POPULARITY
We talk to Tracy, who is concerned for her daughter's well being, as they are not wealthy people.
We talk to Tracy, who is concerned for her daughter's well being, as they are not wealthy people.
Navy Veteran Jesse Swalley shares his story of survival after a brutal knife attack left him paralyzed. Raised in the San Fernando Valley, Jesse enlisted in the U.S. Navy seeking a better life and served as an Aviation Boatswain's Mate from 1980 to 1986. After navigating the dangers of the flight deck and the challenges of military life, Jesse faced his greatest battle on U.S. soil—stabbed multiple times trying to break up a fight. Despite a severed spinal cord, Jesse refused to let paralysis define him. Teaching himself how to skateboard again, he proves that resilience knows no limits. In this episode of Urban Valor, Jesse opens up about life at sea, overcoming addiction, surviving near-death, and reclaiming his spirit.
Svein Falzon @genet1cAnomaly, from world's biggest 20 year old to now 2 years later… Just because we see an online persona, doesn't mean we know who someone may really be in person. While meme'd the biggest 20 year old by Larry Wheels and others… Whatever it was that got him to use ped's, with others realizing his potential before hand and with absolutely nothing to lose, committing his everything to this path seems the only light at the end of the tunnel to make enough money to get his mom and himself out of this hell hole and achieve his dreams at the same time.Watch it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR7YRb0DBhIJoin the Bodybuilding-friendly HRT Clinic - Get professional medical guidance on your health as a bodybuilder:[ Pharma Test, IGF1, Tesamorelin, Glutathione, BPC, Semaglutide, Var troche, etc]https://transcendcompany.com/patient-intake-form/?ls=Nyle+NaygaPlease share this episode if you liked it. To support the podcast, the best cost-free way is to subscribe and please rate the podcast 5* wherever you find your podcasts. Thanks for watching.To be part of any Q&A, follow trensparentpodcast or nylenayga on instagram and watch for Q&A prompts on the story https://www.instagram.com/trensparentpodcast/Huge Supplements (Protein, Pre, Defend Cycle Support, Utilize GDA, Vital, Astragalus, Citrus Bergamot): https://www.hugesupplements.com/discount/NYLESupport code 'NYLE' 10% off - proceeds go towards upgrading content productionYoungLA Clothes: https://www.youngla.com/discount/nyleCode ‘NYLE' to support the podcastLet's chat about the Podcast:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/trensparentpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@transparentpodcastPersonalized Bodybuilding Program: https://www.nylenaygafitness.comTimestamps:00:00 - Intro02:10 - The Masked Bodybuilder Origin Story07:04 - Social Media & Fitness Industry Growth12:01 - Training & Physique Development18:40 - Back & Hamstring Growth Struggles22:32 - Squat Form & Hip Mobility Issues31:22 - From 100K to 1.5M Followers34:35 - The Mindset of Never Being Enough40:07 - Health, Steroids, and Responsible Use45:55 - Growing Up Poor & Family Motivations50:16 - Sam Sulek's Pro Card & Modern Bodybuilding56:10 - Fake Beefs for Engagement1:02:11 - Competing in Bodybuilding: Future Plans1:04:20 - Acne, Blood Pressure & Health Protocols1:11:07 - Ultimate Life Goals1:12:00 - Svein's Mom and Why He Continues Bodybuilding1:15:12 - Finding the Right Coach1:20:18 - Favorite Steroids & Offseason Compounds1:25:02 - The Truth About the Togi Beef1:27:12 - Gear selection1:28:27 - Svein's Final Message#podcast #mentalhealth #humanoptimization #holistic #health #hrt #connection #story #discipline #fitness #ifbbpro #npc #bodybuilder #bodybuilding #selfimprovement #workout #gym #nutrition #mensphysique #classicphysique #love #discipline #relationships #tren #workout #gym #trt #hormones #discipline #gear #steroids #bodybuilding #peptides fitness trt hormones workout gear trensparent
In this episode we talk with our friend Alissa Beamish who shares what it was like growing up without knowing she was poor; then marrying a rich young man and the economics of it all. We also talk about what is like sending our kids to a Christian Private School. PARTNER LINKS Soundstripe Need Royalty Free Music, SFX and Video? You need Soundstripe! Follow this link to get the best song, SFX and video library for your own creative needs: https://soundstripe.com?fpr=christianpodcast Get 10% Discount when you enter promo code: ChristianPodcast Streamyard Want to create live streams like this? Check out StreamYard: https://streamyard.com/pal/d/5548161986330624 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/xtianpodcast/support
Am I the Genius? on
Welcome back to another episode of Dropping Bombs with yours truly, Brad Lea. Today, I've got a special guest in the studio, Carlos Reyes. If you haven't heard of him, trust me, you're going to want to pay attention. Carlos went from literally growing up on dirt floors to driving Rolls-Royces, all through the power of real estate. The guy's built an empire and now spends his time teaching others how to break into the real estate game, no matter where you're starting from. Whether you're struggling to make ends meet, working a 9-to-5 you hate, or already making decent money but want to scale, this episode is packed with insights on how to level up using real estate. Listeners, if you are interested in the very exciting upcoming boot camp DM the word "boot camp" myself (Brad Lea) or Carlos Reyes on Instagram for more information. @therealbradlea @carlosreyes What You'll Learn: How to become successful in real estate and about Brad's upcoming bootcamp. Highlights: Living In Poverty Overcoming Adversity The Ultimate Wealth-Building Tool Real Estate Strategies Mentorship and Success Stories Real Estate Boot Camp Wealth Building and Legacy Resources Mentioned: https://joinrealbusiness.com/ https://allinnation.com/carlos You can follow today's guest at: https://www.instagram.com/carlosreyes/ Watch the full video episode on Brad's Rumble here: https://rumble.com/c/c-2544182 Watch the full video episode on Brad's Youtube here: https://bradlea.tv
