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Welcome to Cloudlandia
Ep157: Unveiling Toronto's Dual Identity

Welcome to Cloudlandia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2025 46:01


In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, I reconnect with Dan Sullivan for another wide-ranging conversation that blends current events, history, technology, and human behavior. We start by reflecting on the safety and comfort of life in Canada while discussing the news of missile strikes in Israel. From there, we explore the idea that innovation often advances when entrenched leaders move on—whether in science, business, or geopolitics. Dan brings up Thomas Kuhn's idea that progress happens after the old guard exits, creating room for new ways of thinking. Our conversation shifts into the role of AI as a horizontal layer over everything—similar to electricity. We compare this shift to earlier transitions like the printing press and the rise of coffee culture. Dan shares his belief that while AI will transform systems, the core of human life will still revolve around handled needs and personal desires. We wrap by talking about convenience as the ultimate driver of progress. From automated cooking to frictionless hospitality, we recognize that people mostly want things to be “handled.” Despite how fast technology evolves, it's clear that unless something is of deep personal interest, most people will let it pass by. As always, the conversation leaves room for reflection and humor, grounded in the reality that technological change doesn't always mean personal change. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dan and I explore the complexities of living in a "world-class" city like Toronto, discussing its cultural vibrancy against the backdrop of global geopolitical tensions. Dan delves into Toronto's significant role as a financial and technological hub, emphasizing its strategic importance in trade with the United States, where a substantial portion of Canadian exports cross the border. We discuss the transformative potential of AI in today's digital revolution, drawing parallels with historical innovations like Gutenberg's printing press, and how these advancements continuously redefine our society. We examine the evolution of Starbucks, from a unique third space with artisanal baristas to a more automated environment, and ponder the implications of this shift on quality and customer experience. The conversation shifts to the rise of independent coffee shops, highlighting how they meet the demands of discerning customers by offering premium experiences. Dean reflects on our relentless pursuit of convenience in modern urban life, where technological advancements shape our daily routines and enhance our quality of life. We conclude with a discussion on habit formation and the role of technology in reinforcing existing habits, while considering the balance between maintaining old routines and embracing new ones. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr Sullivan, Dan: Mr Jackson, I hope the rest of your day yesterday went well. Dean: Oh, delightful, I learned stuff yesterday. That was a very nice day, beautiful, beautiful weather today. You know what, dan, if you could, as an option at the Hazleton, upgrade to include your perfect weather for $1,000, this is what you'd order, it's this kind of day. Yeah, mid-70s perfect white fluffy clouds. Yes, it's why. Dan: Living in a safe, globally unimportant country. That's exactly right. Holy cow, I don't know if you've seen, yeah, what's uh? I woke up like literally just a few minutes ago seeing all the, uh, the raining missiles on israel right now from Iran. Have you seen that this morning? Dean: Oh yeah, there's a lot of them. Most of them don't hit anything and most of them are shot down, but still it puts some excitement in your day. Dan: I mean really, yeah, these ones look like. They're something unique about these ones that they're supersonicersonic and many of them are hitting, yeah, different than what we've normally seen. Like normally, when you see it, it's the, the iron dome or whatever is, you know, intercepting them, which is always interesting, but these ones are like Direct, like you can see them hitting in inrael that's. I mean, could you imagine, dan, like you, just look at how geographically we are. You know we've won the geographic lottery in where we're positioned here, you know, just realizing that's never. Even though you can, all you know you always take precautions with the umbrella above us, over the outside. Dean: But I mean still that today. I've lived in Toronto for 54 years now, just past the anniversary, the 54th anniversary and I think that, first of all, when you have a really large city like Toronto, the center of a lot of things that go on in Canada, A world-class city like Toronto. Well, it's not a world-class city. But yeah, they have to go five years. I'm putting a new rule in for world-class cities. You have to go five years without ever saying the words. Dan: Yeah, we're a world-class city. Dean: We're a world-class city. And that takes you to stage one probation. Dan: Yeah. Dean: No, that takes you to stage two, probation, and then stage three probation is where all the people who've been saying it's a world-class city have either died or moved, and then it's sort of like science. There was a famous he wasn't a scientist, but he was a, I think, a science historian. Thomas Kuhn K-U-H-N if you ever came across that name wrote in the 1960s and he wrote a very influential book which is called the Structure of Scientific Revolutions, and he was asked many times when you have a sudden series of scientific breakthroughs and we really haven't had any for quite a long time, it's been mostly almost a century since we've had any real scientific revolutions. So all the progress we've made over the last century were for discoveries in physics and magnetism and electricity and uh, you know nuclear but they had already worked out how that was going to happen in the by the 1920s. and he said what when, all of a sudden, when you get a breakthrough, let's say, for example, they discover a new hydrogen atom and it essentially gives everybody free energy? That would be a scientific breakthrough. Do you think that I mean? Would you think? Dan: that would be. Dean: Yeah, yeah. In other words, energy just didn't cost anything anymore, you know, and the price of energy would go down. Dan: That would free up a lot of that, free up a lot of other things energy would go down that would free up a lot of that'd free up a lot of other things, and, uh, and, and he said, the single biggest cause for scientific breakthroughs is the funerals of old scientists. Oh who everybody defers to that you can't first them. Dean: Yeah, well, defers to, but they control promotion of young scientists. They control where the money goes for a scientist and then they die and their control loosens up and to the degree that control disappears. Now you get new. Dan: Yes. Dean: Yeah, so that's a long way around. But I think that in the world today there are people who are basically in control of geopolitical systems, economic systems, you know, cultural systems, and in the next 10 years, I think, a lot of the controllers are going. They'll either die or people will think they've already died. They don't have to actually die, they just have to be in a room somewhere and no one's heard, and no one's heard anything from them recently, and uh and uh, you know, and everything like that, and then things change and then things really shifted. But my sense about Toronto is that it's going to be the Geneva of the Western Hemisphere. Dan: Okay, that's interesting. Dean: Switzerland from a geopolitical standpoint really. I mean, nobody ever talks about well, what do the Swiss think about this? But lots of stuff happens in Geneva. People meet in Geneva. There's tons of money that goes through Geneva and you know, when you know people who hate each other want to talk to each other and feel safe about it, they do it in Geneva that's interesting. Dan: How did Switzerland become its neutrality known for? Is that just because of its positioning between Austria? Dean: and Germany mountains. Yeah, the uh, the germans had given some thought during the second world war to invade switzerland, and switzerland can put into the field in a very short period of time a very big army. I don't know what the numbers are. But the other thing is, uh, for the longest period I know maybe a century long they've been howling out the mountains. So they've got, you know, they've got secret bases inside the mountains, but there's also they've created lots of dams with big reservoirs and if there was ever an invasion they would just blow up the dams and they would flood the entire lowlands of. You know, people are told to the mountains, the entire lowlands of you know, people are told to the mountains, get to your bunker. You know everybody's got a bunker and they've all got guns and they do it. You know they just want to. They're in the middle of one of the most warfare inclined continents in human history. Europe is very warlike. It's always been warlike. Dan: Europe is very warlike. It's always been warlike, but they haven't wanted to be part of the wars, so they've taken the other approach. Dean: Yeah, and Canada is kind of like that, but the US is very uniquely positioned, because a lot of people don't know this. I mean, you come to Toronto and it's big skyscrapers, yeah, you know, and it's a financial center. It's very clearly a big financial center, it's a big communication center, it's a big tech center. But a lot of people don't know it's a big manufacturing center. There's the airport here. Dan: Oh yeah, All around the airport. Dean: Mile after mile of low-rise manufacturing Industrial yeah, all around the airport Mile after mile of low-rise manufacturing Industrial. Yeah Actually, sasha Kurzmer, who you'll see tomorrow, you'll see Sasha says it's the hottest real estate in Toronto right now is industrial space Really Wow, yeah. Yeah, we have enough condos for the next 10 years. I mean most of the condos we got enough. Dan: It's enough already. Yeah, that's true. That's funny right. Dean: I mean the vast number of them are empty. They're just. You know they just built them. Dan: Money lockers. Dean: Right yeah, money lockers right, yeah and uh, but a semi-truck you know like a big semi-truck loaded with industrial products can reach 100 million americans in 24 hours and that's where the wealth. That's where the wealth of toronto comes from. It comes from that distribution. Dan: Access to American market. Dean: Yeah, that's true. So you have the bridge at Buffalo, the big bridge at Buffalo. That goes across to New York and you have the big bridge at Detroit or at Windsor that goes across to Michigan and 80% of all the exports that Canada makes goes over those two bridges. Dan: Wow. Dean: Rapid-fire factoids for our listening audience. Dan: Yeah, absolutely, I mean that's. Dean: I like things like that. I like things like that. Dan: I do too. I always learn. You know, and that's kind of the you think about those as those are all mainland exports physical goods and the like but you know that doesn't. Where the real impact is is all the Cloudlandia transfers. You know, the transfer of digital stuff that goes across the border. There are no borders in Cloudlandia. That's the real exciting thing. This juxtaposition is like nothing else. I mean, you see, navigating this definite global migration to Cloudlandia. That's why I'm so fascinated by it. You know is just the implications. You know and you see. Now I saw that Jeff Bezos is back, apparently after stepping down. He's gotten so excited about AI that's bringing him back into the fold, you know. Dean: What at Amazon? Dan: Yes. Dean: Oh, I didn't know that. Dan: I saw that just yesterday, but he was talking about AI being, you know, a horizontal layer over everything, like electricity was layer over everything. Like electricity was, like the internet is, like AI is just going to be a horizontal, like over everything layer that will there's not a single thing that AI will not impact. It's going to be in everything. And so when you think about it, like electricity, like that I think I mentioned a few weeks ago that was kind of a curiosity of mine Now is seeing who were and what was the progression of electricity