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Episode Summary: What if poverty isn't mainly an economic crisis, but a discipleship crisis?This week, we sit down with a true expert, Ena Richards, founder of Work for a Living, to challenge the dominant narrative about poverty. Ena argues that poverty persists where destructive worldviews persist. It thrives in soils of blame, envy, entitlement, unforgiveness, addiction, fatherlessness, and victim identity.The solution clearly isn't more handouts, but hearts transformed. Not performative empathy, but practical love. Not Sunday-only faith, but Monday formation that produces real economic impact.We discuss: • Poverty as a discipleship problem • Homelessness in the US and root-cause restoration • Job creation and dignity through work • Why universal basic income misses human design • How AI can be leveraged — not feared • Equipping churches to move people from dependency to contributionThe gospel is good news to the poor because it changes identity, and identity changes work. If the Church took Monday seriously, what might change?Who is Disciple Nations Alliance (DNA)? Since 1997, DNA's mission has been to equip followers of Jesus around the globe with a biblical worldview, empowering them to build flourishing families, communities, and nations.
In this episode, Michelle chats with Aleksandar Svetski, founder and CEO of Satlantis and author. They explore the idea of freedom in the digital age.Michelle and Aleksandar discuss the rise of remote work and social media, and the growing hunger for real-world experiences. Alexander shares insights from his career building Bitcoin ventures and Satlantis, a platform designed to reconnect people offline. They also dive into personal responsibility, the virtues that sustain healthy societies, the challenges of raising children in a tech-driven world, and the evolving meaning of autonomy and connection. Trying to balance digital life, real experiences, and true freedom? Listen in!If you're savoring Social Soup, make sure to share it around and subscribe! Check out Aleksandar's company: Satlantis.io Read Aleksandar's book: BushidoOfBitcoin.com Read an article by Aleksandar: remnantchronicles.substack.com/p/aenean-money Connect with Aleksandar on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/alekssvetski Connect with Michelle on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/michelledattilio Learn more about sōsh! Visit our website and reach out at: getsosh.com
“If the public can predict you, it starts to like you. But the Marchesa didn't want to be liked.” For the first three decades of the twentieth century, the Marchesa Luisa Casati astounded Europe. Artists such as Man Ray painted, sculpted, and photographed her; writers such as Ezra Pound and Jack Kerouac praised her strange beauty. An Italian woman of means who questioned the traditional gender codes of her time, she dismissed fixed identities as mere constructions. Gathering on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the first publication of Infinite Variety: The Life and Legend of the Marchesa Casati (the first full-length biography of Luisa Casati, now offered in an updated, ultimate edition), Michael Orlando Yaccarino joins Valerie Steele, Joan Rosasco, and Francesca Granata in conversation about the enigma that is the Marchesa Casati.Michael Orlando Yaccarino is a writer specializing in international genre film, fashion, music, and unconventional historic figures. Scot D. Ryersson (1960–2024) was an award-winning writer, illustrator, and graphic designer. Michael and Scot collaborated on many projects, are coauthors of Infinite Variety: The Life and Legend of the Marchesa Casati, The Ultimate Edition, and are founders of the Casati Archives. www.marchesacasati.comValerie Steele is a fashion historian and director and chief curator of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Steele is the author or editor of twenty-five books, including Paris Fashion, Fetish, and Fashion Designers A-Z.Joan Rosasco taught at Smith College, Columbia University, and New York University, with focus on European art and culture, French literature, and the Belle Époque period. She is author of numerous publications including The Septet.Francesca Granata is associate professor of fashion studies at Parsons School of Design. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary visual culture, fashion history and theory, and gender and performance studies. Granata is editor of Fashion Criticism and author of Experimental Fashion, and wrote the afterword to Infinite Variety.Praise for the book:"Ryersson and Yaccarino are judicious historians of frivolity who capture the tone of a life that was obscenely profligate yet strangely pure."—The New Yorker"A meticulously researched biography, Infinite Variety is as much art history as chronicle of personal obsession."—The New York Times"Fascinating . . . with or without her cheetahs, the Marchesa Casati's circus of the self makes her a natural for the new millennium."—Vanity FairInfinite Variety: The Life and Legend of Marchesa Casati, The Ultimate Edition is available from University of Minnesota Press.
