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Enjoy this revisited episode where Lisa and bookstore owner Laura Larson discuss The Midnight Library by Matt Haig. This is a book that addresses suicide and mental health issues. NPR wrote this article tiled “It's Not Quite Dark Enough in the Midnight Library.” Laura opened Odyssey Bookstore in March 2020. The store focuses on sustainability and is nestled in a darling spot in Ithaca, New York. You can follow the bookstore on Facebook or Instagram. In next week's episode, Lisa and Laura will talk about what it was like for Laura to open a bookstore amid the pandemic. Books Discussed on the Show: Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman Less by Andrew Sean GreerThe Post Birthday World by Lionel ShriverLessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus For more information, find Lisa on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and her website.*The book titles mentioned include affiliate links. You can support the podcast by purchasing a book with the links because the podcast receives a small commission.
In this episode, we are talking about creating your own definition of success. We discuss what influences our definitions of success, creating your own story, the PIE Secret to professional success, and how visioning and coaching can be a part of your next steps. Laura Larson spent the first two decades of her career in the Global Technology sector leading successful sales and marketing divisions for Fortune 500 companies such as HP, Cisco, Citrix, and VMware. In 2015, a passion for wine and connecting with community led her to relocate to Napa Valley, where she “retired” from her corporate career, and founded Virtual Vines, a Direct-to-Consumer consulting business targeted at wineries and small businesses. As accredited sommeliers, she and her husband also launched a winery: 601 Cellars. In 2018, she accepted a role as the Editor in Chief, managing the day-to-day operations, content strategy, and market development for Napa Valley Life Magazine. Laura is a featured speaker and columnist for several wine industry events and publications. “I remember when I was in my thirties, you're just trying to make yourself. When you get older, you're a little more apt to make bigger decisions. And realize that mistakes are okay…things work out.” - Laura Larson From this episode's conversation, you will hear: Why it's so important to define success for YOURSELF and get started in that direction. The P.I.E. Secret to Professional Success. How you can use visualization and coaching to define what success looks like for you. That mistakes aren't that big of a deal - dust yourself off, and learn from them. Don't miss our ONE THING TO TRY and WHAT YOU GOT IN THAT BAG prompts at the end! (Hint: trust yourself!) To be sure you catch every episode of Women Who Work, like and follow us on Apple Podcasts and Instagram @soarlead. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/womenwhowork/message
Achtung, das Hören dieser Folge kann zu erhöhtem Speichelfluss führen.
Bookstore owner Laura Larson talks with Lisa about what it was like opening her bookstore amid the pandemic in March 2020. Laura officially opened the doors to the public of Odyssey Bookstore in the summer of 2020. The store focuses on sustainability and is nestled in a darling spot in Ithaca, New York. You can follow the bookstore on Facebook or Instagram. Books Discussed on the show: · · A Ghost in the Throat by Dorieann Ni Ghriofa For more information, find Lisa on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and her website. *The book titles mentioned include affiliate links. You can support the podcast by purchasing a book with the links because the podcast receives a small commission.
Lisa and bookstore owner Laura Larson discuss The Midnight Library by Matt Haig. This is a book that addresses suicide and mental health issues. NPR wrote this article tiled “It's Not Quite Dark Enough in the Midnight Library.” Laura opened Odyssey Bookstore in March 2020. The store focuses on sustainability and is nestled in a darling spot in Ithaca, New York. You can follow the bookstore on Facebook or Instagram. In next week's episode, Lisa and Laura will talk about what it was like for Laura to open a bookstore amid the pandemic. Books Discussed on the Show: Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman Less by Andrew Sean GreerThe Post Birthday World by Lionel ShriverLessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus For more information, find Lisa on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and her website.*The book titles mentioned include affiliate links. You can support the podcast by purchasing a book with the links because the podcast receives a small commission.