kind of thing, as a you know where it, how long it took for the alternate things to come aside from just lighting and now to where it's just everything we take for granted, right, like like you can't imagine a world without electricity. We just take it for granted, it's there, you plug something in and it and it works. Dean: You know, yeah, no, I, I agree, I agree, yeah, and so I wonder who I mean? Dan: do you? Uh and I think I go all the way back to you know that was where, like gutenberg, you know, like the first, the transition there, like when you could print Bibles okay, then you could print, you know, multiple copies and you know, took a vision, applied to it and made it a newspaper or a magazine. You know all the evolution things of it. Who were the organizers of all of these things? And I wonder about the timelines of them, you know? Dean: And I wonder about the timelines of them. You know Well, I do know, because I think that Gutenberg is a real, you know, it's a real watershed and I do know that in Northern Europe so Gutenberg was in Germany, that in Northern Europe, right across the you know you would take from Poland and then Germany, you would take from Poland and then Germany, and then you would take Scandinavia, then the low countries. Lux date that they give for Gutenberg is 1455. That's when you know a document that he printed. It has the year 1455, that within about a 30-year period there were 30,000 working presses in Northern Europe. How many years. That'd be about 30 years after 1455. So by the end of the—you've already surpassed 30,000 presses. Yes, but the vast majority of it wasn't things like Bibles. Dan: The vast majority of it was't things like Bibles. Dean: The vast majority of it was contracts. It was regulations. Dan: It was trade agreements. Dean: It was mostly commercial. It went commercial and so actually maps, maps became a big deal, yeah, yeah. So that made a difference and also those next 150 years were just tumultuous, I mean politically, economically I mean yeah yeah, enormous amount of warfare, enormous amount of became. Dan: Uh, I imagine that part of that was the ability for a precise idea to spread in the way it was intended to spread, like unified in its presentation, compared to an oral history of somebody saying, well, he said this and this was an actual, you know, duplicate representation of what you wanted, because it was a multiplier, really right. Dean: I mean that's, yeah, I'm. It was a bad time for monasteries yeah, exactly. Dan: They started drinking and one of them said you know what? We should start selling this beer. That's what we should be doing. Dean: We should get one of those new printing presses and print ads labels. Dan: Oh, we got to join in. Oh man, it's so funny, dan, that's so true, right? I mean every transition. It's like you know what did the buggy whip people start transitioning into? We're not strangers to entire industries being wiped out, you know, in the progress of things, yeah. Dean: Well, it wasn't until the end of the Second World War that horses really disappeared, certainly in Europe, certainly in Europe. It's. One of the big problems of the Germans during the Second World War is that most of their shipping was still by horses. Throughout the Second World War, you know they presented themselves as a super modern army military. You know they had the Air Force and everything like that, but their biggest problem is that they had terrible logistical systems, because one of the problems was that the roads weren't everywhere and the railroads were different gauges. They had a real problem, and horses are really expensive. I mean, you can't gas up a horse like you can gas up a truck, and you have to take care of them, you have to feed them. You have to use half of them to. You have to use half the horses to haul the food for the other half for all the horses. Dan: It's a self-perpetuating system. Yeah, exactly, that's so funny. Dean: Yeah, it's really an interesting thing, but then there's also a lot of other surprises that happen along the way. You know, happen with electricity and you know everything, but it's all gases and beds. Dan: Well, that's exactly it, and I think that it's clear. Dean: It'd be interesting with Bezos whether he can come back, because he had all sorts of novel ideas, but those novel ideas are standard now throughout the economy. And can he? I don't know how old he is now. Is he 50s? I guess 50s. Dan: Yeah, he might be 60-something. Dean: Yeah, well, well, there's probably some more ingenious 20 year olds that are. Dan: You know that are coming up with new stuff yeah, that were born when amazon already existed, you know I mean, it's like howard schultz with starbucks. Dean: He had the sweet spot for about 10 years, I think, probably from, I would say probably from around 90 to 2000. Starbucks really really had this sweet spot. They had this third space. You know, they had great baristas. Dan: They had. Dean: You walked in and the smell of coffee was fantastic and everything. And then they went public and it required that they put the emphasis on quantity rather than quality, and the first thing they had to do was replace the baristas with automatic machines. Okay, so you know, a personal touch went out of it. The barista would remember your drink. You know, yeah, a personal touch went out of it. The barista would remember your drink you know yeah. Dan: They were artists and they could create you know they punched the buttons and do the things, but they were not really making. Dean: Yeah, and then the other thing was that they went to sugar. They, you know, they brought in all sorts of sugar drinks and pastries and everything else. And now it wasn't the smell of coffee. When you walked in, it was the smell of sugar drinks and pastries and everything else. And now it wasn't the smell of coffee. When you walked in, it was the smell of sugar and uh and uh. So that I mean, people are used to sugar, but it's an interesting you know, and then he also, he trained his competition, you know, if you look at all the independent coffee places that could have a great barista and have freshly ground coffee. He trained all those people and then they went into competition with him. Dan: I think what really you know, the transition or the shift for Starbucks was that it was imagined in a time when the internet was still a place that you largely went to at home or at work, and the third place was a necessary, like you know, a gathering spot. But as soon as I think the downfall for that was when Wi-Fi became a thing and people started using Starbucks as their branch office. They would go and just sit there, take up all their tables all day. Dean: I'm guilty. Dan: I'm guilty, right exactly and that that kind of economically iconic urban locations, you know where you would be a nice little oasis. Yeah, it was exotically, exotically. European, I mean, he got the idea sitting in the. Dean: Grand Plaza in Venice you know that's where he got the idea for it, and yeah, so it was a period in a period in time. He had an era, period in time to take advantage and of course he did. You know he espresso drinks to. Dan: North. Dean: America. We, you know, maxwell House was coffee before Jeff Bezos, you know, and yeah, I think there's just a time. You, you know, I mean one of the things is that we talk about. We have Jeff Madoff and I are writing a book called Casting, not Hiring where we talk about bringing theater into your business and we study Starbucks and we say it's a cautionary tale and the idea that I came up with is that starbucks would create the world's greatest barista school and then you would apply to be, uh, become a barista in a starbucks and you would get a certification, okay, and then they would cream. They would always take the best baristas for their own stores and and. But then other people could buy a license to have a barista licensed, starbucks licensed barista license yes. And that he wouldn't have gone as quickly but he would have made quality brand. Yeah, but I think not grinding the coffee was the big, the big thing, because the smell of coffee and they're not as good. I mean, the starbucks drinks aren't as good as they. They were when they had the baristas, because it was just always freshly ground. You know, and yeah, that that was in the coffee and everything like that. I I haven't been. I actually haven't been to a starbucks myself in about two years that's interesting, we've got like it's very funny. Dan: But the in winter haven there's a independent you know cafe called haven cafe and they have won three out of five years the, the international competition in in Melbourne. Uh. Dean: Australia. Yeah see, that's good, that's fantastic yeah yeah yeah and Starbucks can't get back to Starbucks. Can't get back to that. You know that they're too big right, yeah, we just in winter. Dan: I haven't been yet because I've been up here, but it just opened a new Dutch Brothers coffee, which you know has been they've been more West Coast oriented, but making quite a stir. Dean: West Coast. That's where the riots are right. The riots are in the United. Dan: States. Dean: Oh man, holy cow, riot copy, riot copy. Dan: Yeah, exactly, I mean that's yeah. I can't imagine, you know, being in Los Angeles right now. That's just yeah unbelievable. Dean: Yeah, I think they're keeping it out of Santa Monica. That's all I really care about. Dan: Nothing at shutters right. Dean: Yeah, I mean Ocean Avenue and that. Have that tightly policed and keep them out of there. Dan: Yeah, exactly, it's amazing To protect the business. Yeah, I'm very interested in this whole, you know seeing, just looking back historically to see where the you know directionally what's going to happen with AI as it progresses here. Dean: Yeah, you know like learning from the platforms it's just constant discovery. I mean, you know like learning from that, it's just constant discovery. Dan: I mean uh, you know yeah yeah, I mean it's um. Dean: I had a podcast with mike kanix on tuesday and 60 days ago I thought it was going in this direction. Dan: He says now it's totally changed it and I said, well, that's probably going to be true 60 days from now yeah, I guess that's true, right, layer after layer, because we won't even know what it's going to, uh, what it's going to do. Yeah, I do just look at these uh things, though, you know, like the enabling everything, I'm really thinking more. I was telling you yesterday I was working on an email about the what if the robots really do take over? And just because everybody kind of says that with either fear or excitement, you know, and I think if you take it from. Dean: Well, what does take over mean? I mean, what does the word take over? Dan: mean, well, that's the thing, that's the word, right. That's what I mean is that people have that fear that they're going to lose control, but I think I look at it from that you get to give up control or to give control to the robot. You don't have to do anything. You know, I was thinking with with breakfast, with Chad Jenkins this morning, and we had, you and I had that delicious steak yesterday, we had one this morning and you know just thinking. You know, imagine that your house has a robot that is trained in all of the culinary, you know the very best culinary minds and you can order up anything you want prepared, exactly how it's prepared, you know, right there at your house, brought right to you by a robot. That's not, I mean, that's definitely in the realm of, of realistic here. You know, in the next, certainly, if we, if we take depending on how far a window out you take, right, like I think that things are moving so fast that that's, I think, 2030, you know, five years we're going to have a, even if just thinking about the trajectory that we've had right now yeah, my belief is that it's going to be um 90 of. Dean: It is going to be backstage and not front stage. That's going to be backstage yes, and that's got. You know I use the. Remember when google brought out their glasses, yeah, and they said this is the great breakthrough. You know all new technology does. And immediately all the bars and restaurants in San Francisco barred Google glasses. Dan: Okay, why? Dean: Well, because you can take pictures with them. Oh, I see, okay, and say you're not coming in here with those glasses and taking pictures of people who are having private meetings and private conversations. So