Matt Wright and Charlie Demers make waves in St. John's, Newfoundland when they discuss if the Atlantic Ocean is superior to the Pacific Ocean. Then, Bree Parsons and Nikki Payne bring a wealth of wit when they decide if growing up poor makes you a stronger person.
Welcome back to another episode of Dropping Bombs! I'm Brad Lea, and today we've got a real treat. My guest is the one and only Mike Barron, a guy who's been making waves in the sales industry. He's gone from humble beginnings to running a successful sales academy, and he's here to drop some serious knowledge bombs. Mike shares his incredible journey from growing up in Section 8 housing to becoming a successful entrepreneur. He talks about our first meeting back in 2017 and how he looked up to me as a mentor. Mike discusses the challenges he faced and how he overcame them to become a top earner. Get ready for an episode filled with energy, inspiration, and a whole lot of real talk. What You'll Learn: Get inspired through this inspirational story from poor to rich and what resources are available. Highlights: Enthusiasm and Beginning Career Progression Sales Expertise and Challenges Overcoming Adversity Mindset and Manifestation Routine and Values Resources Mentioned: https://lightspeedvt.com/ https://www.clickfunnels.com/ You can follow today's guest at: https://www.instagram.com/themikebarron1/?hl=en Watch the full video episode on Brad's Rumble here: https://rumble.com/c/c-2544182 Watch the full video episode on Brad's Youtube here: https://bradlea.tv
Go to https://Zocdoc.com/tfc and download the Zocdoc app to sign-up for FREE and book a top-rated doctor. Chelsea sits down with Jessica Oudbier to talk about her struggles with PTSD, fighting for disability money, growing up poor, and building a life without most of the financial tools we're expected to have. Join us on Patreon! Follow us on Instagram
Abandonment, grief, childhood trauma, breaking cyclesGrowing up poor is a trauma that is handed down over generations. Poverty strips you of your humanity and your capacity for positive self-worth. Dawn shares this important conversation with Dr Mariel Buque' who speaks of her experiences of growing up in poverty and how deep and complex the layers of poverty trauma can be.WHAT'S THE TRUTH? COMMUNITY available via the Apple Podcasts App or go to Supercast for access via Spotify and other platforms https://whatsthetruth.supercast.com/ You can find the full episode with Dr Mariel Buque' in episode 192 of this podcast on Apple https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/how-my-parents-raised-me/id1533741808?i=1000632302740 and Spotify https://open.spotify.com/episode/67w834FpMDrwbzMRJDSeRh?si=0af2259152ee4414You can find Dr Mariel Buque' via her website https://www.drmarielbuque.com/ and on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/dr.marielbuque Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Glen Bhimani is the Owner and CEO of BPS Security, which provides elite security officers, as well as alarm systems and monitoring services.In this interview, we talk about the Psychology behind what drives him to be an entrepreneur and what helped him build a $4M ARR brand.00:00:00 - From No Salary to Growing a Multi-Million Dollar Security Company00:03:58 - Valuable Lessons from a Business Coach and Client Acquisition Strategies00:07:53 - Navigating Financial Challenges and the Impact of COVID-19 on Business00:11:56 - Anticipating Market Changes and Strategic Business Preparations00:15:49 - Streamlining Operations with Custom Software and Handling Personnel Issues00:19:42 - The Importance of Quality in Security Services and Employee Management00:23:35 - Personal Growth and Operational Changes for Better Business Management00:27:47 - Reinvesting Profits and the Joy of Overcoming Business Challenges00:32:08 - Revamping Brand Image and Leveraging Social Media for Business Growth00:36:04 - Adapting to Industry Standards and the Power of Effective Marketing00:40:11 - Balancing Work and Personal Life While Scaling a Security Business00:44:18 - Continuous Learning and Legal Considerations for Expanding into New Markets
Exclusive Patron-only Content Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tom Seeman | Author | Toledo Native Tom Seeman's book, Animals I want to See, is a lyrical coming-of-age story set in the projects of Toledo, Ohio, which explores themes of identity, ambition, religion, and friendship—often across racial and social lines. Seeman grew up in Toledo in the 1960s. Money Matters Billy Horn | Savage & Associates Interest Rates are still higher than they've been in decades. So how are people dealing with it and where are rates heading in the future?
