about catching strong bull trends—higher highs, higher lows—buying at support when buyers are in charge. Think wealth-building, not quick flips! I stumbled into it because day trading's fast pace doesn't fit my life right now (kids, family, etc.). This strategy mixes swing trading vibes—holding days, weeks, or longer. That being said, you CAN trade this strategy on shorter time frames.How I do it: Spot bullish structure, buy low at support zones (using tools like Fibonacci, Ichimoku Cloud), and set limit orders at night—no daily stress!It's slower than day trading (fast profits, in-and-out) but simpler for beginners IMO. You don't need to watch every tick—just ride the trend and be patient.Tie-in: My real money challenge (updates in my Skool Group) uses this strategy—see my trades in action!Why It MattersDay trading's the end goal (at least I think it is right now), but momentum trading fits my reality—less time, less pressure, and still profitable if the trend's right. For beginners, it's a gentler start: no lightning-fast moves, just spotting trends and holding on. It's teaching me patience, planning, and market structure—skills I'll carry to day trading later. Plus, with markets shaky now (tariffs, flash crashes), buying support could pay off big down the road—not financial advice, just my take!Final ThoughtsI hope this peek into momentum trading helps! It's not as flashy as day trading (still my goal!), but it's working for me—slower, calmer, and wealth-focused. Markets are wild right now, but that's where support zones shine. Join the Skool Group and follow my real trades and see this strategy play out. Thanks for listening—catch you next episode!Send me some feedback!Website and Other Social Accounts:https://stokestrades.com/https://www.youtube.com/@StokesTradesJoin Our Free Community on SKOOL:https://www.skool.com/day-trading-for-beginners

ArTEEtude. West Cork´s first Art, Fashion & Design Podcast by Detlef Schlich.
#Arrteetude 277 Detlef Schlich, Nermin Goenenc and AI CO-Host Sophia talk about the Fibonacci sequence as a metaphor for creative growth and emotional development. At the end we listen to a song of her and Marvic Bush.

ArTEEtude. West Cork´s first Art, Fashion & Design Podcast by Detlef Schlich.

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2025 31:30


Engines of Our Ingenuity
The Engines of Our Ingenuity 1348: Castel Del Monte

Engines of Our Ingenuity

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2025 3:45


Episode: 1348 Castel del Monte: in which Frederick II plays with geometry.  Today, we wonder why a castle was built.

Sprott Money News
Silver Price Dip: Temporary or Major Trend? Is Gold Next as Tariffs Shake Markets? | Chris Vermeulen

Sprott Money News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2025 24:25


April 2025 is off to a wild start as the silver price drops over 20% in just two days, leaving investors scrambling. In this month's Precious Metals Projections, Craig Hemke and Chris Vermeulen break down what's driving the sudden plunge across silver, gold, and broader markets. They discuss how tariff hikes, panic selling, and key technical patterns like Fibonacci measured moves are shaping short- and long-term trends. Is this a temporary dip or the start of a deeper correction? How is the gold price responding, and what should you watch for next? Watch the full video to understand what's really happening behind the scenes.

Aparici en Órbita
VuFyuM s07e27: Stephen Hawking y los agujeros negros + Gauss y Fibonacci en el Día Mundial de las Matemáticas

Aparici en Órbita

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 25:44


En el programa de esta semana celebramos el Día Mundial de las Matemáticas, que se conmemora todos los años el 14 de marzo: ¡el Día de Pi! Recordamos a Carl Friedrich Gauss, matemático alemán del siglo XIX que destacó por su inusual capacidad para pensar de forma diferente; era, digamos, un artista del pensamiento matemático. Recordamos también a Leonardo Bonacci, matemático italiano de la Edad Media, que vivió a caballo entre los siglos XII y XIII y que hoy es recordado fundamentalmente por la sucesión que lleva su nombre: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13... Pero ¿a cuenta de qué ideó Fibonacci esa sucesión? Nos lo cuenta hoy Santi García Cremades. Alberto Aparici, por su parte, toma también como excusa el 14 de marzo, que es el día en que murió Stephen Hawking, y nos habla sobre su aportación más importante: clarificar y ampliar la física de los agujeros negros. Hawking formó parte de la primera generación de científicos que se tomó en serio que los agujeros negros podían existir, y dedicó mucho tiempo a tratar de entender cuáles eran sus propiedades físicas, dado que son objetos muy exóticos porque nada puede salir de ellos. Por el camino hizo el sorprendente descubrimiento de que los agujeros negros no son eternos, sino que van evaporándose poco a poco, emitiendo un "viento" de partículas a las que hoy llamamos *radiación de Hawking*. Si queréis profundizar en las contribuciones científicas de Hawking podéis encontrar varios episodios dedicados a él en nuestro pódcast hermano, La Brújula de la Ciencia. Son los capítulos s07e30, que emitimos con motivo de su fallecimiento, s02e11 y s05e19. Este programa se emitió originalmente el 13 de marzo de 2025. Podéis escuchar el resto de audios de Más de Uno en la app de Onda Cero y en su web, ondacero.es

The Real Investment Show Podcast
4-1-25 Markets Teeter over Tariffs

The Real Investment Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2025 4:35


Institutions waiting until the very last minute to balance portfolios, pulling markets up to barely eke out a gain for the day. The action kept markets intact, although still over sold. And in all the market turmoil, a negative divergence is developing in both relative strength and momentum: Market uncertainty over tariffs, and whatever Liberation Day" means will certainly temper traders today. Lance describes Fibonacci retracement on pull backs and extensions. There is a level of support markets will try to bounce off of. The question for today: Can Markets hold support at that level? If not, a break of support will likely next test the 5400 level. If tariffs are revealed to be more brutal than expected tomorrow, the decline in the market could be more severe. If less so, markets could have a really big rally. If you want to short the market, you could be terribly wrong...or terribly right. Don't be overly aggressive today; just wait. Hosted by RIA Chief Investment Strategist, Lance Roberts, CIO  Produced by Brent Clanton, Executive Producer ------- Watch the video version of this podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMynEDDoNhY&list=PLwNgo56zE4RAbkqxgdj-8GOvjZTp9_Zlz&index=1 ------- Get more info & commentary:  https://realinvestmentadvice.com/insights/real-investment-daily/ ------- REGISTER FOR OUR NEXT CANDID COFFEE (3/29/25) HERE: https://streamyard.com/watch/Gy68mipYram2 ------- Visit our Site: https://www.realinvestmentadvice.com Contact Us: 1-855-RIA-PLAN -------- Subscribe to SimpleVisor: https://www.simplevisor.com/register-new -------- Connect with us on social: https://twitter.com/RealInvAdvice https://twitter.com/LanceRoberts https://www.facebook.com/RealInvestmentAdvice/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/realinvestmentadvice/ #Tariffs #LiberationDay #MarketCorrection #MarketPullback #MarketRally #MarketBounce #200DMA #MarketSupport #MarketLows #InvestingAdvice #Money #Investing

3PHASE Radio
130: Cosmic Intelligence Within

3PHASE Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2025 12:44 Transcription Available


Send us a message (& include the best way to reach you)The same intricate patterns shaping entire galaxies are also shaping the neurons in your brain, suggesting we are the universe experiencing itself. This episode explores the connection between universal intelligence and your entrepreneurial breakthrough potential.• The Fibonacci sequence appears in galaxies, seashells, DNA spirals, and nervous systems—proof of nature's universal mathematical blueprint• Scientists discovered neural networks in our brains look nearly identical to cosmic webs of galaxies• Your body contains trillions of cells working in perfect harmony, with motor proteins walking along DNA strands like nanobots• You have more bacterial cells than human cells, creating a microbiome that functions as your "second brain"• When your biology is aligned through detoxification, gut health, and practices like meditation, you operate at a higher frequency• Consciousness isn't just in your head—it's the unifying force connecting you to universal intelligence• The double slit experiment demonstrates how observation changes reality, supporting both ancient wisdom and quantum physicsSchedule your free consultation today to learn how to align your biology with your highest potential. Subscribe, share, and leave us a five-star review to help us keep breaking boundaries together.Support the showAs a token of gratitude, of course you're interested in these FREE and powerful resources, and because you enjoy the show, be sure to leave your 5-STAR Review HERE! >Join From The Heart: Your feel good feed packed with inspiring stories, wellness tips, and expert insights. Let's recharge your energy, balance your vibes, and celebrate YOU every Sunday morning. > You might be wondering just how full your Toxin-Tank may be: Take your FREE Toxicity Assessment to find out - no email required! > You'll discover a new level of self, after your FREE 2-Part audio training for Confidence! > Love to Read? You can lean more about Integrative Health on our Blog > I know you're concerned about your future. Schedule your FREE Consultation with Jeffrey

TD Ameritrade Network
Chart of the Day: CELH

TD Ameritrade Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2025 3:59


Shares of Celsius (CELH) have slipped lower over the past year. But, Rachel Dashiell looks at a possible change in the downtrend pointing to a basing pattern in early 2025. Zooming out to a 4-year chart, she looks at Fibonacci studies to examine the stock's retracement. Rachel says long-term investors are keyed in on the $37-$38 level before possibly retesting $45 to break the downtrend.======== Schwab Network ========Empowering every investor and trader, every market day.Subscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribeDownload the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watchWatch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-exploreWatch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/Follow us on X – / schwabnetwork Follow us on Facebook – / schwabnetwork Follow us on LinkedIn - / schwab-network About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about

