Podcast appearances and mentions of Katherine Miller

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Best podcasts about Katherine Miller

Latest podcast episodes about Katherine Miller

Holy Trinity Claygate
The way of forgiveness | Katherine Miller - 2 February | 9:30AM - 1 Cor 2:1-11

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 22:39


The way of forgiveness | Katherine Miller - 2 February | 9:30AM - 1 Cor 2:1-11 by Holy Trinity Claygate

Holy Trinity Claygate
Epiphany | Katherine Miller - 5 January | 9:30AM - Matthew 2:1-12

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 19:39


Epiphany | Katherine Miller - 5 January | 9:30AM - Matthew 2:1-12 by Holy Trinity Claygate

Holy Trinity Claygate
Christmas Day | Katherine Miller - 25 December | 10:30AM

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2024 10:20


Christmas Day | Katherine Miller - 25 December | 10:30AM by Holy Trinity Claygate

Holy Trinity Claygate
Remembrance Day Service | Katherine Miller - 10 November | 6PM - Ephesians 2

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 19:40


Remembrance Day Service | Katherine Miller - 10 November | 6PM - Ephesians 2 by Holy Trinity Claygate

Holy Trinity Claygate
Remembrance Day Service | Katherine Miller - 10 November | 6PM - Ephesians 2

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 29:22


Remembrance Day Service | Katherine Miller - 10 November | 6PM - Ephesians 2 by Holy Trinity Claygate

SharkPreneur
1095: Negotiating Divorce with Dignity with Katherine Miller

SharkPreneur

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 17:01


Katherine Miller is an attorney on a mission to change how people divorce and help them divorce with dignity. She is the founder of the Miller Law Group and a Director and Trainer with the Center for Understanding in Conflict. She has been working in the field of family law for more than 35 years as a mediator as well as an advocate. Listen to this informative Sharkpreneur episode with Katherine Eisold Miller about transforming the divorce process. Here are some of the beneficial topics covered on this week's show: - How negotiation skills in divorce proceedings are crucial to creating win-win outcomes. - Why mediation can be a more productive way to handle family law cases. - How it's a misconception that divorce has to be an "Armageddon" style event. - What makes divorce an opportunity for personal growth and reflection. - Why empathy plays a role in resolving disputes in a divorce. Connect with Katherine: Website: https://miller-law.com/ X: @millerlaw_ny Instagram: @millerlaw_ny Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MillerLawGroupNY LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/2945754 Links Mentioned: https://www.miller-law.com/ https://understandinginconflict.org/ https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Holy Trinity Claygate
Committed to the core - D2 | Katherine Miller - 13 October | 930AM - Daniel 2: 1-23, 44-49

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 18:38


Committed to the core - D2 | Katherine Miller - 13 October | 930AM - Daniel 2: 1-23, 44-49 by Holy Trinity Claygate

Holy Trinity Claygate
Committed to the core - D1 | Katherine Miller - 29 September | 6PM - Daniel 11-21

Holy Trinity Claygate

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 16:48


Committed to the core - D1 | Katherine Miller - 29 September | 6PM - Daniel 11-21 by Holy Trinity Claygate

No Title
The Divorce Hour with Ilyssa Panitz Episode 144 with Katherine Miller, Christopher Castellano, and Mark Steines

No Title

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024


In This Week's The Divorce Hour with Ilyssa Panitz, Ilyssa welcomes Founder, Miller Law Group, Katherine Miller to discuss Christina Hall's Third Divorce. Attorney at Joseph Greenwald and Laake, Christopher Castellano, on Divorce and The Summer Break. TV Host and Founder of Mark Steines Photography, Mark Steines on Healing From A Divorce. The Divorce Hour with Ilyssa Panitz is a safe and comfortable place for listeners to put their feet up and escape from the daily grind while we offer you comfort and advice during a challenging and often isolating time in your life. It is hard to turn to friends and family who don't understand what you are going through emotionally, mentally, or economically but we do and there is nothing to feel ashamed about! While the topics and guests will vary every week – the messaging is always the same: we are going to help you get through this dark period and despite how bleak you may think things look. If you cannot see the audio controls,

Divorce Dialogues
A Fair & Loving Approach to Prenups—with Laurie Israel

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024 29:57


You might assume that mediators who specialize in prenups recommend them for everyone. But Laurie Israel is actually against prenuptial agreements for most couples. So, when should you consider creating a prenup? And how do you write one in a fair and loving way that strengthens the new marriage? Laurie is a collaborative lawyer and mediator based in Massachusetts, where she concentrates her practice exclusively on prenuptial and postnuptial agreements. Laurie also writes extensively about the art of mediating prenups, and she is the author of The Generous Prenup: How to Support Your Marriage and Avoid the Pitfalls. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Laurie joins Katherine to explain when a prenup is a good idea and when it isn't, discussing why it's inappropriate to think of a marriage as a business deal. Laurie shares her thoughts on prenups for inheritances, second marriages, and business owners, describing what to look for in a mediator to negotiate your agreement. Listen in for Laurie's insight on protecting both parties (not just the moneyed spouse) and learn how the right kind of prenup creates peace, certainty and fairness for all involved. Topics Covered Why Laurie is against prenuptial agreements for most couples When a prenup is a good idea and how it can create peace, certainty and fairness in those cases Why it's inappropriate to think of a marriage as a business deal Laurie's advice on what to look for in a mediator to negotiate your prenup Why Laurie suggests a prenup for second marriages and marriages involving children from previous relationships How Laurie thinks about building a prenup or postnup for business owners How fairness in a prenup is influenced by the laws in your particular state When it might be appropriate to draft a postnuptial agreement Laurie's thoughts on the complexities of money and marriage Laurie's loving approach to prenups that protect both people in a marriage (not just the moneyed spouse) How to address student loans and inheritances in a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement Providing for the surviving spouse when a marriage ends in death Connect with Laurie Israel Laurie Israel Law and Mediation: https://www.laurieisrael.com/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources The Generous Prenup by Laurie Israel: https://www.laurieisrael.com/book/ Ten Things I Hate About Prenuptial Agreements: https://www.laurieisrael.com/ten-things-i-hate-about-prenuptial-agreements/

Earth Eats: Real Food, Green Living
Can chefs shape our food system?

Earth Eats: Real Food, Green Living

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 51:38


“There's a restaurant on almost every street in our various cities–they are woven into the fabrics of our communities, and they are deeply embedded in our lives.  Restaurants are the places we go to celebrate marriages, to mourn divorces, the places we go to gossip with friends to celebrate after church and they become these places to hear the stories of their community. They're talking to the farmers everyday, they're talking to the fisherpeople everyday, they're talking to the other producers, they're also getting a sense of what's challenging about their lives or what's opportunities within their lives and they hear the everyday concerns of their customers. So they become these great collectors of stories.”This week on the show, a conversation with Katherine Miller. She's the author of At the Table:The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. She encourages chefs to harness the power of their unique position in the community and raise their voices for change in the food system.

Earth Eats
Can chefs shape our food system?

Earth Eats

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 51:38


“There's a restaurant on almost every street in our various cities–they are woven into the fabrics of our communities, and they are deeply embedded in our lives.  Restaurants are the places we go to celebrate marriages, to mourn divorces, the places we go to gossip with friends to celebrate after church and they become these places to hear the stories of their community. They're talking to the farmers everyday, they're talking to the fisherpeople everyday, they're talking to the other producers, they're also getting a sense of what's challenging about their lives or what's opportunities within their lives and they hear the everyday concerns of their customers. So they become these great collectors of stories.”This week on the show, a conversation with Katherine Miller. She's the author of At the Table:The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. She encourages chefs to harness the power of their unique position in the community and raise their voices for change in the food system.

HRN Happy Hour
Amuse News 5/3 — At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy

HRN Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024 23:14


Thanks for joining as I speak with Katherine Miller, the James Beard Media Award nominated author of At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. The other things I touch on: Queer Food Conference in the NYTFlorida Bans Lab-Grown MeatMcDonald's Creating Biggest Burger YetWalmart Recalls Ground BeefLavender as Springtime Pumpkin SpiceUnfrosted: The MovieAmuse News is hosted and produced by RJ Bee and Heritage Radio Network. Original music by Amar Sastry.