yesterday after lunch I had some time to wander around. I wandered over to the new Hyatt. You know they completely remodeled the Hyatt. Dan: Yeah, how is? Dean: that it's very, very nice. It's 10 times better than the Four Seasons. First of all, they've got this big, massive restaurant the moment you walk into the lobby. I mean it probably has 100 seats in the restaurant. Dan: Like our kind of seats yeah. Dean: Yeah, I mean it's nice. I mean you might not like it, but you know you know, you walk into the Four Seasons and it's the most impersonal possible architecture and interior design. This is really nice. And so I just went over there and I, you know, and I just got on the internet and I was, you know, I was creating a new tool, I was actually creating a new tool and but I was thinking that AI is now part of reality. Dan: Yes. Dean: But reality is not part of AI. Dan: Say more about that. Dean: Well, it's not reality, it's artificial, oh it's artificial. Dan: It's artificial. Oh, exactly it's artificial. Dean: I mean, if you look up the definition of artificial, half of it means fake. Dan: Yes, exactly. Dean: Yeah, so part of our reality now is that there's a thing called AI, but AI is in a thing called reality, but reality is not in a thing called AI. Dan: Right. Dean: In other words, ai is continually taking pieces of reality and automating it and everything like that, and humans at the same time are creating more reality. That is not AI. Dan: AI, yeah, and that's I wonder. You know, this is kind of the thing where it's really the lines between. I'd be very interested to see, dan, in terms of the economy, like and I'll call that like a average you know family budget how much of it is spent on reality versus, you know, digital. You know mainland versus cloudlandia. Physical goods, food you know we talked about the different, you know the pillars of spending, mm-hmm and much of it you know on housing, transportation, food, health, kids. You know money and me, all of those things. Much of it is consumed in a. You know we're all everybody's competing outside of. You know, for everybody puts all this emphasis on Cloudlandia and I wonder you know what, how much of that is really? It's digital enabled. I don't know if you know. I just I don't know that. I told you yesterday. Dean: Yeah, but here, how much of it? The better question is. I mean to get a handle on this. How much of it is electricity enabled? Dan: Oh for sure, All of it. Dean: Most of it Well, not all of it, but most of it. I mean conversation, you know when you're sitting in a room with someone is I mean it's electronically enabled in the sense you like. Have it the temperature good and the lighting good and everything like that, but that's not the important thing. You would do it. Great conversations were happening before there was electricity, so yes, you know and any anything, but I think that most humans don't want to think about it. My, my sense is, you know, I don't want to have conversations about technology, except it's with someone like yourself or anything like that, but I don't spend most of my day talking about technology or electricity. The conversation we had last year about AI the conversation we're having about AI isn't much different than the conversation we're going to have about AI 10 years from now Did you? see this Next year. You're going to say did you see this new thing? And I said we were having a conversation like this 10 years ago. Yeah, yeah, that's absolutely true, I don't think it's going to change humanity at all. Dan: Yeah, I'm just going through like I'm looking at something you just said. We don't want to think about these things. Girding of that is our desire for convenience, progressively, you know, conserving energy, right. So it's that we've evolved to a point where we don't have to think about those things, like if we just take the, if we take the house or housing, shelter is is the core thing. That that has done. And our desire, you know, thousands of years ago, for shelter, even hundreds of years ago, was that it was, you know, safe and that it was gave did the job of shelter. But then, you know, when, electricity and plumbing and Wi-Fi and entertainment streaming and comfortable furniture and all these things, this progression, this ratcheting of elevations, were never. I think that's really interesting. We're never really satisfied. We're constantly have an appetite for progressing. Very few things do we ever reach a point where we say, oh, that's good enough, this is great. Like outhouses, you know, we're not as good as indoor plumbing and having, you know, having electricity is much nicer than having to chop wood and carry water. Dean: Yeah, well, I think the big thing is that efficiency and convenience and comfort, once you have them, no longer have any meaning. Dan: Right. But the ratchet is, once we've reached one level, we're ratcheted in at that level of acceptance. Dean: I mean possibly I don't know. I mean I don't know how you would measure this in relationship to everybody's after this. First of all, I don't know how you measure everybody and the big thing. I mean there are certain people who are keenly interested in this. It's more of an intellectual pleasure than it is actually. See that technology is of intellectual interest. You me, you know, you myself and everything else will be interested in talking about this, but I'm going home for a family reunion next weekend in Ohio. I bet in the four or five hours we're together none of us talks about this because it's of no intellectual interest to anyone else. Ok, so you know but it is for us. It's a, you know, and so I was reading. I'm reading a is the observation of the interest and behavior of a very small portion of the population who have freedom and money and that. And the era is defined by the interest of this very, very small portion, the rest of the people probably they're not doing things that would characterize the era. They're doing things that may have lasted for hundreds but it doesn't. It's not interesting to study, it's not interesting to write about, and you know, I mean we look at movies and we say, well, that's like America. No, that's like actors and producers and directors saying this is how we're going to describe America, but that's not how America actually lives. Dan: Yeah, that's interesting, right, movies are kind of holding up a mirror to the zeitgeist, in a way, right. Dean: Like Strategic Coast, is not a description of how the entrepreneurial world operates no, you know the yeah. Dan: The interesting thing thinking about your thinking is is transferable across all. You know it's a durable context. That's kind of the way. That's what I look about. That's what I love about the eight prophet activators. The breakthrough DNA model is very it's a durable context. It's timeless. Dean: Yes, I mean if the Romans had the eight prophet activators, and they did, but they just didn't know they did. Dan: Right. Dean: Yeah, and you go forward to the Star Wars cafe and probably the ones who are buying drinks for the whole house are the ones who know the eight prophet activators. Dan: Secretly, secretly, secretly. Who's that? Dean: weird. Who's that weird looking guy? I don't know if it's a guy. Who is it who you know? Well, I don't know, but buy him a drink oh my goodness, yeah, I'm. Dan: I think this thing that is convenience. We certainly want things to get easier. I mean, when you look at, I'm just looking down no, we want some things to get easier. What things do we not want to get easier? Dean: The things that are handled. We don't want to get easier. Dan: Oh right exactly. Dean: Yeah, for example, if there was a home robot, we would never buy one, because we've got things handled. Dan: Yeah. Dean: Yeah, I have no interest in having a home robot. I have no interest in having a home shop for a cook. I have no interest in everything because it's already handled and it's not worth the thinking it would take to introduce that into my, into our life I mean yeah, and it right like that. So it's. Dan: There are certain things that we'd like to get easier okay, and we're and we're focused on that yeah, yeah, I think about that, like that's I was thinking, you know, in terms of you know the access we have through Cloudlandia is I can get anything that is from any restaurant you know delivered to my house in 22 minutes. You know, that's from the moment I have the thought, I just push the button and so, yeah, I don't have. There's no, no thinking about that. We were talking about being here in the. You know the seamlessness of you know being here at the Hazleton and of you know I love this, uh, environment, I love being right here in this footprint and the fact that you know the hotel allows you to just like, come, I can walk right in step, you know, get all the function of the shelter and the food and being in this environment without any of the concern of it, right? No yeah, no maintenance. No, I never think about it when I leave. Yeah, it's handled. Think about that compared to when I had a house here, you know you have so much. Yeah, that's the thing, that's a good word handled. We just want things handled. You know Our desires. We want our desires handled and our desires are not really. I think our basic desires don't really. Maybe they evolve, it's just the novelty of the things, but the actual verbs of what we're doing are not really. I think you look at, if we look at the health category, you know where you are a you know you are at the apex level of consumer of health and longevity. Consumer of health and longevity. You know all the offerings that are available in terms of you know, from the physio that you're doing to the stem cells, to the work with David Hasse, all of those things. You are certainly at the leading edge and it shows you're nationally ranked, internationally ranked, as aging backwards. Dean: I'm on the chart. You're on the chart exactly, but I got on the chart without knowing it. It's just a function of one of the tests that I take. Somebody created sort of a ranking out of this and I was on it. It's just part of something that I do every quarter that shows up on some sort of chart. They ask you whether you want to be listed or not, and I thought it was good for um, because your doctor is listed on it too, and I. I did it mostly because david hoss he gets credit for it, you know he does it for yeah you know, it's good. It's good for his advertising and you know his marketing and I mean it's just good for. It's just good for his advertising and you know his marketing, I mean it's just good for his satisfaction and everything like that. But you know that's a really good thing because you know I created that. It was like two years I created a workshop called well, it's a lifetime extender, and then I changed it to age reversal future, because not a really interesting term, because it's in the future somewhere. Right but age reversal you can actually see right now it's a more meaningful comparison number and I had hundreds of people. I had hundreds of people on that and to my knowledge nobody's done anything that we talked about which kind of proves to you, unless it's a keen interest you can have the information and you can have the knowledge. But if it isn't actually something of central motivational interest to you, the knowledge and the information just passes by. The knowledge and the information just passes. Dan: Yeah, and I think it goes. If you have to disrupt your established habits, what do you always say? We don't want any habits except for the ones that we have already established. Right, except for the ones that are existing. Dean: Reinforce them, yeah, reinforce them and anyway, today I'm going to have to cut off early because I have, and so in about two minutes I'm going to have to jump, but I'm seeing you tomorrow and I'm seeing you the next day. It's a banner week. It's four days in a row. We'll be in contact, so, anyway, you know what we're doing in context, so anyway you know what we're doing. We're really developing, you know, psychological, philosophical, conceptual structures here. How do you think about this stuff? That's what I think about it a lot. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's always pleasurable. Dan: Always, Dan, I will. I'll see you tomorrow At the party. That's right. Have an amazing day and I'll see you tomorrow night okay, thanks, bye.

