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Thanks to American missionaries' successes around the globe, the face of evangelicalism is no longer White America. In Soul by Soul: The Evangelical Mission to Spread the Gospel to Muslims (https://globalreports.columbia.edu/books/soul-by-soul/), Adriana Carranca reveals an extraordinary tale that has been under the radar: Missionaries from Latin America are leading the way in spreading the Gospel to Muslim countries, including in former U.S. war zones. She joins host Richard Aldous to discuss the dangerous work being undertaken by a new wave of evangelicals.
Anexos al abecé de la música popular de Brasil en forma de compilaciones. Intervienen: Ramatis & Rose Max, Tuty Moreno, In Soul, Bebel Gilberto, Tom Jobim, Joâo Gilberto, Gilberto Gil, Kaleidoscópio, Conjunto Som 4, Sônia Rosa, Paula Toller, Tânia Maria y Zélia Duncan.Escuchar audio
I have no idea what to write here, truly. Oh wait. Yeah I do. Embodying your Soul helps you be more creative. In Soul embodiment, we can just be free to share what's alive in us, moment to moment, it's so easy. That's what this podcast episode is all about. Ease, flow, being, loving. Deeply, totally, meeting me, and you. ⭐️
This week I was joined by a beautiful soul, Annemeik van Helsdingen, the found of the Academy for Soul-based coaching. After facing yet another heath challenge while working within corporate, she finally quit in 2012, determined to find the way that she could listen to her body while still serving. Annemiek van Helsdingen is the Founder of the Academy for Soul-based Coaching. She brings together 25 yrs of coaching, 15 yrs of teaching coaches and her Priestess background to offer world-class coach training, taught live online since 2016, reaching 1000s of people globally with her team.She is passionate about supporting new paradigm coaching and business growth. In a late-stage capitalist system, we are taught that productivity leads to value creation, that doing leads to fulfilment, both in coaching and in business. But does it? In Soul-based Coaching, she teaches coaches, therapists, healers and leaders how to support change processes that start from within their client's deepest - soul - knowing, while following the client's innate capacity for healing and change, into powerful and sustainable results.Connect w. Annemiek van HelsdingenVisit her website Connect w. Holly FinucanJoin Holly's Community Instagram FacebookEnjoying the show? Please leave a review here, and post a screenshot of you listening on your social platform. Don't forget to tag us, @finucanholly.Music: https://www.bensound.com
(The Human Body, I AM Prescence and Invoking the Violet Flame of Transmutation and Freedom)Based on my approach to coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients in navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss What it might mean to experience and Become an Anchor for Light and Hold Sacred Space as it relates to transformation, ascension and personal power.
(The Human Body, I AM Prescence and Invoking the Violet Flame of Transmutation and Freedom) Based on my approach to coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients in navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss What it might mean to experience and Become an Anchor for Light and Hold Sacred Space as it relates to transformation, ascension and personal power.
(The Human Body, I AM Prescence and Invoking the Violet Flame of Transmutation and Freedom) Based on my approach to coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients in navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss What it might mean to experience and Become an Anchor for Light and Hold Sacred Space as it relates to transformation, ascension and personal power.
Based on my coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients to navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss Heart , Power of Self Reflection and Contemplation in our Personal Growth and a return to Sovereignty.
Based on my coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients to navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss Heart , Power of Self Reflection and Contemplation in our Personal Growth and a return to Sovereignty.
Based on my coaching In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. To support clients to navigate the Multidimensionality of the Human Experience and living life from the Heart/Soul. This episode we discuss Heart , Power of Self Reflection and Contemplation in our Personal Growth and a return to Sovereignty.