The Conch Podcast
The Conch- Mavis-Jay Sanders

The Conch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 41:00


In what ways do food and social justice intersect? How can we help formerly incarcerated youth develop culinary careers? And why is it so important to support independent Black farmers?  Chef Mavis-Jay Sanders digs into all of this with us on Season 5, Episode 6 of The Conch podcast!  A James Beard Award-Winning chef, culinarian, and storyteller, Chef Mavis-Jay has supported so many wonderful organizations and initiatives, from the Coalition for Sustainable Aquaculture to the Queer Food Foundation (which she helped found!).  So join us for this episode where she shares her insights on how to help communities celebrate the joys of life and humanity through food. Episode Transcript Episode Guide :00 Intro 01:03 Chasing childhood food memories: Mavis-Jay's journey to becoming an award-winning chef 07:48  Letting go of the ego of food: what accolades meant and now mean to Chef Mavis-Jay 12:50 The importance of investing in formerly incarcerated youth 17:06  How to celebrate Black American heritage through food 20:41 Reclaiming Black food sovereignty: what does success look like? 24:01 Supporting Black farmers: where food comes from is as much of an issue of justice and equity as food access is 27:47 Why Chef Mavis-Jay supports the Coalition for Sustainable Aquaculture 31:05 The Queer Food Foundation whose mission is to be a nationwide resource and platform for LGBTQIA+ individuals in food and promote, protect, and fund queer food spaces 35:02 What the restaurant industry can do to lessen inequalities 38:15 Chef shouts out Katherine Miller, whose book At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy, will positively support generations of chefs Resources:  Find @chefmavisjay on Instagram and give a follow! Check the links for more information about the Queer Food Foundation, the Coalition for Sustainable Aquaculture, and Black Farmer Fund. Explore Katherine Miller's book, At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy  

Divorce Dialogues
Empowering Women in Divorce—with Heather Quick

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2024 24:09


In the early days of her family law practice, Heather Quick noticed a troubling pattern among the women she represented. Women often undervalued what they brought to the marriage and failed to stand up for themselves in the divorce process. So, what can women do to change their mindset around divorce and fight for what they deserve? Heather Quick is Founder and CEO of Florida Women's Law Group, the only divorce and family law firm in Northeast Florida that serves women exclusively. Consistent with her message of women's empowerment, Heather has published several books on divorce and business, including Women's Guide to Divorce in Florida and Women's Guide to Becoming a Successful Entrepreneur. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Heather joins Katherine to discuss the unique challenges facing women in divorce, from stay-at-home moms to female breadwinners. Heather explains how women compromise on finances to protect their children and why that's a bad idea, challenging couples to stop using their children as a negotiating tool in divorce. Listen in to understand how entrepreneurship can help women own their financial destiny and learn how FWLG advocates for women before, during and after divorce. Topics Covered What inspired Heather to focus on helping women stand up for themselves in divorce Why women tend to undervalue what they bring to a marriage What issues affect women in particular during the divorce process How women compromise on finances in divorce to protect their children (and why they shouldn't) The danger in using your children as a negotiating tool in divorce Common issues facing female breadwinners in divorce, e.g.: custody, alimony, etc. How Heather's books educate and empower women before, during and after divorce Heather's experience working with a team of all women at Florida Women's Law Group How Heather benefits from having a divorce coach on her team What motivated Heather to expand her focus to helping women excel as entrepreneurs Connect with Heather Quick Florida Women's Law Group: https://www.floridawomenslawgroup.com/ Women Winning Divorce Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/685277376560289 Women Winning Divorce Podcast: https://womenwinningdivorce.com/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Women's Guide to Divorce in Florida by Heather Brooke Quick, Esq.: https://www.amazon.com/Womens-Guide-Divorce-Florida-Advantage/dp/150323326X Is Divorce Right for You? by Heather B. Quick, Esq.: https://www.amazon.com/Divorce-Right-You-Guide-Determine-ebook/dp/B00NH2QK1G/ Women's Guide to Becoming a Successful Entrepreneur by Heather B. Quick, Esq.: https://www.amazon.com/Womens-Guide-Becoming-Successful-Entrepreneur/dp/1511734655/ Julie Rountree on Divorce Dialogues: https://miller-law.com/podcast/the-missing-professional-from-a-divorce-litigation-team/ Changes to Florida's Divorce Law: https://www.attorneylauraolson.com/an-overview-of-floridas-new-alimony-law-elimination-of-permanent-alimony/

Add Passion and Stir
Alicia Kennedy and Katherine Miller on Food Justice

Add Passion and Stir

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 44:27


Food and culture writer Alicia Kennedy and chef advocacy trainer and Table81 founder Katherine Miller discuss food justice and how we can make important improvements in our food system. “We operate with this idea that we should be able to have any [food] we want whenever we want it, at whatever price that we wanna pay for it,” says Miller. “It's an artificially constructed system that keeps our food affordable in certain places and makes it unaffordable and unattainable in other places.” Kennedy writes about food justice, food sovereignty, and food apartheid. “Food justice is not merely the ability to access fresh food. It is the space, time, energy, and ability to cook it and serve it in a way that provides a nourishing, complete and aesthetically pleasing dish according to one's cultural standards,” she states.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

In the Moment
Raising your glass & plate for change

In the Moment

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 48:48


We talk to chef Michael Haskett and author Katherine Miller about how cooks and customers can become social advocates. Plus, filling your cup for your mental health.

The Argument
The Election of Our Discontent

The Argument

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2024 33:37


Many voters from both parties are less than enthusiastic about their likely options this November.This week the Opinion writer and editor Katherine Miller joins Michelle, Lydia and Carlos to talk about uncommitted voters, double haters and how they could affect the election, whether they turn out or not.Plus, Lydia makes a plea against the tyranny of clean lines and interior design monoculture.(A full transcript of this audio essay will be available within 24 hours of publication on the Times website.) Mentioned in this episode:“Black Pastors Pressure Biden to Call for a Cease-Fire in Gaza,” by Maya King for The Times“Joe Biden's Last Campaign,” by Evan Osnos in The New Yorker Thoughts about the show? Email us at matterofopinion@nytimes.com or leave a voicemail at (212) 556-7440.

Divorce Dialogues
Divorce Financial Planning with a Love Letter—with Jennifer Lee

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2024 26:13


If you're going through a divorce, writing a love letter is probably the last thing on your mind. But Jennifer Lee, AWMA, AIF, suggests that sharing your values and hopes for the future in a family love letter to your children is a good first step for financial planning in divorce. So, how does a love letter help you set meaningful financial goals and make better money decisions? Jennifer is the founder of Modern Wealth, a Sarasota-based financial firm with a focus on helping individuals in transition, and author of Squeeze the Juice: Live with Purpose, Then Leave a Legacy. Jennifer brings a fresh perspective on the financial planning process by digging deep to understand her clients' values and helping them use money as a tool to accomplish their dreams. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Jennifer joins Katherine to share the personal experience that inspired her idea for a family love letter in the financial planning process. Jennifer explains why financial anxiety is such a common issue in the divorce process and challenges us to see money as a tool to reach our goals—not the goal itself. Listen in to understand how Jennifer supports the ‘non-moneyed' spouse in settlement negotiations and learn how Squeeze the Juice can help you make informed financial decisions in divorce. Topics Covered Why Jennifer includes writing a family love letter in the financial planning process Thinking of money as a tool to accomplish our dreams vs. the goal itself What drove Jennifer's father to communicate his values in a kind of family love letter Why anxiety around money is such a common issue in the divorce process How Jennifer helps the non-moneyed spouse in a divorce make financial decisions The danger in rushing through divorce negotiations because you want it to be done What experiences inspired Jennifer to write her book, Squeeze the Juice How your money story impacts the way you navigate financial decisions The 2 most important chapters in Squeeze the Juice for people going through divorce What it means to be the non-moneyed spouse in divorce (and what it doesn't mean) Why there's a power imbalance in divorce negotiations for the non-moneyed spouse Connect with Jennifer Lee Modern Wealth: https://modern-wealth.com/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Squeeze the Juice by Jennifer Lee: https://squeezethejuicebook.com/

How to Win a Campaign
7 Questions with Katherine Miller

How to Win a Campaign

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 37:56


Connect with Us! Episode Resources: At The Table: The Chef's Guide to AdvocacyGuest Information:Katherine Miller Social Media: Table81WebsiteIf you have campaign questions or want to learn more, reach out to us using the contact information below.The Campaign Workshop: Twitter: @cmpwrkshpInstagram: @TheCampaignWorkshopEmail: marketing@thecampaignworkshop.comJoe FuldX: @joefuldInstagram: @joefuldMartín Diego GarciaX: @gmartindiegoInstagram: @gmartindiegoPresented by The Campaign Workshop

Divorce Dialogues
The Impact of Domestic Abuse in Divorce—with Beverly Price

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2024 27:37


Asking your partner for a divorce is challenging under any circumstances. But the conversation can be downright dangerous if you're leaving an abusive spouse. In fact, upwards of 70% of women who leave an abusive spouse are murdered. So, what resources are available to victims of intimate partner violence? How do you mitigate the risks associated with divorcing an abuser? Beverly Price is the driving force behind Her Empowered Divorce, a coaching practice that has supported thousands of women facing the most challenging aspects of divorce. Beverly is also the visionary behind the Divorce Coalition, a network of divorce professionals and survivor advocates united to transform the landscape of domestic abuse. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Beverly joins Katherine to explore the impact of domestic abuse in divorce and explain why you shouldn't leave an abuser without a safety plan. Beverly discusses the benefit of having a divorce coach, describing how she offers clients education and preparation around the process to reduce their anxiety. Listen in for Beverly's insight into the many forms of abuse and learn how survivors of domestic partner violence can work through the divorce process safely and with adequate support. Topics Covered The benefit of divorce coaching that goes beyond emotional management How education and preparation for divorce reduces the anxiety associated with the process Why Beverly suggests hiring an attorney, financial professional and divorce coach How Beverly's personal experiences inform her work as a divorce coach Divorce Coalition's work to improve abuse survivors' experiences in the court process The many forms of domestic abuse, i.e.: physical, financial, sexual, legal, emotional, etc. Why you shouldn't leave an abuser until you have support and a safety plan How Beverly coaches people through the conversation of asking for a divorce The statistics re: the number of men and women who experience intimate partner violence Beverly's advice on documenting abuse to prepare for divorce litigation Connect with Beverly Price Her Empowered Divorce: https://herempowereddivorce.com/ Her Empowered Divorce Podcast: https://herempowereddivorce.com/podcast Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources National Domestic Violence Hotline: https://www.thehotline.org/

The NC State Philanthropy Podcast
Episode 20: Planned Giving With Katherine Miller

The NC State Philanthropy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 31:55


On this episode of the NC State Philanthropy Podcast, we're joined by Katherine Miller, the executive director of NC State's Office of Gift Planning, to discuss planned giving and its importance to the university's ongoing success. A bequest is a gift made through your will or trust, but it is much more than simply leaving money to NC State in your long-term financial plans. It is one of the most popular and flexible ways that you can support the university, and it even comes with benefits that you can enjoy in the present. Miller discusses all of this in our interview, along with how she came to be part of the Wolfpack following time spent in the private sector as a CPA. For more information on how you can benefit NC State through planned giving, please visit ncsugift.org. If you'd like to hear even more stories of Wolfpack success, please subscribe to the NC State Philanthropy Podcast today in the Apple or Google Podcast stores, on Spotify or through Stitcher. Be sure to leave a comment and rating to let us know how we're doing. Thanks for listening, and as always, go Pack! Transcript available here.