What The Bible Says
Episode 2662 / “Girding Up The Loins Of Your Mind”

What The Bible Says

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 15:00


Series: N/AService: Radio Program / PodcastType: Radio Program / PodcastSpeaker: E.R. Hall, Jr.

Chrisman Commentary - Daily Mortgage News
4.14.25 Building Costs and Mergers; TrustEngine's Dave Savage on Curiosity; Girding Capital Markets Loins

Chrisman Commentary - Daily Mortgage News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 30:56 Transcription Available


Welcome to The Chrisman Commentary, your go-to daily mortgage news podcast, where industry insights meet expert analysis. Hosted by Robbie Chrisman, this podcast delivers the latest updates on mortgage rates, capital markets, and the forces shaping the housing finance landscape. Whether you're a seasoned professional or just looking to stay informed, you'll get clear, concise breakdowns of market trends and economic shifts that impact the mortgage world.In today's episode, we explain what could happen to home prices if we keep tariffs on our largest trading partners. Plus, Robbie sits down with TrustEngine's Dave Savage to discuss the evolution of the industry since he entered more than three decades ago, how he's driven to make an impact, and more tidbits from one of the most recognizable names in mortgage that you won't want to miss. And we conclude with a look at what is on the minds of capital markets folks this week in the face of volatility.Thank you to BeSmartee, which is transforming mortgage lending with Bright Connect, its native mobile app designed to boost loan officer productivity, speed up referrals, and simplify the borrower experience.

Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast featuring Hank Smith & John Bytheway
Doctrine & Covenants 27-28 Part 1 • Dr. Matthew Richardson • March 24 - 30 • Come Follow Me

Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast featuring Hank Smith & John Bytheway

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 68:46


How do we make more of the ordinance of the sacrament? Dr. Matthew Richardson explores the significance of the sacrament, the importance of revelation and following the Lord's appointed leaders, and the need to put on the full armor of God as we navigate the challenges of daily life. YOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/t6IGvT4sPFkFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 - Part 1 - Dr. Matthew Richardson01:49 Strand of pearls05:45 A message to a wheat farmer08:00 Dr. Matthew Richardson's bio11:37 Come, Follow Me Manual13:39 The sacrament isn't transactional15:59 D&C 27 - Sally and Newel Knight 19:16 Attaching meaning to the sacrament21:22 Why Joseph didn't buy wine24:32 Passover and the sacrament27:12 Look to the future32:22 Gratitude and ideals36:21 Sharing a meal37:59 A trip to the Garden of Gethsemane42:10 Young children and sacrament meeting47:10 Girding your loins50:53 The armor of God57:09 The sword is a weapon01:00:03 The wisdom of Marlene Baker Savage01:04:49 One question01:09:22 End of Part 1 -  Dr Matthew RichardsonThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika : Portuguese TranscriptsHeather Barlow: Communications Director"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com

The Hard Skills
Girding Resiliency Through Spiritual Practices, with Linda Marsanico

The Hard Skills

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 60:56


In this episode, we explore how love, compassion, playfulness, visualization, meditation, and stillness can be healing spiritual practices that gird resiliency. The Hard Skills is hosted by TalkRadio.nyc, a global live Podcasting Station focused on Empowering, Inspiring, Uplifting, and Educating our audiences and importantly, offsetting the fear and negativity that is so common in traditional programming. In this episode, I introduce Linda Marsanico, one of the newer hosts on this platform. She hosts The A Train to Sedona podcast and we'll be exploring resiliency through the lens of various spiritual practices.  Linda Marsanico initially trained as a social psychologist, but transitioned to writing, speaking, and coaching about love, compassion, playfulness, visualization, meditation, and stillness as a road to a joy-filled life. She encourages clients to develop themuscle of meditation and mantra as a support for a disciplined mind. She is a spiritual coach who considers the mind,body, spirit of a person. Linda sees herself as a healer, through various modalities, including Reiki, Vortex (R) and Integrated Energy (R). Her podcast is named after her recently published book, The A Train to Sedona, in which she shares her journey toward love, compassion, and enlightenment and we'll hear more about that today.  Twitter X - @LMarsanicoLinkedIn - www.linkedin.co/in/linda-marsanico-b2854a5b/Facebook - www.Facebook.com/profile.php?id=00007089480249Website: LindaMarsanico.comhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZ5Vf8uv2rwhttps://www.talkradio.nyc/shows/the-a-train-to-sedona#SpiritualPractice, #Healing #Resiliency #TheHardSkillsTune in for this empowering conversation at TalkRadio.nyc

Bible Centered Fellowship Sermon Podcast
Jeremiah's Prophetic Girding 10-7-07

Bible Centered Fellowship Sermon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 93:22


Sunday PM Series Jerry Carter https://www.youtube.com/@Godihhm https://bcfodessa.podbean.com/

United Church of God Sermons
Girding Your Waist with Truth: Developing Discernment

United Church of God Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2024 28:56


By Donald Turgeon - “Gird your waist with truth.” From the beginning, mankind has been duped by the “father of lies.” Even with all the information available to us today, it is hard to know what is true and what is not true. Being girded with truth is critical to withstanding the enemy's deception, but how can we cut

The Nextlander Watchcast
106: Cloak & Dagger (1984)

The Nextlander Watchcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 126:01


This week on the Watchcast, it's Cloak & Dagger! No, not the Marvel thing. The loosely Atari-related thing from the '80s! Join us as we discuss illegal game tapes, Dabney Coleman's action hero credentials, and how we feel having just watched the kid from E.T. kill a guy. CHAPTERS: (00:00:00) - The Nextlander Watchcast Episode 106: Cloak & Dagger (1984) (00:00:24) - Intro. (00:01:00) - Our movie this week: Cloak & Dagger! (Not the Marvel thing.) (00:10:42) - Talking about the movie's connection to Atari and video games. (00:17:52) - Some top-line thoughts about what does and doesn't work in the movie. (00:20:49) - Talking about some of the folks who helped make this thing. (00:27:33) - The strangely common refrain of this movie being important to kids who have trouble relating to their dad. (00:28:30) - More production and cast talk. (00:35:43) - The movie's opening Hitman level. (00:37:10) - Our intro to the kids and Morris. (00:44:45) - Infiltrating Textronics. (00:51:07) - Evil video game scientists are hunting your children! (00:58:30) - Break! (00:58:46) - We're back, and the bad guys are coming to kill this kid. (01:05:39) - Unlocking the secrets of the forbidden Atari tape. (01:12:28) - There is no plan here. These people are dumb as hell. (01:16:13) - Davey is on the run. (01:21:30) - Sure, let's make a kid ride in a trunk with a corpse. PG! Parental Guidance! (01:26:07) - To the Alamo! (01:31:32) - Wacky child driving antics! (01:36:28) - Jack Flack might not be a great role model. (01:45:41) - To the airport! Where unsupervised children will be welcomed with only moderate questioning. (01:50:37) - This is one of the goofiest hostage situations in film history. (01:56:40) - Final thoughts. (01:59:58) - Girding ourselves for next week's movie: Ready Player One! (02:05:00) - Outro.

Eagle Eye Perspectives Podcast
Girding Your Loins With Truth

Eagle Eye Perspectives Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 54:54


In this episode Brian shares on the importance of girding your loins with truth in the evil day.  Though the battle is a spiritual battle against satan's kingdom, the enemy will assault our soul.  The weapons of our warfare stated in Ephesians 6 is to prepare us in the evil day when the enemy speaks lies, accusations, vain imaginations, or propaganda into our soul.  We must learn to gird up the loins of our mind (1Peter 1:13) and emotions when the trial comes.  The Holy Spirit is the truth given to us as well as the word of God to speak the truth to our spirit in order to place the mind and emotions into subjection to the Spirit.

The Word for Today with Ray
Jesus Girding Himself with a Towel - John 13:4

The Word for Today with Ray

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 4:21


Verse by verse study through the book of John Chapter Thirteen and Verse Four

Let’s Talk Tanya
Igeres Hakodesh: Part Four of Tanya: Girding our loins with strength | 7 Av | Day 255 | Leap Year

Let’s Talk Tanya

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2024 4:25


7 Av | Day 255 | Leap Year Igeres Hakodesh: Part Four of Tanya: Girding our loins with strength-- Can you spare four minutes a day to gain deeper insight into yourself, your soul, your spiritual make-up, your personal purpose, and how to enjoy a meaningful relationship with G-d? If yes, Let's Talk Tanya. Tanya, the seminal work of Chabad Chasidism, is the personal owner's manual for the Jew who seeks to serve G-d and live a life suffused with holiness, purpose, and joy. Let's Talk Tanya is a daily series that attempts to translate the Tanya into resonant and relevant language Tanya is divided into daily portions. Following this regimen, one concludes the Tanya every year. Let's Talk Tanya, in 4 minutes on average, briefly reviews the day's segment, conveys its basic ideas, and zooms in on one large idea. To watch, listen, or subscribe to Let's Talk Tanya: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LetsTalkTanya Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3uFNrie Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3BqG9Tm Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3FMnvrs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/letstalktanya/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/LetsTalkTanya www.letstalktanya.com To donate or for dedication opportunities, please visit letstalktanya.com/donate or reach us at contact@letstalktanya.com Have Tanya questions? Submit questions for possible inclusion in a future Tanya Q&A Segment: letstalktanya@gmail.com __ The full text of the daily Tanya is available at: www.Chabad.org/DailyTanya

C. H. Spurgeon on SermonAudio
Girding on the Harness

C. H. Spurgeon on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 44:00


A new MP3 sermon from Dr David C. Mackereth is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Girding on the Harness Subtitle: C H Spurgeon Speaker: C. H. Spurgeon Broadcaster: Dr David C. Mackereth Event: Midweek Service Date: 5/22/2024 Bible: 1 Kings 20:11 Length: 44 min.

C. H. Spurgeon on SermonAudio
Girding on the Harness

C. H. Spurgeon on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 44:00


A new MP3 sermon from Dr David C. Mackereth is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Girding on the Harness Subtitle: C H Spurgeon Speaker: C. H. Spurgeon Broadcaster: Dr David C. Mackereth Event: Midweek Service Date: 5/22/2024 Bible: 1 Kings 20:11 Length: 44 min.