Episode 154 - Laura Larson, 601 Cellars by Michelle Mandro
139. Light & Simple Joys ft. Laura Larson by Andrew & Emily Jordan
Laura Larson and Danielle Cusack of Scrunchies, who refer to themselves as "post everything rock n rollers" join us on this episode to talk about their fabulous new album "Feral Coast" which is already a hit at college radio, reaching #1 on huge stations like WMBR(Cambridge MA). Hailing from the always cool Minneapolis, MN scene, Laura and Danielle were joined by Bassist/all-star engineer Matt Castore before recording "Feral Coast" and the trio have become a force to be reckoned with. We talk about a little of everything including their debut album "Stunner"(2018), Hüsker Dü and Babes In Toyland, and what the city of Minneapolis has gone through the past few years. One of our favorite shows so far! Music The Charms "So Pretty"(Theme song) Scrunchies "Parallel" Scrunchies "Absolute Maximum" Interview recorded on zoom on April 17, 2022 with additional recording and editing by Mike Nash at Voice Motel on April 23, 2022. This show was sponsored by Baby Loves Tacos and Disorder Vintage. Support the podcast: patreon.com/twistedrico Contact Steev Riccardo at twistedrico@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/blowingsmoketr/support
Get Instant Access to Laura's Presentation by Clicking the link => http://www.proctorpodcast.com/marketing How to Leverage your Real Estate Business Marketing | featuring Laura Larson Laura has been practicing real estate full time for over 13 years. She started her career as a graduate from the U of MD with an accounting degree but later realized her passion for helping individuals and families in their real estate needs, buying or selling a home. Since joining the Craig Proctor System just 2 short years ago, Laura has grown her business considerably and now is the Broker and Owner of Your Home Sold Guaranteed Realty Partners where she is building an amazing team to ensure her clients are extremely well cared for and become happy life-long members of the our extended family. Laura also has a passion for giving back to the community in many ways; financial, personal, social and civic engagement. Currently she is on a mission to donate $25,000 for INOVA Children's Hospital. She does this by making a donation on every transaction or referral on behalf of her clients. Laura also collaborates with the House of Mercy that provides basic necessities and opportunities for personal growth, and with Habitat for Humanity supporting their mission of bringing people together to build homes, communities and hope. Laura is very active in the community and is looking forward to reactivate more in-person activities and client appreciation events. Leave a comment if you have any questions and don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our channel. Click the Bell Icon so you'll receive notifications for new informative Craig Proctor videos, Real Estate Coaching!
Gefühlte Fakten Folge 130 - V.I.P. MÖBEL Christian war in dem eigenartigsten (und exklusivsten) Möbelladen der Welt und hat dort die Wachsfigur von Mr. Miyagi gesehen (gruselig!) Tarkan hat mal wieder eine Billionen-Dollar-Idee, die der FIFA helfen könnte, endlich etwas Profit zu machen. Was für eine moralisch einwandfreie Organisation! Klasse Folge, 10 von 10 Quotenboxen. Partner diese Woche sind Bookbeat und Koro Hol dir mit dem Code: FAKTEN 5% Rabatt auf deine Koro-Bestellung. Geh jetzt auf: korodrogerie.de Bookbeat 2 Monate lang kostenlos testen! Mit dem Code: fakten www.bookbeat.de/fakten www.bookbeat.at/fakten www.bookbeat.ch/fakten Folgt uns: http://instagram.com/tarkanbagci http://instagram.com/Christian_Huber
This week Seth and Rebecca talk about their favorite kids books about meditation and mindfulness. Show Notes: 4:27- B is for Breathe, by Dr. Elizabeth Monroe Boyd 17:18- Wild Mindfulness, by Laura Larson 31:22- My Magic Breath, by Alison Taylor and Nick Ortner 35:47- You are a Lion and Other Fun Yoga Poses, by Tae-eun Yoo 43:38- If You Want to See a Whale, by Julie Fogliano Find us on the web! Rad Child Podcast: www.radchildpodcast.com Facebook Twitter Instagram Contact us: radchildpodcast@gmail.com Be a guest Donate Buy Rad Merch Shift Book Box: https://www.shiftbookbox.com/ Facebook Instagram Twitter
In this episode, we talk with Laura Larson who is the author of Wild Mindfulness. Laura spends a lot of time camping around Minnesota in the summers with her family. She wrote Wild Mindfulness as a tool for parents and educators to teach mindfulness practices to children. Teaching young minds mindfulness is a journey not to be perfected in one day. It comes with time and practice and this book is an awesome tool for that. We dive into how her camping and outdoor experience had a huge impact on writing the book. She shares some of the mindful moments from the book that are directly related to the outdoors and camping! We also talk about some of her memories camping with her own children and favorite places they’ve been in Minnesota. If you are a parent, teacher, or someone who benefits from the mindful practices of spending time in the outdoors, this episode is for you! Purchase Wild Mindfulness from Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Cli1Gq Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/wildmindfulness/ ---- Hiking Thru Life T-shirts and water bottles: hikingthrulife.net/shop Be a guest on the podcast: hikingthrulife.net/podcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hiking-thru-life/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hiking-thru-life/support