Down to Earth: The Planet to Plate Podcast
At The Table: Chefs advocating for a better food system

Down to Earth: The Planet to Plate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2024 43:11


Katherine Miller, author of At The Table: The Chef's Guide To Advocacy, began her work toward a healthier food system with a deep background in political advocacy. She trains chefs to use their position as influencers to make change on issues like healthy and regenerative food sourcing, food waste, sustainability, fair wages, anti-sexism and -racism, and better mental health––in ways that engage the community and work with their already busy schedules.

Divorce Dialogues
Navigating Stress in Your Relationship—with Judy Herman

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 25:51


Is your relationship causing you a great deal of stress? Do you suspect that your partner has a diagnosable mental illness? In such a challenging situation, it's human nature to blame the other person in the relationship. To label their behavior as wrong and ask, ‘Why won't they change?' But if their mental health is in question, they may not be able to change. And the better question is, ‘What is YOUR next right step?' Judy Herman is a mental health professional and relationship wellness advocate dedicated to equipping high-achieving women in the helping professions go from trauma drama into vibrant karma. Judy is also the host of Better Relationships, Better Life: The Podcast and author of Beyond Messy Relationships and Relationships with Purpose. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Judy joins Katherine to explain how her personal experience as a twice-divorced relationship therapist inspired her to write Relationships with Purpose. Judy discusses what differentiates someone with self-centered characteristics from a diagnosable narcissist and shares questions to ask yourself if you're married to someone with mental illness. Listen in for Judy's insight on shifting your attitude toward your partner from judgement to curiosity and learn strategies for staying grounded during challenging interactions in any relationship. Topics Covered How Judy's own challenging relationships inspired her to write her first book The identity crisis Judy faced as a twice-divorced relationship therapist What differentiates someone with self-centered characteristics from a diagnosable narcissist What questions to ask yourself if you're married to someone with mental illness How to shift your attitude toward your partner from judgement to curiosity Judy's strategies for staying grounded in challenging interactions with your partner Why Judy suggests getting professional help if you're feeling shame around your relationship Judy's deep breathing exercises for navigating intense interpersonal situations Connect with Judy Herman Judy's Website: https://www.judycounselor.com/ Better Relationships, Better Life: The Podcast: https://www.judycounselor.com/podcast/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Beyond Messy Relationships by Judy K. Herman: https://www.judycounselor.com/product/premier-author-signed-single-book/ Relationships with Purpose by Judy K. Herman: https://www.judycounselor.com/relationships-with-purpose/ Brene Brown: https://brenebrown.com/ My Lovely Wife in the Psych Ward by Mark Lukach: https://www.marklukach.com/book Judy's Relationship Stress Quiz: https://www.judycounselor.com/ Judy's From Chaos to Calm Online Course: https://www.judycounselor.com/jumpstart-emotionally-safe-conversations/

Divorce Dialogues
Holistic Financial Planning in Divorce—with Adrienne Grace

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 23:59


If you aren't fully informed about your finances in marriage, you can't negotiate from a level playing field in divorce. That's why Adrienne Grace is committed to helping women with what she calls holistic financial planning. So, what is holistic financial planning? How can it help you negotiate a realistic divorce settlement and build a plan for the future? Adrienne is the Women's Wealth Advocate and Holistic Financial Planner behind Transitioning Finances, a platform where she guides women and couples to successfully negotiate divorce settlements, survive financial transitions and rebuild afterward. Adrienne has 30-plus years of experience working in every area of the financial world, and she is passionate about helping you overcome your financial challenges and move empowered into the next phase of your life. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Adrienne joins Katherine to discuss why the inability to communicate about money is often the cause of divorce. Adrienne explains how she helps people understand the relative value of their assets and empowers them with the confidence to negotiate a divorce settlement. Listen in for Adrienne's advice on ‘talking to your honey about money' early in the relationship and learn how to design a holistic spending and savings plan to ensure your financial security in divorce. Topics Covered The personal experiences that led to Adrienne's work helping people through transitions How Adrienne defines holistic financial planning as looking at money as it relates to your life Why the inability to communicate about money is often the cause of divorce Adrienne's advice around talking to your honey about money before you get married Why Adrienne suggests setting aside private time to talk with your partner about money How women who are not fully informed about their finances struggle to negotiate a divorce settlement How Adrienne helps people understand the relative value of their assets Why it's crucial to design a spending + savings plan with a realist view of what it costs to live How Adrienne empowers people with the confidence to negotiate their divorce settlement Adrienne's experiences helping people find hidden assets in the divorce process Connect with Adrienne Grace Transitioning Finances: https://adriennegrace.com/ Adrienne on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/womenswealthadvocate/ Adrienne on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adrienne-rothstein-grace-cdfa/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://miller-law.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources From We to Me: A Financial Guide to Divorce by Adrienne Grace: https://adriennegrace.com/adriennes-books/ I'm Divorced. Now What? by Adrienne Grace: https://www.amazon.com/Im-Divorced-Now-What-Guide/dp/B0C6W6HX5Y Adrienne's Blog on Talking to Your Honey About Money: https://adriennegrace.com/remarriage-living-together-second-time-around/ Adrienne's Divorce Academy Online Course:https://adriennegrace.com/classes_and_courses/

The Divorced Girl Smiling Podcast
Divorce When the Woman is the Breadwinner

The Divorced Girl Smiling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 36:21


More and more women are finding themselves going through a divorce when THEY are the breadwinner. In this episode, my guest, Divorce Attorney, Katherine Miller offers advice for this scenario, and also offers tips on how to protect yourself. Learn more: https://www.divorcedgirlsmiling.com/katherine-e-miller-founder-of-miller-law-group-new-york-and-connecticut/

Software Huddle
AI for Developers with Rizel Scarlett, Leandro Margulis and Katherine Miller

Software Huddle

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 55:32


On today's show, we have quite the lineup. We have Rizel Scarlett, Leandro Margulis and Katherine Miller all joining Sean to talk about AI for developers. This came together because the four of them had participated on a conference panel earlier this year discussing the topic. We discuss our impressions of AI for developers, what impact it may or may not have, privacy and security, ethics concerns, what the future might look like, and a whole lot more. Today's guests have a diverse set of roles spanning product, marketing, and developer relations, so we think we were able to bring a lot of different perspectives to the topic. Timestamps: 02:25 Introduction 05:45 Will AI's net impact be positive? 11:10 Customer support chatbots 17:18 Speed of Innovation 26:15 Safeguarding Sensitive Data 28:47 Creating your own Models 31:55 Using LLMs responsibly 41:27 Everything GPT 45:08 Existential Risk 51:17 Psychological Safety Links: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wh02qPQasfk

Divorce Dialogues
Expert Answers to Your Tax Questions in Divorce—with Hubert Johnson

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2023 29:05


What do you need to know about filing your taxes during or after divorce? Are asset transfers taxable? What about alimony and child support? Who claims the children? And what if your ex mishandled the finances and there's tax debt you knew nothing about? Tax Attorney Hubert Johnson is Founder of Guardian Tax Law, where he has assisted thousands of individuals and businesses dealing with IRS and state tax issues. Hubert lectures to tax professionals in seminars and training sessions across the country and has cowritten two books on tax debt resolution. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Hubert joins Katherine to answer your questions around tax issues in divorce, explaining where to go for tax information if your soon-to-be-ex handled the finances. Hubert walks us through the pros and cons of delaying divorce to file taxes jointly and discusses when asset transfers are a taxable event—and when they're not. Listen in for Hubert's insight on the tax rules around alimony and child support and learn where to go for help settling tax debt in the aftermath of divorce. Topics Covered The pros and cons of delaying divorce to file your taxes jointly Where to go for tax information if your ex-spouse handled the finances How to qualify as an ‘innocent spouse' if your partner fails to pay taxes Why the IRS pursues both parties equally for tax debt (filing jointly) When asset transfers are a taxable event and when they're not How to avoid capital gains on the sale of an asset in divorce When the IRS respects a marital settlement agreement Who should consider applying for ‘offer in compromise' with the IRS The state and federal tax rules re: alimony and child support What to do if your ex claims the children on their taxes but shouldn't Connect with Hubert Johnson Guardian Tax Law: https://guardiantaxlaw.com/ Guardian on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@guardiantaxlaw Guardian on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/guardian-tax-law/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources IRS.gov