UnMind: Zen Moments With Great Cloud
152: Election Year Zen part 4

UnMind: Zen Moments With Great Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 18:56


In the last episode of UnMind, we concluded our review of the design intent of the Three Treasures of Buddhism. In this segment, we return to the current state of the campaign for political leadership of the country. My intent in these essays regarding the practice of Zen in an election year cycle is not to persuade or convince anyone of anything, other than the efficacy of sitting in zazen to straighten this mess out for yourself. I will try to make the case that it ‑ the political discourse ‑ is not at all disconnected from the Three Treasures. After all, the design of the three branches of government, and even partisan politics, are nothing more than manifestations of the community writ large – however subject to manipulation and distortion by special interest groups and individuals who may not honor the harmony of the larger Sangha, as their highest ideal. To be clear, I am not interested in getting out the vote, or influencing your vote. I regard politics as only one of the multifarious – and perhaps nefarious – arenas of civic action available to us in modern times. But because the unremitting and relentless campaign is currently taking all the oxygen out of the air, and threatens to do so for some time, more than ever should we turn to our own council, and tend to our own knitting, on the cushion. Zen meditation provides a safe haven, a dependable redoubt, for refreshing our resolve to take action in the most compassionate way, but informed by the wisdom of the ancestors. The political pageantry of the moment is subject to the cardinal marks of dukkha – impermanence, imperfection and insubstantiality – perhaps more than any other dimension of existence. We can regret, or rejoice, at its passing. It is also a given that most of those in positions of power and influence do not have the wisdom and compassion of the Dharma forming their guiding principles, nor even that of the founding documents of the republic. Nor can we claim that the clarity of Buddha's wisdom, or buddha-nature, resides at the heart of the American cult of the individual. In spite of the complexity, confusion, and downright contrariness of human nature, in coming to terms with the polity, I think I speak for all the ancestors of Zen in saying that our recommendation remains the same, regarding the spectrum, or spectacle, of governance across the countries of the globe, and the span of centuries since the advent of Buddhism in India. Physical samadhi is first in priority – more centered and balanced, less off-kilter, in the form of sitting upright and still, in zazen as well as kinhin, walking meditation. Then follows emotional samadhi – manifesting as more calmness, less anxiety. Then mental samadhi – fostering more clarity and less confusion, especially as to the deeper meaning and ramifications of the compassionate teachings. And finally, social samadhi – finding more harmony and less friction, in personal and social relationships. Girding our loins, as it were, with the “sword of Manjusri,” cutting through delusion, and reentering the marketplace with bliss-bestowing hands. By starting at the center of things, the personal sphere, eventually we may find our way in the social, natural, and even the universal spheres of influence that surround us, bringing the eyes and ears, and helping hands, of the bodhisattva to bear upon the suffering of the world. A large dollop of humility, and perhaps a healthy sense of humor, may be in order. We have introduced the notion that what we are doing in Zen training is, after all, only developing our penchant for independent thinking, along with its counterpart, a capacity for interdependent action. This is the tightrope we walk, while keeping all the balls in the air, of the many influences surrounding us. The nexus of near-infinite causes and conditions can bring about analysis paralysis if we succumb to the usual approach to defining and solving problems based on self-defense. What is called for is recognition and acceptance of the Japanese proverb cited by Master Dogen: “Fall down seven times; get up eight!” We need to give ourselves permission to fail in the social realm. Partisanship in politics requires that we suspend independent thinking. We are often prevailed upon to subscribe to views and opinions that may not be fully vetted or justified, in order to take advantage of the opportunities of the moment, to win over sufficient numbers of voters to the cause. But when we examine the sources of the ideological divide, it seems that underlying factors, which would fall into the skandha of “mental formations,' or unconscious volition, may play a greater role than we think. Further to the point, a recent article in the New York Times by Neil Gross, a professor of sociology at Colby College, titled “Are You Thinking for Yourself?” approached the problem of ideological division from a demographical perspective: If you're trying to guess whether people are Republicans or Democrats, knowing a few basic facts about them will take you a long way. What's their race and gender? How far did they get in school? What part of the country do they live in and is their community urban, suburban, or rural? He goes on to support the point with examples, which we will not detail here. His basic conclusion is that your demographics often determine what you believe, in regards to your general worldview, as well as political leanings. A seemingly determinative factor is that of the influence of parents and family. A majority of partisans of the new generation reflect the ideology of their parentage, apparently going back for generations. From this we might conclude that the vast majority of voters are going to be biased in favor of their family and social history from childhood – nature and nurture – and not likely to be persuaded by rational or ideological argument to switch allegiances. This suggests that the majority of campaign messages and ads attempting to sway so-called independents and moderates to join one camp or another may be a waste of time and money. It might be more effective to track the generational histories of constituencies, homing in on the genetically captive audience, known colloquially as “the base.” New coalitions may be limited by this unseen dimension, holding steady through generations. Please indulge an exercise involving simple mathematics, something we do not often engage in to make a point about Zen, or the teachings of Buddhism. But we have to admit that a major factor in differentiating our lives and times from those of our Zen ancestors is the burgeoning population and geometrically expanding demographics of the modern age. Pardon me while I “do the math,” with an assist from my onboard calculator, using search results from online sources, both inaccessible to the ancients. The current US population is estimated at about 333 million, of which roughly 240 million, or 72% of the total, are eligible to vote. In 2020, around 66% of those eligible actually registered and voted, a record, but representative of less than 50% of the total population. The Democrat candidate won the election with a little over 51% of the vote, while the Republican candidate lost, with about 47% of the vote. Political spending in the 2020 election totaled $14.4 billion – more than doubling the total cost of the also record-breaking 2016 cycle – according to opensecrets.org. So the last victory came at a cost of about $2000 a vote, if my math is correct. Even though a record 60-plus percent of eligible voters turned out in the 2020 election, the final decision was made by a miniscule fraction – 0.03% -- of the total, assuming the count was accurate, and that my math is close enough for jazz. Throw in the electoral college, with its handful of “swing states,” and the final decision comes down to a cohort less than the population of the metro area of Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas. Yet the winners (and losers) not only endeavor to rewrite history to favor their cause, they also claim to enjoy the mandate of “the American people,” a tiny portion of whom actually put them in office. Or threw them out. The losing side famously claimed the election was stolen through voter fraud, though the electoral college tally came in at 306 to 232, a decisive difference, along with the overage of multiple millions of voters in the popular vote. But, as we hasten to say, that's a story for another day. Who are we to argue the truth of politics? Zen calls upon us to challenge the truth of our very senses! So we have to look at whatever leaders we get as being “the leaders we deserve,” in the context of a system demonstrably incapable of representing the “will of the people,” let alone “government of the people, by the people, for the people.” The fact that a large percentage opt out, and others are disenfranchised, belies a foundational tenet of the democratic republic: “one man-one vote.” This remains an ideal, one that may be forever out of reach, even with our vaunted technical connectivity. It may come down to a matter of free will, or the inexorable ignorance of the modern hoi polloi. Nobody is legally required to vote, after all, which may be a good thing. Further into the article, Gross generalizes: Although there are certainly people whose politics defy generalization, the underlying demographic tendencies are powerful predictors of belief – powerful enough that elections have become as much a turnout game as an exercise in persuasion. Do tell. But if it takes $2 grand a pop to get a single person to the polls, one has to question whether it is possible to turn that massive a “push” into a “pull,” to borrow from marketing terminology. Of course, there are those who would question whether it is wise to target people who are disinclined to vote in the first place. How informed would their choices likely be, if they are finally dragged out of their inertia, and into the polls? Gross concludes his essay with a turn to something deeper, the humanity underlying our behavior, including political activism: By all means, let's duke it out in the public sphere and at the ballot box. You'll fight for you interests and I'll fight for mine. That's democracy in a big, diverse, boisterous nation. But if we could bear in mind that we sometimes stumble into our most passionately held beliefs, the tenor of our discourse might be a bit saner and more cordial. The fact that we are all deeply social creatures, in politics and otherwise, underscores our shared humanity – something that we would be wise to never lose sight of. Whether or not you agree with the implicit assumption that making the tenor of our public discourse saner and more cordial would be a good thing – many seem to feel the opposite, that the squeakier the wheel, the more grease it will get – most would probably agree with the appeal to our shared humanity, and recognize the lamentable truism of frequently stumbling into our most passionately held beliefs. Aye, there's the rub – that our actions within the social sphere, including the political arena, are too often based on belief, rather than reality. Here is where Zen comes in. The deeper implicit assumption is that our shared humanity is necessarily a good thing. But I think Buddhism points to something deeper. We do not aspire to human nature in Zen – we aspire to buddha nature. Meaning to wake up to the deeper meaning and implications of our lives – our very existence – beyond the immediate and local causes and conditions impinging upon us, including the political machinations of our fellow travelers. Again, my intent in these essays is to emphasize the necessity of the practice of Zen in an election year cycle, not to persuade you of anything, other than the efficacy of sitting in zazen to straighten this mess out for yourself. That said, or resaid, I do encourage you to vote. You will make the right choice, informed by your meditation, I am sure. In the next episode of UnMind, we will return to considerations of more broadly focused adaptation of design thinking principles of problem definition and potential solutions in everyday life, of which politics is only one, if one of the most noisy and noisome.* * * Elliston Roshi is guiding teacher of the Atlanta Soto Zen Center and abbot of the Silent Thunder Order. He is also a gallery-represented fine artist expressing his Zen through visual poetry, or “music to the eyes.”UnMind is a production of the Atlanta Soto Zen Center in Atlanta, Georgia and the Silent Thunder Order. You can support these teachings by PayPal to donate@STorder.org. Gassho.Producer: Shinjin Larry Little

The Garrett Ashley Mullet Show
David's Descendants and the Extreme Necessity of Girding Up Our Loins

The Garrett Ashley Mullet Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 141:54