Journalist Josh Molina shares his views on the housing crisis in Santa Barbara, while sharing about his own upbringing, growing up poor in Goleta and Santa Barbara. Molina talks about how his personal story affects his reporting and storytelling. He also talks about a recent sex trafficking story he wrote and shares details about his new title. Please hit subscribe on YouTube and consider a financial contribution by visiting santabarbaratalks.com. This is podcast is an effort to talk to a wide swath of voices on the topics of housing, education, business, politics, media, transportation and culture.
Robert Indries grew up in a poor family in Romania but has now gained millions in net worth as an entrepreneur. In this episode, Robert shares his entrepreneurial journey, strategies for dealing with challenges in business and partnerships, his investment philosophy, and the surprising truth about billionaires.Connect with RobertEmail Robert: me@robertindries.comWebsite: robertindries.comLinkedInInstagram: @obertindriesConnect with NicoleInstagram @workwealthandtravelYoutube @workwealthandtravelWebsiteSign up for 80+ Remote Work Job BoardsGive the Podcast a 5-Star Rating on Apple Podcasts - Thank you!
I did not grow up particularly wealthy, sure we had everything that we needed but there was always a scarcity mindset to finances. I'll show you what I learned growing up underprivileged and that the stuff you couldn't have learned if you were rich.
On today's episode on the Digital Social Hour, we sit down with Carlos Reyes to talk about living in poverty, making a ton of money with real estate, and why he spends $250K a year on personal development. BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com APPLY TO BE ON THE POD: https://forms.gle/qXvENTeurx7Xn8Ci9 SPONSORS: Opus Pro: https://www.opus.pro/?via=DSH HelloFresh: https://www.hellofresh.com/50dsh Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On today's episode on the Digital Social Hour, we sit down with Carlos Reyes to talk about living in poverty, making a ton of money with real estate, and why he spends $250K a year on personal development. BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com APPLY TO BE ON THE POD: https://forms.gle/qXvENTeurx7Xn8Ci9 SPONSORS: Opus Pro: https://www.opus.pro/?via=DSH HelloFresh: https://www.hellofresh.com/50dsh Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In what ways are children particularly hard hit by poverty? How does growing up poor affect early-life development? Lisa A. Gennetian joins EconoFact Chats to answer these questions, drawing on preliminary results from 'Baby's First Years,' a large-scale, multi-decade interdisciplinary study on the impact of poverty on brain development among infants. A Principal Investigator at 'Baby's First Years,' Lisa is also the Pritzker Professor of Early Learning Policy Studies at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University.
In what ways are children particularly hard hit by poverty? How does growing up poor affect early-life development? Lisa A. Gennetian joins EconoFact Chats to answer these questions, drawing on preliminary results from 'Baby's First Years,' a large-scale, multi-decade interdisciplinary study on the impact of poverty on brain development among infants. A Principal Investigator at 'Baby's First Years,' Lisa is also the Pritzker Professor of Early Learning Policy Studies at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University.
DO YOU KEEP YOUR BUTTER OUT, GROWING UP POOR, IM DANGEROUS.