Food Sleuth Radio
Katherine Miller, advocate and author of At The Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy

Food Sleuth Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 28:09


Did you know that chefs are uniquely positioned to drive food system change for good? Join Food Sleuth Radio host and Registered Dietitian, Melinda Hemmelgarn, for her interview with Katherine Miller, advocate and author of At The Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy (Island Press, 2023). Miller was the founding executive director of the Chef Action Network, a  chef advocacy group, and the vice president of impact at the James Beard Foundation where she developed the Chef's Boot camp for Policy and Change, where chefs learn how to effectively use their skills for advocacy. She discusses the National Restaurant Association's political force, the key role immigrant labor plays in our food system, and the powerful potential chefs have to advocate for food system reform. Related website:  https://table81.com/ 

The Other Chair Podcast
The Six Underlying Concepts with Guests Katherine Miller and Catherine Conner

The Other Chair Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 54:17


This episode of The Other Chair explores the six underlying concepts of the Understanding-Based model, which can guide a conflict resolution professional through difficult moments and help structure the process to minimize the challenging moments. In this webinar recording, Catherine Conner and Katherine Miller will describe the six underlying concepts, their meaning, and, most importantly, how to use them.

Food Dignity Podcast
Author Katherine Miller Wants Chefs at the Table!

Food Dignity Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2023 31:41


Katherine Miller is an author, activist, and mover-and-shaker in the restaurant world. She trains chefs to use their position in society to make an impact for food workers in their community.  She outlines all her tricks in her must-read book, “At the Table: A Chef's Guide to Advocacy”. Katherine teaches readers, restaurants, home cooks, and eaters alike to use their voices! It's time!

Earth Eats: Real Food, Green Living
Katherine Miller on how chefs can help shape our food system

Earth Eats: Real Food, Green Living

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 51:38


“There's a restaurant on almost every street in our various cities–they are woven into the fabrics of our communities, and they are deeply embedded in our lives.  Restaurants are the places we go to celebrate marriages, to mourn divorces, the places we go to gossip with friends to celebrate after church and they become these places to hear the stories of their community. They're talking to the farmers everyday, they're talking to the fisherpeople everyday, they're talking to the other producers, they're also getting a sense of what's challenging about their lives or what's opportunities within their lives and they hear the everyday concerns of their customers. So they become these great collectors of stories.” This week on the show, a conversation with Katherine Miller. She's the author of At the Table:The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. She encourages chefs to harness the power of their unique position in the community and raise their voices for change in the food system.

Earth Eats
Katherine Miller on how chefs can help shape our food system

Earth Eats

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 51:38


“There's a restaurant on almost every street in our various cities–they are woven into the fabrics of our communities, and they are deeply embedded in our lives.  Restaurants are the places we go to celebrate marriages, to mourn divorces, the places we go to gossip with friends to celebrate after church and they become these places to hear the stories of their community. They're talking to the farmers everyday, they're talking to the fisherpeople everyday, they're talking to the other producers, they're also getting a sense of what's challenging about their lives or what's opportunities within their lives and they hear the everyday concerns of their customers. So they become these great collectors of stories.” This week on the show, a conversation with Katherine Miller. She's the author of At the Table:The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. She encourages chefs to harness the power of their unique position in the community and raise their voices for change in the food system.

Food Talk with Dani Nierenberg
402. Katherine Miller on Becoming an Advocate for Food Systems Transformation

Food Talk with Dani Nierenberg

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2023 34:42


On "Food Talk with Dani Nierenberg," Dani speaks with Katherine Miller, the author of At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy. Since 2012, Miller has focused on the interdisciplinary practices of politics, policy, advocacy, sustainability, and gender bias in the global food system. During this episode, they discuss strategies to be a successful advocate on food and agriculture issues, the ways that organizations are responding to the demands of younger generations, and turning feelings of helplessness into meaningful action. This conversation was part of a live conversation available only to Food Tank members, which featured a special Q&A session not included in the episode. To access these virtual events and have the chance to pose your own questions to changemakers transforming our food and agriculture systems, head to foodtank.com/join and find a membership level that works for you. New members also receive a special gift from Food Tank when they sign up. While you're listening, subscribe, rate, and review the show; it would mean the world to us to have your feedback. You can listen to “Food Talk with Dani Nierenberg” wherever you consume your podcasts.