All these were David's sons, besides the sons of the concubines, and Tamar was their sister. - 1 Chronicles 3:9   This Episode's Links and Timestamps: 00:24 – 1 Chronicles 3 3:40 – Thoughts on the Reading 38:02 – Why was David called a man after God's own heart? 1:09:27 - Reaction to Woke Staff Sergeant Bronson Martial Law TikTok – Garrett Ashley Mullet, YouTube 1:31:41 - Silence Equals Consent (Proverbs 13:22) – William Federer, Calvary Chapel Chino Hills, YouTube 1:45:44 – The Extreme Necessity of Girding Up Our Loins --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/garrett-ashley-mullet/message

Live Behind The Veil
We Gird Our Loins With Truth

Live Behind The Veil

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2024 17:33 Transcription Available


Summary: The believer today must build his life in the Lord if he is going to be able to stand in the spiritual warfare that comes against him. Girding his loins with truth is an essential part of this amour which will protect his emotions from all the fiery darts of the wicked one. Each day we gird our loins with His truth as we build our life in the Lord. Show Notes: The believer girds his loins with the truth of the scriptures, worship, and waiting on the Lord to be able to resist all that the enemy would throw at him. The full amour of God is made up of several different pieces. Each piece has a specific purpose. ...your loins are the seed of your emotions, and there's a great deal of creativity connected to the loins. The purpose of these pieces of amour is to protect us in areas of our vulnerability. We react to situations in ways that is pleasing to the Lord because we have the amour of God on. We take the time to gird our loins with His truth each day. We are building the army of the Lord that can turn back anything that Satan would throw against them. Reading the scriptures, Worship, waiting on the Lord and being in fellowship with other believers will build this amour of God into our lives. Quotes: ...being in the Scriptures, spending time with the Lord alone, Worship all those things, to me, is building your life in the Lord. That's what Christ did. He built his life in the Word. the purpose of the armor of God is to cover areas of vulnerability. Emotions are so intensely united with this area of the loins. It's all about our emotions. We are such a people of emotions. My emotions get hit and I almost double over with...

Wilderness Wanderings
Girding the Belt of Truth

Wilderness Wanderings

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 5:07


Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist… (Ephesians 6:14). Having planted our feet firmly on the ground, aware that we are in Christ, the Lord—surrounded and guarded not by our own might, but by His mighty power, let us get dressed up in the armour that our Father so gracious provides for us. And let us stand against the attacks of our enemy. The first piece armour is the belt of truth which we buckle around our waists. “Having girded your middles with truth” is a more accurate rendering of the Greek. It shows a deliberate action we must take. We must put the armour on; it does not appear on us by magic. As Pastor Anthony said yesterday, standing in not loitering. Paul says we must equip ourselves so that we can stand. If we don't get our minds involved, we will fail. Spiritual battle is not done simply by attending worship or by claiming we are Christians. Unless we personally put on the armour, we will not stand firm. Before the armour can be put on, the garments underneath must be bound together. The metaphor of girding describes fastening loose fitting clothing securely around the waist. This made rapid movement easier and was vital preparation for any vigorous activity, such as running a race or fighting a battle. The most famous Biblical example is the Israelites leaving Egypt; God told them to tuck their cloaks into their belts (Exodus 12:11). Mostly likely, Paul had Isaiah 11:5 in mind when he wrote our text. Isaiah says this about our Messiah-King, the shoot of Jesse, “Righteousness will be his belt and faithfulness the sash around his waist”. Thus, it is not doctrinal truths that Paul is referring to, but truth in the sense of integrity, truth in the inward being. The belt of truth suggests that our character and activities are shaped by the gospel. If we claim to be a Christian, we will desire to live as Jesus lives. He has already instructed us “to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness” (4:25) and told us that “the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth” (5:9). If this sounds too difficult, fear not, Jesus prays for us, "protect them from the evil one...Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth” (John 17:15, 17). While we are fastening our spiritual belt, the Spirit is simultaneously teaching and training us. Committing to living in the truth will probably mean facing some unpleasant, even ugly moments. It might mean opening to the light of Christ some dark secrets we've carefully hidden away and making them right. Satan loves the secret sins that we ignore. In those dark corners of our minds, he causes awful rot and infections that can affect our spiritual health, weakening us. For over a year, King David lied about his sin with Bathsheba and his murder of Uriah. Psalms 32 tells of the price he paid, “When I kept silent, my bones wasted away through my groaning all day long. For day and night your hand was heavy on me; my strength was sapped as in the heat of summer” (3,4). With the belt of truth buckled firmly in place, we seek to live by the light and in the light. We desire to grow up into Christ, putting away the deeds of darkness – anger, fighting, envy, lusts. It means following God's example, walking in the way of love, seeking out the will of God. Our goal is to allow all our words and actions to flow from the goodness, righteous and truth of Jesus. Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen. (Ephesians 3:17-21).

Daybreak North
Girding the grid

Daybreak North

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 9:40


What's needed to shore up BC Hydro infrastructure and power new projects?

KidNuz: News for Kids

Canine Caper, Bomb Cyclone, Meta's Teen Tweaks, Girding the Great Wall, Hershey's Halloween Hiccup & Harbaugh's Hen House!

Lancaster Covenant Church
931 – “Girding up the Loins of Your Mind!” – 1 Peter 1:13-16

Lancaster Covenant Church

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023


Sermon by pastor Galen Nordin. For more messages or to find out what we’re all about, check us out on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts.  You can visit our website at lancastercovenant.com or join us financially by giving online.

Let’s Talk Tanya
Igeres Hakodesh: Part Four of Tanya: Girding our loins with strength | 3 Av | Day 221

Let’s Talk Tanya

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 4:24


3 Av | Day 221 Igeres Hakodesh: Part Four of Tanya: Girding our loins with strength -- Can you spare four minutes a day to gain deeper insight into yourself, your soul, your spiritual make-up, your personal purpose, and how to enjoy a meaningful relationship with G-d? If yes, Let's Talk Tanya. Tanya, the seminal work of Chabad Chasidism, is the personal owner's manual for the Jew who seeks to serve G-d and live a life suffused with holiness, purpose, and joy. Let's Talk Tanya is a daily series that attempts to translate the Tanya into resonant and relevant language Tanya is divided into daily portions. Following this regimen, one concludes the Tanya every year. Let's Talk Tanya, in 4 minutes on average, briefly reviews the day's segment, conveys its basic ideas, and zooms in on one large idea. To watch, listen, or subscribe to Let's Talk Tanya: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LetsTalkTanya Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3uFNrie Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3BqG9Tm Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3FMnvrs Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/letstalktanya/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/LetsTalkTanya www.letstalktanya.com To donate or for dedication opportunities, please visit letstalktanya.com/donate or reach us at contact@letstalktanya.com Have Tanya questions? Submit questions for possible inclusion in a future Tanya Q&A Segment: letstalktanya@gmail.com __ The full text of the daily Tanya is available at: www.Chabad.org/DailyTanya

Fides et Ratio
Summer in the Garden I have been deceived! V

Fides et Ratio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2023 9:07


XI Proper clothing and time of day matter. Habits & modest dress. Put on armor of salvation, St. Paul. Girding for task at hand. Recognizes Continue reading The post Summer in the Garden I have been deceived! V appeared first on Fides et Ratio.

What The Bible Says
Episode 1937 / “Girding Up The Loins Of Your Mind”

What The Bible Says

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2023 14:57


Series: N/AService: Radio Program / PodcastType: Radio Program / PodcastSpeaker: E.R. Hall, Jr.

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 19, 2023 is: undergird • un-der-GHERD • verb Undergird means “to strengthen or support (something) from below” or “to form the basis or foundation of.” // Their way of life is undergirded by religious faith. See the entry > Examples: “Genuine connection has always been scarce, but during the height of the pandemic in 2020 it became even more so. [Jake] Johnson wrote the screenplay for Self Reliance during this scary, unpredictable and lonely period. The lessons from isolation undergird the film's emotional core.” — Lovia Gyarkye, The Hollywood Reporter, 16 Mar. 2023 Did you know? When undergird was a new word in the 16th century, it was ships that were undergirded—that is, made secure below—and the undergirding was done by passing a rope or chain underneath. That literal sense has long since fallen out of use, but in the 19th century undergird picked up the figurative “strengthen” or “support” meaning that we still use. Centuries before anything was undergirded, however, people and things could be girded—that is, encircled or bound with a flexible band, such as a belt. Girding today is more often about preparing oneself to fight or to do something difficult, as in “girding themselves for an ideological battle.” About as old as gird is the word's close relation, girdle, which originally referred to an article of clothing that circles the body usually at the waist; the girdles of today address the same anatomical territory but with the squeezy aim of making the waist look thinner. Gird also gives us girder, a noun referring to a horizontal piece supporting a structure.

Shiretown Baptist Church Preaching Podcast

Join us as Alan preaches about 1 Peter

Garry Meier Show
Episode 1053 - Girding Our Loins for New Years

Garry Meier Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 10:20


A robber learned that if you're going to be committing crimes, it's a good idea to wear shoes with good traction. Be sure to tune into the GarrForce Live Cocktail Hour this evening at 6pm ET!

KTRH News
Girding the Grid: U.S. Power Supply Remains Vulnerable

KTRH News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 0:40


92 PRO FM
GK PODCAST - Girding Loins - Headlines - Sleaze - G Jokes

92 PRO FM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 20:18


Highlights from Giovanni and Kim in the Morning 11/18/22See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Giovanni & Kim in the Morning
GK PODCAST - Girding Loins - Headlines - Sleaze - G Jokes

Giovanni & Kim in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 20:18


Highlights from Giovanni and Kim in the Morning 11/18/22See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sanctuary Views
Girding Our Loins for That Which Lies Ahead

Sanctuary Views

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 17:30


Homily for the Nineteenth Sunday of Ordinary Time.