Do you really need a photography studio? Today, we talk about why you should NOT get a studio until you have done ONE very important thing. You'll meet one of my students who took on the expense of a studio and what happened next. It's a tale of a really poor upbrining, with a dash of risk, and the kind of mistake that could've had her throwing in the towel. Curious to hear all the juicy details about Shelby's studio rollercoaster? Hit play to tune in. RESOURCES: WORTH EVERY PENNY JOYCAST SHOW NOTES: www.joyofmarketing.com/podcast/episode-175 SHOW TRANSCRIPT: https://bit.ly/47Yt0PX BOUTIQUE BREAKTHROUGH – 8-WEEK WORKSHOP www.joyofmarketing.com/boutiquebreakthrough INSTAGRAM – DM me “Conversation Starters” for some genuine ways to strike up a conversation about your photography business wherever you are. https://www.instagram.com/sarah.petty FREE COPY: NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLING BOOK FOR PHOTOGRAPHERS www.joyofmarketing.com/freebook FREE FACEBOOK GROUP: Join and get my free mini-class: How I earned $1,500 per client working 16 hours a week by becoming a boutique photographer. https://www.facebook.com/groups/ditchthedigitals YOUTUBE: Check out my latest how to videos: https://www.youtube.com/c/thejoyofmarketing LOVE THE SHOW? Subscribe & Review on Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/worth-every-penny-joycast/id1513676756
Today Alyssa is joined by Becca Moore. You probably know her from TikTok, where she details her crazy dating stories, past relationship traumas and is the ultimate girl's girl by performing the 'DM test' on people's boyfriends. The girls are chatting about everything - nothing is off limit - from growing up poor, to having a sugar daddy to toxic relationships.
Even if you're a rich person now, you could have grown up in poverty and may maintain a poor person mentality. Unfortunately, not all people can call their childhood cloudless. Some of them had problems with their families, others — with money. And even if their parents' financial difficulties were short-lived, the memory of these times stays with many people forever. In this video we're trying to figure out which habits reveal that a person grew up in a poor family. From the habit to choose the cheapest meal on the menu, to the habit to keep the expired goods. What else is on the list of poor people habits? Spoiler: some of them will surely surprise you, like feeling guilty about freebies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Questions: What led you to leaving your corporate job? Can you talk about the process of letting go? Do you experience imposter syndrome? How do you get rid of that negative voice? How do you handle guilt? What's the hardest challenge you've ever been through? What led you to pursuing your career now? Sign up for my newsletter: www.manifesment.com Say hello
Luke is going "viral" for a video where he lets people know what he does now to make up for the fact that he grew up poor. Do you have this "thing"?
Luke is going "viral" for a video where he lets people know what he does now to make up for the fact that he grew up poor. Do you have this "thing"?
Cory Bryson is a Senior Policy Advisor to the Speaker Tim Moore. However, the Gaston County native wasn't always so fortunate. Cory was raised by his maternal grandparents, grew up eating food from a local church pantry, and struggling in school. In this heartfelt conversation, Cory takes listeners through his incredible life, including his enlistment in the U.S. Marines, how a decision to volunteer at the Gaston County Republican Party elevated him to one of the highest offices in North Carolina politics, and how met his wife Britt. Skye and Brian also talk about the aftermath of the abortion bill, 2024 governor's race polling and updates, the Growler, #TOTW, brunch, and the Coronation. The Do Politics Better podcast is sponsored by New Frame, the NC Travel Industry Association, the NC Beer & Wine Wholesalers Association, and the NC Pork Council.
This week Waylon discusses a handful of things that have come to enrich his life in the present that he learned from growing up with less. “People talk about being poor as a sort of a negative thing. However it gave me life skills and appreciation for things that have enriched my entire life. There's financial poverty, and that's real, and there are real problems around it. But there are also some positive attributes, and I want to highlight a few of those.” ~ Waylon Lewis Read the accompanying article on Elephant Journal. Thanks for listening. Hope you're getting a lot out of it. If this was of benefit, the full conversation is on our indie platform that supports & continues our work: elephantjournal.com/videos You can subscribe, listen, watch, & participate there—and when you do so you'll keep these mindful videos and podcasts going.
Were you here before podcasts? Remember the NPR show? AM radio anyone? Today Mac Greer is back with the keys to our deep vault of audio gold. Tom Gardner joins David to revisit and discuss the conversations, predictions, and lessons from 20 years ago. (7:08) Jim Sinegal on competition and growth (13:09) Meg Whitman on eBay's acquisition of PayPal (18:00) John Antioco on Blockbuster's bright future (22:53) Roger Ebert on Blockbuster's imminent demise (25:23) Loretta Lynn on Growing Up Poor (30:45) Sir Bob Geldof on the futility of bribery (35:07) Mike Veeck on creative marketing Companies Discussed: COST, WMT, EBAY, PYPL, NFLX Host: David Gardner Guests: Tom Gardner, Mac Greer Voices from the Vault: Jim Sinegal, Meg Whitman, John Antioco, Roger Ebert, Loretta Lynn, Sir Bob Geldof, Mike Veeck Producers: Mac Greer & Rick Engdahl
Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app NOW,use promo code CURRAN, throw down FIVE DOLLARS on UFC 281,and get TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS IN FREE BETS if your fighterwins. That's code CURRAN this Saturday at DraftKings Sportsbook— THE Official Sports Betting Partner of UFC. Minimum age andeligibility restrictions apply. See show notes for details.If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisiscounseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/PA/TN/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/NH/KS), 888-789-7777/visithttp://ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/textHOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA).21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/LA(selectparishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. $200 in Free bets:New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pre-fight moneyline bet.$200 issued as eight (8) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Stepped Up: 1Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limitsapply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds orlonger. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends at the start of the main cardfight of UFC 281. See eligibility & terms atsportsbook.draftkings.com/mmaterms.---Follow Curran:https://www.Twitter.com/CurranBhatiahttps://www.Instagram.com/CurranBhatiahttps://www.Youtube.com/CurranBhatiahttps://www.tiktok.com/@curranbhatiaEmail: CurranBhatia@gmail.comFollow Ask The Experts:https://www.Twitter.com/ATE_Podcasthttps://www.Instagram.com/ATE_Podcasthttp://bit.ly/ATE_PODCASTAPPLE PODCASTS: https://apple.co/37M4jHnEmail: AskTheExpertsPod@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mr Jay Hill and Quicktrip join Fat Nasty and Limitless Rich to discuss what's a real n*gga, loyalty or respect, growing up with parents on drugs, and more.