More of The Four-Fold Formula for All Things Wellness Dr. Pat Baccili is a leader in the field of human potential and the creator of The Transformation Network, the new mainstream in media. She is an international award-winning talk radio host, TV commentator, keynote speaker, certified career and belief coach. Dr. Pat has received numerous awards for her empowering message on radio and her contribution to “Green Awareness” and Empowering Women across the globe. Jesica Henderson is an executive producer at The Transformation Network and The Dr. Pat Show. She's been a lifelong creative & musician. When Jesica is not facilitating transformation through the network hosts, co-hosts, and sponsors, you will find her exploring the mountains, paddling on Lake Washington, or playing music. Gina Lobito is Transformational Coach, Energy Intuitive and Advanced teacher and student of Self Mastery. She Created Soul Inspired Reflections to guide others to master their personal power through her In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul approach to life. This approach assists in embodying the multidimensionality of Soul and transcending the Human Experience; holding all things as sacred. Martiné Emmons is a Certified Transformation Life Coach serving women who have overcome trauma and adversity. She is the host of, Transformation with Martine (Conquer Everything, Compromise Nothing). Martine enjoys helping therapists and coaches run their businesses as an Executive Virtual Assistant. She loves traveling to ocean destinations and lives in Michigan with her husband. https://martineemmons.com/ Video Version: https://youtu.be/vcWnxfyCcYg Call in with a comment or Chat with Teresa during Live Show with Video Stream: Call 646-558-8656 ID: 8836953587 press #. To Ask a Question press *9 to raise your hand. Or click YouTube icon to write a question Learn more about Teresa here: www.webebookspublishing.com http://authenticendeavorspublishing.com/
Based on my coaching approach to Ascension Process; In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. This episode we take a deeper dive with Lady Gaia and explore a Foundation Skill of Connecting with Allies. Allies may take on many forms, similar to Harry Potter The Wand Choses the Wizard so does the Ally. From a Shamanic and Mystical perspective this is about Personal Power and Bids For Power. Watch/Listen https://www.facebook.com/transformationtalkradio/live_videos/
Based on my coaching approach to Ascension Process; In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. This episode we take a deeper dive with Lady Gaia and explore a Foundation Skill of Connecting with Allies. Allies may take on many forms, similar to Harry Potter The Wand Choses the Wizard so does the Ally. From a Shamanic and Mystical perspective this is about Personal Power and Bids For Power. Watch/Listen https://www.facebook.com/transformationtalkradio/live_videos/
Based on my coaching approach to Ascension Process; In-Body, In-Power, In-Soul. This episode we take a deeper dive with Lady Gaia and explore a Foundation Skill of Connecting with Allies. Allies may take on many forms, similar to Harry Potter The Wand Choses the Wizard so does the Ally. From a Shamanic and Mystical perspective this is about Personal Power and Bids For Power. Watch/Listen https://www.facebook.com/transformationtalkradio/live_videos/
Based on my coaching approach to assist Lightworkers build Foundational Skills to be In-Body, In-Power, and In-Soul while experiencing an Awakening, Ascension and Embodiment of Cosmic Christ Consciousness Energies. Primary focus will be In-Body Staying in the physical body is a vital skill to assist with grounding, heart opening, and navigating the ascension process and holding higher frequencies and vibrations. Lady Gaia, Earth Star Chakra, Arch Angel Sandalphon, Merkabah Activation, invoking the violet flame, Decrees and Mantra assist in obtaining a grounded state of being.
Based on my coaching approach to assist Lightworkers build Foundational Skills to be In-Body, In-Power, and In-Soul while experiencing an Awakening, Ascension and Embodiment of Cosmic Christ Consciousness Energies. Primary focus will be In-Body Staying in the physical body is a vital skill to assist with grounding, heart opening, and navigating the ascension process and holding higher frequencies and vibrations. Lady Gaia, Earth Star Chakra, Arch Angel Sandalphon, Merkabah Activation, invoking the violet flame, Decrees and Mantra assist in obtaining a grounded state of being.
Based on my coaching approach to assist Lightworkers build Foundational Skills to be In-Body, In-Power, and In-Soul while experiencing an Awakening, Ascension and Embodiment of Cosmic Christ Consciousness Energies. Primary focus will be In-Body Staying in the physical body is a vital skill to assist with grounding, heart opening, and navigating the ascension process and holding higher frequencies and vibrations. Lady Gaia, Earth Star Chakra, Arch Angel Sandalphon, Merkabah Activation, invoking the violet flame, Decrees and Mantra assist in obtaining a grounded state of being.
