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For our season 7 finale episode, we're taking you behind the scenes with co-host Drew Horning and executive producer Julie Daley. The idea came about when Drew and Julie met in person for the first time the day after Thanksgiving - over three and a half years after starting this podcast together. It's pretty amazing that people can work together so closely to create something near and dear to them, and have never met in person. But the real story is why the podcast came into being, to begin with. It has to do with you, our listeners, graduates of the Process. In the first few months of the pandemic, the podcast was just one of a slew of new projects initiated by the Institute in service of staying connected to and supporting our graduate community. Along with others, Drew and Julie came together to brainstorm how to create the first Hoffman Institute podcast in April 2020. Sound engineer, Walt Hubis, joined us and in the middle of May 2020, after releasing our first three episodes of the Podcast, we were off and running with the release of our fourth episode. In time, both Sharon Mor and Liz Severin joined as co-hosts. We'd found our team. We hope you enjoy learning a bit about how all this came together and the "why" behind what makes doing this so meaningful for us. Happy New Year to you and yours. The Hoffman Podcast will return with season 8 in February 2024. We look forward to sharing conversations with a whole new group of graduates with you. About Drew Horning: Drew Horning is a former licensed private practice psychotherapist with a Master's in clinical work from the University of Michigan. He is trained in EMDR, Mediation and Dispute Resolution, Gottman Couples Counseling, and Brené Brown's Daring Way. He also hosts a podcast on relationships and coached high school basketball. Drew published his book, Grappling: White Men's Journey from Fragile to Agile, in May 2021. Drew values his role in calling forth students' courage and supporting them on their healing journey. He recalls how amazed he was at the speed of change during the week of his Process. “Sure, there was work to do once the week was over; but I was able to tap into parts of myself and what I wanted for my life in ways that I had never experienced before … despite years of therapy.” Drew lives in Boulder, CO with his wife of over 20 years, Genny, and their two children. About Julie Daley: Julie Daley is the executive producer of the Hoffman Podcast. It is her great joy to work in support of the Hoffman Process. Julie did her Process in August 2002. There, she experienced deep, abiding love and boundless joy. Julie left knowing she had been deeply transformed. A graduate of Stanford University, Julie is also a Certified Professional Co-Active Coach (CPCC) and a certified teacher of Creativity in Business, a course originally taught at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. Julie loves supporting others in coming home to their Essence and finding their courage to share this essential, creative nature with the world. Julie enjoys artistic expression through writing prose and poetry, dancing, painting, and photography. She is the author of Here: Poems, Prose, and Photography. Julie lives in the Bay Area and is a grandmother to six beautiful, treasured human beings. https://media.blubrry.com/the_hoffman_podcast/content.blubrry.com/the_hoffman_podcast/Behind_the_Scenes_Podcast_Final.mp3 As mentioned in this episode: Walt Hubis, Sound Engineer for the Hoffman Podcast • Listen to Walt on the Hoffman Podcast Sharon Mor, Hoffman Podcast co-host • Listen to Sharon and Drew on the Hoffman Podcast Liz Severin, Hoffman Podcast co-host • Listen to Liz on the Hoffman Podcast Jason-Aeric Huenecke, Hoffman Process Graduate, and Podcast guest • Listen to Jason-Aeric on the Hoffman Podcast Jack Rafferty, Hoffman Process Graduate, and Podcast guest • Listen to Jack on the Hoffman Podcast Ian Salvage,
"Strumming my pain with his fingers... Singing my life with his words..." Killing Me Softly with His Song is a song about the pleasure and embarrassment of being seen. The feeling that someone has reached into your deepest, most private feelings, and laid them bare: "I felt he'd found my letters, and read each one out loud". It's a song about a singer, and about what music can do. And it's a love song that feels at once happy and sad. The song was a huge hit in two different generations. It won Grammy Awards for The Fugees in 1997 and for Roberta Flack in 1974. Ray Padgett, author of Cover Me: The Stories Behind the Greatest Cover Songs of All Time, unfolds the layers of the song's history as a famous cover of a famous cover. The musicologist Nate Sloan explores what the song does harmonically, oscillating between major and minor chords to create a sense of uncertainty and longing. And Lori Lieberman tells the story of the Don McLean concert that inspired her lyrics for the song, that she was the first to record as a young singer-songwriter in 1972. It's a song that transports Tiff Murray back to the hot New York summer of 1996, when the Fugees version blared from every car radio and shopfront. For her it was the soundtrack to falling in love while far from home. It's also a love song for Julie Daley, but now with a sharp edge. Dr Robin Boylorn listened to the Fugees version as a self-conscious teenager and felt a flush of recognition; Ben heard it the Christmas he first came to the UK from South Africa, played by a busker early one morning in Covent Garden as the first snow he'd ever seen began to fall; and Perminder Khatkar has treasured the song since it played in the delivery room during the birth of her first child. Produced by Mair Bosworth for BBC Audio in Bristol