Dave and Falen discuss growing up poor, what to do for your mom's b-day and more!
Haley and Vee examine growing up lower middle class and how that has affected their money narratives as adults. They discuss Haley's snack drawer, leaving legacy wealth despite not having crotch goblins, and why wanting a life that looks different from what you grew up with is admirable. In this episode, they chat about: Haley + Vee's financial situations growing up The importance of financial literacy and education How to pass generational wealth down when you don't have money (or kids) Why unpacking money perceptions is important + more This episode is sponsored by A Sunny Side Up Life Podcast FIND HALEY AND VEE ONLINE + SOCIAL MEDIA HERE: Haley's Instagram Haley's Twitter Haley's Facebook Vee's Instagram Vee's Twitter Vee's Website Vee's Facebook Join the Price of Avocado Toast Newsletter Join the Vee Frugal Fox Newsletter OTHER LINKS: Price of Avocado Toast episode 54 1:1 Coaching With Haley Capitalize Vee's Debt Payoff Coloring Charts Vee's Soap RECOGNITION: Podcast Support: Weir Digital Marketing Audio engineer: Garrett Davis with Gart Studios Podcast Artwork: Heather Divoky
Topics we go over on this episode....Hunting Story and Zombie Apocalypse 00:45-260:00R.I.P. Queen, but what does English Royalty do? 26:00-30:00What are some things you're good at and hobbies you enjoy? 30:00-53:30Growing up poor and what did you learn? 53:30-1:07:30Line between cocky and confident 1:07:30-1:15:00
You have to put yourself around people who are different than you. It will change your life, so look for opportunities to connect with people who are different than you.Text me at 972-426-2640 so we can stay connected!Support me on Patreon!Twitter: @elliottspeaksInstagram: @elliottspeaks
What were you doing at 17? When he was that age, Timothy Armoo had already sold his first startup. Now 27, he has just sold his second startup, Fanbytes, a social media and influencer marketing agency, to digital advertising company, Brainlabs, for eight figures. Timothy, or Timo as he is known, grew up on a council estate in Hackney and it was the realisation that he was poor when he was a teenager that motivated him to become an entrepreneur. He started Fanbytes with his co-founders in 2017 and the company, which connects social media influencers to big brands, has gone on to employ 65 people. Part of the work Fanbytes does, finding up-and-coming influencers, is done by its algorithm, built by Co-Founder Ambrose Cooke - meaning that Fanbytes can sign potential talent before anyone else. We talked about: What happened after he lost almost half the money he got selling his first business in just three months What a lead gangster told him that helped him as an entrepreneur How the death of his father in his early twenties was a pivotal moment in deciding how he was going to grow Fanbytes How he doesn't feel his next business has to be bigger than his previous one What advice he has for other young entrepreneurs…you might be surprised by what he says! We'd love your feedback: hello@secretleaders.com Sponsor links: evelyn.com/secretleaders svb.com/uk transparent.biz/SL vanta.com/secretleaders
Like this content ? · Get my book in USA: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1988925819 · Get my book in Canada: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/1988925819 If you know a great guest for the podcast send me an email kelly@4xformula.com Join our Free Group on Facebook: Real Estate Agents Learning Centre Connect with me on LinkedIN Connect with me on Twitter See More Training Content on YouTube
One of my favorite ways to start off speeches now is to ask the audience, "who here grew up poor", usually about half the room will raise their hand and I'll say, "I feel sorry for the rest of you." Tweet me your takeaway from today's episode @davidmeltzer Email Me! david@dmeltzer.com Sign up for my Free Weekly Training https://free.dmeltzer.com/friday-training-1 Text Me! (949) 298-2905 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ms. Pat jokes about growing up poor in her Netflix special, "Y'all Wanna Hear Something Crazy?"