Timing Research Podcasts
⏰ ST #56: Introduction To Advanced Fibonacci Time And Price Analysis with Carolyn Boroden

Timing Research Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 58:46


Title: ⏰ Synergy Traders #56: Introduction To Advanced Fibonacci Time And Price Analysis with Carolyn Boroden of ElliottWaveTrader.net   Recorded on as part of the Synergy Traders #56: "7th Annual Women Teach Trading And Investing 2025 Conference" hosted by TradeOutLoud and TimingResearch.   The full event archive is available here: https://link.timingresearch.com/ArchiveST56   Bonus...   • [AD] Report: MAGA Stocks (10 Stocks Experts Are Picking to Explode) https://timingresearch.com/MAGAReportMar25   • [AD] PDF: 5 High-Yield Growth Stocks https://link.timingresearch.com/LR9internal   • [AD] eBook: Best Tools for 2025 https://timingresearch.com/CEB6   Terms and Policies: https://timingresearch.com/policies/  

TD Ameritrade Network
Chart of the Day: LUV

TD Ameritrade Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 4:04


Southwest Airlines (LUV) receives a pair of upgrades this morning from UBS and Melius Research. The beleaguered airline stock is enjoying a slight bounce this month. Rachel Dashiell examines the 1-year chart looking at a Fibonacci support bounce. Then, Rachel zooms out to a 25-year chart of LUV to show the bigger picture trading perspective in the new millennium.======== Schwab Network ========Empowering every investor and trader, every market day.Subscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribeDownload the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watchWatch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-exploreWatch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/Follow us on X – / schwabnetwork Follow us on Facebook – / schwabnetwork Follow us on LinkedIn - / schwab-network About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about

Radiolab
Growth

Radiolab

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 58:52


It's easy to take growth for granted, for it to seem expected, inevitable even. Every person starts out as a baby and grows up. Plants grow from seeds into food. The economy grows. That stack of mail on your table grows. But why does anything grow the way that it does? In this hour, we go from the Alaska State Fair, to a kitchen in Brooklyn, to the deep sea, to ancient India, to South Korea, and lots of places in between, to investigate this question, and uncover the many forces that drive growth, sometimes wondrous, sometimes terrifying, and sometimes surprisingly, unnervingly fragile.Special thanks to Elie Tanaka, Keith Devlin, Deven Patel, Chris Gole, James Raymo and Jessica SavageEPISODE CREDITS: Reported by - Matt Kielty, Becca Bressler, Pat Walters, Sindhu Gnanasambandun, Annie McEwen, Simon Adlerwith help from - Rae MondoProduced by - Matt Kielty, Becca Bressler, Pat Walters, Sindhu Gnanasambandun, Annie McEwen, Simon AdlerSound design contributed by - Jeremy Bloomwith mixing help from - Jeremy BloomFact-checking by - Emily Krieger and Natalie Middletonand Edited by  - Pat WaltersEPISODE CITATIONS:Audio:“The Joy of Why,” (https://www.quantamagazine.org/tag/the-joy-of-why/) Steve Strogatz's podcast. Articles:“The End of Children,”(https://zpr.io/WBdg6bi8xwnr) The New Yorker, by Gideon Lewis-KrausBooks:Finding Fibonacci (https://zpr.io/3EjviAttUFke) by Keith DevlinDo Plants Know Math (https://zpr.io/bfbTZDJ8ehx5) by Chris GoleSingup for our newsletter!! It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)!Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today.Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org.Leadership support for Radiolab's science programming is provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Science Sandbox, a Simons Foundation Initiative, and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

Market Mondays
What Ian Dunlap Knows That We Don't: His Secret to Predicting Stock Prices!

Market Mondays

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 6:05


In this episode of Market Mondays, Rashad Bilal and Ian Dunlap delve into the intricacies of predicting stock prices and strategic investing. Learn how to identify the right time to buy and maximize your investment potential.Understanding why predicting market prices is crucial for strategic investments.Ian's analysis on AMD's fluctuation and how he accurately estimated its value drop.The role of EMAs and Fibonacci retracements in making informed trading decisions.Differentiating between casual investing and strategic buying for significant returns.The core elements of the Stock Club and how it guides on best prices for trading.Our Sponsors:* Check out NerdWallet: https://www.nerdwallet.comSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/marketmondays/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Write Your Narrative, a South Florida weekly street art podcast.

David Louf, aka Mr. June, began his creative journey as a breakdancer in the 1980's before immersing himself in graffiti in 1985 in the south of the Netherlands. With over 15 years as a graphic designer, Mr. June eventually decided to focus solely on his art, merging his skills in design, graffiti, and muralism into a singular artistic vision. His work revolves around exploring geometry, specifically the hexagon—a shape he considers the epitome of balance and harmony, inspired by the golden ratio and Fibonacci sequences.Through murals and canvases, Mr. June manipulates form, color, and perspective to create optical illusions that transform spaces and challenge viewers' perceptions. By responding to the environment of each site, he crafts cohesive works that integrate seamlessly with their surroundings while offering adynamic, interactive experience.

Doc Malik
#310 - Robin Kelly: Medicine, Consciousness, and the Art of Truly Caring

Doc Malik

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 94:46


FREEDOM - HEALTH - HAPPINESSWARNING - This podcast is highly addictive and seriously good for your health.SUPPORT DOC MALIK To make sure you don't miss any episodes, have access to bonus content, back catalogue, and monthly Live Streams, please subscribe to either: The paid Spotify subscription here: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/show/docmalik/subscribe The paid Substack subscription here: https://docmalik.substack.com/subscribeThank you to all the new subscribers for your lovely messages and reviews! And a big thanks to my existing subscribers for sticking with me and supporting the show! ABOUT THIS CONVERSATION: I had a fascinating and deeply meaningful conversation with Robin Kelly about what medicine is really supposed to be: human, personal, and soulful. These days, healthcare feels more like a data-driven machine than a healing practice. We've lost the art of listening, of truly seeing patients as individuals rather than just collections of symptoms and numbers.Robin and I explored individualised care, not the kind that gets thrown around as a marketing term, but the real kind, where a doctor actually takes the time to understand the person in front of them. We talked about how technology, protocols, and endless data gathering make medicine more robotic and impersonal, stripping it of its true purpose.From there, we went deep into acupuncture, Chinese medicine, and the role of consciousness in healing. Robin shared his insights on chakras, the interstitium (a newly recognised part of human anatomy), and the incredible mathematical patterns in nature, like Fibonacci sequences and fractals, that seem to reflect the very essence of life itself.But more than anything, this conversation was about slowing down, reconnecting, and remembering that medicine isn't just about fixing bodies—it's about caring for souls.Much love Doc xLinksPersonal website Robin KellyIMPORTANT INFORMATIONAFFILIATE CODESWaterpureI distill all my water for drinking, washing fruit and vegetables, and cooking. If you knew what was in tap water, so would you!https://waterpure.co.uk/docmalik BUY HERE TODAYHunter & Gather FoodsSeed oils are inflammatory, toxic and nasty; eliminate them from your diet immediately. Check out the products from this great companyhttps://hunterandgatherfoods.com/?ref=DOCHG BUY HERE TODAYUse DOCHG to get 10% OFF your purchase with Hunter & Gather Foods.IMPORTANT NOTICEIf you value my podcasts, please support the show so that I can continue to speak up by choosing one or both of the following options - Buy me a coffee If you want to make a one-off donation.Join my Substack To access additional content, you can upgrade to paid from just £5.50 a monthDoc Malik Merch Store Check out my amazing freedom merchTo sponsor the Doc Malik Podcast contact us at hello@docmalik.comCheck out my website, visit www.docmalik.com

Event Marketing Redefined
EP 131 | AI & Events: The Playbook for Pre-Show Tactics & Better Engagement

Event Marketing Redefined

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 53:08


Most event marketing strategies stop at logistics. Booth design? Check. Speaker lineup? Done. But what about actually driving engagement before, during, and after the event? Without a structured approach, you're leaving valuable connections—and revenue—on the table.Sales and marketing teams scramble to fill schedules last-minute. Booths are filled with unqualified traffic. Leads go cold because follow-up is inconsistent. AI can be your secret weapon, but only if you know how to use it.Enter Doug Foley, President of Giant Goat, who joins Matt Kleinrock to break down how AI is transforming event engagement—from pre-show outreach to post-event follow-ups.You'll learn:✅ The AI-driven pre-show tactics that secure more meetings before the event even starts.✅ How real-time AI transforms lead qualification and booth interactions.✅ Why the Fibonacci email sequence is the secret to structured, high-conversion follow-ups.This isn't a future prediction—it's happening now. Tune in to learn how AI can make your event marketing smarter, faster, and more effective.------------------------------Connect with DougOn his LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/douglasjfoley/Connect with MeOn my LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matt-kleinrock-9613b22b/On my Company: https://rockwayexhibits.com/