Unaffordable housing is forcing more New Zealanders to think about living with extended family members. People who haven't grown up with it, fear multi-generational living will be too stressful but the kind of stress it generates can be healthy to work with, says psychotherapist Dr Zoë Krupka. "The stress of living in a household where you have to negotiate your space, your role, yourself, is hard but it's productive stress," she tells Jim Mora.
Morning Mix listeners shared who they like to have cuddle sessions with plus Alyssa calls in to tell us about van life living. And, Pat Tomasulo, from WGN TV, promotes his Laugh Your Face Off event. Listen to The Morning Mix weekdays from 5:30am – 10:00am on 101.9FM The Mix in Chicago, at wtmx.com, and on our free Mix App available in the Apple App Store and Google Play.
Here Habakkuk acknowledges and accepts what he heard from God. He is also in awe about what God said about Himself and about what God said He would do. -Habakkuk's attention is not on Judea or the Chaldeans but only on God. Instead of being confused about God's ways he is now confident in God's ways. He now accepts what God is up to. He is anxious for it to take place in his lifetime but asks Him to be merciful in His wrath.
Here Habakkuk acknowledges and accepts what he heard from God. He is also in awe about what God said about Himself and about what God said He would do. -Habakkuk's attention is not on Judea or the Chaldeans but only on God. Instead of being confused about God's ways he is now confident in God's ways. He now accepts what God is up to. He is anxious for it to take place in his lifetime but asks Him to be merciful in His wrath.
A new MP3 sermon from Liberty Baptist Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Praying for a Living Work Subtitle: Habakkuk Speaker: Mack Tester Broadcaster: Liberty Baptist Church Event: Sunday Service Date: 7/24/2022 Bible: Habakkuk 3:1-2 Length: 46 min.
A new MP3 sermon from Liberty Baptist Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Praying for a Living Work Subtitle: Habakkuk Speaker: Mack Tester Broadcaster: Liberty Baptist Church Event: Sunday Service Date: 7/24/2022 Bible: Habakkuk 3:1-2 Length: 46 min.
Here Habakkuk acknowledges and accepts what he heard from God. He is also in awe about what God said about Himself and about what God said He would do. Habakkuk's attention is not on Judea or the Chaldeans but only on God. Instead of being confused about God's ways he is now confident in God's ways. He now accepts what God is up to. He is anxious for it to take place in his lifetime but asks Him to be merciful in His wrath.
Bayou City Fellowship - Tomball Buzzsprout-10754812 Sun, 05 Jun 2022 12:00:00 -0500 2713 Bayou City Fellowship, Bayou City Fellowship - Tomball, Tomball, Kevin Barra, Skillful Living full
Have you toured a memory care community and thought there was absolutely NO WAY you would ever move your mom "IN THERE"! Well....you are not alone. Many families find that the memory care communities they tour have resident who are way more advanced than their loved one. So today...we're taking a look at 5 questions to ask yourself if you'r considering Assisted Living for your loved one who has Alzheimer's. Check out the 5 questions plus a bonus question in our Doable Download! CLICK HERE for our DOABLE DOWNLOAD with FULL SHOW NOTES Would you like to share your story and be a guest on our show? Email us at familytalk@desperatelyseekingseniorliving.com Email us your questions! www.desperatelyseekingsenioriving.com
Fab Wives is a community of wives committed to love and marriage. Visit fabwives.com to learn more.Connect with us on Instagram @fabwives Join our private Facebook Group, Fab Wives Community: bit.ly/fwconnectonfbFollow the wives behind the Fab Wives Unfiltered Podcast on Instagram:Lady E: @ericafisherpattersonRhea: @thefabwife_rheaTish: @therealdopetherapistPatrice: @sheispatricechanel
As the number of multigenerational households increases in response to economic pressures as well as cultural and demographic shifts in our country, a handbook for families is essential. Today's guest shares her valuable insights and tips for those balancing elder care, childcare, and living with adult children; all under one roof, in any combination.Guest: Cheli English Figaro, Esq., Attorney, Co-Founder of Mocha Moms, Inc. and Author of When the Nest Never Empties: A Handbook for Living with Adult Children and/or Elderly Parents
Little is known about The Wizard of New Zealand who took centre stage in Christchurch's Cathedral Square from the 70s until the Christchurch earthquakes in 2011, which saw the city in a state of disrepair. A man who challenged political, social and cultural ideology, The Wizard posed provocative questions in this public space, much to the delight, and sometimes dismay, of passersby. But the background to why The Wizard was there in the first place has been something of a mystery... until now. Sonia Yee finds out more in this episode of Eyewitness.