Even if you're a rich person now, you could have grown up in poverty and may maintain a poor person mentality. Unfortunately, not all people can call their childhood cloudless. Some of them had problems with their families, others — with money. And even if their parents' financial difficulties were short-lived, the memory of these times stays with many people forever. In this video we're trying to figure out which habits reveal that a person grew up in a poor family. From the habit to choose the cheapest meal on the menu, to the habit to keep the expired goods. What else is on the list of poor people habits? Spoiler: some of them will surely surprise you, like feeling guilty about freebies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As another tumultuous year winds it way to a close, your boy Bigg Q shares an intimate story about growing up in the impoverished south. Entering round three with COVID-19 lots of laws and ordinances and mandates being thrown about. what if your job was on the line depending on your vaccination status? And we end the year with a bang as the whole hip hop scene is brimming about Jay Z's critical stance on Verzuz battlessolo.to/biggqsworldSearch "The Bigg Q's World Podcast" on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, PocketCasts, Stitcher, and other platforms for weekly Tech Talk, and Pop Culture conversations. Listen from anywhere in the world!solo.to/biggqsworldThanks so much for listening. If you like the podcast, please Rate it 5 Stars on Apple Podcasts! Much love and have an awesome day!Follow us "The Bigg Q's World Podcast" meaning "Bigg Q's World" for weekly awesomeness!Follow Us : Instagram: @biggqsworld | Twitter: @BiggQsWorld | Facebook: Bigg Q's World | YouTube: Bigg Q's WorldSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/bigg-qs-world/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Adult Entertainer/ Porn Star Skylar Vox Joined The Bougie Show And She Talks Being A Loner? The Lifestyle Of The Adult Industry? Quit Trying To Enhance Her Deep Throat Skills! Skylar Informs Xay That Her Vagina Can't Take On Any Dick Size! Ms. Vox Also Speaks On Having Ugly Facial Expressions When Having An Orgasm! She Also Wanted To Put It Out There That She Won't Be Doing Adult Films In Her 30's Plus So Much More!! Make Sure To Subscribe To The Page And Get Notifications On All New Releases.
Lunch counters vs delis vs sandwich shops - is it all semantics? Sometimes. But not when we're talking about the 1960s. (And, no, tuna melts were not created by accident.) You can listen to Smart Mouth on iTunes, on Stitcher, on Spotify. Check out all our episodes so far here. If you like, pledge a buck or two on Patreon. This episode brought to you by Wünder, makers of European-style quark. Go to Wünder Creamery and enter code SMARTMOUTH for 15% off on your first order. Smart Mouth newsletter Smart Mouth merch Smart Mouth IG Katherine Twitter Max Twitter Max Flickr Related Episode: Ladies Who Lunch Link: The Fight to Save Alaska's Bristol Bay Salmon Sources: Washington Post Jackson Free Press American Tuna: The Rise and Fall of an Improbable Food Sitting for Equal Service: Lunch Counter Sit-Ins, United States, 1960s Coming of Age in Mississippi: The Classic Autobiography of Growing Up Poor and Black in the Rural South Signs of the Times: The Visual Politics of Jim Crow
Welcome to The Kayleigh O'Keefe Show! Can you imagine being born with a bilateral cleft lip and palette and not being able to eat in front of your friends? Can you imagine growing up on public assistance for over a decade? Can you imagine your father, a Christian preacher, coming out as gay when you were just six years old? What about having a paranoid schizophrenia mother who drives you across the country and writes her complaints to the world on a mattress? Mary E. Gregory is the author of an incredibly poignant memoir - Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue - and on this podcast she shares the moments from her fraught childhood that shaped her and reveals how she was able to write her memoir with deep compassion for her flawed parents. Buy your copy of Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue https://www.amazon.com/Travels-Through-Aqua-Green-Blue/dp/1735411604 Connect with Mary at her website https://maryegregory.com and on Twitter https://twitter.com/MsMaryEGregory Apply for the 2021 Significant Women Mastermind: https://kayleighokeefe.com/mastermind/ Apply for our next book - Significant Women: Leaders Reveal What Matters Most: https://bit.ly/36ECfFY Sign up to be the first to know when Leading Through the Pandemic is available on Amazon: https://bit.ly/2H58Mwm
When Office Depot® sells a pencil on their website the description says, “Brand Basic Wood Pencils, #2 Medium Soft Lead, Pack Of 36”. Now take a look at Nick Offerman's website and see how he sells a pencil. He's the actor who famously brought the character of Ron Swanson, a colorful crank, to life in the sitcom Parks and Recreation. First of all, Offerman Wood Shop (OWS) calls it a Mistake Stick and the description says, “Keep an OWS pencil in your beard/bun at all times because you never know when you'll need to jot down a cut list, bifurcate a compound angle, label your jerky or add a few inches to your scratching reach.” As you can see, language has the capacity to tantalize the curiosity, tease the appetite, tickle the funny bone, or simply transport you to an imaginary place. With a gift of enriched language and mature executive function skills, you can even sell snow to an Eskimo. On this episode, Dr. Julie Ann Washington from Georgia State University returns to discuss challenges in raising and educating children from low socio-economic backgrounds whose disadvantages are compounded by chronic stress, minimal exposure, and a lack of