Investing Experts
Hedging QQQ with Growth Investor Pro

Investing Experts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2025 18:27


Alex King runs Growth Investor Pro and discusses hedging the QQQ, especially helpful for volatile times (0:30). Recognize patterns, find a charting method like Elliot Wave and Fibonacci (3:40). Why brokers make a huge difference (5:50). Practical example of hedging (9:00). Leveraged ETF options (13:00). This is an excerpt from Hedging Bets in Tech, published here with video and slides.Show Notes:Growth Investor ProPredictive Analytic Models by Robert P. BalanRead episode transcriptsFor full access to analyst ratings, stock quant scores and dividend grades, subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium at seekingalpha.com/subscriptions

The Tuesday Ketchup
268 - Fibonacci Spiral

The Tuesday Ketchup

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 64:27


In this episode of The Tuesday Ketchup, the boys argue over NapGate 2025 and Hayden leaving Nate to fight alone at a SuperBowl Party. They talk the Fibonacci Spiral, going Toddler Mode, and Nate drops a new invention that is sure to blow you away. This one's a good one, come ketch up with us. Buy tickets to Haydens Special Taping at Haydenfcomedy.com. Pod Subscribers - DM The Instagram account for discounted tickets! speakpipe.com/thetuesdayketchup to leave the boys a message patreon.com/tuesdayketchup for weekly bonus eps haydenfcomedy.com to see Hayden live

Mejor Con Gaby Vargas
Fibonacci y los números de los conejos 23 Enero

Mejor Con Gaby Vargas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 5:42


Fibonacci y los números de los conejos 23 EneroSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Daily Stock Picks
Bitcoin or Semiconductors? Which to buy now? 1-23-25 Market Update

Daily Stock Picks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2025 39:29


Get the Top 10 stocks of 2025 from Seeking Alpha⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Limited Time offer on Trendspider - save over $1500 and get unlimited 1-1 Training for 1 year! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 1. Stock Battle today at 3pm on Substack App 2. Fibonacci levels - I'm learning 3. Bitcoin to $700k? 4. A bitcoin ETF with 100% downside protection 5. Financials outperform in year 1 of all presidents 6. Mag 7 7. $AAPL - buy the dip? 8. $NVDA 9. Software names now $CRM and $PLTR 10. Earnings TRENDSPIDER SALE - best offer available  - ⁠⁠⁠https://linktr.ee/dailystockpick⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Sign up at the top link ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠   (use code DSP25 if prompted) Email me at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠dailystockpick3@gmail.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠  I'll send you all the algorithms, watchlists and scanners that you see me use each and every day. Social Links and more - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://linktr.ee/dailystockpick⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠SEEKING ALPHA BUNDLE -  save over $150 ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠SEEKING ALPHA PREMIUM⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - my $30 off coupon for a limited time⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠   ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Watch this episode on YouTube with video⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ to see how Steve from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Seeking Alpha⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ uses the tool to navigate on picking stocks. ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Want to beat the S&P? ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Sign up for Alpha Picks here.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ FREE NEWSLETTER WITH CHARTS - subscribe at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠dailystockpick.substack.com ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ 

Enlightenment Radio
The Cosmic Web

Enlightenment Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 55:57


This meditation goes into who the material world is created from apparent nothing. From latent potential to patent expression. We follow the Golden Ratio to see live unfolding within us and around us.  For more on this read Steven's book The Theory of Existence  

Choses à Savoir SCIENCES
Pourquoi dit-on que le Moyen âge a eu peur du zéro ?

Choses à Savoir SCIENCES

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 2:32


L'idée que le Moyen Âge ait eu "peur du zéro" est un raccourci souvent utilisé pour décrire l'appréhension et les controverses entourant l'introduction du chiffre zéro en Europe médiévale. Mais cette "peur" est-elle réelle, ou bien s'agit-il d'une simplification historique ? Examinons les faits.Le concept de zéro trouve son origine dans les mathématiques indiennes, où il était utilisé comme un chiffre à part entière et un symbole du vide. Ce savoir a été transmis au monde arabe, puis introduit en Europe au XIIᵉ siècle grâce aux textes de mathématiciens comme Al-Khwarizmi et aux traductions d'œuvres arabes par des érudits tels que Fibonacci.Le zéro n'était pas seulement un nouveau symbole mathématique, mais aussi une révolution conceptuelle. Il introduisait des idées abstraites liées au vide et à l'infini, des notions qui déconcertaient la pensée médiévale. À cette époque, les chiffres romains dominaient encore, et ils n'avaient pas de symbole pour représenter le vide. Les mathématiciens européens, habitués à des systèmes plus concrets, ont mis du temps à intégrer le zéro dans leurs calculs.De plus, la philosophie chrétienne médiévale, qui voyait le vide comme un concept théologique complexe lié au néant et à l'absence de Dieu, a parfois renforcé la méfiance. Dans ce contexte, le zéro pouvait être perçu comme un symbole "dangereux" ou difficile à concilier avec la vision du monde de l'époque.La peur du zéro : une réalité pratique et politiqueAu-delà de l'aspect philosophique, l'adoption du zéro posait aussi des problèmes pratiques. Le système décimal basé sur le zéro était moins intuitif pour les marchands et les notaires habitués aux chiffres romains. De plus, certains gouvernements médiévaux considéraient l'utilisation des chiffres arabes, y compris le zéro, comme un risque de fraude. Par exemple, le zéro pouvait être facilement modifié pour falsifier des comptes.Une acceptation progressiveCependant, cette "peur" n'était pas universelle ni insurmontable. Des figures comme Fibonacci ont joué un rôle crucial en démontrant l'efficacité du zéro dans les calculs et les applications commerciales. Peu à peu, les avantages pratiques du système décimal l'ont emporté sur les réticences philosophiques et culturelles.En conclusion, le Moyen Âge n'a pas véritablement eu "peur" du zéro, mais son introduction a soulevé des débats et des résistances, à la croisée des enjeux intellectuels, pratiques et religieux. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

IBKR Podcasts
Fibonacci, Futures, and Full-Time Trading: Lessons from TradingWarz

IBKR Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 17:35


Join Andrew Wilkinson as he dives into the world of trading with Richard Dhanpaul, the creator of TradingWarz on YouTube. Discover how Richard turned Fibonacci, risk management, and futures trading into his unique approach, growing his channel into a hub for thousands of traders worldwide.   Disclosure: Interactive Brokers The analysis in this material is provided for information only and is not and should not be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any security. To the extent that this material discusses general market activity, industry or sector trends or other broad-based economic or political conditions, it should not be construed as research or investment advice. To the extent that it includes references to specific securities, commodities, currencies, or other instruments, those references do not constitute a recommendation by IBKR to buy, sell or hold such investments. This material does not and is not intended to take into account the particular financial conditions, investment objectives or requirements of individual customers. Before acting on this material, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and, as necessary, seek professional advice. The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Interactive Brokers, its affiliates, or its employees. Disclosure: Options Trading Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. Multiple leg strategies, including spreads, will incur multiple commission charges. For more information read the "Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options" also known as the options disclosure document (ODD) or visit ibkr.com/occ Disclosure: Futures Trading Futures are not suitable for all investors. The amount you may lose may be greater than your initial investment. Before trading futures, please read the CFTC Risk Disclosure. A copy and additional information are available at ibkr.com. Disclosure: Margin Trading Trading on margin is only for experienced investors with high risk tolerance. You may lose more than your initial investment. For additional information regarding margin loan rates, see ibkr.com/interest Disclosure: IBKR Tax Disclosure Interactive Brokers does not provide tax advice, does not make representations regarding the particular tax consequences of any investments, and cannot assist clients with tax filings. Investors should consult with their tax professional about the tax implications of any investment. Disclosure: IBKR Tools The projections or other information regarding the likelihood of various investment outcomes generated by the Tool mentioned in this podcast are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual investment results, and are not guarantees of future results. It is important to understand that these projections are based on certain assumptions and models, and actual outcomes may differ significantly. Please note that results may vary over time.

The Dictionary
#F72 (fiat money to fibre)

The Dictionary

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 33:09


I read from fiat money to fibre.     Making Fiber Glass! https://youtu.be/RihBn0mP9hI?si=ZQ6U9jgJEqwptut7     The word of the episode is "fibonacci sequence". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibonacci_sequence     Use my special link https://zen.ai/thedictionary to save 30% off your first month of any Zencastr paid plan.    Create your podcast today! #madeonzencastr     Theme music from Tom Maslowski https://zestysol.com/     Merchandising! https://www.teepublic.com/user/spejampar     "The Dictionary - Letter A" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter B" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter C" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter D" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter E" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter F" on YouTube     Featured in a Top 10 Dictionary Podcasts list! https://blog.feedspot.com/dictionary_podcasts/     Backwards Talking on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIujMwEDbgZUexyR90jaTEEVmAYcCzuq     https://linktr.ee/spejampar dictionarypod@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/thedictionarypod/ https://www.threads.net/@dictionarypod https://twitter.com/dictionarypod https://www.instagram.com/dictionarypod/ https://www.patreon.com/spejampar https://www.tiktok.com/@spejampar 917-727-5757

A TRADER'S LIFE
Mark Randall - Upgrade your trading with a high performance coach