The Leading Voices in Food
E219: Training Chefs for Food Advocacy Work

The Leading Voices in Food

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2023 19:35


Does the term Policy Advocate conjure up the image of a chef? Today we're speaking with Katherine Miller, Founding Executive Director of the Chef Action Network, and author of the book "At The Table, The Chef's Guide to Advocacy". Katherine formerly served as the Vice President of Impact at the James Beard Foundation and serves as an adjunct professor at the Culinary Institute of America. She's worked for 20 years at the intersection of policy, politics, and social impact, and says chefs have an important role to play in this space. Interview Summary   Chefs are more and more visible in this advocacy and policy space. I assume that they've been doing this for a long time, but you see more attention to it now, which is nice. Let's talk about sort of its fundamental concept of chefs being involved in the food system at this level. Why do you think chefs and other people in the restaurant industry are equipped to make the food system more just and sustainable?   I think that chefs are some of the greatest translators, right? Chefs, as we know them, are the people who cook us delicious meals or host us for events in our lives. But in reality they are taking the ingredients from the farmers and producers and fishermen and translating them to the plate to make them interesting and enjoyable for all of us, right? And the food system is incredibly complicated. It is deeply rooted. The root system overlaps and is incredibly complex. It's off-putting for people to think about how they might get involved in food policy or even understand the different controls on our food. Chefs can really help tell a better story, right? They can take the what's happening in the field and on the boats, and then they can put it on our plate, and they can help explain to us the stories behind all the food, how it's grown, the things that we should be interested in, the decisions that we should make differently. I think they're the ultimate translators and making the world a more delicious place.   That makes perfect sense! What inspired you to write your book, "At The Table"?   I've been working with the chef community for 10 years, first as a consultant and the founder of the Chef Action Network, and then working with the James Beard Foundation as the first vice president of advocacy and impact for the foundation. Then, after leaving the foundation, continued to work with organizations who are really interested in helping chefs step into policy arenas on things like healthy soils or food waste or medically-tailored meals. All those things are impacted by the policies that our state houses and our federal houses. And it's hard. The restaurant industry is enormous. There are 11 million or so restaurant employees. There are tens of thousands of people who are considered chefs or leaders in the kitchen, and we weren't going to reach them one Chef Bootcamp for Policy and Change at a time. You know, when I left the foundation in 2020 at the sort of tail end of the first year of COVID, we had over 1000 people on the waiting list to get into the Chef's Bootcamp for Policy and Change. We knew we were on to something, but we didn't really have the capacity to expand at scale. So, you know the great thing about a book is it can reach many chefs, culinary students, restaurant workers, farmers. And that's the other thing - I think there's a sort of duality to this idea of chef. It's really anybody who's a food system leader, anybody who is really interested in how the policies control our food system. I'm very excited to have a book out because I wanted this message and the examples and the tips and tools to reach the biggest audience that it could.   Boy, it's nice to hear there's so much interest among chefs and work of this type. I'm interested in whether this kind of thing is finding its way into culinary education. You have a position at the Culinary Institute of America, highly visible place. Is this the sort of thing that's showing up in discussions in culinary schools and classes and the training people receive?   More and more. I really credit Robert Egger for so many things in life, the great food system advocate and co-founder of DC Central Kitchen. But Robert was one of the first to write an op-ed that was like, culinary education should include advocacy, right? Because in culinary schools all over the country and all over the world, we teach people about flavor, we teach people about dish composition, we teach people about cleaning their station, and being a good person on the line, right? But we don't teach them about sustainability and that concerted way, we don't teach them business school skills and we don't really teach them about policies that impact their business, their sourcing, the way they run their restaurants. So that is growing. I think it's also a benefit of this next generation of chefs and consumers even who are really leading with their values. They want to see people step into this arena. The Edelman Trust Survey, which comes out every year, shows that food systems and food communities are some of the most trusted networks in the world. These leaders of that community have sort of a right, but also an obligation to get involved. The thing I like about the book and the thing I love teaching is that it's easy to do. It's not as difficult as you think it is, but I really think that the students and the consumers are demanding a sort of values-based approach. We're going to see all of the culinary schools add at least one class, if not more, of this type of training, I think in the future.   Let's go a little bit deeper into the bootcamp. You've directed the James Beard Foundation's Chefs Bootcamp for Policy and Change. Can you describe what goes on at the camp, and how this has affected your view on the chef's role in the advocacy world?   The Chef's Bootcamp for Policy and Change was an idea that Chef Michel Nischan and a James Beard trustee by the name of Eric Kessler had the idea for way back in 2012. They found me because I am a experienced trainer and facilitator. I've worked all over the world with, whether it be land advocates in Nigeria, health experts in China, folks in Australia, democracy in Lebanon, and they approached me and they said, “Hey, we have this idea. Chefs are highly visible. They are celebrities in their own right and we want to help them better use their voice.” That first bootcamp took place in July of 2012. We trained the first 15 chef advocates, and the penny sort of dropped for me that this was a community who are sitting in every single street corner. They have visible storefronts in every single community in America. They are trusted not to kill us, right? They are trusted to deliver something delicious and an amazing experience. They are networked heavily through the producers, both within their region and their city, but also globally in terms of what they source and how they buy. They have an authentic connection to fans, right? The bootcamp, which still continues to this day, trains 15 to 20 advocates at a time. The training module is still the same it was with a few tweaks in 2012. We really put them through their paces on introducing them to this food system and the complications of the food system. They also did role plays and learned techniques on how to be a better advocate. So how to create a message, how to reach out to their networks, how to use their social media profiles to talk about advocacy. And also, how to deal with the sort of haters of the world who might be like, "Shut up and get back to the kitchen". So, a little bit of that. Then the other piece that is so important to the entire food movement is created community amongst themselves. Every bootcamp ends with a dinner cooked by the chefs, for the chefs together with what they source on the working agricultural farm that would take them to. That community then spills out and it grows and grows. So exponentially, you could grow from 15 to 150 to 1000. They take it with them, they teach their staff, they host their own bootcamps or programming in their own cities. So, the bootcamp is one piece of it, but it's really about giving people the tips and tools they need to be an advocate, and then creating community amongst the chefs themselves and also their staffs and their greater community, and really just putting them into the places where they can use their voice to make a difference.   You know, it sounds really exciting! So, you have talked us through the process of how this education and training on advocacy and policy takes place. But let's talk a little bit more about the issues. Let's just say the Chef's Bootcamp was happening today and we walked in and we could overhear the discussions. What would we hear people talking about? Would they be talking about how children can be educated about food, about sustainable food systems and regenerative agriculture? Would they be talking about? state law, federal policy? What kind of issues would be important to them today?   Today? The Farm Bill, right? Chefs do advocacy in three places really. They do it on the table, right, through what they source, how they market to their customers, the types of labor practices they have in their own restaurant, like that is a self a form of advocacy. They do it within their community. So, a lot of chefs will get involved with local feeding organizations, will get involved with school gardens, things that they can put their hands on and bring people into their restaurant or visit regularly. I see a lot of community interaction. Then there's the hard and long work of state and federal policy reform. We are not going to be able to just uproot our entire food system and throw it out the window. Policy reform is gradual. It takes time and it takes a concerted effort. So, throughout each bootcamp or throughout different programs that I do, say with the Natural Resources Defense Council or programs that are run through No Kid Hungry, where alumni of the bootcamp have really gone on to shine is this federal policy piece. If you walked into a bootcamp today, you'd probably be hearing information about the Farm Bill, the impact of the Farm Bill on local regional food systems, the impact of the Farm Bill on food as medicine programs and SNAP programs, and really looking for ways a chef or a food system advocate could use their voice effectively to make the case for greater funding, to protect funding, to really encourage more progressive policies.   That sounds good. You brought up the Farm Bill, so let's talk about that in a little more detail. The last Farm Bill was passed in 2018, so it needs to be passed again now and reauthorized. Vast amounts of money are at stake for this. You mentioned that chefs can advocate for protecting funds that have been used in the past for particular purposes, and also argue for new uses of funds. What would be some of the top priorities? You kind of alluded to several of these, but tell us a little bit more specifically about what the chefs might be fighting for.   The Farm Bill is our food bill. I think we don't say that often enough. I think when we look at how the Farm Bill is constructed, we are looking at programs that are everything from specialty crops, i.e., fruits and vegetables, to the Supplemental Nutrition Programs that help people in times of need to not go hungry, to food as medicine programs that help us reach vulnerable populations with more fruits and vegetables at farmer's markets or medically tailored meals in hospitals or in systems. The Farm Bill reaches into all of those things. One thing I like to say about chefs is they're not monolithic. They're not all running around saying this thing. They are well-informed narrators and translators of a complicated food system and encouraging people to pay more attention to things like the Farm Bill and more things like the political nature of our food system.   If we want in the long term to redirect subsidies to support more climate smart agriculture, or help us have local and resilient food systems, that's going to happen through the Farm Bill. I was just recently with a bunch of chefs who were on Capitol Hill talking about healthy soil and the need to incentivize farmers through a bill called the Cover Act to help them change growing practices so that their soils would be healthier, and they could do more regenerative agriculture techniques. In a few weeks, there will be folks here really advocating to protect SNAP benefits. I think as we see a growing partisan divide and the growing divide on how to spend government money, SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, is always going to be a constant target of that.   There's a great anecdote in the book by chef Elle Simone, who talks very eloquently and proudly about the fact that at an early point in her life, she took SNAP benefits. She was broke, and she was financially insecure, and she needed help. She took those SNAP benefits at a time when she needed them, and they helped her complete her education and complete her path to the future. Now, she's a cookbook author and the first woman of color to be on America's Test Kitchen. She is a known celebrity chef around the country, and she wouldn't be there, she will always say, if it hadn't been for SNAP. So, somebody like Elle will come to Capitol Hill and tell that story to put a human face on a program that is often demonized by people who think there are other ways to spend money rather than make sure that people don't come hungry.   You know, there's a lot built into what you just said on lots of different levels. SNAP program, relationships with farmers, et cetera. Let's talk about farmers for a moment. I know that chefs have, of course, always had a strong relationship with farmers because that's where they secure what they serve in their restaurants, but it sounds like it's going beyond that. This alliance now is out there in the bigger policy arena around issues of regenerative agriculture and things like that. I'm assuming you've seen some interesting cases of farmers and the chef community coming together to argue for a common purpose.   Chefs and farmers are natural partners. There wouldn't be any food on our plates if there weren't for farmers. The types of food and the types of vegetables and meat, and even seafood, fishermen, the world, you wouldn't be able to put things on the plate without those humans. They produce amazing, delicious food, and they do it in ways that are better for the environment. It's nutritionally dense. So, they're a natural partnership, but they haven't always worked together. In part, because they had completely opposite schedules. The farmers are up at 5:00 AM and go to bed at 2:00 PM and you know, chefs are out until 5:00 AM, and at work, they haven't always been able to come together. But more intentionally, organizations are bringing them together. The Natural Resource Defense Council is working a lot with zero food print as a chef-led organization. Those two organizations are working in deep partnership to put chefs and farmers together regularly on Capitol Hill or in state houses, talking about things like the Cover Act, talking about regenerative agriculture, talking about the health that's contained in our soil and how that translates into healthier and more delicious food. They are natural partners, and I'm really excited that they seem to be coming together more on common issues that really are about putting healthy and delicious things in front of us all.   Well, it makes good sense that those kind of partnerships have evolved to where they are now. Let me ask you a final question. Well, let's just say I'm a chef and I meet you or people involved in this kind of sphere of work, and I'm thinking, boy, my life is pretty crazy. It's a high stress life, very long hours, lots of decisions to be made and people to supervise, and all kinds of stuff going on in these restaurants. How in the world would I have time to do anything like this? And then also, what are the actionable steps that such a chef might take to help create a better food system?   It's a great question, right? We're all really busy people. Everybody's calendar is full, whether it's kids or parents to take care of, whether it's jobs, whether it's volunteering, and we all look at our calendars, and we're like. How could I possibly fit one thing else in here? The number one tip I give chefs and anybody who really wants to be an advocate is you learn to say no first. You learn to look at what you care most about and decide that that is the thing that you are going to focus on. And all the rest of it, you're going to say no very politely to. So, in the beginning of work with chefs, I did an audit of dozens of restaurants and essentially chefs were being asked to donate on average about $50,000 each year to dozens of organizations in their local community and even nationally. When we think about that from a fundraising perspective, if you donated $50,000 to one organization, you would be a top donor to that organization. You would have a totally different relationship with them. I really encourage all of us, but especially the chef community, to take a deep look at the issue that drives you most, whether it's hunger, the environment, ending violence in our communities, mentorship, whatever it is. And really, one, pick that issue and prioritize that issue. Get to know the organizations and the experts that are already working in it, right? We all think that we're so smart and we must be the first people to have thought about X, Y, and Z, and you're not, right? There are lots of experts in the field, and there are now even experts in the field of chef advocacy. There are dozens of organizations actually in the appendix of my book that point you in the direction of different issues that you might want to get involved in. So, get to know the experts. And number three, take a baby step. Schedule an appointment with an organization, sign a petition, do some research. Just take a baby step into, okay, now I'm going to learn more. Now I'm going to do something. And it doesn't have to be a big thing. And then your advocacy will go from there. I'm a political activist at heart, and I want everybody to make sure that they're registered to vote, and vote because that is the ultimate form of advocacy and probably the biggest baby step that we can all take once we've picked an issue and become informed on that issue. There are other tips and tools in the book. I'm all about opening conversation, not closing conversation. So I really encourage people through the book and through some exercises in it to figure out their own narrative that opens conversation, their own set of questions that turns them into sort of active listeners and not lecturers. I think food certainly has enough judgment in it that it doesn't need advocates pointing fingers at each other, talking about how one's point of view is better than the others. It's really simple to get involved. The first step is say no. Pick the one issue that's most important to you. Do the work and get to know the issues and the experts. Take a baby step, register to vote, vote, and then you can grow from there.   Bio   Named an industry leader and “Fixer” by Grist magazine and called one of the most innovative women in food and beverage by Fortune and Food & Wine magazines, Katherine Miller was the founding executive director of the Chef Action Network and the former vice president of impact at the James Beard Foundation. She was the first food policy fellow at American University's Sine Institute of Policy and Politics and is a Distinguished Terker Fellow at George Washington University's School of Media and Public Affairs. Miller has built a 20-year career working at the intersections of policy, politics, and social impact. She develops and manages award-winning campaigns, trains activists around the world, and helps deliver millions of supporters – and hundreds of millions in funding – to efforts focused on global health, climate change, gender bias and violence, and food system reform. She is a member of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (IADAS) and serves on the Board of Directors of both the New Venture Fund and Re:Her DC. Miller is an adjunct professor at the Culinary Institute of America. She lives in Washington DC, on the land of the Anacostan and Nacotchtank people, with her husband, Lou, and their cat, Lily.

