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In this episode of the Tactical Living Podcast, hosts Coach Ashlie Walton and Sergeant Clint Walton explore one of the deepest truths in first responder life (Amazon Affiliate) — there is always that one call that never fully lets you go. It may have been early in your career. It may have blindsided you years later. It may involve a face you still see, a sound you still hear, a decision you still question, or a moment you still relive in the quiet. Some calls fade. Other calls get stored in the nervous system like a permanent tattoo. This episode unpacks why certain incidents imprint so deeply and what you can do when a moment from the past keeps interrupting your present.
Late autumn 1941. The Sunday service had just concluded. As their father lingered at the little north-country church, my dad and his siblings walked the short distance home. When their father came up the snowy hill to the farmhouse, he was crying. He’d just learned Pearl Harbor had been bombed. His sons—my dad included—would be going to war. Dad always recalled the moment in vivid detail. Researchers call such events “flashbulb memories”—moments seared into our minds. Think of 9/11, or the day you lost someone close. Think too of your most joyous experience. Imagine the flashbulb memories of Jesus’ disciples. They witnessed miracle after miracle. Suddenly, catastrophe struck. The Son of God was arrested and crucified. But then, resurrection! Mary Magdalene hurried to tell the disciples, “I have seen the Lord!” (John 20:18). Still, the disciples hid in fear. They didn’t believe the news (Luke 24:11), not until “Jesus came and stood among them” (John 20:19). Then, “The disciples were overjoyed” (v. 20). John recorded some of those moments, saying, “These are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name” (v. 31). “Flashbulb memories” with eternal significance.
Join us for today's Our Daily Bread devotional by Tim Gustafson, taken from John 20:18-20, 30-31. Today's devotional is read by Andrew. Meet the team at odb.org/meet-the-team. God bless you. We hope that you have enjoyed today's reading from Our Daily Bread. You can find more exciting content from Our Daily Bread Ministries by following @ourdailybreadeurope on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok. You can even sign up to receive Our Daily Bread Bible reading notes sent straight to your door for free: odb.org/subscribe
Helping you connect with God. Every day. Every way. Read along with today's devotional: https://www.odbm.org/en/devotionals/devotional-category/flashbulb-memories Want to get Our Daily Bread's daily devotionals delivered to your inbox or mailbox? Subscribe for free here: https://odbm.org. Our Daily Bread Ministries helps millions of people connect with God each day. For more than 75 years, our purpose has remained the same: to reach people with the life-changing wisdom of the Bible. All Scripture from the New International Version, unless otherwise noted. SUPPORT Our Daily Bread Your generous support helps us make the life-changing wisdom of the Bible understandable and accessible to people around the world. https://donations.ourdailybread.org/intm9.html?motivation=INTM9 More Podcasts from Our Daily Bread: Discover the Word: https://www.discovertheword.org God Hears Her: https://www.godhearsher.org/podcast Ways To Connect With Us: Facebook: https://facebook.com/ourdailybread Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ourdailybread/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ourdailybread Print Subscription: https://odb.org/getprint App: https://odb.org/mobile-resources Web: https://odbm.org #ourdailybread #dailydevotional #bible
A flashbulb memory is a vivid memory about an emotionally significant event, usually a historic or other notable event. People often experience these memories in photographic detail, and can recall aspects like what they were doing when the event occurred or how they learned about what happened.I have several flashbulb memories that have occurred over the last few decades. Many of them are well known but a few are more personal. Here is my list of flashbulb memories.#shaggylife #flashbulbmemories #irememberwhereiwas Support the show