A TRADER'S LIFE

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2025 65:51


As a trader, you have to be able to keep a check on your emotions, no matter what the state of play. Like air traffic controller, a sniper. Life or death.My next guest on A Trader's Life is no stranger to extreme pressure in trading.He's been trading since the eighties when charts were typically worked up with a pencil and paper. When he was diagnosed with arthritis as a young man, he knew he'd have to work on his mindset if he was to cope with the kinds of stressful situations he found himself in on a daily basis.. Today Mark Randall is a very successful high performance coach. He helps develop traders, and trading teams at corporate level. They hire him because his methods and teaching make a real difference, not just in financial gains but also in terms of a trader's overall wellbeing. ==A unique trading strategy with a very high win rateYou've probably heard of Fibonacci, and you may already be using the Fibonacci tool you find on TradingView as part of your trading stratregy. Until about a year ago, I thought these tools were the last on the subject of Finoacci sequences. Then I met trader and investor All Peters-Plocher and talked to the people using her proprietary Fibonacci tool and strategy. To date, I have met five of Alla's students, and they all said joining Alla's courses was the best investment they ever made. One of the guys I spoke to said he'd been struggling for about 10 years before he joined one of Alla's courses, and once he got going, he was consistently profitable. He just bought a house in Arizona with the money he's made since he joined.Like me, he's a filmmaker. One of things he loves about her system is that he spends only a few minutes a day checking trades, and can focus on his filmmaking projects. I also met Alla herself when she was over in London, early in 2024. She even took me to lunch - at Claridges! - with her husband and two other 'student' traders. I believe she genuinely cares about the traders who sign up to her programs. More than that - she's on a mission to help traders of all abilities.  It's very rare I send out affiliate links, not least because I have to have complete faith in the person and his or her coaching or product before I do - but down below you'll find some links to her courses. Transform your trading performanceIf this is a good time for you to join one of Alla's program, and you found this podcast episode useful in helping you come to that decision, I'd really appreciate it if you were to sign up via one of the links below - it would be extra cost to you but would help me cover some of the costs of running this podcast and enable me to do more ambitious episodes, both audio and video, in the future.If you'd like to talk to me in person about Alla's courses, feel free to reach out on email - nic.penrake@gmail.com - and we can arrange to have a chat over Zoom or WhatsApp, whichever you prefer. Links to explore:Fibonacci Trading Institute -  https://jn521.isrefer.com/go/fibinstitute/Penrake/Group Mentoring for Any Platform - Support the showSubscribe to A Trader's Life

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 298 – Unstoppable Chief Obstacle Buster with Gail Sussman-Miller