A Shared InHERitance
March 2022 Articles - Girding your Waist with Truth

A Shared InHERitance

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022 21:56


The March theme was "Girding your Waist with Truth" and the following three articles are read:What is Truth? by Amy SchlosserThe Belt of Truth by Jamie AngellThe Truth Incarnate by Lori AsherMusic from Uppbeat (free for Creators!):http://uppbeat.io/t/zoo/clarityLicense code: UL9CSCKZ4YPM52DF

Glory Days Of Gold
Episode 72 - Glory Days of Gold (Girding Our Loins)

Glory Days Of Gold

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2022 94:51


Welcome to Episode 72 of Glory Days of Gold, the East Fife and Scottish football podcast recorded across two continents. It finally happened! East Fife scored a goal this year. Not only that, but they scored three of them. And guess what? They also got their first win since October. And it was away from home! Pinch us, we must be dreaming. But dreams can come true. Gabrielle told us so all those years ago. We didn't even have to wear an eyepatch. The guys are back to delve into all the ins and out of the mighty Fife's win over Alloa on Saturday. This was the fight and passion we wanted to see from the team. Have they turned a corner? Is the great escape on? Or should be stay grounded as there's still a hell of a mountain to climb? There's a lot of what ifs for the Fife to avoid relegation. Too many maybe. But at least there's still some hope and signs of improvement and right now that'll do. We also look around the rest of League 1, including Falkirk's signing of Leigh Griffiths, talk Scottish Cup, chat about Kevin Smith getting a well deserved testimonial, and delve into our bulging mailbag.

Gateway Raleigh
Girding Up for Pressing On

Gateway Raleigh

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2022


Inside the ICE House
Episode 268: Southern Company CEO Tom Fanning: Girding the Country's Fortified Grid

Inside the ICE House

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2021 65:31


From climate change to cyber threats, the energy grid faces many threats — keeping the electrons flowing requires exhaustive planning and excellent execution. For decades, the energy industry has turned to Tom Fanning, Chairman & CEO of Southern Company (NYSE: SO), for his leadership to ensure we get our power from a reliable, safe, and secure grid. Tom discusses how his career path gave him the tools to protect key infrastructure, while transitioning Southern Company to a greener future.     Inside the ICE House: https://www.theice.com/insights/conversations/inside-the-ice-house

SpyTalk
Girding for New and Old Threats

SpyTalk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 57:56


Extremism expert Kathleen Belew talks with Jeanne Meserve about new factors raising the potential for violence at Sept.18 Capitol protests, while former senior CIA ops official Dan Hoffman tells Jeff Stein that the Kabul collapse has given Al Qaeda and ISIS new life.   See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Deep State Radio
Girding for New and Old Threats

Deep State Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 56:41


Extremism expert Kathleen Belew talks with Jeanne Meserve about new factors raising the potential for violence at Sept.18 Capitol protests, while former senior CIA ops official Dan Hoffman tells Jeff Stein that the Kabul collapse has given Al Qaeda and ISIS new life.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/deepstateradio. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Deep State Radio
Girding for New and Old Threats

Deep State Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 56:41


Extremism expert Kathleen Belew talks with Jeanne Meserve about new factors raising the potential for violence at Sept.18 Capitol protests, while former senior CIA ops official Dan Hoffman tells Jeff Stein that the Kabul collapse has given Al Qaeda and ISIS new life.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/deepstateradio. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

KTRH News
Girding the Grid: Texas Electric System Gets Overhaul

KTRH News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 0:38


Justin Rhodes Vlogs
Girding My Loins for the Tomato Trellis

Justin Rhodes Vlogs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2021 16:06


Rebekah and I put our heads together to figure out the installation process for our new tomato trellis system in the high tunnel greenhouse. I eventually had to gird up my loins to do it and with a little elbow grease and a tall ladder, we got it done.   Today's vlog edited by https://bit.ly/GrassFedHomestead   FREE Courses: ___________________________   CHICKENS: http://bit.ly/2CoBLDr Homestead Design: http://bit.ly/FreePermaculture PIGS: http://bit.ly/PermaculturePigsCourse The Great American Farm Tour (free chapters): http://bit.ly/2FlrQkz ________________   Shop my Merchandise: http://bit.ly/ShopJustinRhodes   Product Placement (Kubota): https://bit.ly/KubotasWebsite

Northfield Blvd church of Christ - Murfreesboro, TN
Earnestly Girding Virtue - David Bunting

Northfield Blvd church of Christ - Murfreesboro, TN

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2021 37:04


A sermon by David Bunting.

Giggly Squad
Giggling about Puerto Rico, punks, and girding your loins

Giggly Squad

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 65:41


Hannah is on vacation and Paige is a punk. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Luv Lighthouse with Vikki Elizabeth Semple

Girding and the towel --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/vikki-semple/message

The Wordsmith
Weather, Girding Up Your Loins, & Bible Translations - 0203

The Wordsmith

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2021 57:08


Can't Stand the Weather? After discussing the climates of the various places we've lived, this week look at being sober-minded, the other-worldliness of holiness, and we spend a few minutes discussing Bible translations in a world of abundance.

The Jim Colbert Show
Girding Our Grundle

The Jim Colbert Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 158:42


Monday – What advice would you give to someone moving to Florida? Apple is getting into the electric car business, are you ready to buy an iCar? A woman is selling face masks with a certain scent after she wears them, in her underwear. Attorney Steve Kramer on music copyright lawsuits. Rauce Thoughts with a Valentine's Day challenge. Plus, WOKE News, Trivia & Last Call.

U.S. history, cracked.
Part 4 (ep.4): Girding For War: North and South

U.S. history, cracked.

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2021 24:41


Who do you think might win the civil war? What advantages/disadvantages do both sides have? Come find out in this episode!

Bethel Baptist Church
Girding With Truth

Bethel Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2021 44:00


OK Boomer Podcast
Episode 29: Afterglow and Girding Our Loins for 2021!

OK Boomer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2021 31:08


Episode 29: Afterglow and Girding Our Loins for 2021!

Happy Hour with Amanda Younger

In this episode, we sit down with Amanda's former Director of Operations, Britton Hogge who now works as a Software Analyst for the government. We begin with a Flaviar tasting of Bourbon and plenty of Virginia based cocktail snacks to keep us going while discussing tasting events at wineries, surprise bus tours, and bedazzled merchandise. We continue with a tasting of Rye, through TV show tapings, city logistics, and the daunting task of event debris removal. Finally, we end our Tasting with Scotch as we go over finding your gaming Clan, the benefits of the Twitch platform, and how digital events allow ease of global programming and audience. Articles Cited in the program: Reuters "New York's same-sex marriage law sets off waves of engagements" By Barbara Goldberg June 25, 2011 http://jp.reuters.com/article/instant-article/idUSTRE75N5ZA20110625 New York Times "At Clerks’ Offices, Girding for More Weddings" By Nicholas Confessore and Michael Barbaro June 25, 2011 http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/nyregion/new-york-clerks-offices-gird-for-influx-of-gay-couples.html

Latter Day Lesbian
71: Girding Up Our Loins For Mother's Day

Latter Day Lesbian

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2020 60:27


Happy early Mother's Day everybody! Once again we read from the book "Woman" (written by 15 men) to learn all about how to be a good mother, and Shelly relates it to her own experience. Should be a good time. Also, we read a letter from a listener who's related by marriage to one of the aforementioned authors/experts on how to be female: Boyd K. Packer. Somebody's gotta be I guess. Nutty. Music provided by Purple Planet: https://purple-planet.com.

Latter Day Lesbian
71: Girding Up Our Loins For Mother's Day

Latter Day Lesbian

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2020 62:44


Happy early Mother's Day everybody! Once again we read from the book "Woman" (written by 15 men) to learn all about how to be a good mother, and Shelly relates it to her own experience. Should be a good time. Also, we read a letter from a listener who's related by marriage to one of the aforementioned authors/experts on how to be female: Boyd K. Packer. Somebody's gotta be I guess. Nutty. Music provided by Purple Planet: https://purple-planet.com. --- This episode is sponsored by · Zhou Nutrition: At Zhou Nutrition, we believe greatness comes from within. We make supplements in our own facilities in the heart of Utah with carefully crafted formulations to support essential wellness, mind, mood, beauty, and the keto lifestyle. https://www.zhounutrition.com/ · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Faith Family Maui
Girding The Loins Of Your Mind 04-26-2020

Faith Family Maui

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2020 37:49


Pastor Carol Haupu 04-26-2020

Midnight Express
Episode 50 - The Wu Keng [Mage: the Ascension]

Midnight Express

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 91:34


Terry from Mage: the Podcast joins BK to discuss the Wu Keng from The Book of Crafts.  Girding themselves against the forbidden knowledge of Lord Ku of the Thousand Tears, the duo consider whether a group of unwitting Infernalists make for player-characters, and the types of chronicles possible with this Craft and their demonic patrons. The episode begins with a chat about Terry's recent publication 'Ascension's Landscape' and some his decision-making around describing 'the world of darkness', and communicating it to players.  Economies of scale play a massive part in chronicles, and it's a topic that needs further exploration. Support and the show and pick up your copies of 'The Book of Crafts' and 'Dragons of the East' via the embedded affiliate links.   ONE WEEK ONLY  The special offer for this episode is 'Watch the World Burn' (for Mage: the Ascension) from the Storytellers Vault, now available on discount until 28/02/2020 Hosts: BK and Terry

TBOC
Girding Up the Loins of Your Mind (11-21-19) - Audio

TBOC

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2020 62:46


District Sentinel Radio
DISTRICT SENTINEL RADIO 2/19/19: Every Bernie Dance Now

District Sentinel Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 18:12


-We get excited for Bernie 2020 as the consultant class diapers fill -Sanders effectiveness can’t be ignored, from healthcare to inequality to Yemen -Sam Knight gives Bernie $27 after Tom Watson meltdown -Girding ourselves for a damn capital strike

Adult and Teen Challenge of the Upper Cumberland

A lesson from the desk of Pastor Tim McLauchlin. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/atcuc/support