This episode of INCOGNITO the podcast features Julie Daley! Julie is a healer, teacher, and coach guiding people and organizations to a more creative, human way of relating and doing business. In this episode, Julie and I discuss her experience as both a student and teacher at Stanford, her thoughts on facilitating a grounded room, and how to connect with people more deeply. Suggested Tools: -Judgment, not discernment, separates -Come in grounded; humans mirror each other, so bring the attitude and energy that you want mirrored -Everybody is creative, resourceful, and whole -Allow people to be heard or felt -If appropriate, look into the eyes of others; search for similarities and extend an “invitation” -Being “real” is a process of letting go of all the things you think you are supposed to be Julie's Media Recommendations: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig The Age of Adaline - Movie, 2015 __ Find Julie's work Julie's Website: www.Juliedaley.com Email: julie@juliedaley.com Thanks to Ned Doheny for providing our podcast music! You can find him and his music on Spotify. Editing and co-production of this podcast by Farrah Sklar. Email info@incognitotheplay.com with questions or comments about the show!
Topics/contemplations/prompts explored in this episode of Living Your Wildly Naked Truth include: Wild Honoring; a poem about pleasure—giving it, receiving it, living it, and merging with the ache of sweetness. Spontaneity and permission to be you. Receiving the words “lover, come home” and what that means. Rites of passage and the creative process: initiation, birth, death, grief. Falling in love and saying goodbye. Home as expansive trust—the inner and outer landscapes of home. Instruction for homecoming. Letting nature do what nature does—trusting your own wild truth. Asking to be shown can be a companion for your willingness to say yes in the unknown spaces. Releasing what we know and falling apart; the (w)holiness of longing, being shattered, honoring endings and letting the grief come. The Mistress of Longing—Her teachings on how to listen to soul. We are meant to BE LONGING. The epiphany and process of giving birth to a book and Trust. La Loba and Women Who Run With the Wolves by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estes, PhD. Fleshing out the bones of the wild woman. Julie Daley and her divine timing. Learning how to work with a numinous presence. Devotion as a path of trust. “You are not alone.” A message for all of us from the Mistress of Longing. Taking your seat in sovereignty and trusting your inner world of knowing. Womancraft Publishing and Lucy Pearce. Katie Hess and Lotuswei in Costa Rica. Poetry as messenger and declaration. Sacred endings and uncoupling. Mutual Liberation. Shape shifting as a great awakening. What stories are we telling ourselves about longing and writing new ones. Paying attention to the messages coming through our nervous systems—an equisite navigation tool. What would it feel like to be held in your sacred yes and how would you know? What would support and strengthen you? What’s holding you back? Reclamation.
Awakening Eros Episode 4: The Drive Shaft of Creativity by Julie Daley
Awakening Eros Episode 3: Eros & The Feminine Principle by Julie Daley
This week Mary Ann talks to Julie Daley about her life and work. They talk about Julie's exploration of Awakening Eros and how we might flourish in our essential nature at this time, overcoming our conditioning to do otherwise. They explore what it means to feel deeply connected and to experience joy and wonder. And they talk about how the work Julie does support people with a whole range of backgrounds to embrace more of who they truly are.
subscribe: iTunes | google play | android | stitcherThe OneWoman Radio Theme:Featuring Invocation by The Rev, Teri Ciacchi of www.LivingLoveRevolution.org, gratitude to the living universeVocals by Angela Blueskies of www.AngelaBlueskies.com, gratitude to the ancestorsAll music arranged, composed and mastered by Henry GieblerIncluding voices of Kassandra Brown, Megan Hawk, Alyson Lanier, Chris Muse, Julie Daley, Adriana Giammaria, Filiz Telek, Kai Wu, Helena Palmqvist, Michele Pimenta, Laura Emlen, Maria Baley and Jolene MonheimVideo created by Alyssa MorinGrandmother illustration by Kelly Green Porterfield of www.KellyGreenGallery.com
Join us LIVE In the Spotlight on Crowdcast, Thursdays at 2pm EST : https://www.crowdcast.io/tanyageisler This week's guest is Julie Daley, an educator, writer, consultant, and leadership coach who's led hundreds of people from all walks of life to develop their creativity and authentic leadership skills. Julie guides individuals from around the world in discovering and uncovering their authentic nature as creative human beings. She offers one-on-one coaching, courses and consulting in creativity and innovation, compassion and collaboration, as well as authentic feminine leadership. Find full episode show notes here.