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2025 61:52


Gail Sussman-Miller founded Inspired Choice in 2001. She took the title of Chief Obstacle Buster which describes her perfectly. Gail lived her entire life in Chicago Illinois until she and her husband moved to Sarasota Florida in 2019. While Gail grew up thinking she should be a teacher along the way she decided she did not wish to teach youngsters. She recognized that her talents were put to better use teaching and coaching adults. She makes it quite clear that she has fun and great joy working with adults. She will say that some people want to be coached and some who think coaching for them is not necessary. I would say that Gail urges people to approach the coaching experience with an open mind. She is, as you will hear, quite successful at her work. About the Guest: Gail Sussman-Miller, Chief Obstacle Buster at Inspired Choice, helps women leaders leverage, rather than squelch, feminine power and abilities they don't realize they possess, so they live their most authentic, joy-filled life. She is an expert at guiding women to deliberately choose their thoughts and beliefs to design desired experiences and results. Gail's techniques shape new perspectives that reduce stress, discomfort and procrastination which increases decisive action, inner peace and resilience amidst the uncertainty of life. The bottom line is increased freedom and more joy! Clients find Gail's perspective-shifting techniques, practical tactical action steps, and spiritually-inspired wisdom indispensable. Her rare gift, shared by 7% of leaders assessed, is she senses and sees things few people see, speaks that truth and offers actionable ways for participants to thrive and fulfill their soul's desires. The biggest demand and focus of Gail's coaching is strengthening the efficacy and collaboration in challenging conversations and relationships by combining truth, authenticity, and vulnerability. Professional background. Gail has been teaching executives and women at all levels to turn obstacles into opportunities since 2001 as a coach, facilitator, speaker, and trainer. She received her training as a professional coach at the Coaches Training Institute (CTI) in 2001. Gail is certified in the EQi-2.0 emotional intelligence assessment by MHS, a well-known publisher of psychological assessments. Prior to founding Inspired Choice, Gail delivered computer job training for visually-impaired adults and spent 13 years at Andersen Consulting (Accenture) in Marketing, Knowledge Management and Technology Coaching. After a lifetime in Chicago, Gail made Sarasota, Florida her home in 2019. www.inspiredchoice.com Ways to connect with Gail: Gail@inspiredchoice.com www.inspiredchoice.com http://www.linkedin.com/in/gailsussmanmillerr https://www.facebook.com/GailSussmanMiller/ About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:21 Well, a pleasant hello to you. Wherever you happen to be today, you are listening to unstoppable mindset, and my name is Michael Hingson. You can call me Mike if you want. It's okay as well. I am the host of unstoppable mindset, and today we get to chat with Gail Sussman-Miller, who is are you ready? Here it comes, Chief obstacle. Buster, I love that, and she is the chief obstacle Buster at inspired choice, which is an organization that she founded. She has been a coach for, wow, 23 years. You started in 2001 I think you said, And so anyway, this will be a fun conversation. She's got lots to talk to us about, and we've been talking for the last few minutes about how to talk about some of the visual stuff to an audience that isn't necessarily going to see it. And that isn't because the people who aren't going to see it are blind. It's because they're not watching this, but listening to it on a podcast site, so you guys get to experience things the way some of the rest of us do. But anyway, Gail, welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're really glad you're here.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 02:32 Thanks, Michael. I'm honored to be here, and I've had fun getting to know you as we get ready for this. Yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 02:39 well, and it's been good to get to know you and get a chance to really chat. Let's start, if we could by maybe you telling us sort of a little bit about the early Gale, growing up and some of that stuff, always a good way to start right. That could take an hour, but I'll leave it up to you. It reminds   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 02:54 me of the movie, I think was called the jerk that Stephen Martin was in, and he starts out saying, I was born a poor, black child. Started with his anyway, so I grew   Michael Hingson ** 03:10 up. I was born, I was born modest, some people have said, but it wore off. But anyway, you were born in Chicago, and I was born in Chicago.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 03:20 Yeah, I grew up on north side, so yes, I'm a Cubs fan.   Michael Hingson ** 03:25 I was south side, and I still love the Cubs, Hopelessly Devoted   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 03:29 and lived my entire life actually in the city limits. Sometimes people say they're from Chicago to give people a reference, and they really live in the suburbs. So I loved, I would say all Yes, actually, all my residences were within two miles of Lake Michigan, and I love being near water. So grew up. I'm the the eldest of two girls, and close to my cousins, really great, close family. And then I went to college at Northern Illinois University, got a degree in teaching elementary and special ed at a time when there was a surplus of teachers, and I wasn't sure I wanted to do it as a career. And then I learned later in life that I love teaching, but actually prefer teaching adults. So it's been an interesting evolution of I would say most of my jobs were just good enough. I was one of millions who believed you live for Fridays and work is something you do to make money because you have to. And it wasn't until I was in my 40s that I found my ideal dream. Work, which is coaching and speaking and teaching, and I came home to a profession that I thought was just for me. It was perfect. It was great. And in the last five years, almost five years, we've been in Sarasota, Florida, made some permanent move and happy ever since, so   Michael Hingson ** 05:26 until you were in your 40s, were you teaching school or what were you doing? No,   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 05:30 I never became a teacher. It just wasn't. I didn't enjoy my student teaching. I did enjoy trying to parole and contain and control 2025 kids. I love children, so that was why I thought, Well, it's interesting. When I went to college, I had no strong calling for a profession, so I enrolled in teaching as the Lacher of evils, if you will. It just was like, well, compared to being a scientist, computer engineer, or you name it, this, I like kids and I like teaching, I just didn't like the combination.   Michael Hingson ** 06:15 So what did you do for jobs?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 06:20 Oh, we'll see if I can remember, there was a period of time where I worked for an educational publisher, because I thought, Okay, I have a teaching degree. Maybe this will be interesting. It was not. I spent some time even working as a temp because I was good at computers and word processing, as it was called in the day. Yes, and it's so funny, Michael, I actually need my resume in front of me to tell you things in sequence. But the funny thing was, each thing led to something else. I think of my life as walking through a doorway and then going down a hall with lots of doorways, and then I choose another doorway, and that leads to another hall with doorways, and that's how I wound up where I am. So at one point, I think it might have been after the education publisher. There were, there were literally, I'm I'm being this is proof how meaningless some of my jobs were. But I did spend four years in Chicago at the chicago lighthouse at the time, called Chicago Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired. I think they've changed their name now, and I taught transcription skills and typing to adults who then went on to get jobs and get placed. And that was the most gratifying thing I did, and that's where I realized I much prefer teaching adults   Michael Hingson ** 08:01 you created a an interesting analogy, one that I subscribe to a lot. I think that each of us go through life making choices, and if you really sit down and think about it, you can trace your life back to and through the choices that you make. So you did a variety of things, and you discovered something with each choice and each thing that you went off and did, I can trace my life back because of the choices that I made. And I also studied teaching. I got a secondary teaching credential. And I actually thought of teaching, but then an opportunity to take a job in technology, actually working with Dr Ray Kurzweil and the National Federation of the Blind, with the development of the Kurzweil Reading Machine came along, and that led to working for Ray, and I was going to do human factors and continuing to do some of the work I did when we were all originally developing the first machine. But then after about eight months, I was confronted with a choice of either leaving the company or going into sales. And I decided, I love to tell people I lowered my standards from science and went into sales, which is not true, but I didn't lower my standards, as it turns out. But what I what I discovered, and I always liked teaching, I always liked explaining, and what I discovered was that the best salespeople are teachers. They're counselors. They really are involved in understanding what a customer's needs are, and then teaching that customer about how to get those results, hopefully with their products, I've had some situations where the product that we had wasn't the right solution, and of course, from. One standpoint that's an ethical issue to deal with. Do I say it's our product won't work, or do I still try to sell it? My belief has always been, you take the ethical choice and I are a few times where we specifically said our product won't work, but here's what will but whenever that occurred, we developed a level of trust that then led to other opportunities later on, but teaching people and really advising and counseling was something that I enjoyed, but I but I hear what you're saying about teaching adults. The question I would ask you is there are a lot of people who say that adults tend to be locked in and are much harder to teach than children. What do you think about   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 10:44 that? Oh, wow. I don't think that's ever it's funny in a way. I don't think that's ever crossed my mind.   Michael Hingson ** 10:54 It's like teaching language. You know, children learn language and additional languages.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 11:00 Yeah, I would agree there. What I mean by that is, and what I thought you were going to ask me, so maybe I'll answer it anyway, is what I liked more about working with adults, and I like being able to hold the adult accountable and responsible for their learning and for asking questions, for speaking up, all of that. It depends, I suppose, if the adult, if the person I'm working with, wants to be in the training slash coaching learning situation or not are very there was only one period of time as a contractor where I was matched with people without my meeting them or knowing them. Normally, my clients come to me and then I get to we see if we have a fit in both ways. So there were a few times where people were assigned to me and didn't necessarily want to have coaching. But what I'm a master at is helping people look at their perspectives and shift them for their greater good. So it almost always worked out that I could say or get to help them see this is going to benefit you, whether you ask for it or not. And let's figure out what it is you would most like to get out of it. Yeah? So enlisting, yeah, enlisting them, engaging them. And then I, I don't think it's ever been a challenge. In my opinion,   Michael Hingson ** 12:36 my wife was a teacher for a number of years, and she liked teaching third graders more than older kids, because she said a lot of the older kids had already developed their attitudes, whether taught by their parents or whatever, and developed habits that weren't necessarily positive. And as a result, it was harder to work with them than it was to work with third graders, because third graders were at an age where she could get them to to think and to focus, and was able to get them to look at and hopefully learn the things that she was trying to Teach, whereas older kids she felt didn't do that nearly as well. So that was an interesting observation that she had. And eventually she she left teaching because, well, here's a story. She was going to do a Valentine's Day party for her class, and she made a deal with the students. The parents were going to bring goodies and they were going to come and all that in the park. That. And the party was supposed to start at two o'clock, and she made a deal with her students, and I don't know whether it was that morning or before, but she said, we'll start the party when you all get your work done. Okay? And everybody agreed. Well, at two o'clock, kids had been goofing off and so on, so the party didn't start. The parents had to wait outside, and it was like about 20 minutes late for the party to start. The kids finally finished the stuff they were supposed to do, and one parent pitched a real hissy fit and had her well, took her to the principal's office. The principal called her in and said, what's going on? The parents are not happy with what you did that day. And Karen brought the students in, who were the children of the parents, and the parents complained that she was too hard on the students and all that. And so Karen then said, Okay, kids, what was the arrangement that we had? And they all said we were supposed to get our work done before the party could start. Why didn't we start the party on time? We didn't get stuff done and that was it. You know, the principal told the parents, go away, go away. It is accountability. And Karen. Is really always great at accountability, and I love the concept of accountability, and when you're creating teams and so on, the most basic fundamental is all about being able to hold each other accountable. And you don't do it because it's a personal thing, or you have an ax to grind, it's because the whole team agrees that those are things that everyone can do. So I agree with you, accountability is important. That's great.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 15:29 I also think that if motivation is important, so your wife used the party as a motivator, and with adults, if they really want to change their results, then this is and I don't, I don't dictate how to do it as much as help them figure out how they're going to do it,   Michael Hingson ** 15:52 absolutely, absolutely. So   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 15:56 it's fun. It's fun. I have a blast, and some people are a term coaches use is coachable. Some people are more coachable than others. And usually I can kind of assess that early on. And sometimes it's we go as far as they're willing to go. They may also not be emotionally ready to go any further   Michael Hingson ** 16:22 well. So in 2001 you discovered that you really wanted to teach adults more, and you started your organization. And so inspired, choice came to be. Tell us more about that and what it is and how it's evolved over the years.