When is love an art form in and of itself? Like art, true love comes in many forms. A Congolese couple, separated by the ocean, sing to each other over the phone to stay connected. An all-grrrl punk band sing through a telephone (repurposed as a microphone) to the community that supports them. Corrie Harrigan (drums), Laura Larson (bass), and Liz Elton (vocals), are Kitten Forever. The three-piece punk band blazes minimalist dance punk in their underwear, trade off on instruments frequently, and love each other.
Hidden Mother by Laura Larson was published by Saint Lucy Press (January 2017), with 96 pages and 26 Color and black and white images. Hidden Mother tells the story of the adoption of Larson’s daughter from Ethiopia as mapped through nineteenth-century hidden mother photographs. The term “hidden mother” refers to the widespread but little-known practice in 19th-century portrait photography of concealing a mother’s body as she supported and calmed her child during the lengthy exposures demanded by early photographic technology. In the final portrait of the child, the mother–often covered from head-to-toe in a black drop cloth–appears as an uncanny figure. A practical strategy deployed by the photographer unintentionally yielded an evocative representation of the mother; never meant to be seen, her presence nonetheless haunts these images. Part photography book, part essay, Hidden Mother enlists these strange and powerful images to present a lyrical account of becoming a mother through adoption. Laura Larson is a photographer who has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including Art in General, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, SFCamerawork, Susanne Vielmetter/L.A. Projects, and Wexner Center for the Arts. Reviews of her exhibitions have appeared in Artforum, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Time Out New York, and she has published artist projects in Cabinet, Documents, Open City and The Literary Review. She is the recipient of grants from Art Matters, Inc., New York Foundation of the Arts, and Ohio Arts Council, and of residency fellowships from MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Santa Fe Art Institute, and Ucross Foundation. Larson’s work is represented by Lennon, Weinberg Gallery in New York City. She earned a BA in English from Oberlin College, a MFA in Visual Art from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University, and participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. Hidden Mother is available online at the Saint Lucy bookstore. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hidden Mother by Laura Larson was published by Saint Lucy Press (January 2017), with 96 pages and 26 Color and black and white images. Hidden Mother tells the story of the adoption of Larson’s daughter from Ethiopia as mapped through nineteenth-century hidden mother photographs. The term “hidden mother” refers to the widespread but little-known practice in 19th-century portrait photography of concealing a mother’s body as she supported and calmed her child during the lengthy exposures demanded by early photographic technology. In the final portrait of the child, the mother–often covered from head-to-toe in a black drop cloth–appears as an uncanny figure. A practical strategy deployed by the photographer unintentionally yielded an evocative representation of the mother; never meant to be seen, her presence nonetheless haunts these images. Part photography book, part essay, Hidden Mother enlists these strange and powerful images to present a lyrical account of becoming a mother through adoption. Laura Larson is a photographer who has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including Art in General, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, SFCamerawork, Susanne Vielmetter/L.A. Projects, and Wexner Center for the Arts. Reviews of her exhibitions have appeared in Artforum, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Time Out New York, and she has published artist projects in Cabinet, Documents, Open City and The Literary Review. She is the recipient of grants from Art Matters, Inc., New York Foundation of the Arts, and Ohio Arts Council, and of residency fellowships from MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Santa Fe Art Institute, and Ucross Foundation. Larson’s work is represented by Lennon, Weinberg Gallery in New York City. She earned a BA in English from Oberlin College, a MFA in Visual Art from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University, and participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. Hidden Mother is available online at the Saint Lucy bookstore. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hidden Mother by Laura Larson was published by Saint Lucy Press (January 2017), with 96 pages and 26 Color and black and white images. Hidden Mother tells the story of the adoption of Larson’s daughter from Ethiopia as mapped through nineteenth-century hidden mother photographs. The term “hidden mother” refers to the widespread but little-known practice in 19th-century portrait photography of concealing a mother’s body as she supported and calmed her child during the lengthy exposures demanded by early photographic technology. In the final portrait of the child, the mother–often covered from head-to-toe in a black drop cloth–appears as an uncanny figure. A practical strategy deployed by the photographer unintentionally yielded an evocative representation of the mother; never meant to be seen, her presence nonetheless haunts these images. Part photography book, part essay, Hidden Mother enlists these strange and powerful images to present a lyrical account of becoming a mother through adoption. Laura Larson is a photographer who has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including Art in General, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, SFCamerawork, Susanne Vielmetter/L.A. Projects, and Wexner Center for the Arts. Reviews of her exhibitions have appeared in Artforum, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Time Out New York, and she has published artist projects in Cabinet, Documents, Open City and The Literary Review. She is the recipient of grants from Art Matters, Inc., New York Foundation of the Arts, and Ohio Arts Council, and of residency fellowships from MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Santa Fe Art Institute, and Ucross Foundation. Larson’s work is represented by Lennon, Weinberg Gallery in New York City. She earned a BA in English from Oberlin College, a MFA in Visual Art from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University, and participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. Hidden Mother is available online at the Saint Lucy bookstore. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hidden Mother by Laura Larson was published by Saint Lucy Press (January 2017), with 96 pages and 26 Color and black and white images. Hidden Mother tells the story of the adoption of Larson’s daughter from Ethiopia as mapped through nineteenth-century hidden mother photographs. The term “hidden mother” refers to the widespread but little-known practice in 19th-century portrait photography of concealing a mother’s body as she supported and calmed her child during the lengthy exposures demanded by early photographic technology. In the final portrait of the child, the mother–often covered from head-to-toe in a black drop cloth–appears as an uncanny figure. A practical strategy deployed by the photographer unintentionally yielded an evocative representation of the mother; never meant to be seen, her presence nonetheless haunts these images. Part photography book, part essay, Hidden Mother enlists these strange and powerful images to present a lyrical account of becoming a mother through adoption. Laura Larson is a photographer who has exhibited her work both nationally and internationally, including Art in General, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, SFCamerawork, Susanne Vielmetter/L.A. Projects, and Wexner Center for the Arts. Reviews of her exhibitions have appeared in Artforum, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Time Out New York, and she has published artist projects in Cabinet, Documents, Open City and The Literary Review. She is the recipient of grants from Art Matters, Inc., New York Foundation of the Arts, and Ohio Arts Council, and of residency fellowships from MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Santa Fe Art Institute, and Ucross Foundation. Larson’s work is represented by Lennon, Weinberg Gallery in New York City. She earned a BA in English from Oberlin College, a MFA in Visual Art from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University, and participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. Hidden Mother is available online at the Saint Lucy bookstore. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
GIRL BAND member Laura Larson discuss the unique nature of her group and how her collegiate a cappella experiences framed her post-collegiate endeavors.
GIRL BAND member Laura Larson discuss the unique nature of her group and how her collegiate a cappella experiences framed her post-collegiate endeavors.