Julie Daley is a transformational coach, speaker, writer, and creator of Unabashedly Female. She also teaches Creativity and Leadership at Stanford and corporations and organizations.
Different from what I normally offer on this podcast, today's story is one that I've written (and recorded) collaboratively with three other women, the three women with whom I have been writing for nearly 3 years: Julie Daley, Tanya Geisler, and Amy Palko. Along the way we discovered a process we call "braided writing" in which our voices have merged into something more powerful than each one separately. It has changed us, to be sure. Today, on World Storytelling Day, it feels appropriate and like profound privilege to offer "Limned" to you. The sound quality and volume tend to waver a bit within. It will be worth adjusting for...I promise. And a warning: there is some profanity within.
Back for the second time on Creative Spirit, Julie Daley is a teacher, coach, writer, and creativity expert whose passions are women's leadership and embodiment of the sacred feminine. Her work as a coach and teacher has varied with the setting; Julie works with corporations, nonprofits, and individuals. She teaches Creativity and Leadership at Stanford University Continuing Studies; and her latest project is R I S E, a course that will focus on finding our capacity to RISE into our true selves and the work we are here to do in the world at this time. Find out how Julie holds the importance of beauty in this inspiring interview!
Writer, coach and educator, Julie Daley shares her unfolding journey of embodied feminine leadership. Listen to her powerful story of opening to the erotic feminine through the portal of deep personal loss. Like a Wise Woman for our Age, Julie guides us to the exquisite beauty, vital aliveness and wild creativity at the heart of our embodied experience as women. For more from Julie go to http://www.unabashedlyfemale.com
A teacher, coach, writer, and creativity expert, Julie Daley's passions are women's leadership and embodiment of the sacred feminine. Her work as a coach and teacher has varied with the setting; Julie works with corporations, nonprofits, and individuals. She teaches "Creativity and Leadership" at Stanford University Continuing Studies and has coached hundreds who lost loved ones in 9/11. Listen to this exciting interview and discover how Julie weaves her design background—and her sense of the sacred—into her coaching and consulting.
Julie Daley is a teacher, writer, and coach who works with people around the world in emotional intelligence, conscious embodiment, leadership potential, spontaneous awakening, the sacred feminine, finding one’s purpose, healing the pain of the past, and disconnecting from negative conditioning. She started her journey in 2001 when she became a certified creativity and business teacher at Stanford and received coaching certification from the Coaches Training Institute and the International Federation of Coaches. She also works with those who have lost loved ones in 9/11 as well as those directly affected by the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary. In addition to all of that, Julie enjoys dancing to 5Rhythms, writing prose and poetry, process painting, and spending time with her grandchildren. She joins Charlie on the show to talk about her journey and her work. Key Takeaways: 02:46 – Julie teaches creativity courses at Stanford as well as writing courses. 03:08 – Julie went to Stanford at age 42 and graduated at age 45 with her bachelor’s degree. 09:37 – The class Julie teaches is really about regaining and reclaiming that trust in ourselves and in the unseen world and in the mystery of life. 10:53 – One of the biggest things that gets in the way of creativity is the voice of judgment. 14:18 – Julie has spent time working with people directly affected by the Sandy Hook shootings and has worked with families of 9/11. 21:44 – Julie now offers a program she teaches where she combines what she’s done at Stanford with what she has experienced and knows about the sacred feminine. 28:38 – Men and women can’t choose to not coexist. We need each other. 32:25 – One of the most important things that we can do right now is to feel. 41:02 – You have exactly what you need to navigate whatever comes your way, and what comes your way is always what you need in the moment. Mentioned In This Episode: Michael Ray and Rochelle Myers Lucy Pearce Tao Te Ching David Kelley, IDEO The Gender Knot, Allan Johnson Danielle LaPorte Gabrielle Roth, 5Rhythms How to Enter the Creative Unknown Sacred Flesh Fierce Conversations, Susan Scott