Divorce Dialogues
The Missing Professional from a Divorce Litigation Team With Julie Rountree

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 25:54


Julie Rountree began her career as a divorce attorney. And she quickly realized that clients expected her to be both their legal advocate and counselor. But it was very difficult to wear both hats. Julie recognized that her clients needed someone to help them navigate the emotions of divorce. That's when she stumbled on divorce coaching and thought, ‘This is professional who's been missing from the divorce litigation team.' Today, Julie is the Certified Divorce Coach behind Divorce Coaching Solutions, a practice that helps clients navigate the frustration of divorce, grow their confidence, and transition into life beyond divorce. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Julie joins Katherine to discuss her role in helping people work through their emotions, articulate their goals, and manage expectations around divorce. Julie walks us through what a divorce coach does for their clients, describing how she helps people become and remain the best version of themselves through the process. Listen in for Julie's advice on managing your anger to focus on negotiating a settlement and learn how a family law attorney can benefit from teaming up with a divorce coach. Topics Covered What inspired Julie's transition from family law attorney to divorce coach Julie's role in helping clients manage their frustrations and expectations around divorce What a divorce coach can do for someone who's considering divorce or working through the process Julie's goal to help clients remain the best version of themselves through divorce Julie's advice to someone who's worried about how reentering the workforce will impact alimony Why spousal support can be a bitter pill to swallow for the breadwinner of a divorcing couple How family law attorneys can benefit from teaming up with a divorce coach Managing your anger in divorce to focus on negotiating a settlement Connect with Julie Rountree Divorce Coaching Solutions: https://www.mydivorcecoaches.com/ Divorce Coaching Solutions on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100078882049039 Julie on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-anna-rountree-3967748/ Email julie@mydivorcecoaches.com Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765

Divorce Dialogues
Co-Parenting Without Conflict After Divorce With Jenni Rock

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 27:47


We all assume that when we get divorced, things are going to get better. But when a marriage ends, communication is usually at a low point. And that communication style tends to stick, which causes ongoing conflict in the co-parenting relationship. So, what can you do to interrupt that conflict dynamic with your ex? How do you build a constructive, positive co-parenting relationship? Jenni Rock is the creator of Co-Parenting Without Conflict, a coaching practice that helps divorced parents exit toxic relationships and communicate in a way that prioritizes the needs of their children. Jenni brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the table, helping parents navigate the often-challenging terrain of co-parenting after a divorce. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Jenni joins Katherine to share the story of her own horrific divorce and explain how that experience informs her work in co-parenting conflict resolution. Jenni discusses the most common conflicts in co-parenting relationships and describes the consequences of using your children as a bartering tool. Listen in for Jenni's insight on navigating reactive feelings toward your ex and learn the first steps to changing the way you communicate and co-parenting without conflict! Topics Covered How Jenni's own horrific divorce informs her work in co-parenting conflict resolution Why divorced couples get stuck in the communication style at play when the marriage ended How Jenni helps people interrupt their conflict dynamic with an ex-spouse What differentiates a toxic relationship from a difficult moment in a relationship Blaming your partner vs. taking responsibility for what's not working in your relationship Jenni's insight on the most common conflicts in co-parenting relationships The consequences of using your children as a bartering tool in the divorce process What to consider before you hit SEND on a text or email to your ex-spouse Jenni's advice on what to do with reactive feelings you're tempted to fire at your ex How to set up a constructive, positive co-parenting relationship with your ex-spouse Connect with Jenni Rock Co-Parenting Without Conflict: https://coparentingwithoutconflict.com/home Email jennirock1@outlook.com The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765

Foodie Pharmacology
At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy with Katherine Miller

Foodie Pharmacology

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 46:34


The U.S. Farm Bill has far-reaching implications for our food systems and our health. Our guest this week, Katherine Miller, shares insights into this piece of legislation and offers tips on how to effectively advocate for food policies. Katherine has built a 20-year career working at the intersections of policy, politics, and social impact. Her new book, "At the Table: The Chef's Guide to Advocacy," highlights ways that people can get involved in food policy and advocacy. It showcases chefs that work on hunger relief efforts, food waste reduction policies, labor, and mental health policies and more. We address questions like:  What is the role of chefs and culinary professionals in helping change the food system?  What are some ways people can get started on political advocacy? What are common mistakes people make when it comes to food advocacy? You can learn more about Katherine's work at her website www.table81.com and follow her [at]Table81 on Twitter, Instagram, and Threads.   #FoodPolicy #FarmBill #Chefs #FoodWaste #FoodSystems #FoodBook #foodiepharmacology

Capitol Weekly Podcast
Katherine Miller: Guiding Chefs - or Anyone - to Advocacy

Capitol Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 33:44


It wasn't long ago that the idea of chefs moonlighting as political advocates - and finding a willing audience of elected officials - might have seemed ludicrous. Now, celebrity chefs and a fascination with food culture has changed all that.  Many chefs are dedicated activists for causes like hunger relief efforts, supporting local farmers, fighting food waste, confronting racism and sexism in the industry, and more.  And, politicians listen.Katherine Miller has a background in organizing activists throughout the world: she trained thousands of community activists how to work toward change in business practices, social systems, and public policy. Training programs she developed and led are in use around the world including China, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, Mali, and Nigeria. When she was first approached about helping chefs find their political voice she scoffed, but seeing them in action made her a believer.  Inspired by activist chefs like Sacramento's own Patrick Mulvaney, she developed a series of impact-focused programs for the James Beard Foundation, served as the founding executive director for the Chef Action Network, and developed the Chefs Boot Camp for Policy and Change.Miller spoke with us about her new book, At the Table, the chef's guide to advocacy, and about the intersection of policy, politics and food culture.  She will be in Sacramento on Tuesday, October 3rd for a very special dinner and discussion centered around the book and her work. The evening will include a family style dinner provided by Mulvaney's B&L and an in depth discussion about the creation of the book, what advocacy looks like in Sacramento, and of course the recipes that highlight what it means to be a chef and advocate. Featuring chefs Brad Cecchi, Nina Curtis, Santana Diaz, Marie Mertz, Patrick Mulvaney, Nena Rasul and Patricio Wise. Reservations HERE.Show Notes3:10 Sacramento: Food city5:27 'The idea was ludicrous...'7:51 Chefs have a constituency every politician craves to meet10:25 Chefs can get the meetings that lobbyists don't11:43 Learning to navigate public policy 15:54 Patrick Mulvaney's mental health advocacy work20:02 What are the goals?24:56 Who Had the Worst Week in California Politics?Want to support the Capitol Weekly Podcast? Make your tax deductible donation here: capitolweekly.net/donations/Capitol Weekly Podcast theme is "Pickin' My Way" by Eddie Lang"#WorstWeekCA" Beat provided by freebeats.io

Divorce Dialogues
Is Your Soon-to-Be-Ex-Spouse Hiding Money? With Tracey Coenen

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2023 27:03


Do you suspect that your soon-to-be-ex-spouse is hiding money? If your partner is trying to avoid equitable distribution in a divorce settlement, they might be keeping assets from you or transferring money into a secret account. But is it necessary to hire a forensic accountant? Or can you do the job yourself? Tracey Coenen is a renowned forensic accountant and the brains behind the Divorce Money Guide. She is also the author of the book Find Me the Money and host of the podcast of the same name. Tracey is passionate about helping people who feel powerless in the divorce process regain their confidence and take control of their money. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Tracey joins Katherine to explain how to identify when your spouse is hiding money and where they might be keeping it. Tracey walks us through the common reasons why people hide money in a marriage and describes why financial infidelity is just as devastating as romantic infidelity—if not more. Listen in for Tracey's insight on initiating the conversation around money in your marriage and learn the first steps to educating yourself about the family finances in divorce. Topics Covered How your relationship with money impacts the way you handle finances in a marriage Why we need to change the language we use to talk about money in divorce How to identify when your spouse is hiding money and where they might be keeping it When to hire a forensic accountant (and when you can do the job yourself) How Tracey's Divorce Money Guide helps you understand the financial piece of divorce The most common reasons why people hide money in a marriage What makes financial infidelity just as devastating as romantic infidelity Why talking about money in a marriage is so challenging and how to initiate the conversation Why Tracey suggests listing all the accounts you know about as the first step in getting more financial information The benefit of regularly running a credit report on yourself and exchanging that information with your spouse What Tracey says to women who want to educate themselves about the family finances How knowing where you're spending gives you power to create the life you want Connect with Tracey Coenen Fraud Coach: https://www.fraudcoach.com/dd Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Divorce Money Guide: https://www.fraudcoach.com/ Find Me the Money: Take Control, Uncover the Truth, and Win the Money You Deserve in Your Divorce by Tracey Coenen: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BYFCRMJR?&linkCode=sl1&tag=sequenceinc-20&linkId=ee67be01fe036601f36861168c84e524&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_tl Find Me the Money Podcast: https://www.fraudcoach.com/podcast