Soul Inspired Reflections with Gina Lobito: Ascension; A Humble Awakening of The Heart: Importance of Connection to Gaia and the relationship with Your Earthly Embodiment and Physical Body. Based on my coaching approach to assist Lightworkers build Foundational Skills to be In-Body, In-Power, and In-Soul while experiencing an Awakening, Ascension and Embodiment of Cosmic Christ Consciousness Energies. Primary focus will be “In-Body” Staying in the physical body is a vital skill to assist with grounding, heart opening, and navigating the ascension process and holding higher frequencies and vibrations. Lady Gaia, Earth Star Chakra, Arch Angel Sandalphon, Merkabah Activation, invoking the violet flame, Decrees and Mantra assist in obtaining a grounded state of being. Website: http://www.soulinspiredreflections.com/
Soul Inspired Reflections with Gina Lobito: Ascension; A Humble Awakening of The Heart Importance of Connection to Gaia and the relationship with Your Earthly Embodiment and Physical Body. Based on my coaching approach to assist Lightworkers build Foundational Skills to be In-Body, In-Power, and In-Soul while experiencing an Awakening, Ascension and Embodiment of Cosmic Christ Consciousness Energies. Primary focus will be “In-Body” Staying in the physical body is a vital skill to assist with grounding, heart opening, and navigating the ascension process and holding higher frequencies and vibrations. Lady Gaia, Earth Star Chakra, Arch Angel Sandalphon, Merkabah Activation, invoking the violet flame, Decrees and Mantra assist in obtaining a grounded state of being. Website: http://www.soulinspiredreflections.com/
It was an honor to interview Harvard Professor Dr. Arthur Kleinman, a luminary in the field of Psychiatry and Medical Anthropology. When I was a college student, Dr. Kleinman's work was a major inspiration for me to pursue a career in Clinical Psychology with a research emphasis on the intersection of psychology and culture. During the interview, we discussed Dr. Kleinman's most recent book, The Soul of Care: The Moral Education of a Husband and a Doctor. In Soul of Care, Dr. Kleinman discussed his deeply personal 10 year journey of caring for his beloved wife Joan in her struggle with early onset Alzheimer's Dementia. He puts his own experience into perspective drawing from his intellectual and academic focuses on the challenges of Western Medicine to provide adequate and meaningful care to patients and their families. If you have ever been a caretaker, or you currently find yourself in this role, you will certainly find Dr. Kleinman's interview and his book both moving and validating. Dr. Kleinman is one of the most renowned and influential scholars and writers on psychiatry, anthropology, global health, and cultural and humanistic issues in medicine. Educated at Stanford University and Stanford Medical School, he has taught at Harvard for over forty years. He is currently a professor of psychiatry and of medical anthropology at Harvard Medical School and the Esther and Sidney Rabb Professor of Anthropology in Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. He was the Fung Director of Harvard's Asia Center from 2008 to 2016. He is the author of six other books, including The Illness Narratives: Suffering, Healing, and the Human Condition, widely taught in medical schools. He is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Kleinman is currently directing a project on Social Technology for Global Aging and Eldercare in China that involves faculty and students from six of Harvard's schools as well as a number of his former students who are professors in China. * photo credit to Torben Eskerod
Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: August 16th, 2021The Showstopper ShowWe've been holding a Twitter Space weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it's not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for August 16th, 2021.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers on August 16th included special guests G. Pascal Zachary (see gpascalzachary.com), and Jessamyn West (see jessamyn.medium.com), as well as Dan Cross, Tom Lyon, Josh Clulow, and others. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them: G. Pascal Zachary's “Showstopper! The Breakneck Race to Create Windows NT and the Next Generation at Microsoft” book Tracy Kidder's “The Soul of a New Machine” book [@0:46](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=46) “The endless debate of NT vs Unix.” Bryan: My whole career was kind of defined by going where Windows wasn't. I don't know what I was expecting, but what I found was a real time capsule from software development in the 90's. [@2:46](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=166) Jessamyn: There was some familial impact (from developing DG Eclipse) that wasn't mentioned in the book. “O, Engineers!” retrospective from wired [@6:30](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=390) What was Kidder's process? “He lived in my house!” [@8:32](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=512) Zachary interviewed family members extensively. > People couldn't leave, they were staying at the office all the time. [@14:23](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=863) I do feel this is a time capsule. A time before two mega-trends hit: the Internet and open source. [@17:33](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1053) Microsoft was kind of a joke software company in the early 90's. > Dave Cutler was a force of nature. [@19:59](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1199) No one understood why someone was good at coding. It was a mystery to everyone, why there was such a wide stratification of coders. > There were projects that never saw the light of day. Ashton-Tate, dBase > There was a sense from Cutler and Perazzoli, that leadership of the team, > that these guys at Microsoft really didn't get how serious the process > of building this battleship was. I think the level of anguish did surprise me. [@23:59](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1439) In “Soul of the New Machine,” the machine was the star, and people served it. East Coast vs West Coast attitudes. > On the West Coast, the personal computer were supposed to help you > actualize your counter-cultural values. Ken Olsen of DEC > Computing is equivalent with IBM. There was no software industry > so long as IBM