Have you ever wondered why zombies make so much of our popular media culture these days? In this episode, hosts Dr. Stephanie Heck and Dr. Eric Spiegel discuss work life in America and what it will look like in a post-pandemic world. Will we be the walking dead? Or will we risk change?
Tim Ollhoff from LSS Behavioral Health talks about the importance of establishing a work-life balance and offers tips for doing so, including a service from LSS called NuVantage.
Tim Ollhoff from LSS Behavioral Health talks about the importance of establishing a work-life balance and offers tips for doing so, including a service from LSS called NuVantage.
Tim Ollhoff from LSS Behavioral Health talks about the importance of establishing a work-life balance and offers tips for doing so, including a service from LSS called NuVantage.
I’m so excited to share my conversation with Dr. Ashley Turner because we are digging into how stewardship and healthy living go hand in hand. Dr. Ashley started out as an elementary education teacher, but quickly found a passion in natural health and functional medicine as her family endured trial after trial in their health. She shares their journey, discovering their daughters suffered from PANDAS and PANS syndromes, and how their decision for stewardship of their body and home has brought healing.
Speaker: Bryant Brailles Summary: Part of a series on the book of Hebrews. We can have confidence in salvation; we are exhorted to encourage one another; but we must not shrink back. Passage: Hebrews 10:19-39 Legal notice: Speakers here typically quote from the NASB, ESV or NKJV almost exclusively, and the respective copyright notices follow. Some occasionally quote from the King James Version, which is public domain (in the US). Scripture quotations taken from the NASB (New American Standard Bible) Copyright by The Lockman Foundation Scripture quotations are from The ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
If you've ever wanted more energy, vibrance, and aliveness in your life, then do we have the Your Life as a Work of Art, show for you! Today we'll talk about painting your life, sculpting your life, and creating the life of your dreams, by making it a living work of art. Living Work of Art Self-Improvement and Self-Help Topics Include: What does it mean to sculpt your life? What do animal imitations have to do with anything? What can we learn from bird-feeders? What you can learn about your life while out on the trails? How do we find our greatest passion in life? What are markers on our path for us? What can truly help us find our direction? What does it mean to grow awareness in your backyard? How does cultivating presence help you sculpt your life? What does it mean to turn your home into a shrine? How you do you make your home sacred? How can you beautify your life and make it into a work of art? How can decluttering help our lives? Why you don't want pyschedelic wall-paper? What does it mean to sculpt your environment as a work of art? What does it mean to sculpt yourself? How do you completely shift the energy of your environment? How you can observe your ego on a whole new level? How to diffuse your ego, to completely change your circumstances? What's a 1% challenge? How you can make your life a living work of art. To Find Out More visit: FireItUpWithCJ.com CJ Liu & Michael Sandler on Turning Your Life Into a Living, Sacred, Work of Art!!! Health | Inspiration | Motivation | Spiritual | Spirituality | Meditation | Law of Attraction | Inspirational | Motivational | Self-Improvement | Self-Help | Inspire To Find Out More Visit: www.InspireNationShow.com
We believe in The Person: Christ. Our beliefs are not in a set of doctrines or teachings. We engage the Person. By the Holy Spirit, God directs our every step. The Scriptures give us the Word of God, but we are after The Living Work, The Living Truth, YahuShua HaMoschiach Himself. He is The Truth, The Way, The Life. Our pursuit is Him and He is calling us into a relationship in intimacy with Him where we become ONE with Him.