resources. For these children, specific language impairment and impoverished language can impact the development of written language, general educational trajectory, and overall mastery of executive function.About Dr. Julie WashingtonDr. Julie Washington is a Professor in the Department of Educational Psychology, Special Education and Communication Disorders in the College of Education and Human Development at Georgia State University (GSU) in Atlanta. She is also Director of the Communication Sciences and Disorders Program. Dr. Washington is an affiliate faculty of Georgia State University's Center for Research on the Challenges of Acquiring Language and Literacy Currently, Dr. Washington's research is focused on understanding the role of cultural dialect in the identification of Learning Disabilities in school-aged African American children and on disentangling the relationship between language production and comprehension on development of reading skills for children growing up in poverty. Dr. Washington's research program is funded by the National Institutes of Health, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute on Child Health and Human Development.Resourceshttps://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/04/the-code-switcher/554099/https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/https://news.stanford.edu/news/2013/september/toddler-language-gap-091213.htmlhttps://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/reading_rocketscience_2004.pdfhttp://www.academicjournals.org/journal/ERR/article-full-text-pdf/31F3BFB6129http://www.nccp.org/publications/pdf/text_1001.pdfSupport the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)
On April 11, 1734, a tiny notice appeared in the small corner of the Pennsylvania Gazette owned by Benjamin Franklin that read, “Ready money for old rags”. People poured in just as expected. Franklin, the entrepreneur extraordinaire, who also held a license to print paper currency, began to send these rags to the mill he owned to convert it into paper money; thus popularizing the notion, rags to riches. Since then, the American psyche has been steeped into the belief that everyone who has the will and the self-control to influence their life can rise above all odds; including poverty and socio-economic disparity.On this podcast, Dr. Julie Ann Washington from Georgia State University talks about the idea that not only that all learners are not created equal, but neither are their learning environments and many are detrimental to a child's future. In a society that values autonomy, agency, and everything that says self-made, parents and educators are trying their best to reconcile with those who are simply flailing around. The brain's Executive Function guides and redirects behaviors and attitudes towards goal-oriented actions and flailing around is a sign of the brain not doing too well. Dr. Washington invites us to dive deep into the complexities of educating the marginalized and the disadvantaged.About Dr. Julie WashingtonDr. Julie Washington is a Professor in the Department of Educational Psychology, Special Education and Communication Disorders in the College of Education and Human Development at Georgia State University (GSU) in Atlanta. She is also Director of the Communication Sciences and Disorders Program. Dr. Washington is an affiliate faculty of Georgia State University's Center for Research on the Challenges of Acquiring Language and Literacy Currently, Dr. Washington's research is focused on understanding the role of cultural dialect in the identification of Learning Disabilities in school-aged African American children and on disentangling the relationship between language production and comprehension on development of reading skills for children growing up in poverty. Dr. Washington's research program is funded by the National Institutes of Health, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute on Child Health and Human Development.Resourceshttps://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/04/the-code-switcher/554099/https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/https://news.stanford.edu/news/2013/september/toddler-language-gap-091213.htmlhttps://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/reading_rocketscience_2004.pdfhttp://www.academicjournals.org/journal/ERR/article-full-text-pdf/31F3BFB6129http://www.nccp.org/publications/pdf/text_1001.pdfSupport the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)
Jung-ah Choi writes that during a parent-teacher conference she discovered that her son was misbehaving in his kindergartner class. Upon further inquiry it turned out that her son was having a hard time complying with the class rule about not invading other people's personal space. The teacher called it the “do-not-pop-the-bubble” policy. Choi's son did not know how best to achieve the balance of engaging his classmates playfully without grabbing onto their hands or pulling them closer. A teacher expects her students to cooperate in the class, meet the policy expectations, and those who can't or don't know how to ‘not-pop-the-bubble' often get in trouble. When such trouble escalates, it leads to suspension or even expulsion. This episode, my guest, Clancy Blair, Ph.D. will talk about ways to promote fundamental abilities, which helps children meet the classroom expectation of HOW to regulate yourself.About Clancy Blair, Ph.D.Clancy Blair, PhD is a Professor of Cognitive Psychology in the Department of Applied Psychology in Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development at New York University. He earned a BA at McGill University and an MPH in maternal and child health, and MA and PhD in developmental psychology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He has been conducting research