Divorce Dialogues
From Victim Mentality to Empowered Life Post-Divorce With, Kimberly Kelley

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 26:19


What story are you telling yourself about your divorce? Blaming your ex may seem justified, but that story only gets you stuck in a victim mentality with no control over your own life. So, how do you rewrite your story and start building an empowered life post-divorce? Kimberly Kelley is the neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) practitioner and hypnotherapist behind Reinvent Yourself, a program that helps newly single people create the life they want. She is also the author of No Blame No Shame: Living an Empowered Life After Divorce, where she describes the profound changes she made after her own marriage of 30 years came to an end. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Kimberly joins Katherine to discuss how the stories we tell ourselves affect our experience of divorce. Kimberly explains how the internal shame of another failed marriage drove her fears around what other people would think and describes how hypnotherapy empowered her to imagine a life beyond divorce. Listen in for Kimberly's advice on navigating a divorce you didn't choose and learn how NLP can help you reframe your divorce as a growth opportunity rather than a mistake! Topics Covered How NLP is the study of how we communicate with ourselves How we can leverage neuro-linguistic programming to live a more empowered life How the stories we tell ourselves affect our experience of divorce How Kimberly's internal shame drove her fears of what other people would think of her divorce Reframing your negative self-talk around divorce into something constructive How Kimberly helps people reframe their divorce story as a growth opportunity vs. a mistake Why blaming your ex-spouse puts you into a victim mentality Why Kimberly suggests exploring what you got out of your marriage How Kimberly uses hypnotherapy to help people imagine a life beyond divorce Kimberly's advice for navigating a divorce you didn't choose Connect with Kimberly Kelley Body Mind Spirit Healing Arts: https://kimberly-kelley.com/ Kimberly on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kimberly.dyer.kelley Email kimberlykelleyauthor@gmail.com Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources No Blame No Shame: Living an Empowered Life After Divorce by Kimberly Kelley: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C6YPXH3J?ref_=cm_sw_r_kb_dp_9TSY3G3AE7589AQ5ARWK&tag=kpembed-20&linkCode=kpe Peggy McColl's Power Life Script: https://go.peggymccoll.com/powerlifescript-special-promotion

Divorce Dialogues
Divorce Advice from the Kids' Perspective With Grace Casper

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 26:46


Wonder what your kids are experiencing during the divorce process? What if you could ask adult children of divorce for advice? Grace Casper became a child of divorce at the age of eight. By age 10, she had written the first draft of her book, Dear Parents: Notes from a Child of Divorce by Grace Casper. Today, Grace runs Divorce Tips from Kids, a platform dedicated to helping families navigate divorce, and hosts Divorce: What I Wish My Parents Knew, a podcast about divorce from the kids' perspective. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Grace joins Katherine to describe the pressure she felt to be the source of her parents' happiness after their divorce. Grace explains what inspired her to write about her parents' divorce and how we can apply Grace's story in Dear Parents to our own individual circumstances. Listen in for insight on the commoditization of kids in divorce negotiations and learn how Grace's resources can help you improve the experience of divorce for your children. Topics Covered What adult children of divorce would like to go back in time and tell their parents The pressure Grace felt to be the source of her parents' happiness after their divorce Why so many children of divorce see themselves as peacekeepers The power of apologizing to your child when you make a mistake as a parent What inspired Grace to journal about her parents' divorce when she was 10 years old How Grace turned her original 10 tips for kids into a book for divorced parents How Grace learned to let go of her bitterness & resentment and forgive her dad How you can apply Grace's advice in Dear Parents to your own situation How divorce lawyers, coaches and therapists can use Grace's resources to serve clients How Grace thinks about the commoditization of kids in divorce negotiations Grace's advice on keeping your children at the forefront of your thinking in divorce Connect with Grace Casper Divorce Tips from Kids: https://www.divorcetipsfromkids.com/ Divorce Tips on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/divorcetipsfromkids/ Divorce Tips on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/divorcetipsfromkids/ Divorce: What I Wish My Parents Knew Podcast: https://www.divorcetipsfromkids.com/podcast Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Dear Parents: Notes from a Child of Divorce by Grace Casper: https://www.divorcetipsfromkids.com/dear-parents-notes-from-a-child-of-divorce

Divorce Dialogues
How to Manage the Anxiety of Divorce With Bernadette Purcell

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 26:26


Worried thoughts about the future generate anxiety. And divorce begets an uncertain future. So, it's no surprise that anxiety is such a common emotion in divorce. But how do you navigate that anxiety without getting overwhelmed in the process? Bernadette Purcell is Founder of Shore Behavioral Health, a practice that helps patients with anxiety disorders enjoy more fulfilling lives and supports individuals and couples through all phases of divorce. A licensed clinical social worker in private practice since 2008, Bernadette is also the author of Divorced as F* in Seven Spiritual Steps. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Bernadette joins Katherine to discuss how worry impacts the divorce process and what to do about it. Bernadette explains how to prevent worry from turning into anxiety, challenging you to surrender to the fact that divorce is happening and leverage acceptance to take the next right step for you. Listen in for insight on getting comfortable with uncertainty and learn Bernadette's top stress management interventions for managing the anxiety of divorce. Topics Covered How thoughts about the future generate anxiety Bernadette's strategy for bringing yourself back to the present moment How to prevent worry from turning into anxiety What inspired Bernadette to write Divorced as F* How Bernadette defines spirituality as learning something that resonates and then truly living it Why it's crucial to surrender to the fact that divorce is happening Why it's a mistake to discontinue stress management interventions when you start to feel better How anxiety impacts the divorce process Bernadette's advice for getting comfortable with uncertainty What to do if divorce is making you anxious about the future Connect with Bernadette Purcell Shore Behavioral Health: http://www.shorebehavioralhealth.net/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Divorced as F* in Seven Spiritual Steps by Bernadette Purcell: https://www.bernadettepurcell.com/

True Crime Garage
The Hammer Man /// Part 2 /// 691

True Crime Garage

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 51:16


The Hammer Man /// Part 2 /// 691Part 2 of 2 www.TrueCrimeGarage.com1973 - Seattle, Washington; When 15 year old Katherine Miller did not return home from school, her mother notified the police.  The following morning an investigation ensued.  Katherine's disappearance was immediately considered to be suspicious by seasoned detectives.  The disappearance reeked of foul play.  The detectives were quick to find a suspect and other cases that shared similarities to Katherine's.  Was all of this the work of “The Hammer Man?”   When one wants to do a thorough historical review of U.S.A. True Crime, there are those stories that must be told.  This is one of them. Beer of the Week - the Bible Salesman by Transplants Brewing Company Garage Grade - 3 and a half bottle caps out of 5 Make sure to follow True Crime Garage on Facebook, Twitter (X), and Instagram Thanks for listening and thanks for telling a friend! 

The Divorced Girl Smiling Podcast
Advice for Divorce after an Affair

The Divorced Girl Smiling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 23:33


Every divorce is painful, but divorce takes on a whole other level of hurt when it's happening because of an affair. In this episode, my guest, Divorce Attorney, Katherine Miller offers insight into divorce after an affair, and offers legal and emotional advice for this situation. Learn more: https://www.divorcedgirlsmiling.com/advice-for-divorce-after-an-affair/

True Crime Garage
The Hammer Man /// Part 1 /// 690

True Crime Garage

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 49:11


The Hammer Man /// Part 1 /// 690 Part 1 of 2www.TrueCrimeGarage.com1973 - Seattle, Washington; When 15 year old Katherine Miller did not return home from school, her mother notified the police.  The following morning an investigation ensued.  Katherine's disappearance was immediately considered to be suspicious by seasoned detectives.  The disappearance reeked of foul play.  The detectives were quick to find a suspect and other cases that shared similarities to Katherine's.  Was all of this the work of “The Hammer Man?”   When one wants to do a thorough historical review of U.S.A. True Crime, there are those stories that must be told.  This is one of them. Beer of the Week - the Bible Salesman by Transplants Brewing Company Garage Grade - 3 and a half bottle caps out of 5 Make sure to follow True Crime Garage on Facebook, Twitter (X), and Instagram Thanks for listening and thanks for telling a friend! 