We believe in The Person: Christ. Our beliefs are not in a set of doctrines or teachings. We engage the Person. By the Holy Spirit, God directs our every step. The Scriptures give us the Word of God, but we are after The Living Work, The Living Truth, YahuShua HaMoschiach Himself. He is The Truth, The Way, The Life. Our pursuit is Him and He is calling us into a relationship in intimacy with Him where we become ONE with Him.
We believe in The Person: Christ. Our beliefs are not in a set of doctrines or teachings. We engage the Person. By the Holy Spirit, God directs our every step. The Scriptures give us the Word of God, but we are after The Living Work, The Living Truth, YahuShua HaMoschiach Himself. He is The Truth, The Way, The Life. Our pursuit is Him and He is calling us into a relationship in intimacy with Him where we become ONE with Him.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Uncle Tom’s Cabin didn’t start the Civil War and Silent Spring didn’t start the environmental movement. In The Myth of Silent Spring: Rethinking the Origins of American Environmentalism (University of California Press, 2018), historian Chad Montrie insists that environmental consciousness has been present in the United States since its founding, and that it could be found in places and among people overlooked by Rachel Carson and legions of journalists, historians, and activists in her time and our own. In this, his fourth book working to push the perspectives of social and labor history to the foreground in the grand narrative of American’s relationship with the natural world, Montrie draws on his own research and synthesizes a generation of scholarship to show how a diverse cast of characters—from Lowell mill girls to United Auto Workers executive Olga Madar, from migrant farm laborers in California to Slovenian immigrants in Minnesota, from coal miners fighting black lung to urban residents fighting lead poisoning, and others—perceived industrialization as a threat to their health and quality of life. This inclusive, revisionist history challenges us to rethink the causes, geography, chronology, and content of American environmentalism. Chad Montrie is Professor of History at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell and the author of The Myth of Silent Spring, A People’s History of Environmentalism in the United States, Making a Living: Work and Environment in the United States, and To Save the Land and People: A History of Opposition to Surface Coal Mining in Appalachia. Brian Hamilton is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin—Madison where he is researching African American environmental history in the nineteenth-century Cotton South. He is also an editor of the digital environmental magazine and podcast Edge Effects. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In real estate, we are seeing generational living become a huge thing. We recently held an open house for a 5-bedroom home with well over 4,500 square feet and we were shocked at the number of buyers who came in looking for a setup where they can have mom, dad, their kids, or both living in the same household. This trend seems to increase in popularity each year. Portland is not exactly the most retirement-friendly place. Our cost of living is pretty high, as are our property taxes. Downsizing won’t result in you paying much less like it would in other areas of the country.Property values are just so high right now. This is why we’re seeing more and more families come together under one roof. What they’re typically looking for is something with a master bedroom on the main floor and two separate living areas. Accessory dwelling units are becoming more popular as well. This is a really fascinating trend to watch. If you have any questions about generational living or about other affordable living options in Portland for you and your extended family, don’t hesitate to reach out and give me a call or send me an email. I look forward to hearing from you soon. “Portland is not exactly the most retirement-friendly place.”
Since 2008 Alan Power, head gardener at Stourhead in Wiltshire, has joined Radio 4's PM programme to tell us about the autumnal view. This year, there was something extra to talk about. (Photo: Stourhead. Credit: PA)
Sunday morning sermon from 23rd July 2017. Preacher John Hall
Sermons from Grace Church, Walworth, WI
Landscape Designer Nancy Goslee Power recounts her creative journey to transform the Museum’s Sculpture Garden, which debuted in the autumn of 1999. This video was produced to mark the garden’s fifteenth anniversary and the publication of “A Living Work of Art: The Norton Simon Museum Sculpture Garden.”
Andy Goldsworthy is a British sculptor who travels all over the world to create site-specific sculptures.
Short talk given by Guy Finley at Life of Learning Foundation on 12/2/11.