on the development of self-regulation in early childhood for over two decades. The specific focus of this research has been on the development of executive function abilities. This research has demonstrated that executive functions are central to school readiness and school achievement in the elementary grades, are substantially influenced by experience and by the characteristics of the family and the home environment, and highly interrelated with the regulation of stress response physiology. An important focus of this research is on the ways in which experience ‘gets under the skin' to influence the development of executive functions through the stress response. This mechanism is one that appears to be particularly relevant to the effect of poverty on children's development and may be one primary route through which childhood poverty exerts long-term influence on cognitive and social-emotional development into adulthood. Blair is currently completing a trial of a parenting program designed to foster self-regulation including executive functions in parents and children participating in Early Head Start programs (funded by the US Administration for Children and Families), is collecting normative data on a computer-based assessment of executive functions that he developed with his colleague Michael Willoughby (funded by IES), and is in the beginning stages of a study designed to examine prenatal and early postnatal influences on the development of executive functions in children (funded by the National Science Foundation). He serves as a consultant on numerous research projects and in addition to serving as a scientific advisor to the Urban Child Institute, serves on the advisory boards of several initiatives focused on early childhood education and child wellbeing including First Things First in Arizona; the Early Childhood Comprehensive Assessment System, in Maryland and Ohio; the Exploring Implications of Emerging Insights from Psychology for Self-Sufficiency Programs project, Mathematica, Washington DC; and the BUILD K-3 Formative Assessment Consortium, North Carolina.Support the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)
At age 6, his mother said to him, “Why don't you just kill yourself? You're such a burden to me.” At age 9, his mother drove him away from home to the unfamiliar part of Baja, California and walked him into an orphanage saying that she found this orphan kid and left him there for 90 days before his grandmother got a hold of him and brought him back. Throughout his elementary school she beat him senselessly. This is a story of a gangster, Sergio, from the roughest neighborhood of LA as told by father Greg Boyle in his book, Barking to the Choir. This gut wrenching and sad story traces the roots of a young man turning to the streets to escape his misery. Children who grow up in poverty, unstable homes, and highly unpredictable circumstances experience chronic and unabating stress, which takes a toll on the very shock-absorbing system in the brain, the Executive Function. Today, my guest, Clancy Blair, Ph.D., will discuss the distinction between acute and short lasting stress that buffs the adaptive and resiliency skills and chronic stress which dismantles it.About Clancy Blair, Ph.D.Clancy Blair, PhD is a Professor of Cognitive Psychology in the Department of Applied Psychology in Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development at New York University. He earned a BA at McGill University and an MPH in maternal and child health, and MA and PhD in developmental psychology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He has been conducting research on the development of self-regulation in early childhood for over two decades. The specific focus of this research has been on the development of executive function abilities. This research has demonstrated that executive functions are central to school readiness and school achievement in the elementary grades, are substantially influenced by experience and by the characteristics of the family and the home environment, and highly interrelated with the regulation of stress response physiology. An important focus of this research is on the ways in which experience ‘gets under the skin' to influence the development of executive functions through the stress response. This mechanism is one that appears to be particularly relevant to the effect of poverty on children's development and may be one primary route through which childhood poverty exerts long-term influence on cognitive and social-emotional development into adulthood. Blair is currently completing a trial of a parenting program designed to foster self-regulation including executive functions in parents and children participating in Early Head Start programs (funded by the US Administration for Children and Families), is collecting normative data on a computer-based assessment of executive functions that he developed with his colleague Michael Willoughby (funded by IES), and is in the beginning stages of a study designed to examine prenatal and early postnatal influences on the development of executive functions in children (funded by the National Science Foundation). He serves as a consultant on numerous research projects and in addition to serving as a scientific advisor to the Urban Child Institute, serves on the advisory boards of several initiatives focused on early childhood education and child wellbeing including First Things First in Arizona; the Early Childhood Comprehensive Assessment System, in Maryland and Ohio; the Exploring Implications of Emerging Insights from Psychology for Self-Sufficiency Programs project, Mathematica, Washington DC; and the BUILD K-3 Formative Assessment Consortium, North Carolina.Support the show (https://mailchi.mp/7c848462e96f/full-prefrontal-sign-up)