Divorce Dialogues
A New Approach to Conflict Resolution in Divorce With Jacinta Gallant

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 26:36


Divorce makes us feel vulnerable. And many of us lawyer up and come out swinging to protect ourselves. But what if there's a more effective way to reach an agreement with your ex? What if a little self-reflection early on can help you improve the process of working with a divorce professional? Jacinta Gallant is a respected lawyer, mediator and educator recognized internationally for her innovative approach to conflict resolution training. Jacinta's Our Family in Two Homes resources for divorce professionals help their clients prepare for effective dispute resolution. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Jacinta joins Katherine to share her journey from cutthroat divorce litigator to effective mediator, describing how she leverages curiosity to understand clients on a deeper level and deliver what they need. Jacinta walks us through the reflection questions she encourages people to ask themselves before they meet with a divorce lawyer and explains how divorce attorneys serve clients better when they don't pretend to have all the answers. Listen in to understand why people who take the ‘high road' get better deals than those who come out swinging and get Jacinta's advice on using divorce as an opportunity for self-discovery and catalyst for a better life! Topics Covered Jacinta's journey from cutthroat divorce litigator to effective mediator Why divorce attorneys can't serve clients well when we pretend to have all the answers How Jacinta leverages curiosity to understand clients on a deeper level and deliver what they need What Jacinta learned by asking clients what it was like to work with her How Jacinta's reflection questions help clients get to know themselves better How Jacinta's Our Family in Two Homes workbook is delivered through the services of a collaborative divorce professional The benefit of reflecting on your hopes and fears re: parenting and finances before you meet with a divorce lawyer Why people who take the ‘high road' get better deals than those who come out swinging Divorce as an opportunity for self-discovery + catalyst for a better life Connect with Jacinta Gallant Jacinta's Website: https://jacintagallant.ca/ The Authentic Professional Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/2WY6tXaASxiQkXBWebQmSY Our Family in Two Homes: https://intwohomes.com/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Dr. Cheryl Picard's Insight Approach to Conflict Resolution: https://www.collaborativepractice.com/system/files/The Insight Approach and CP - essay.pdf Going Steady: A Toolkit for Building Our Future Together by Jacinta Gallant: https://goingsteadytoolkit.com/

Divorce Dialogues
How to Stay Positive (Even During Divorce!)With Bill Carmody

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 27:05


If your marriage is ending, you may be convinced that things will never be good again. But what if I told you there is a way to stay positive, even during a divorce? To feel less vulnerable in stressful situations? And change the dynamic of conversations with your ex? Bill Carmody serves as Chief Coaching Officer for Positive Intelligence, where he oversees the application of mental fitness for thousands of coaches worldwide. Bill is also the author of the bestselling book The 3 Rules of Marriage, and he is dedicated to being an inspirational leader who creates breakthroughs for himself and solves problems for others. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Bill joins Katherine to explain how Positive Intelligence strategies can help you be less reactive in stressful situations and stay positive regardless of your circumstances. Bill shares his approach to making progress in high-conflict conversations, challenging us to develop mental fitness and stop the cycle of judgement when we feel criticized by our ex. Listen in for Bill's PQ Reps exercise for dropping into your fully present self and learn how to leverage Positive Intelligence to focus on the outcomes you want during a divorce. Topics Covered How Positive Intelligence helps us stay positive regardless of our circumstances What happens when we let our emotions run us in the process of divorce Using Positive Intelligence to feel less vulnerable and be less reactive in stressful situations How to adjust your autonomic nervous system to cultivate a sense of calm Bill's PQ Reps exercise for dropping into your body and being fully present in the moment Bill's strategies for changing the dynamic of conversations in high-conflict circumstances How mental fitness allows you to focus on the outcome you want in divorce Bill's 3 rules of marriage (don't keep score, show appreciation & don't go to bed angry) Why we tend to judge others when we feel criticized and how to stop that cycle How PQ Reps can help people who are contemplating or navigating divorce Why Bill recommends coaching to help you focus on what's important in divorce Connect with Bill Carmody Positive Intelligence: https://www.positiveintelligence.com/ Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources The 3 Rules of Marriage by Bill and Elena Carmody: https://www.threerulesofmarriage.com/free The Saboteur Assessment: https://www.positiveintelligence.com/saboteurs/

Divorce Dialogues
Leveraging Integrative Nutrition to Detox from Divorce With Suzy Wood

Divorce Dialogues

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 26:48


According to the Holmes and Rahe Stress Scale, divorce is the second most stressful life event after the death of a spouse. And that stress has an impact on our food choices and overall health. So, how might we leverage integrative nutrition to make positive, lasting lifestyle changes while we're coping with divorce? Suzy Wood is the Integrative Nutrition Health Coach behind True Wellness Within, a platform that helps people make healthy food and lifestyle choices and rebuild their lives after the stress of divorce. Suzy's divorce was a calling card to reinvent herself, inspiring her to leave a career in high tech marketing to start her own business and live her best life. On this episode of Divorce Dialogues, Suzy joins Katherine to discuss the 12 lifestyle factors that must be in balance for you to live a healthy life. Suzy shares tips for finding an avenue for self-care to help you detox during or after divorce and discusses the importance of discerning what divorce advice works for you—and what doesn't. Listen in for Suzy's techniques to navigate the stressful moments of a divorce negotiation and learn how to leverage divorce as an opportunity to transform your life! Topics Covered How divorce gave Suzy the opportunity to transform her outlook on life How integrative nutrition looks at both lifestyle factors and the foods you eat The 12 lifestyle factors that must be in balance for you to live a healthy life How the stress of divorce impacts our food choices and overall health Suzy's tips for finding an avenue for self-care to detox during/after divorce Why Suzy suggests having an outlet to discuss divorce beyond friends and family How to discern what divorce advice works for you and what doesn't What Suzy says to people who are afraid of divorce and don't know what to do How Suzy's coaching program helps people make lasting lifestyle changes Stress-reduction techniques to use during triggering events in divorce Connect with Suzy Wood True Wellness Within: https://www.truewellnesswithin.com/ True Wellness on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/truewellnesswithin/ Suzy on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/suzanne-wood-true-wellness-within/ Email suzy@truewellnesswithin.com Connect with Katherine Miller The Center for Understanding Conflict: http://understandinginconflict.org/ Miller Law Group: https://westchesterfamilylaw.com/ Katherine on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kemiller1 The New Yorker's Guide to Collaborative Divorce by Katherine Miller: https://www.amazon.com/New-Yorkers-Guide-Collaborative-Divorce/dp/0692496246 Email: katherine@miller-law.com  Call (914) 738-7765 Resources Divorce Detox Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1634325603620269

New Food Order
Investigating Alternative Business Models in Food & Ag

New Food Order

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 85:28


The food and agriculture industries are major contributors to today's social and environmental crises. Companies across all industries are being forced to rethink the way they do business, and food and agriculture are no exception. Businesses big and small want to do better and become more resilient, but how? In this episode, we take you on a journey through a few existing and emerging alternative business models that companies and farmers are exploring today that decentralize power, distribute value more equitably across all stakeholders, and aim to have a better impact on our planet.  This week we explore: Different ways of doing business, including cooperatives, B Corps, perpetual purpose trusts, stewardship ownership, DAOs, NFTs, and open source How these models may work better than the norm for the people working withinWhy a better deal for food and agriculture employees can benefit all of usBarriers to entry to these models and how to break them downThe potential failings of emerging business models and the risk of building the wrong thing with good intentionsThe challenge of applying models that have been successful on a small scale, to large food corporationsHow Western business tactics have impacted emerging market farming communitiesBusiness model inspiration from emerging marketsHow sharing knowledge publicly can remove friction for small businessesThe appetite to fund these kinds of businesses Our guests include: Katherine Miller, author and founder of Table 81, formerly of the James Beard Foundation; author and regenerative business pioneer Carol Sanford; farmer and activist Jon Jandai; Adrian Rodrigues, co-founder and managing director at Provenance Capital group and formerly of Patagonia; Snaxshot founder Andrea Hernandez; and Nigel Teh, founder of Next Billion Burgers. *Giveaway Details* We've teamed up with our partners at New Hope Network to offer ALL of our listeners an exclusive 25% off discount for an Expo West 2023 badge and ONE lucky listener will have the opportunity to win a free booth at Expo West 2024 ($8k value). To enter, do the following by February 17th: Head to New Food Order's show page on Apple PodcastsMake sure you are subscribedLeave us a review - good or bad - but hopefully good! Scroll to the bottom of the page to do so.Screenshot the review and email it to Meg at meg@savageimpacts.com - if you're interested in the 25% discount to this year's Expo, please call it out in the email.  Lastly, head to newfoodorder.org - select newsletter - and register to receive our newsletters. In addition to New Food Order content, AgFunder and Food+Tech Connect publish the leading newsletters for the food and agtech community.Those who follow New Hope Network, Food + Tech Connect and AgFunder on Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn will receive double entry. Show Notes: Zebras Unite Co-op: https://zebrasunite.coop/ Democracy at Work Institute: https://institute.coop/ ZingTrain: https://www.zingtrain.com/ Purpose (steward ownership & perpetual purpose trusts): https://purpose-economy.org/en/ Billionaire No More: Patagonia Founder Gives Away the Company: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/14/climate/patagonia-climate-philanthropy-chouinard.html What Co-ops and DAOs Can Learn From Each Other: https://www.fwb.help/editorial/what-co-ops-and-daos-can-learn-from-each-other Flyfish Club: https://www.flyfishclub.com/ FriesDAO: https://fries.fund/ Subscribe to our newsletters that track all of the business, tech, and investment trends in food: https://tinyurl.com/nfonewsletters Follow us on Instagram: @newfoodorderpod Follow us on Linkedin: @agfunder & @foodtechconnect This series is sponsored by Foodshot Global & New Hope Network And a huge thank you to everyone who helped us bring this podcast to life:  Production: Cam Gray, Cofruition, Anna de Wolff Evans Audio Editing: Tevin Sudi Original Music: Rodrigo Barbera