Wir glauben felsenfest an unseren Erinnerungen. Sie machen uns schließlich aus und sind wichtig für unsere Identität. Doch die Wissenschaft zeigt, dass Erinnerungen alles andere als unumstößlich sind. Sie sind deutlich fehlerbelasteter und manipulierbarer als man denkt.Timestamps & Quellen:Einführung (00:00)Teil 1: Flashbulb-Memories (03:00)https://images.app.goo.gl/6EtEVAyNZzLMKk946https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fxge0000055http://whoville.ucsd.edu/PDFs/319_Schmolck_etal_PsychSci2000.pdf Teil 2: Falsche Erinnerungen (15:25)https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/The-Formation-of-False-Memories-Loftus-Pickrell/d5262b894abffcb2bd5389c06af018799b82a118https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mar.1000https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0956797614562862https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2F1076-898X.7.1.51https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-997-1000-5https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12908679/Teil 3: Mandela-Effekt (25:47)https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/mandela-effect-false-memories-explain-science-time-travel-parallel-universe-matrix-a8206746.htmlhttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/256375079_Collective_representation_elicit_widespread_individual_false_memorieshttps://psyarxiv.com/nzh3s/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTcLPD5ZhhcTeil 4: Auswirkung von falschen Erinnerungen (32:03)https://www.wired.co.uk/article/false-memory-syndrome-false-confessions-memorieshttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/acp.3274https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cogs.12303Weihnachts-/Winter-Essen/Snacks, Suppe und (42:36) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome back to our series on “The Golfer's Mind” by Dr. Bob Rotella. I can vividly recall my wedding day. And the first time I held my son, Charlie. Psychologists call these moments “flashbulb memories.” It's all about the emotion attached to the moment—and we can use that insight can improve our performance on the golf course.
How accurate are your autobiographical memories? In this episode, I take some time to check in on my own memories with my guest, Melissa Mann, currently director of donor communications for Reason Foundation, a national media organization and think tank that publishes Reason magazine, produces original videos, and uses in-depth public policy research to educate policymakers, journalists, and option leaders on the ideas of individual liberty, free markets, and the rule of law. (She writes a lot about a wide variety of political and cultural trends.) She started at Reason in 2001, took a detour in 2018 to let her hair go gray, and rejoined the organization in 2020. Mann earned a bachelors' degree in diplomacy and world affairs at Occidental College in Los Angeles and attended graduate school at Kaiser-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Germany, where she also worked as a policy analyst in the German federal parliament. She has been, at various times, a drive-time terrestrial radio personality, a commercial voiceover actress, a journalist, a homeschooling parent, and a screwer-on of factory cogs. She is mom to Rook, who lives in the Seattle area, and the hu-mom to Charlie, a generally disinterested but sweet husky mix. She and her husband Michael Johnson, a retired movie propmaster, recently joined the California exodus and moved to a temperate rainforest in the Blue Ridge mountains of western North Carolina. Melissa and I discuss episodic memory, focusing primarily on our memories of the death of John Lennon. For more information, visit the Dubious Scrapbooks Podcast at https://dubiouspod.show/. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dubscrap/message
It turns out there is a lot to learn about when studying the psychology of near misses. One thing we learn is that the memories of these events–like the time you almost ran into a tree with your bike, or the time you stuck your head out of a moving train and then pulled it […]
It turns out there is a lot to learn about when studying the psychology of near misses. One thing we learn is that the memories of these events–like the time you almost ran into a tree with your bike, or the time you stuck your head out of a moving train and then pulled it...
It turns out there is a lot to learn about when studying the psychology of near misses. One thing we learn is that the memories of these events–like the time you almost ran into a tree with your bike, or the time you stuck your head out of a moving train and then pulled it...