Two Bit Geeks
Episode 42: Girding for Frivolity

Two Bit Geeks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 88:01


Don’t Panic! Tom is surrounded by hippies. Ped is on the lookout for interstellar visitors. And they both continue their search for the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything. Plus, Ped has a curious collection. Support the podcast on Patreon or by purchasing a T-shirt. Discuss the podcast on Reddit. Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts. Lighting the beacons “Happy Valley” John “Grizzly” Adams Whole Foods Market Rationalism vs Magical thinking 12 Natural and Organic Brands Owned By Big Food (Mental Floss) False equivalence Light pollution Messier 31 - The Andromeda Galaxy The International Dark-Sky Association Outdoor Lighting Basics (darksky.org) Bobcat The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Zaphod Beeblebrox Galaxy Quest Infocom Play the Hitchhiker’s text adventure online Could Solar Radiation Pressure Explain ʻOumuamua’s Peculiar Acceleration (Shmuel Bialy and Abraham Loeb) ʻOumuamua The Unexpected Trajectory of Interstellar Asteroid ʻOumuamua (APOD) Radiation pressure Is ʻOumuamua an Interstellar Spaceship? I’m Still Going With ‘No’ (Phil Plait) Light sail Tabby’s Star The Planetary Society Breakthrough Starshot LightSail 2 Rosa (Doctor Who S11E3) Lay’s Stax Ped’s collection How to Make a Tayto Sandwich Music by Lee Rosevere (CC by 4.0)

Discovering Jesus
Ephesians (Part 15): The Armour of God: Girding Your Loins

Discovering Jesus

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2018 35:02


We apologize for the poor audio quality, we are having some difficulties with the mic. This week we begin to actually look at the pieces of the Armour of God, what they are used for, and why it matters. We learn what the "Belt of Truth" actually is, what it is not, and how to equip it properly for the sake of God's Kingdom.

Tulsa Church of God
Girding up our Minds

Tulsa Church of God

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2018 12:41


"Girding up our Minds" presented by Curtis Whiteley

Tulsa Church of God
Girding up our Minds

Tulsa Church of God

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2018 12:41


"Girding up our Minds" presented by Curtis Whiteley

Community Gospel Church
Girding, Belt and Breastplate (Ephesians 6:14)

Community Gospel Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2018 44:58


For a Bad Time, Call...
Girding Our Metaphorical Loins

For a Bad Time, Call...

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2018 3:37


For a Bad Time, Call... is a podcast dedicated to women's anger. In this, its fifth episode, we hear about hair pulling, unwanted tears, and literal and metaphorical tools.

West Salem Baptist Church
Girding Up For Next Year - Audio

West Salem Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2017 45:49


Girding Up, is a military term, meaning to put on your battle armor.

Without Walls
2017-04-23 Girding Up The Loins Of Your Mind

Without Walls

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2017


Launch Sermon Player We weekly sermon podcast of the Apostolic Church of Salem: A church without walls.

Tim Hall Podcast -
Girding Up The Loins Of Your Mind

Tim Hall Podcast -

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2017 0:30


Recorded live at PlanetShakers Church on Sunday 1st of January 2017

Book Riot - The Podcast
#183: The Denim Version of Girding Your Loins

Book Riot - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2016 47:33


Jeff and Rebecca record live from the show floor at Book Riot Live.  This episode is sponsored by The Tourist by Robert Dickinson.

House of Destiny Christian Fellowship Assembly
Importance of Under girding Leadership - Audio

House of Destiny Christian Fellowship Assembly

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2013 59:48


The act of surrender to God causes our enemy to be defeated. A support system is needed in the body of Christ to Leadership.

Heart of the Bay Christian Center Services - Audio Podcast
The Whole Armor of God, Part 2 Girding Your Loins with Truth

Heart of the Bay Christian Center Services - Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2013 39:03


Wednesday, March 6, 2013 07:30PM

Heart of the Bay Christian Center Services - Audio Podcast
The Whole Armor of God, Part 2 Girding Your Loins with Truth

Heart of the Bay Christian Center Services - Audio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2013 39:03


Wednesday, March 6, 2013 07:30PM

Celtic Myth Podshow
CMP005 Girding the Loins for Battle

Celtic Myth Podshow

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2008 31:34


Treachery is committed and the Dagda makes a powerful new friend. It's always great to hear from you! Email garyandruth@celticmythpodshow.com, or call us on Speakpipe   Show Summary: The Sons of Tuireann encounter Cian, the father of Lugh, on his own and foul acts are committed. Later, the Dagda has two encounters and gains two allies. WARNING - This episode contains the "toilet humour" of the original myth which may be unsuitable for younger children. This episode is the 5th episode of the Irish Book of Invasions. More resources over at our main Website at http://celticmythpodshow.com Show Summary: Running Order: Intro 0:42 News & Views 0:50 Call to Action -Promote your Blog! J.C. Hutchins 2:18 Story 4:10 Promo - Scotchcast 28:15 Listener Feedback - Lhugnar 29:00 All the credits for this episode can be found in our show-notes at http://celticmythpodshow.com/irish5 We hope you enjoy it! Gary & Ruthie x x x   News & Views We give out our contact details and mention that you can send us a message using the Evoka Browser Mic widget on our website. This has now long disappeared (2017) and has been replaced by Speakpipe. Use the link at the top of this page to leave us some voice feedback or just to have a chat with us!   Girding the Loins for Battle - Episode 5 of the Irish Mythological Cycle and Part 5 of the Book of Invasions Names Used in this Story Listed in order of appearance Lugh Teamhair Nuada Balor Tory Erin Fomor, Fomori Nemed Fir Bolg Eithne, Eithlinn Currach Tuatha De Danaan Druim na Teine Goban Samthainn Cian Glas Gaibhnenn Birog of the Mountain Tailltiu, Taillte Eas Dara Manannan Aonbharr Bodb Dearg Cu Ceithen Cainte Sidhe Plain of Muirthemne Tuireann Ogma Goban, Goibhniu Brian Urcar Dagda Glenn Etin River Unius Connachta Loscuinn The Morrigan Magh Scetne Ford of Uinius Indech De Domnan Bres Traigh Eabha Etain Geas Fer Benn Fer Benn Mach Fer Benn Bruach Brogaill Broumide Cerbad Caic Rolaig Builc Labair Cerrce Di Brig Oldathair Boith Athgen mBethai Brightere Tri Carboid Roth Rimaire Riog Scotbe Obthe Olaithbe Beltraw Strand Tethra Tir Tairngire Ur Ogham Locations mentioned in this story   Promo - The Scotchcast All single malt, all the time! The Scotchcast is a podcast dedicated to the exploration and enjoyment of Single Malt Scotch. voicemail line: 517-879-4629 http://www.thescotchcast.com/forum http://www.twitter.com/thescotchcast   Listener Feedback We give apologies and hear some feedback from lhugnar suggesting maps for each episode.   Sources used in this Episode Timeless Myths http://www.timelessmyths.com/celtic/invasions.html#DanannArrival Lebor Gabala http://members.aol.com/lochlan2/lebor.htm The Second Battle of Moytura http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T300011.html http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/cmt/cmteng.htm Lebor Gabala Erenn http://www.maryjones.us/ctexts/lebor4.html#55 Coming of Lugh http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/gafm/gafm05.htm Coming of Lugh http://www.celtic-twilight.com/celts/rolleston/chapter_iii.htm And, of course, the Awen - inspiration and imagination!   Special Thanks For voice acting: Edward, our son. For incidental music: Diane Arkenstone, The Secret Garden . See the Contributor page for details. Kim Robertson, Angels in Disguise . See the Contributor page for details. Time Ticks Away by Jigger. See their Contributor Page for details. For our Theme Music The Skylark and Haghole, the brilliant Culann's Hounds. See their Contributor page for details.   Extra Special Thanks for Unrestricted Access to Wonderful Music (in Alphabetic order) Anne Roos Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of her masterful music to Anne Roos. You can find out more about Anne on her website or on her Contributor page. Caera Extra Special thanks go for permission to any of her evocative harping and Gaelic singing to Caera. You can find out more about Caera on her website or on her Contributor Page. Celia Extra Special Thanks go for permission to use any of her wonderful music to Celia Farran. You can find out more about Celia on her website or on her Contributor Page. Damh the Bard Extra Special thanks go to Damh the Bard for his permission to use any of his music on the Show. You can find out more about Damh (Dave) on his website or on his Contributor page. The Dolmen Extra Special thanks also go to The Dolmen, for their permission to use any of their fantastic Celtic Folk/Rock music on the Show. You can find out more about The Dolmen on their website or on our Contributor page. Keltoria Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of their inspired music to Keltoria. You can find out more about Keltoria on their website or on their Contributor page. Kevin Skinner Extra Special thanks go for permission to use any of his superb music to Kevin Skinner. You can find out more about Kevin on his website or on his Contributor page. Phil Thornton Extra Special Thanks go for permission to use any of his astounding ambient music to the Sonic Sorcerer himself, Phil Thornton. You can find out more about Phil on his website or on his Contributor Page. S.J. Tucker Extra Special thanks go to Sooj for her permission to use any of her superb music. You can find out more about Sooj on her website or on her Contributor page. Spiral Dance Extra Special thanks go for permission to use Adrienne and the band to use any of their music in the show. You can find out more about Spiral Dance on their website or on their Contributor page. We'd like to wish you 'Slán Go Foill!', which is Irish for 'Goodbye', or more literally 'Wishing you safety for a while'!   Get EXTRA content in the Celtic Myth Podshow App for iOS, Android & Windows Contact Us: You can leave us a message by using the Speakpipe Email us at: garyandruth@celticmythpodshow.com. 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John Piper Sermons
Girding the Mind to Guard Your Hope

John Piper Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 1993 22:39


John Piper | Avoid what numbs your mind to God and stay sober for the sake of hope.