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 16:43 So I'm actually it's kind of funny. I was I got married in 2000 came back from my honeymoon to find out I'd been laid off. I spent 13 years at Anderson Consulting, which became Accenture, just as I was leaving, and I, I don't even remember, I think I had seven different jobs in 13 years. They there was a lot of shifting, and one or two I enjoyed the most because they had a lot of teaching. So I enrolled in a couple of programs. Chicagoans will recognize this name, maybe, you know it the Discovery Center was on Lincoln Avenue. We've hired that so I took a class that introduced coaching there. And I said, this is interesting. I'm actually still friends with a couple people that were in that classroom, and then I went to a two day conference held by the local Chicago chapter of the International Coach Federation. And then I was hooked, totally hooked. So after being laid off, I spent some time looking for a job, and then I asked my husband if it was okay with him if I decided to pursue this training and then career and coaching. And he said, Sure. So that's where it started, and in 1997 I'm rewinding just a little, I did a two and a half day women's personal growth weekend, and started to do the deepest personal growth work I'd done, I would say, in my life, I'd done therapy for years, but didn't find it as effective as this. Two and a half days really moved the needle. And one of the women who was staffing that weekend, I saw her at a local event for that organization, and I mentioned I was unhappy about a few things. She said, Well, I think I can help you. And I hired her. Lo and behold, she was a coach. I didn't even know it, and it was immensely helpful to me. That's how I really got familiar with coaching. And then the two day, two and a half day weekend, and then all of that. So that's when I realized it was like a career design just for me. No one else was perfect. It was my orientation. Was not telling people what to do, it was helping them empower themselves and realize their best way. So I started my business very slowly. I didn't know anything about being a business person. I had no clue I was the least bit entrepreneurial, and it evolved slowly, but in the beginning, I kind of like thinking of as a sandwich on the bottom layer. The first piece of bread was about seven years working with women who were in the. Own businesses, helping them realize and find their best marketing method. I just love thinking about marketing, and then that led me to develop a workshop of my own called How to love networking, which most people do not love. It used metaphors, taking what they love to do most in their life, like, let's say cooking or knitting or travel, and how to network the way they do that activity they love. That led to my being discovered by a senior executive organization helping people network. So they asked if I would lead their Chicago meetings, and I did for about seven and a half years. That shifted me and put me in front of senior executives who were looking for jobs, and I taught networking and help them present themselves well within the meeting. And many of them needed additional help, so I was hired into that kind of coaching. And my whole career, my whole business shifted from helping women on marketing to helping executives with their job search, which is, by the way, still marketing.   Michael Hingson ** 21:22 It is, how? How do you teach networking? What? What is that?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 21:28 I'll answer that in a minute, but my brain needs to finish this one. Okay, okay, brain, go ahead. My brain will be busy working on it. After about seven years of teaching these executives, helping them in their job search and promoting themselves and networking, I came back to working with women, and that's what I've been doing, working with women leaders on how to be a more empowered, truthful, authentic and vulnerable leader. So that just had to bring you up to the present. So how do you teach networking? It was helping to debunk what networking is, and I like to define networking as simply connecting with like minded people for the greater good. It's all about connection. What do you have in common? How getting curious? I mean that one of the basic concerns people had was always walking into a room like a networking event, and maybe there's 10 people, there could be 40 people. How do I start a conversation? How do I describe myself? And people being very attached to the outcome, I have to meet someone who's going to be helpful to me. I worked with some people who wanted to literally walk in the room, grab the microphone and say, I'm a tech engineer. Can anyone hire me? Like, Oh my gosh, that is not going to get you there, no, but very, you know, end result oriented. So it had a lot to do with understanding human nature, how to have these conversations, how to describe themselves well and talk about the outcomes they deliver, and to be of service help others. First things you've heard before, but it was usually getting at what their obstacle was. What was their obstacle to the process,   Michael Hingson ** 23:29 makes sense, and and it and it is always a challenge. If let's take your example. I'm a tech guy who will hire me, shows in so many ways, probably what that person isn't looking at and needs to look at, and certainly could use a lot of teaching and coaching. The question is, of course, would they be interested in doing it? And that's, that's, of course, what you address and what you deal with. Some people are coachable, and some people aren't, and some people will be once they discover what being coachable is all about.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 24:15 Yeah, then a case like that, sometimes it's people that kind of urge, like, you know, I don't want to make small talk. I always say, Well, then don't make small talk. Make big talk. Ask important questions. Don't talk about the weather or how good the weenies are wrapped in the in the dough and the hors d'oeuvres. But they are impatient, perhaps because they're desperate, because they're afraid. I always wind up on the emotional undertones of what is going on. How long have you been in job search? Have you been turned down a lot what's going on? How confident are you? How well can you talk about what you do? Well. How well do you do in relationships having nothing to do with job search? What you know, are you good listener? All those things. So it's, I would say it's interesting about job search that at some level, people might not be at their best depending on how comfortable they are with the process, because it is not linear,   Michael Hingson ** 25:27 yeah, and even if you're turned down for a job, do you ask? Why? You know? Are you willing to learn? And again, some people are and some people aren't. Right, right when I talk, when I talk with people about being as when I talk with people about being a speaker and and even sometimes they say we're considering you. And then if they come back and they say we went a different direction, I will ask why. I'd love to learn a little bit more. I don't, I'm not quite that blunt. I'll say something like, I'd like to learn a little bit more about what the process was and what led you to the choice that you made. If you would please take the time to let me know. And again, it's, it's a it's a process. I haven't generally heard that. Oh, you're not a good speaker, or whatever. And I suppose some people might not want to say, but usually it's we had somebody who went a different wanted us to go a different direction, or, I mean, any number of things, or we changed our mind about the theme for the event, which has happened more than once any number of things. And so you you take every, every opportunity, and you learn what you can.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 26:50 That makes sense. Yeah, yeah. It eventually. What led me at some point, I think the pretty sure the people were under and their fear and working with that, I think that some point that may have been what helped me decide to move on and instead of and practice what I preach. Really am I coaching this target audience out of passion, and I was starting to lose my passion. And I said, you know, I've been feeling a hankering to go back to working with women, and as I did the work on myself, this is not a surprise, but I was doing a lot of work on myself. To stand in my power more to really tune into my feminine energy and to spirituality. And it was all guiding me to say, you're not following your heart and soul passion. And then that led me right back to where I started, and working with women. There you go on on deeper issues. So it's been wonderful,   Michael Hingson ** 28:09 by the way. What kind of work does your husband do?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 28:14 Oh, well, it's really interesting. He might have lost track how many years, but he's about a 45 year stock trader, and started out on the Chicago Board of Trade floor. Then around the time I met him, he, as they call it, went upstairs, became an upstairs trader, electronic only, and now, for maybe the last eight years, nine years, he's teaching traders and investors how to read the cycles in the stock market chart analysis and some emotional issues for traders. Traders psychology. And he created a membership for people that want to get involved at a deeper level or a lighter level. And he does training videos. He does. He's actually got a live show that he does once a month, and it's all about education and analysis, some really technical but this gorgeous, beautiful charting that he that he invented, of looking at where the rhythms are. I could go on and on about this, but I think that's probably all your listeners want to hear, because it gets great, really technical. And for those who are a little geeky, if you have ever heard of the Fibonacci formula, even the market follows Fibonacci cycles. Well,   Michael Hingson ** 29:52 the reason I asked the question was you said earlier, when you decided to start your business, you asked him, and he said, Yes, and that. Immediately made me wonder, what kind of a guy is he that he was willing to be open, and clearly, he's an intelligent person. He observes a lot, and so it makes perfect sense that that he would be the kind of person who would support and agree with decisions that you could make and do make, and the fact that the two of you communicated about it is, I think, the most telling thing. It's great when a couple shares and essentially really decides together.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 30:36 Well, I can't wait to tell him what calls over. He's uh, currently relaxing by the pool after his Friday, his Friday live show. But the interesting thing, or, or, and the three, the two and a half day training I told you that I did in 97 he did the men's version, which is a little more popular. It's called a little has more notoriety. It's called new Warrior, and he did that in like three months before I met him, and that changed his life. So, communication skills, self awareness, taking responsibility, all of that, that was what drew me to him and that, and we've been growing those skills ever since, no taking responsibility if you get triggered, and not blaming the other person. Yeah, understanding a lot of emotional intelligence, a ton of emotional intelligence. In fact, we both got certified in a tool published by MHS, and it's a emotional intelligence assessment.   Michael Hingson ** 31:46 Well, you've been coaching for a while, needless to say, 23 years. What are the most common issues that women leaders ask for support on?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 32:01 There's usually one common thread, and it's about, how do I have this conversation? I need to tell this employee they're not doing well, but I don't want to hurt their feelings. I'm not getting along well. Things are not going smoothly with one of my direct reports. I don't know how to approach that. Or there I have some clients who are in a male dominated industry and a male dominated firm, and they may be the only woman in the room. How do I dan in my power express myself and communicate where very often, male and female communications can be different. So how to how to tell, have the conversations, how to tell the truth, what they think is the truth, without worrying about hurting people's feelings or having a lot of fear come up and how how to move through the discomfort. It might be speaking up more than they're used to. It might be saying no, it might be setting some limits and being honest with some risk. So it's almost all connected, but those are usually the general themes,   Michael Hingson ** 33:29 yeah, and it's unfortunate that there have to be risks just to being able to speak up where as if it were just men in the room, probably the same issue wouldn't be there, but we're still way too patriarchal, I think, in a lot of ways, and that tends to be a problem. I love it when people are willing to speak up and be open. I think it's it's so important to do that.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 33:57 Well, I can tell you that while I was still coaching on job search, most of my clients were men, and they had plenty of fear about speaking up plenty it is really not so gender biased, especially networking or interviewing, or how am I going to answer that question, or all of this strategizing. Well, if they say this, then I'll say that. Or instead of what I have come to learn to not only do but to enjoy, is to just be be in the moment. Yeah? Like I often joke, I like being put on the spot. Yeah, I mean, you asked you, and I talked about some things we might talk about today, but I'm ready for you to ask me anything, and I think that's exciting. And if I don't know the answer, I'll say so, but, but I've learned to love honesty in that kind of Troy. And that's what I help my clients do, yeah, and I can think of, oh, sorry, let me just finish this one, thinking of this one client, he wanted to get promoted. He liked his company a lot. He was doing well, and he was going to go to this meeting where they're going to be all appears of his, and then the next level up of management, and he was making himself a little nuts preparing, like I said, if they go on this topic, I've got my notes, and if they go to this topic, I've got my notes. And I helped him to see how he could he didn't need he was over, preparing, spending a lot of time that he didn't need to. And this concept of showing up, show up, be present, answer the questions from what you know, and the words don't matter as much as the energy. It's about saying what you feel and what you believe and say that proudly. So he started doing that, and he couldn't believe the shift. And there's a there's a woman. Her name is nalima bat. I've heard her speak, and she has a meditation that helps get to the point of saying there's nothing to defend, there's nothing to promote, and there's nothing to fear. God practically just want to sigh at that, yeah, oh, that's so reassuring. And then you just show up because you're you've got the ability you know you you're ready. You're always ready.   Michael Hingson ** 36:43 We just don't always think we are, because we overthink things. You know, the biggest problem with fear is we focus so much on the what ifs and that we create our own fear, rather than, as you just said, really living in the moment and and using the knowledge that you have, trusting your your gut or your brain, and, yeah, speaking up and doing the things that you know, really that you should do. And the reality is, you do know what you should do, but we are so focused so often on what if that we've lost a lot of those skills. They're there to be redeveloped. And I wrote a book that's going to be well, it'll be out in August of 2024 it's called Live like a guide dog, true stories from a blind man and his dogs about being brave, overcoming adversity and walking in faith. And the idea is to help people learn how to control fear. It isn't to be fearless, because fearless is a very powerful thing, but you don't need to let fear overwhelm you. You need to use it in a positive way. And one of the things that I learned and talk about in the book is that living in the moment is one of the most powerful things that we can do. That isn't to say you don't develop strategies and spend some time strategizing, but if you do it to the point where you drive yourself crazy and you don't really listen to yourself, that's a problem.