gave all the software away for free. [@26:09](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1569) Crashes. > Wozniak dreamed of owning > his own PDP > computer, which cost as much as a house. So he was aware of the robustness > of the minicomputer, and by contrast, the puny power of a personal computer. Thirtysomething > Dave Cutler was not cuddly. He was menacing, he could lose his temper. > And I tried not to get to close to him physically for that reason. > There were two looming father figures in Cutler and Gates. > And I think it created a lot of anxiety. [@29:52](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1792) The stakes for NT at Microsoft were high. Fred Brooks' “The Mythical Man-Month” book > It was a watershed moment in the history of computing. > It was more like the last battleship, rather than the next frontier. Bryan: I didn't realize this, that Gates was arguing against memory protection with Cutler. From our perspective, shipping an operating system without memory protection, in an era when microprocessors supported it, is malpractice. [@33:14](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=1994) Cutler's vendetta against Unix. > Conflict was at the heart of innovation at Microsoft at that time. Mitch Kapor of Lotus. > These early personal computer innovators were dismissed and sometimes > humiliated by mainstream big iron people of the 60's and 70's. Bill Gates' “The Road Ahead” book doesn't mention the internet. Zachary's “Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century” book > Computers on the West Coast were seen as extensions of your creativity, > and a tool for liberation. And for a long time that dominated the horizons. In 2005 Gates and Ballmer don't want to do cloud computing. “Who's gonna want to put their stuff in the cloud?” We've found that computing is a collective experience. [@38:28](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=2308) Email and personal messaging Sun Ray thin client computer Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson's “The UNIX time-sharing system” paper > Unix was an experiment in collaboration. RSX-11 for the PDP-11. And VMS for the VAX. > The attitude of looking down on Unix (as undesigned, academic) is > carried forward by Microsofties today. Tom: You can forgive Cutler's misgivings, because Unix pretty much stole the thunder out of VMS. [@42:24](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=2544) Interviews for the book. Family members perspective on workplace behavior. Betty Shanahan, Society of Women Engineers. Brief Q&A EAGLE (Eclipse Appreciation and Gratitude for Lonely Evenings) award > Betty's husband got an award for having to do his own laundry… Jessamyn's “Women in Early Tech” blog entry about Shanahan [@48:10](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=2890) Where did these engineers end up? They are broadly no longer engineers. This project burned people out. Short 1993 article by Zachary: “After two years in ship mode… a lot of people are angry, tired, and burned out.” Johanne Caron, linkedin Pascal: Kidder was like a fly on the wall. I was doing reconstruction as well as observation. I talked to family members to get the whole picture. [@53:20](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=3200) Cutler got to run his own show. > Ken Olsen was like the LBJ > of the computer industry: he's waist deep in the big money. Corporate culture. Hotshot coders. Renegades, rebels, hero programmers. > It's the majesty and mystery of code writing, that there's such a wide > range of performance. Pascal: I wasn't invited to the 25 year anniversary of the NT team.. [@1:01:47](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=3707) Journalists and companies. > Soul of a New Machine was very flattering to the company. Jobs backdated stock options, in violation of clear federal law. Gates repeatedly stole things. > The hobbyists were a small market, Microsoft needed to sell to corporations. Zachary's “Software, the Invisible Technology” 2016 essay > Where we used to relate to programs, we now relate to services. I think there needs to be a greater literature of software: the making of it, its purpose, its vulnerabilities, its values.Tom: It's because us practitioners are too embarrased about it all.. [@1:05:49](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=3949) Josh compares and contrasts. > Coders don't have to test their own stuff. The second stringers do that. Pascal: I would encourage people to write more about software and how it's created. Zachary's “Code Rush” film ~56mins about Netscape. [@1:08:58](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=4138) The rise of open source. Software as immutable artifact: once it's written, it's written. > Amazon, Google, Netflix are not possible without open source. [@1:10:50](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=4250) Jessamyn on helping people use tech. Accessibility > I'm a service oriented person. I work with > people who are struggling with technology. [@1:15:24](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=4524) Agency of users. > Bryan: Without memory protection, you would lose hours of work. > One bad application could cause the computer to reboot. Open source tools, and user accessible scripting/modding. Gary Larson's “The Far Side” comic “Blah blah blah Ginger” Tweet series about Internet Explorer's 25 year anniversary [@1:22:01](https://youtu.be/hlQuF75L4TE?t=4921) Pascal's parting thoughts. > The transformation of software from artifact into service, > is both fabulous and also scary. It changes all the time. > When NT was done, it was a fixed unchanging thing. Bryan: The darker side to services is people need to attend to it whenever it breaks. Adam: It's the death march with no end. > Pascal: Thanks everyone, I'd love to hear from you individually. > I'm interested in why people continue to turn to Showstopper > and find some value in it. Pascal: I encourage you to think about the literary aspects of software. I think it's valuable for society and civilization, for our culture, because there really is an artistic, artisanal side to software. Thanks again for including me. If we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next Twitter space will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time; stay tuned to our Twitter feeds for details. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!
Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: May 3, 2021Mr. Leventhal, Come here I want to see youWe've been holding a Twitter Space on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it's not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for May 3, 2021.In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, speakers on May 3rd included Laura Abbott, Nate, Antranig Vartanian, François Baldassari, Tom Killalea, Land Belenky, and Sid?. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)Before the recording started, we discussed: 2011 Solaris Family Reunion video ~20mins Katie Moussouris's blog entry on the Clubhouse vulnerabilities Laura's blog entry on the LPC55 vulnerability Land pointing us to the Atmega 328p MCU in a BK Medical endorectal probe François on the STM32F103 found in Pebble Intel Management Engine Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them: ASPEED BMC chip [@1:24](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=84) So formal correctness is something that I think we are all very sympathetic with. > It's very laudable, it's also very hard. From L3 to seL4 What Have We Learnt in 20 Years of L4 Microkernels? (paper) Who guards the guards? Formal validation of the Arm v8-m architecture specification (paper) > Hardware architecture is an area where formal verification is more tenable, > a level you can readily reason about. Our challenge is how can we satisfy our need for formalism without getting too pedantic about it. You don't want to lose the forest for the trees. A system we never deliver doesn't actually improve anyone's lives, that's the challenge. [@5:20](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=320) Journal club experiencesBootstrapping Trust in Modern Computers (book) > [@9:45](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=585) > We've tried to build a culture of looking to other work that's been done. > Not because everything's been done before, but because you don't want to have to > relearn something that someone has already learned and talked about. > If you can leverage someone's wisdom, that's energy well spent. [@11:46](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=706) When systems repeat mistakes, engineers feel deprived of agency: “I suffered for nothing.” > Engineering is this complicated balance between seeing the world as it could be, > and accepting the world as it is. > As you get older as an engineer, it's too easy to no longer see what could be, > and you get mired in the ways the world is broken. You can become pessimistic. Caitie McCaffrey on Distributed Sagas: A Protocol for Coordinating Microservices (video ~45min) [@14:17](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=857) It's dangerous to live only in the future, detached from present reality. Optative voice [@16:45](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=1005) At Oxide, we ask applicants “when have you been happiest and why? Unhappiest?” Interesting to see that unhappy is all the same story: we were trying to do the right thing and management prevented it. > When I was younger and maybe more idealistic and willing to charge at the windmills, > I stayed too long with a company. > All the developers that interviewed me were gone by the time I got there. > I should have walked out the door, but I was too young and didn't know better. [@18:43](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=1123) “How do you and your cofounder resolve conflicts?” > I don't want to hear about how you don't have conflicts, tell me about how you resolve them. Folks aren't able to walk away, they've got this commitment both to the work and to their colleagues. I've been a dead-ender a couple of times, I'll go down with the ship. [@20:28](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=1228) In “Soul of a New Machine” (wiki) Tom West says he wants to trust his engineers, but that trust is risk. > I just love that line: that trust is risk. > That's part of the reason some of these companies > have a hard time trusting their technologists, > they just don't want to take the risk. People are so not versed in how to deal with conflict, and there's nothing scarier than salary negotiation. They need you, that's why you're here, you've made it all the way through the interview to this point, you've got leverage, now's the time to use it. [@23:04](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=1384) Oxide: Compensation as a Reflection of Values > It takes the need for negotiation out, > because it replaces it with total transparency. Sometimes it's not about what you're getting paid, it's about what the other person is getting paid. Not wanting to get taken advantage of. It's a social experiment for sure. [@28:07](https://youtu.be/h-WSU3kiXVg?t=1687) Steve Jobs famously tried this at NeXT: pay was transparent but not equal.History of compensation at NeXT (wiki) (quora post) > I think that's the worst of both worlds, a recipe for disaster. If we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next Twitter space will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time; stay tuned to our Twitter feeds for details. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!