Amid all the noise and fury about immigration, the Trump administration announced they would be changing the test given to immigrants seeking citizenship. Gary takes the test (twice). Also, a no-hands stand-up, a bit on the ongoing NC Gerrymandering trial, and how Gary can’t remember the Apollo 11 moon landing (and almost everything else).Links:Washington Post anxiety-inducing fitness test: https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/wellness/this-anxiety-inducing-fitness-test-purports-to-tell-you-how-long-youll-live-we-investigated/2019/03/18/0a1d06fe-4035-11e9-9361-301ffb5bd5e6_story.html?utm_term=.4866f4d1c466NC Gerrymandering Trial - WRAL streaming video (search): https://www.wral.com/search/?jump=1&qs=gerrymanderingIf that link doesn’t work, this’ll get you to “Day Two” with more links from there: https://www.wral.com/day-2-nc-panel-considers-challenge-to-voting-maps/18513095/Flashbulb Memories: 10 Historic Events that Everyone Remembers: https://blog.myheritage.com/2018/04/flashbulb-memories-10-historic-events-that-everyone-remembers/YouTube video of this episode: https://youtu.be/Z1UWKZ2PAcgThe TTS web site: https://TriangleTalkShow.com
Locked On Cardinals - Daily Podcast On The Arizona Cardinals
Flashbulb memories are important in the preseason but not as important as this Week 3 preseason game in Dallas on Sunday Night Football. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Locked On Cardinals - Daily Podcast On The Arizona Cardinals
Flashbulb memories are important in the preseason but not as important as this Week 3 preseason game in Dallas on Sunday Night Football. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We talk about what flashbulb memories are, what they aren't, and what happens when society has a flashbulb memory all at the same time.
In Episode 0, you'll hear what PeteBrownSays is all about: How my memory works, specifically, and how memory functions over time What my podcast is all about and why podcasting is the right medium for these stories and a bonus story: Homecoming, plus the View from Under the Bus A post shared by Pete Brown (@petebrownsays) on Oct 9, 2017 at 4:53pm PDT Links Read Homecoming, plus the View from Under the Bus on Medium (https://medium.com/@petebrownsays/homecoming-plus-the-view-from-under-the-bus-f160795050bc). More on Flashbulb Memories (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashbulb_memory) The Consistency of Flashbulb Memories (https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/ulterior-motives/201506/the-consistency-flashbulb-memories) Music and SFX Credits Intro and interstitials by Brian Hake Additional Interstitials by Kevin Davison "I'm Not Myself" by Delicious, feat. Brian Hake and Kevin Davison "By the Pool" by Jingle Punks, YouTube Audio Library SFX sourced from Freesound.org, including: Leaves on the Wind by user alexbird Sounds of Record Player by user luffy Bonfire sounds by electrovalence Marching Band sounds by freqman MarchingBand 2 by frae Crowd Cheering by Adam N Crowd booing by unchain Rimshot by jmayhoff Schoolbus by cognate precept Elementary school playground by tomliajames sounds of lockers Bleep by ermine
Mumbai based electronic producer Kumail shares a rich, emotive mix for Wild City. The 21-year old music maker has been making music for 4 years now and has put out two EPs so far – his debut ‘Flashbulb Memories’ and the recently released ‘Shift’ EP – a meticulously produced, cleverly constructed downtempo collection of music, reviewed in detail here. Kumail is now signed to Mumbai based booking agency KRUNK and has played a number of shows in the last year, recently opening for Malaysia based duo Bass Sekolah. Influenced by a range of sounds from minimal and ambient (apparent in his work) to rap and dubstep, his music aims to extend beyond the confines of a club, exploring ethereal and cerbral realms that work best on a set of headphones. His exclusive mix for Wild City is shorter than what we’re used to (clocking in at just over half an hour) but packs in a quality assortment of relatively contemporary, beautiful tunes. Shlohmo (a major influence) kicks things off with ‘Same Time’, followed by the cinematic, jazz inflected sounds of Adult Jazz, High Water and Skalpel. The second half of his mix adds a layer of hip-hop and melodic rap with King Krule and a couple of tracks by the astoundingly talented Teebs. This is quality listening, tailored for a wandering mind. For a tracklist and further info, head over here: http://www.thewildcity.com/EN/music.xhtml/article/8093-wild-city-093-kumail
Would you be surprised if I told you that your memories of the attacks on September 11, 2001 are inaccurate? How much of what you remember of that day or of other Flashbulb Memories actually happened? Where were you, for example, when the Challenger shuttle blew up? Or when Princess Diana died? Join me as I explore the research that reveals how inaccurate our memories are (no matter how confident we feel). And by the way, was President Bush involved in a conspiracy over the events of September 11? Let's find out.