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 38:21 You used a really important word there trust and we have this is a topic that I'm warning you. Michael could go pretty deep, so I'm going to try to stay at the top, because it can. It's so enmeshed, I have come to appreciate that as humans, we have to, let's call it two minds. We have our ego, fear driven mind that, from our cave days, is there to protect us. That's the the ancient reptilian part of our brain that's there to make sure that we have our fight, flight or freeze response if we see a big wooly mammoth today, our fears are very different, but we're not worried about a lion or a tiger around every corner, so we have this protective, fear driven way of thinking that you can also refer to as ego. That is the what if negative and I need to be careful. What if I don't get promoted? What if someone thinks this? What if a lot of women worry? What if I sound too outspoken? We've got all that worry side, and that's one mind. The other is love driven, and it is for many people. It is about faith. It is about beliefs that there is the. Our powers greater than us, and that it isn't what one side, the ego, human protective side, is very tied to body identification with the eyes, ears, nose and touch, all of that what we hear the other side is spirit identification, and and that there, there's magic in the world. There's mystery, yeah, and it is not 100% all up to you. People will feel your energy. There are, there's, whatever you want to call it for you, divine, the universe, spirit. There are other forces at work, and that that's where, if we can trust that it doesn't all rest on our shoulders, not all within our control, either, but we, one side is powerless. This side, to me, is where you have your power. I need to do my best, and I can show up.   Michael Hingson ** 41:00 We don't always have control over what happens, but we always have control over how we deal with what happens, and that's the part that we have to make, the choice to address. And the example I always give with that is the World Trade Center. We had no control over it, and I no one's convinced me yet that we could have figured it out, but each and every one of us moves forward from the World Trade Center, and we have the choice to make of how we deal with what happened that day. We can hate love, we can use it as a way to move forward and help others and ourselves and so many different things that we have a choice to do. Well,   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 41:45 I hope so here do, yeah, yeah, big time.   Michael Hingson ** 41:50 And I think it's the important thing that we we need to do. Let me ask you this question. You have a tool that you use to help men and women improve their results. And do you want to talk about that some?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 42:04 Yeah, and it's all about what you were just talking about. It's all about perspective and it all and the power of our thoughts. So very typically, when I work with people, I'm sure you see this, and the people you talk to, people want to change their results. So they say, Well, if I want a better career, I want this, or I want that, I need to change my actions, my behavior. And usually that's where it stops. Is okay. Want a job, I'm going to go look for a job. I'm going to do this, do that, do these steps. I want to get promoted. I'm going to start showing up like this or that, and then it sometimes doesn't work, or they're too afraid, so they do some shortcuts, or they aren't showing up fully in their strength and their ability and their power. So what I help people realize is before you go take those changed actions to get new results, there's something that happens before the action, and that is, you look at choices options, you think about your options first, and then you choose one or two, and you do those actions before the choices, even before you look at a list of choices, there's an emotion or a feeling. If your job search is motivated by fear, then your options that you look at might be somewhat desperation driven, and then your behavior, and then the results you get. If we I'll stick with job search as the example. What triggered those emotions? Where do those come from? So even before the emotion, there's some kind of a belief, and before the belief we have thoughts, and I like to kind of put those in the same bucket, thoughts that we hold on to long enough become beliefs we can have fleeting thoughts, like I think I can fly, but then when we we look at what we believe. So there's often a trigger at the beginning of the whole process. I need a job. I've just been laid off, and the thought or belief is this is a tough market. No one's going to want to hire me. I didn't get enough to a high enough level, or my resume is not going to be impressive. That creates the emotion of fear. Fear leads to limited options, like, I'm not even ready to talk about my skills. I'll just go apply online. That's it. I'll send out like 50 resumes online. Online is never the best way to find a job, and it's usually. Maybe 20% of the best strategy. So we look online, and then the result is, that's our action. The result is, maybe we get called for one or two interviews. So now we're annoyed This isn't going well, that thought, that belief now starts a whole nother chain reaction. This isn't going well. I'm never going to find a job more anger and frustration and fear, and we make new choices, take more action, and the results may not change. So what you can do with this is interrupt the whole flow and choose a different thought, a different belief. And one possibility for this kind of a person would be, I've had a reasonably good career. I have a lot of skills, maybe if I ask for some help, I can present myself in a different way, or I'm really focusing too much on the negative, and a new belief might be if I tell my story in a more positive way, and if I can calm myself down, I know I'm hireable. I know I can do well, and that would bring a new emotion of some positivity, some maybe even a little spark of joy, some contentment. I don't know if we could go all the way to happy and we look at making different choices. Who can I ask? Who do I think describes themselves really well? Who has a lot of confidence? Maybe a good friend of mine can help me, and we look at a bunch of choices. I've heard that networking is more important than looking online, but I don't, I don't think I can network well. Who do I know that networks well, and then we take different action, like maybe talking to one of those friends, or working with a job search office or a coach, and we get different results, and that then feeds the formula again. Then we're like, okay, that worked. I'm on the right track. I got more interviews. I'm hireable, and it keeps circulating and circulating.   Michael Hingson ** 47:28 Yeah, and the example you just gave, the reality is, all too often we talk ourselves into a bad situation or a not positive situation, because we do the what ifs and we don't look at options. And I think it's so important to think about the more positive things. And the reality is, Gandhi put it very well when he said interdependence is an ought to and ought to be as much the ideal of man as a self sufficiency. And the point is, is so true that we're all part of the same world. We're all part of the same process, and the more we work together, and the Learn More we learn to work together, the better it will be. Yes,   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 48:17 and interestingly, maybe building on your What if concept, there's, there's a, there's a game I sometimes play with people, if you can picture like the chair you're sitting in is, is center center point. What if negative moves to your left every time you answer? Well, what if I don't get a job? Well, what if I go hungry? What if I'm broke? What if, and you keep moving left, left, left, further, or you can come back to center and move to the right, well, what if I get some help, and that leads to a job? And what if this, and what if this going positive, and you just notice where, where are you in the center? And the minute you go, what if, positive two or three steps, but you have a negative thought, it takes you back to the center. So it's just a way of paying attention. Am I? Am I going up with my What if, or in this case, to to the right, or am I going? What if negative they can go either way,   Michael Hingson ** 49:26 well. And the issue is, you take two or three steps to the right or movements to the right, and then a negative thought comes along again. You have the choice and the control of how you deal with that negative thought of that as a negative thought, I'm not going to let that control my life. It might be good point. Glad you brought that up negative mind, but that's not going to help me progress, and that. That's the part that I think a lot of people don't learn how to deal with very well. We're way too negative oriented in our world. It seems, sometimes seems to me,   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 50:12 Well, it's interesting, because that's the human protective ego side bringing up the fear based thought, like, Ooh, wait a minute, you're feeling a little too cocky so you could get hurt. Let me throw a monkey wrench in here. Well, what if? And then here comes the negative thought. And we really those thoughts are so powerful, they influence not just our emotions and choices and action and results, but they they influence what what we believe, and we actually vibrate that to other people. I'm sure you know our listeners and and you have walked into a room and said something with with other people, and you just feel something in the air someone's like, did you just walk in after an argument two people had or something doesn't feel right. We really do vibe off each other. And using continuing to use the job search metaphor, depending on how you come in the room to meet someone that wants to have a conversation with you, you set the tone you really we have that power. It's takes a lot of practice, though, to catch like you said, Oh, thanks, negative mind, because it is worth thinking. It is trying to protect you, and especially your very young child. All our coping mechanisms, we taught, we were taught them or developed them, and it's gotten us this far, but it may not be serving you anymore, or   Michael Hingson ** 51:54 you you haven't learned how to put a barrier or a stop to those things, and that's the the part that's missing. Can you give us an example? Tell us a story about someone who you've helped with, with the whole process and what happened?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 52:12 Well, this is kind of fun, and this has happened a couple times. To tell you about I'm trying to decide which story to tell you, because I'm also thinking about protecting confidentiality. So maybe this is a little easier one. So I have a client who, right now is actually a month from today, is her 65th birthday, and she's thinking was came to me thinking about retiring. She She and I worked together, I don't know, maybe 10 years ago, and she came back, and she was in a lot of either or thinking, so I'd like to make a decision, and may 12, be retired, but I still really love what I do. She's a musician, and I know she would enjoy my telling her story, and I still get a lot of pleasure out of it, but I don't want to work so many hours. She's used to kind of just saying yes to every gig that comes along, sure I'll play for you. Sure, sure. So part of our work was about what is your desired outcome? What do you really want? Do you want to stop working and cook and visit with people and go on trips? No, I really still like working, but I don't really trust myself to not work all the time. So we wound up shifting using a similar thought formula. Her current belief was it's either work or play. That was it. So that led to feeling overwhelmed and afraid, and that led to her making choices to postpone it, which is really a choice. She didn't take action. And the result is, well, I'm getting even closer to that 65th birthday, and I have no decision. And we shifted to the concept of what about work and play, that there were way to set ways to set limits. We came up with some criteria, all based on joy. Which gigs bring you the most joy? Oh, well, that's easy. I get to play this instrument, not that one within 25 miles of my home, for people that I really like, Okay, now we have, like, a thought filter, a choice filter for choice filter, right, right. It has to meet this criteria, this one and this one. Oh, but then I'll hurt the feelings of people I say no to we worked on that. Well. Now. I just talked to her yesterday, she said no to like, two or three gigs. Said yes to six. She's working fewer hours, and now she's exploring, what do I want to do with my time off? She's never taken much time off, and now it's just plugging in some time for my husband, some time for learning new recipes, some time for practicing my instrument, and now she trusts herself to only say yes to the gigs that bring joy. And   Michael Hingson ** 55:32 why did she say no? Why did she say no to some   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 55:38 they they were on holidays, which she's used to sacrificing holidays. And she said, Nope, I want Easter with my husband and my family. I'm saying no,   Michael Hingson ** 55:50 that's my point. Yeah, and yeah. And it was limits. It   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 55:54 was setting limits. Maybe she'd worked with them before and they didn't pay on time, or it was out of her driving limit, or something about it, there's no one else in the room with her making the decision. Something about it didn't feel right, like it's just trusting instinct, but there were some clear cut yeses and clear cut nos instead of I need to please everyone, so I have to say, yes, yeah,   Michael Hingson ** 56:26 which is so cool.   56:28 Yes, it's so fun. Well, what's   Michael Hingson ** 56:30 the best way that people can explore working with you?   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 56:33 Well, I think that when we share this video and the audit the recording, that folks will have my email but let me give it to you now. Yes, please. My email address is Gail, G, A, I, L, at, inspired choice.com, that's I n, s, p, i, R, E, D, C, H, O, i, c, e.com, you can also call me good old telephone, 773-477-4012, still have my Chicago area code. There you go. And my website, if you want to learn more, is www, dot inspired, choice.com,   Michael Hingson ** 57:20 and through the website, and I would assume that through the website, they also can contact you. There's contact information on the site and so on.   57:28 Cool.   Michael Hingson ** 57:31 Well, this, I think, has been a lot of fun to do, and I think it's so important that people learn that they can discover better how to make choices, and that you're out there to help. And I still love chief obstacle. Buster, I think that's such a great title.   Gail Sussman-Miller ** 57:52 And Michael, I just want to add that I'm happy to always set up a zoom and meet with people and explore the possibilities and see it has to be a good fit on both sides and like, am I even someone who is coachable, or is this something that would even work for me? So that's always the first step.   Michael Hingson ** 58:16 Exploration is always a good thing. Yeah. Well, I want to thank you for being here, and I want to thank you all for listening and watching us today. I hope that this has been informative and useful and helpful, and that you will take advantage of the services and skills that Gail has to offer and that you'll reach out to her. I want to thank you for listening, and as always, really appreciate all that you're doing with unstoppable mindset and attending our different episodes. I'd love to hear from you. You can reach me by email at Michael H i, at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, I, B, e.com, or go to our podcast page, www dot Michael hingson.com/podcast, Michael hingson is m, I C, H, A, E, L, H, I N, G, s, o, n.com/podcast, wherever you're listening, please give us a five star rating. Really would love to get that. It really is one of the wonderful things. When people give us a rating, we hope it'll be five star. But whatever you rate us, please review and we'd love to hear your thoughts and your comments. If you know of anyone else who ought to be a guest on unstoppable mindset, please encourage them to reach out, or you reach out and introduce us. Love it. Gail, you as well. If you know anyone else who ought to be a guest, please let us know. Thank you today. Michael, well, I want to thank you again, and we really appreciate you being here. Thanks very much for all of your time. Thanks.   **Michael Hingson ** 59:54 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

The Lydian Spin
Episode 285 Elliott Sharp

The Lydian Spin

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2024 75:11


Elliott Sharp is a composer and multi-instrumentalist active in New York City's avant-garde music scene since the late 1970s. With over 85 recordings across genres such as contemporary classical, jazz, noise, and electronic music, he incorporates elements like algorithms, Fibonacci sequences, and literary themes in his experimental compositions. In the 1980s, he developed the Virtual Stance project, utilizing personal computers in live performance. Elliott plays guitar, saxophone, and bass clarinet, and leads ensembles including Terraplane, Orchestra Carbon, and SysOrk.

The Skeptic Metaphysicians - Metaphysics 101
Mysteries of Sacred Geometry: Patterns of the Universe - Metaphysical Moment

The Skeptic Metaphysicians - Metaphysics 101

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2024 6:00


In this Metaphysical Moment, Will dives into the fascinating world of Sacred Geometry. Far beyond simple shapes and mathematics, Sacred Geometry is seen as the blueprint of the universe, connecting everything from atoms to galaxies through intricate patterns.This episode was edited using Descript. This will absolutely revolutionize your video editing: https://get.descript.com/tbrkkp6wsi07Key shapes like the Flower of Life, Fibonacci spiral, and platonic solids demonstrate the hidden order of the cosmos.Ancient civilizations, from the builders of the Great Pyramid of Giza to medieval cathedral architects, incorporated these principles into their designs, seeking harmony and spiritual connection.Discover how these age-old patterns continue to impact modern technology and everyday life.Whether you view it as spiritual or scientific, Sacred Geometry invites us to appreciate the profound beauty and connectivity in the world around us.Follow The Skeptic Metaphysicians on Instagram here for more motivation and inspiration. Then tag them on Instagram with your favorite part from today's show and they will repost their fav's every week!Join our FREE Inner Circle and get acesss to discounts, giveaways and a really great community!https://station.page/skepticmetaphysicianOther Ways To Connect With Us:Website: skepticmetaphysician.comFacebook: @TheSkepticMetaphysicianSupport the Show:Rate/review Us Here: https://lovethepodcast.com/SkepticMetaphysiciansPurchase Merchandise: https://www.skepticmetaphysician.com/storeBuy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SkepticMetaphys 

Hackaday Podcast
Ep 231: Hacking NVMe into Raspberry Pi, Lighting LEDs with Microwaves, and How to Keep Your Fingers

Hackaday Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2024 61:29


Twas the week before Christmas when Elliot and Dan sat down to unwrap a pre-holiday bundle of hacks. We kicked things off in a seasonally appropriate way with a PCB Christmas card that harvests power from your microwave or WiFi router, plus has the potential to be a spy tool. We learned how to grow big, beautiful crystals quickly, just in case you need some baubles for the tree or a nice pair of earrings. Speaking of last-minute gifts, perhaps you could build a packable dipole antenna, a very durable PCB motor, or a ridiculously bright Fibonacci simple add-on for your latest conference badge. We also looked into taking a shortcut to homebrew semiconductors via scanning electron microscopes, solved the mystery of early CD caddies, and discussed the sad state of table saw safety and the lamentable loss of fingers, or fractions thereof.

Palisade Radio
Chris Vermeulen: We Need a Crash for Miners to Perform

Palisade Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 53:23


Tom welcomes back Chris Vermeulen, the founder of The Technical Traders, to discuss market trends post-election and the impact of the looming economic debt situation. According to Chris, the small business sector has seen significant growth since Trump's win, as indicated by the Russell 2000's jump. However, he believes that the end of the economic cycle is near and advises investors to consider defensive assets like gold and utilities due to market uncertainty. Chris identifies the current market stage as a potential topping phase, with signs such as resistance levels in gold and energy stocks. Chris highlights the challenges facing the economy, including an expensive housing market, rising unemployment, and struggling business sales in the S&P 500. Delinquencies for credit cards and commercial real estate mortgages are increasing, signaling a potential looming financial reset. The nervousness within the market is evident through strong performances of the U.S. dollar and gold as safe havens, with the New York Stock Exchange experiencing distribution selling and institutions unloading large shares. Despite a bullish stance on equities, Chris suggests investing in bonds, the dollar, or cash during market volatility before transitioning to an inverse ETF during a potential bear market. He is excited about Bitcoin's potential upward movement, predicting price targets using Fibonacci extensions and technical analysis, but remains skeptical of it as a long-term investment due to its volatile nature. Chris expresses his concerns about gold from a cyclical standpoint, acknowledging that it has reached a significant resistance level, which is part of a 15-year cycle pattern. He suggests that the measured move is complete and that gold might consolidate before potentially moving up to around $3000. Chris emphasizes this doesn't mean a downward trend but rather a pause in the uptrend. Chris also believes that the Russell 2000, representing small caps in the US, serves as an indicator of when money might move out of riskier stocks into safe-havens like gold and the dollar. He anticipates gold will resume its defensive role once the stock market starts to show weakness, making it an attractive investment option again. Time Stamp References:0:00 - Introduction0:48 - Elections & Markets3:22 - When the Music Stops10:40 - Nervous Markets13:11 - S&P Order Book15:06 - Trump & Dollar Scenarios19:03 - Rate Cuts & Recessions20:47 - Overall Trends & ETFs22:54 - Bitcoin Chart28:00 - Gold Technicals31:41 - Overbought/Sold & Gold34:46 - Silver Thoughts36:05 - Next Crisis & Capital38:19 - Bubbles & Buy The Dip?42:36 - Market Stages & Strategy44:33 - Oil Market Concerns51:14 - 2025 Expectations52:40 - Wrap Up Talking Points From This Episode Chris Vermeulen anticipates market uncertainty due to economic debt situation; advises defensive assets like gold and utilities. He identifies signs of a potential topping phase, including resistance levels in gold and energy stocks. Despite his bullish stance on equities, he suggests investing in bonds, the dollar, or cash during market volatility. Guest Links:Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheTechTradersWebsite: https://www.thetechnicaltraders.com/ Chris Vermeulen is the Founder of Technical Traders Ltd. Chris has been involved in the markets since 1997. He is an internationally recognized technical analyst, trader, and author. Years of research, trading, and helping individual traders worldwide have taught him that many traders have great trading ideas, but they lack one thing. They struggle to execute trades systematically for consistent results. Chris helps educate traders, and his mission is to help his clients boost their trading performance while reducing market exposure and portfolio volatility. He has also been on the cover of AmalgaTrader Magazine and featured in Futures Magazine, Gold-Eagle, Safe Haven, The Street, Kitco, Financial Sense,

Empire
194. Empire of Numbers: Fibonacci and the Birth of Modern Money

Empire

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 41:18


When King Alfonso VI of León took Toledo from the Arabs in 1085, the history of western christendom changed forever. Within the city existed a number of texts full of the ideas that we would call Arabic numerals, but that originated in India. From the libraries of Toledo these were translated and spread through Europe. Enter Fibonacci. A genius Italian mathematician, he instantly recognised the advantages of this number system and so wrote Liber Abaci, distilling these ancient ideas into a Latin text. Once this caught on, it laid the foundation for the modern banking and economic system that underpins the global economy.  Listen as William and Anita discuss how numerical ideas that originated in India came to prevail across the world. To buy William's book: https://coles-books.co.uk/the-golden-road-by-william-dalrymple-signed-edition Twitter: @Empirepoduk Email: empirepoduk@gmail.com Goalhangerpodcasts.com Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Producer: Callum Hill Exec Producer: Neil Fearn Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices