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Brandon LaGreca, Lac, MAcOM author, speaker and holistic medical practitioner, joins Dr. George to discuss how to protect yourself from the negative effects of electropollution and how the mind can be the most powerful tool to prevent illness such as cancer. He is nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine. In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. Brandon is a thought leader in the synthesis of traditional and functional medicine, having written numerous articles on the subject. He is the author of “Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself From the Silent Carcinogen of Electropollution” and “Cancer, Stress & Mindset: Focusing the Mind to Empower Healing and Resilience.” He shares his thoughts at EmpoweredPatientBlog.com. [Amazon – Buy his Books] • [BookBub – Follow Brandon] • [GoodReads – Read Brandon's Post] • [Facebook – Like Brandon's Group] • [Facebook – Like Brandon's Group] • [Patreon – Support Brandon's Work] • [Brandon LaGreca – Visit his Website] • [Making Structured, Living Water – Read Brandon's Article]
In this episode we are delighted to be joined by Dr Lisa J. Taylor-Swanson to discuss our new ACUAWARE Study which asks; does acupuncture improve interoceptive awareness in people with chronic pain? We discuss what interoceptive awareness is and why its relevant to acupuncture.Interested in taking part in the ACUAWARE Study?If you are a US-based licensed acupuncturist, you may be eligible for taking part in this study! Please visit the Study Page for more information.About LisaLisa J. Taylor-Swanson, PhD, MAcOM, LAc is A Nursing Scientist and Licensed Acupuncturist at the University of Utah, a native of Salt Lake City, she completed her Honors BS in Psychology with a minor in Women's Studies at University of Utah. She relocated to the Pacific Northwest and completed a Master's degree in Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine (Seattle Institute of East Asian Medicine - SIEAM) and a PhD in Nursing Science (University of Washington).Dr. Taylor-Swanson has provided acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine in private practice for over 21 years with an emphasis on women's health. Most recently, Dr. Taylor-Swanson transitioned from full-time private practice to a full-time, tenure-line academic position at Utah. Dr. Taylor-Swanson previously taught at University of Washington and served as Academic Dean at SIEAM. Dr. Taylor-Swanson leads national and international collaborations on the topic of interoceptive awareness, menopause, and pain with colleagues in the United Kingdom and Australia, and serves on the Board of Directors of Society of Acupuncture Research.
https://bit.ly/newsletter-laconciergerie-podcast :La newsletter hebdomadaire
This edition features stories on Air Force Manpower and Personnel officials announcing a change of tenure limits for enlisted personnel, U.S. President Barack Obama expressing his respects and gratitude for service members and promising to care for those who serve during his inaugural State of the Union address, the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) working around the clock to aid in Operation Unified Response, the U.S. Air Force flying with French Airmen during exercise Red Devil, the Lone Wolf Comedy Tour performing three shows around Joint Base Balad, the Air Force's newest major command (MACOM), Global Strike Command (GSC), progressing in its mission and streamlining the process for handling varied weapons systems being transferred from other MACOMs, and Department of Defense officials launching free online tutoring services for service members and their families. Hosted by Airman 1st Class Alina Richard.
En la sede del Mando Aéreo de Combate del Ejército del Aire y el Espacio (MACOM), en la base de Torrejón de Ardoz, nos recibe el Teniente General Francisco González-Espresati, actual jefe del MACOM, que lleva a sus espaldas un total de 85 misiones de guerra y 3.200 horas de vuelo, en las que más de 2.000 las ha realizado con el F-18. Su larga trayectoria profesional nos sirve de pretexto para conocer de primera mano cuáles son las necesidades del Ejército, cómo es la forma en la que se entrenan los pilotos para poder realizar con éxito las misiones OTAN o conocer más acerca de la actual invasión rusa sobre Ucrania, así como las nuevas amenazas a las que el Ejército tiene que hacer frente de una manera «inesperada». 👉 https://bit.ly/3wTJfwh
En la sede del Mando Aéreo de Combate del Ejército del Aire y el Espacio (MACOM), en la base de Torrejón de Ardoz, nos recibe el Teniente General Francisco González-Espresati, actual jefe del MACOM, que lleva a sus espaldas un total de 85 misiones de guerra y 3.200 horas de vuelo, en las que más de 2.000 las ha realizado con el F-18. Su larga trayectoria profesional nos sirve de pretexto para conocer de primera mano cuáles son las necesidades del Ejército, cómo es la forma en la que se entrenan los pilotos para poder realizar con éxito las misiones OTAN o conocer más acerca de la actual invasión rusa sobre Ucrania, así como las nuevas amenazas a las que el Ejército tiene que hacer frente de una manera «inesperada».
Brandon LaGreca, Lac, MAcOM, is a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental Medicine. In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. Brandon is a thought leader in the synthesis of traditional and functional medicine, having written numerous articles on the subject. He is the author of “Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself from the Silent Carcinogen of Ellectropollution,” and “Cancer, Stress & Mindset: Focusing the Mind to Empower Healing and Resilience.” He shares his thoughts at EmpoweredPatientBlog.com During our conversation, Brandon shares what led him to discover he had stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, how his background in integrative and holistic health helped him advocate for his treatment plan, how to figure out the right treatment plan for you, how to listen to your intuition, how to cultivate an anti-cancer mindset, and how to protect yourself from EMF radiation. For more information and to purchase Brandon's books, go to brandonlagreca.com The Cancer Liberation Project is sponsored by thekarlfeldtcenter.com
Hace una semana, en una de mis visitas no supe transmitir a una gran marca, la importancia del empque, del embalaje. Para mi había una disonancia entre la fortaleza de la marca (una muy conocida) y el embalaje o empque con el que se presentan en el mercado. En este capítulo os vamos a demostrar de la mano de la mano de David Juarez de Macom de la UPV de Alcoy. Cómo el neuromarketing nos demuestra que el empaque o packaging nos debe seducir y la recordación de la marca, del empaque refuerza futuras compras. Escuchad el capítulo porque es muy ejemplarizante y educativo Os deseo una muy buena semana!!
Leah Guy and Matthew Branham, MAcOM, LAc, discuss powerful topics based on finding the harmony within our lives, living in harmony with the breath, and overcoming the fear of death. Yin & Yang, breathing with nature, finding acceptance and flowing with the expansion and contraction and not forcing through or disrupting are part of this conversation. The breath dynamic happens every day, every season, with every breath, and as with Yin & Yang, the human body also functions seasonally, and part of our conversation is about how death has come to be perceived as a loss, a fear, and a negative occurrence. Perhaps nature has a different intention.To find out more about Leah, visit her website. To find out more about Matthew, visit his website. Matthew received his Master's degree in Acupuncture and Oriental medicine (M.Ac.O.M) from the Seattle Institute of Oriental Medicine where he was clinically trained in acupuncture modalities from mainland China, Taiwan, Japan, and even France. Matthew's Chinese herbal medicine training is broad and includes both classical and modern approaches. He is licensed as an acupuncturist and herbalist in the State of New Jersey and is certified by the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM).In addition to his acupuncture expertise Matthew has been a massage therapist specializing in Asian Bodywork therapy for over ten years. Matthew's passion is in facilitating patient's journey of healing on a holistic level. Recognizing and honoring that while we appear as separate individuals, in truth we are all deeply connected. Likewise, our mind, emotions, and body are not separate. Disease and pain are often more obvious symptoms of an underlying imbalance.
Rachelle DeMichele L Ac, MAcOM, Dipl. OM owns and operates a healing clinic in Dripping Springs, Texas, called Hill Country Healing Haven. Her struggles with endometriosis, digestive disorders and depression/anxiety led her to seek help with Oriental medicine and meditation. Through these modalities, she found profound healing and realized her path included facilitating this healing in others. Her style of practice embodies a respect and reverence for the body, mind and spirit of all beings. In this episode of MVP Business we discuss her journey of healing herself and others, how she determines what modalities of healing will be most effective to her patients, and how she keeps her joy and passion active in her daily work.
Emmanuel Melo conta como é o food service brasileiro, e as oportunidades que se encontram neste mercado. Trabalha com projetos para FoodService há 45 anos e já desenvolveu centenas de equipamentos para importantes empresas nacionais e internacionais como Tramontina, Fagor Industrial México e EUA, Macom, Cozil, Prática, Brastemp, Burger King, KFC, Unilever, Grupo GRSA, entre outras. Recebeu mais de 20 prêmios de design no Brasil e no exterior. Entre eles o Red Dot Award na Alemanha e What's Hot, What's Cool nos EUA. É fundador do StudioIno, agência paulistana de arquitetura e design de FoodService, onde atua como diretor de design e inovação. É também cofundador do Hub Foodservice, cozinhas colaborativas e do Hub Cloud Kitchen, cozinhas para delivery todas em São Paulo. Redes Sociais site: www.studioino.com Instagram: @Studioino Linkedin: Studioino design de foodservice Linkedin: Emmanuel Viana de Melo, FCSI Pinterest: @studioinoSP
This week it's all about girls holidays and nights out, and yes you heard it here first, unless you want beer-fear from hell, 2am is bedtime honey. When the girls go on tour, we know it can get a little bit wild so here's Ashley & Laurens guide to staying (relatively) hangover-free, not breaking girl code and how to deal with your partner going away. Of course not forgetting a VERY naughty dilemma of the week and stag-do scandal. And don't forget, be careful of those dirty d*cks.... Make sure you get your medical-grade compression from Macom with 15% off! Use the code NIPTUCK at checkout over on macom-medical.com and follow the team @macom_medical. Of course, it's @ntngaf on socials for more hilarity and to send in your Dilemmas!
In this episode, Rachael Moss speaks with Brandon LaGreca LAc, MAcOM about the importance of mindset when it comes to cancer. Brandon LaGreca is a licensed acupuncturist in Wisconsin who is nationally certified in Oriental medicine. In 2015, he was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Eight months later, he had a complete remission following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy. This was achieved without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. LaGreca also shares his thoughts at www.EmpoweredPatientBlog.com.
Qualcomm is the world's largest fabless semiconductor designer. The name Qualcomm is a mashup of Quality and Communications and communications has been a hallmark of the company since its founding. They began in satellite communications and today most every smartphone has a Qualcomm chip. The ubiquity of communications in our devices and everyday lives has allowed them a $182 billion market cap as of the time of this writing. Qualcomm began with far humbler beginnings. They emerged out of a company called Linkabit in 1985. Linkabit was started by Irwin Jacobs, Leonard Kleinrock, and Andrew Viterbi - all three former graduate students at MIT. Viterbi moved to California to take a job with JPL in Pasadena, where he worked on satellites. He then went off to UCLA where he developed what we now call the Viterti algorithm, for encoding and decoding digital communications. Jacobs worked on a book called Principles of Communication Engineering after getting his doctorate at MIT. Jacobs then took a year of leave to work at JPL after he met Viterbi in the early 1960s and the two hit it off. By 1966, Jacobs was a professor at the University of California, San Diego. Kleinrock was at UCLA by then and the three realized they had too many consulting efforts between them, but if they consolidated the request they could pool their resources. Eventually Jacobs and Viterbi left and Kleinrock got busy working on the first ARPANET node when it was installed at UCLA. Jerry Heller, Andrew Cohen, Klein Gilhousen, and James Dunn eventually moved into the area to work at Linkabit and by the 1970s Jacobs was back to help design telecommunications for satellites. They'd been working to refine the theories from Claude Shannon's time at MIT and Bell Labs and were some of the top names in the industry on the work. And the space race needed a lot of this type of work. They did their work on Scientific Data Systems computers in an era before that company was acquired by Xerox. Much as Claude Shannon got started thinking of data loss as it pertains to information theory while trying to send telegraphs over barbed wire, they refined that work thinking about sending images from mars to earth. Others from MIT worked on other space projects as a part of missions. Many of those early employees were Viterbi's PhD students and they were joined by Joseph Odenwalder, who took Viterbi's decoding work and combined it with a previous dissertation out of MIT when he joined Linkabit. That got used in the Voyager space probes and put Linkabit on the map. They were hiring some of the top talent in digital communications and were able to promote not only being able to work with some of the top minds in the industry but also the fact that they were in beautiful San Diego, which appealed to many in the Boston or MIT communities during harsh winters. As solid state electronics got cheaper and the number of transistors more densely packed into those wafers, they were able to exploit the ability to make hardware and software for military applications by packing digital signal processors that had previously taken a Sigma from SDS into smaller and smaller form factors, like the Linkabit Microprocessor, which got Viterbi's algorithm for encoding data into a breadboard and a chip. The work continued with defense contractors and suppliers. They built modulation and demodulation for UHF signals for military communications. That evolved into a Command Post Modem/Processor they sold, or CPM/P for short. They made modems for the military in the 1970s, some of which remained in production until the 1990s. And as they turned their way into the 1980s, they had more than $10 million in revenue. The UC San Diego program grew in those years, and the Linkabit founders had more and more local talent to choose from. Linkabit developed tools to facilitate encoded communications over commercial satellites as well. They partnered with companies like IBM and developed smaller business units they were able to sell off. They also developed a tool they called VideoCipher to encode video, which HBO and others used to do what we later called scrambling on satellite signals. As we rounded the corner into the 1990s, though, they turned their attention to cellular services with TDMA (Time-Division Multiple Access), an early alternative to CDMA. Along the way, Linkabit got acquired by a company called MACOM in 1980 for $25 million. The founders liked that the acquirer was a fellow PhD from MIT and Linkabit stayed separate but grew quickly with the products they were introducing. As with most acquisitions, the culture changed and by 1985 the founders were gone. The VideoCipher and other units were sold off, spun off, or people just left and started new companies. Information theory was decades old at this point, plenty of academic papers had been published, and everyone who understood the industry knew that digital telecommunications was about to explode; a perfect storm for defections. Qualcomm Over the course of the next few years over two dozen companies were born as the alumni left and by 2003, 76 companies were founded by Linkabit alumni, including four who went public. One of the companies that emerged included the Linkabit founders Irwin Jacobs and Andrew Viterbi, Begun in 1985, Qualcomm is also based in San Diego. The founders had put information theory into practice at Linkabit and seen that the managers who were great at finance just weren't inspiring to scientists. Qualcomm began with consulting and research, but this time looked for products to take to market. They merged with a company called Omninet and the two released the OmniTRACS satellite communication system for trucking and logistical companies. They landed Schneider National and a few other large customers and grew to over 600 employees in those first five years. It remained a Qualcomm subsidiary until recently. Even with tens of millions in revenue, they operated at a loss while researching what they knew would be the next big thing. Code-Division Multiple Acces, or CDMA, is a technology that allows for sending information over multiple channels so users can share not just a single frequency of the radio band, but multiple frequencies without a lot of interference. The original research began all the way back in the 1930s when Dmitry Ageyev in the Soviet Union researched the theory of code division of signals at Leningrad Electrotechnical Institute of Communications. That work and was furthered during World War II by German researchers like Karl Küpfmüller and Americans like Claude Shannon, who focused more on the information theory of communication channels. People like Lee Yuk-wing then took the cybernetics work from pioneers like Norbert Weiner and helped connect those with others like Qualcomm's Jacobs, a student of Yuk-wing's when he was a professor at MIT. They were already working on CDMA jamming in the early 1950s at MIT's Lincoln Lab. Another Russian named Leonid Kupriyanovich put the concept of CMDA into practice in the later 1950s so the Soviets could track people using a service they called Altai. That made it perfect for perfect for tracking trucks and within a few years was released in 1965 as a pre-cellular radiotelephone network that got bridged to standard phone lines. The Linkabit and then Qualcomm engineers had worked closely with satellite engineers at JPL then Hughes and other defense then commercial contractors. They'd come in contact with work and built their own intellectual property for decades. Bell was working on mobile, or cellular technologies. Ameritech Mobile Communications, or Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS) as they were known at the time, launched the first 1G network in 1983 and Vodaphone launched their first service in the UK in 1984. Qualcomm filed their first patent for CDMA the next year. That patent is one of the most cited documents in all of technology. Qualcomm worked closely with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the US and with industry consortiums, such as the CTIA, or Cellular Telephone Industries Association. Meanwhile Ericsson promoted the TDMA standard as they claimed it was more standard; however, Qualcomm worked on additional patents and got to the point that they licensed their technology to early cell phone providers like Ameritech, who was one of the first to switch from the TDMA standard Ericsson promoted to CDMA. Other carriers switched to CDMA as well, which gave them data to prove their technology worked. The OmniTRACS service helped with revenue, but they needed more. So they filed for an initial public offering in 1991 and raised over $500 billion in funding between then and 1995 when they sold another round of shares. By then, they had done the work to get CDMA encoding on a chip and it was time to go to the mass market. They made double what they raised back in just the first two years, reaching over $800 million in revenue in 1996. Qualcomm and Cell Phones One of the reasons Qualcomm was able to raise so much money in two substantial rounds of public funding is that the test demonstrations were going so well. They deployed CDMA in San Diego, New York, Honk Kong, Los Angeles, and within just a few years had over a dozen carriers running substantial tests. The CTIA supported CDMA as a standard in 1993 and by 1995 they went from tests to commercial networks. The standard grew in adoption from there. South Korea standardized on CDMA between 1993 to 116. The CDMA standard was embraced by Primeco in 1995, who used the 1900 MHz PCS band. This was a joint venture between a number of vendors including two former regional AT&T spin-offs from before the breakup of AT&T and represented interests from Cox Communications, Sprint, and turned out to be a large undertaking. It was also the largest cellular launch with services going live in 19 cities and the first phones were from a joint venture between Qualcomm and Sony. Most of PrimeCo's assets were later merged with AirTouch Cellular and the Bell Atlantic Mobile to form what we now know as Verizon Wireless. Along the way, there were a few barriers to mass proliferation of the Qualcomm CDMA standards. One is that they made phones. The Qualcomm Q cost them a lot to manufacture and it was a market with a lot of competition who had cheaper manufacturing ecosystems. So Qualcomm sold the manufacturing business to Kyocera, who continued to license Qualcomm chips. Now they could shift all of their focus on encoding bits of data to be carried over multiple radio channels to do their part in paving the way for 2G and 3G networks with the chips that went into most phones of the era. Qualcomm couldn't have built out a mass manufacturing ecosystem to supply the world with every phone needed in the 2G and 3G era. Nor could they make the chips that went in those phones. The mid and late 1990s saw them outsource then just license their patents and know-how to other companies. A quarter of a billion 3G subscribers across over a hundred carriers in dozens of countries. They got in front of what came after CDMA and worked on multiple other standards, including OFDMA, or Orthogonal frequency-Division Multiple Access. For those they developed the Qualcomm Flarion Flash-OFDM and 3GPP 5G NR, or New Radio. And of course a boatload of other innovative technologies and chips. Thus paving the way to have made Qualcomm instrumental in 5G and beyond. This was really made possible by this hyper-specialization. Many of the same people who developed the encoding technology for the Voyager satellite decades prior helped pave the way for the mobile revolution. They ventured into manufacturing but as with many of the designers of technology and chips, chose to license the technology in massive cross-licensing deals. These deals are so big Apple sued Qualcomm recently for a billion in missed rebates. But there were changes happening in the technology industry that would shake up those licensing deals. Broadcom was growing into a behemoth. Many of their designs sent from stand-alone chips to being a small part of a SoC, or system on a chip. Suddenly, cross-licensing the ARM gave Qualcomm the ability to make full SoCs. Snapdragon has been the moniker of the current line of SoCs since 2007. Qualcomm has an ARM Architectural License and uses the ARM instruction set to create their own CPUs. The most recent incarnation is known as Krait. They also create their own Graphics Processor (GPU) and Digital Signal Processors (DSPs) known as Adreno and Hexagon. They recently acquired Arteris' technology and engineering group, and they used Arteris' Network on Chip (NoC) technology. Snapdragon chips can be found in the Samsung Galaxy, Vivo, Asus, and Xiaomi phones. Apple designs their own chips that are based on the ARM architecture, so in some ways compete with the Snapdragon, but still use Qualcomm modems like every other SoC. Qualcomm also bought a new patent portfolio from HP, including the Palm patents and others, so who knows what we'll find in the next chips - maybe a chip in a stylus. Their slogan is "enabling the wireless industry," and they've certainly done that. From satellite communications that required a computer the size of a few refrigerators to battlefield communications to shipping trucks with tracking systems to cell towers, and now the full processor on a cell phone. They've been with us since the beginning of the mobile era and one has to wonder if the next few generations of mobile technology will involve satellites, so if Qualcomm will end up right back where they began: encoding bits of information theory into silicon.
Thankyou to all the co-produces investing and supporting the showValue For Value Funding Model:https://pod.fan/transcending-explorations-with-lachlan-dunTo Share Your Time + Talents / Collab Email me: Lachlandunn23@gmail.comPRODUCT DISCOUNTSMedicinal Mushrooms And Superfoods: https://teelixir.com/ Code lachlan10StoneAge Supplement Discounts 15% Store Wide: http://www.stoneagehealth.com.au?afmc=4a10% off grounding and emf protection products : https://www.earthingoz.com.au/?ref=lachlandunnWork With Me: https://calendly.com/lachlandunn23/callConnect With Brandon:https://brandonlagreca.com/About BrandonBrandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, is a 2005 graduate of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin, and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine.Having been exposed to acupuncture at a young age, Brandon began his formal study of traditional Chinese medicine through the practice of qi gong at age 13. After the completion of his master's degree in acupuncture and Oriental medicine, he continued his education with postgraduate clinical work in Nanjing, China.In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery.Brandon created his Empowered Patient Blog to share his experience growing stronger through and beyond cancer. He now lectures and writes extensively on holistic cancer therapies.As the founder and director of East Troy Acupuncture, an integrative medical clinic serving southeast Wisconsin, Brandon specializes in whole food nutrition, ancestral health, and environmental medicine.Topics Discussed:Brandon's spiritual philosophy How Spirituality & religion are different Understanding Cancer , The bodies intelligence & what disease isTaking 100000% responsibility for your lifeTraditional Chinese Medicine perspective of diseaseThe meaning we create around illnessPerception and Mindset of diagnosisThoughts are prayersShen / IntentionSyncing the head , heart and haraWhat internal and External toxins make up common diseasesPeople negative perception of events , left unresolved and the manifestation of cancer 2years down the lineEpigenetics Modern Medicines approach to cancerCancer is a giftElectromagnetic radiation and cancer EMR and behavioral changesWhat is EMR doing and how to protect yourselfHope you guys enjoy this episode !
In this episode of Intuitively Rich Ani talked to Brandon about his cancer journey, Chinese medicine, meditation, cancer mindset, conventional vs natural medicine, and more. Brandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, is a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine. In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. Brandon is a thought leader in the synthesis of traditional and functional medicine, having written numerous articles on the subject. He is also the author of “Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself From the Silent Carcinogen of Electropollution” and “Cancer, Stress & Mindset: Focusing the Mind to Empower Healing and Resilience”. He shares his thoughts at EmpoweredPatientBlog.com. FOLLOW Brandon: Website: https://brandonlagreca.com/ Ani Rich is a Life Coach, an Embodiment Yoga Teacher, a Mother, a Podcast Host, and a Life Coach. FOLLOW Ani: Hear Ani's Story https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yWsX... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ (personal) https://www.instagram.com/ani_rich_co... Website: https://anirich.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ani-rich-... YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXAi... Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/anirichcoaching Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08VS7DG76 Much love Ani Rich --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ani-rich/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ani-rich/support
Ep#085 Fed up with fad diets and fake wellness? Christine Okezie is on a mission to guide you to approach your food and self care challenges from a genuinely "whole-istic" perspective. She's passionate about you having the right tools to understand the deeper soul truths in your health challenges so you can feel empowered in your body and in your life.While modern scientific research on the gut microbiome has exploded relatively recently, Eastern medicine has honored the power of digestion for millennia. It's so exciting to watch modern science repeatedly validating the teachings of traditional medicine.To explore the fascinating world of the gut microbiome I have on today's show, Bridgette Shea, a gifted holistic health practitioner who uses the Eastern medicine approach to help people manage and heal their gut health naturally. Her private practice based in Saratoga Springs, NY is an integration of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurvedic medicine. Bridgette is a licensed acupuncturist, author, and wellness educator who has been practicing traditional healing modalities including energy medicine, yoga, and medical QiGong for more than 20 years. She also practices and teaches Yogic and Tibetan Buddhist meditation. Bridgette is the author of two books, the Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda and Cultivating Your Microbiome, Ayurvedic and Chinese Practices for a Healthy Gut and a Clear Mind. You can learn more about her and her services at. https://www.bridgetteshea.com/Buy Her Books: https://www.bridgetteshea.com/cultivating-your-microbiomehttps://www.bridgetteshea.com/handbook-of-chinese-medicine-ayurveda
Cette semaine, Daniel Auteuil se raconte en musique "Je m'appelle Daniel Auteuil, je suis un artiste multi-risque, c'est-à-dire que je viens de l'opérette, de l'opéra, de la comédie musicale, de la comédie, de l'art dramatique et du cinéma et de la chanson. Je suis là depuis de nombreuses années, j'y suis bien et j'ai encore envie d'y rester". C'est par ces mots que Daniel Auteuil a choisi de se présenter à nous.. Alors qu'il revient sur scène avec un spectacle musical inspiré des poèmes de Paul-jean Toulet et un disque, "Si vous m'aviez connu" conçu avec la complicité de Gaëtan Roussel, Daniel Auteuil se confie sur sa relation au "4ème art".Bienvenue dans ses oreilles.TracklistLuis Mariano - Maman, la plus belle du monde G.Puccini, Maria Callas - Madame Butterfly, Act 2 “Un bel di vedremo” Extrait Feuilleton Radiophonique “La Famille Duranton”Dario Moreno - Eso Es El Amor Charles Aznavour - Ce sacré piano Johnny Hallyday - Retiens la nuit Adamo - Dolce Paola Claude Nougaro - Une Petite Fille en pleurs /Cécile ma fille/ Le cinémaComédie Musicale Godspell - Lumière du Monde Giuseppe Verdi -Jean-Claude Petit : La force du Destin (Thème de Jean de Florette)Alexandre Desplat - La Fille Perdue Georges Dellerue - Thème de CamilleDaniel Auteuil - Les Alyscamps / Que la vie me pardonne/ Le Faux monnayeurLouise Attaque - Léa Gaëtan Roussel - Les matins difficiles Tim Dup -Juste pour te plaire Gustav Mahler - Symphonie No. 5 “Adagietto” Clara Luciani - Au revoir Daniel Auteui - Les Alyscamps See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Mr. Brandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, a licensed acupuncturist, author, speaker, and holistic medical practitioner discusses the importance of digital detox for physical, mental and spiritual rejuvenation. Brandon shares about his own personal experience with cancer. Back in 2015, he was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. As a result, Brandon created his Empowered Patient Blog to share his experience growing stronger through and beyond cancer. There is an increasing amount of patients he has seen over the last year with elevated stress levels. This stress is overwhelmingly the result of fear and the overuse of digital devices and social media. He offers some simple solutions and ways to measure the overuse of electronics. He is a 2005 graduate of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin, and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine. As the founder and director of East Troy Acupuncture, an integrative medical clinic serving southeast Wisconsin, Brandon specializes in whole food nutrition, ancestral health, and environmental medicine. https://www.facebook.com/EmpoweredPatientBlog/ https://brandonlagreca.com/blog/ https://www.easttroyacupuncture.com/shop/
Welcome back to the Queer Circle Podcast where queer healers come to the mic to share their journeys and what they'd tell their younger selves. Today's guest is Jamee Pineda (he/him/siya). He is a queer, nonbinary, trans person with Tagalog and Chinoy ancestry living on Piscataway Territory (Baltimore, MD). He practices Hilot and Chinese medicine in virtual formats which include classes, workshops, and on-on-one sessions. Jamee graduated with an MPA from The Evergreen State College in 2008 and a MAcOM from the Seattle Institute of East Asian Medicine in 2015. He was initiated into the practice of hilot at the Hilot Academy of Binabaylan by Apu Adman and Lakay Magbaya in 2020 (with ongoing mentorship). Currently he is in his first year of Witch School with Ylvadroma Marzanna Radziszewski. To learn more about Jamee's work, check out his website Jamee-pineda-lac.com or his instagram @jameepinedahealingarts. QueerCirclePodcast.com Music by Purple Fluorite (Bandcamp // or all the streaming platforms)
Acupuncturist and wellness expert, Bridgette Shea, join me to talk about her new book Cultivating Your Microbiome: Ayurvedic and Chinese Practices for a Healthy Gut and a Clear Mind. In traditional medicine, such as Indian Ayurveda and Chinese medicine, the digestive system and microbiome are recognized as the foundation for good health. Our internal flora influences our immune system, brain function, hormonal balance, cravings, sleep, mood, inflammatory response, digestion, nutrient assimilation, and elimination. Gut Health is more than prebiotics and probiotics Going beyond probiotics and prebiotics, Shea presents Ayurveda and Chinese medicine practices to reestablish balance in your internal microbiome, support the mesentery, improve digestion and elimination, and restore a clear mind and strong immune system. She explains how to read your symptoms, from brain fog to fatigue to congestion and stool quality, and offers herbal remedies, acupuncture, and acupressure techniques, and dietary methods to improve your internal health, including a microbiome dietary reset. We talk about Defining the microbiomeClear definition of inflammationThe tongue shows our true healthSesame and coconut oil pulling Why Himalayan salt is the only salt you needThe importance of using whole food oils that are not processedNeeding sweet and salty in every mealDetoxify with breathingFungus, virus, and yeastMetabolitesHandwashingPrebiotics and probiotics are they really needed?Autoimmune diseasePhlegm is really a misting of the mind and how to avoid thisTaste and digestion Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, is a licensed acupuncturist and wellness educator who has been practicing traditional healing modalities for more than 20 years. Her private practice integrates Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine, and she enjoys teaching workshops on Eastern wisdom. She is also the author of Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda and lives in Saratoga Springs, NY. www.bridgetteshea.com
This week, we "take the plunge" into the mikvah, a Jewish ritual bath, by speaking with Jocelyn Schorvitz, the executive director of MACoM: Metro Atlanta Community Mikvah. Learn about this community mikvah, the ways people re-imagine the ritual, and ways you can visit MACoM. For more information, please visit atlantamikvah.org.
𝐄𝐩𝐢𝐬𝐨𝐝𝐢𝐨 𝟓𝟒. 𝐍𝐞𝐮𝐫𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐤𝐞𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠. 𝐄𝐦𝐨𝐜𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐚 𝐜𝐨𝐧 𝐞𝐥 𝐏𝐚𝐜𝐤𝐚𝐠𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐝𝐞 𝐭𝐮 𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐝𝐮𝐜𝐭𝐨. Hoy Víctor Borrás el CMO de Knauf Industries España tiene como invitado a David Juárez, director responsable de equipo MACOM en Universitat Politècnica de València. David alterna su tiempo entre la docencia, la investigación y la consultoría en marketing, neuromarketing, marketing digital y neuroventas. También es speaker en jornadas y talleres. TEDx speaker. Han tratado, entre otros, temas tan interesante como: ✇ Que tecnología se esconde detrás del neuromarketing. ✇ Aprende a emocionar con el packaging de tu producto para huir de la venta por precio. ✇ Como influye el color de tu packaging en distintas culturas. Empezamos.
𝐄𝐩𝐢𝐬𝐨𝐝𝐢𝐨 𝟓𝟒. 𝐍𝐞𝐮𝐫𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐤𝐞𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠. 𝐄𝐦𝐨𝐜𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐚 𝐜𝐨𝐧 𝐞𝐥 𝐏𝐚𝐜𝐤𝐚𝐠𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐝𝐞 𝐭𝐮 𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐝𝐮𝐜𝐭𝐨. Hoy Víctor Borrás el CMO de Knauf Industries España tiene como invitado a David Juárez, director responsable de equipo MACOM en Universitat Politècnica de València. David alterna su tiempo entre la docencia, la investigación y la consultoría en marketing, neuromarketing, marketing digital y neuroventas. También es speaker en jornadas y talleres. TEDx speaker. Han tratado, entre otros, temas tan interesante como: ✇ Que tecnología se esconde detrás del neuromarketing. ✇ Aprende a emocionar con el packaging de tu producto para huir de la venta por precio. ✇ Como influye el color de tu packaging en distintas culturas. Empezamos.
5:30 Interview- Alyssa Heron & Ashley Macom. We talk a lot about cheerleading with these two HSHS Seniors and members of the Cheerleading team. They discuss the best parts of cheering, how competition cheer differs from supporting school teams, some great cheer movies and tv shows, and why cheerleading definitely is a sport. We also give out a lot of great plugs for Alyssa's clothing business (www.anhapparel.com) 27:30 Game- Cheerleader Would You Rather. Alyssa and Ashley have to answer some tough cheering related questions choosing between Rhodes and Will and a few more tough questions about potentially cheertastrophic situations. 37:10 Dating Advice- We workshop some lines for Will for the socially distanced speed dating event that he is attending this weekend. Is hosting a podcast the first or the last thing that he should tell his dates at this event?
Special Guest Bridgette Shea Discusses Her New Book, Cultivating Your Microbiome: Ayurvedic and Chinese Practices for a Healthy Gut and a Clear Mind. In this holistic guide to cultivating a healthy microbiome, Bridgette Shea explores digestive functioning from the perspectives of Western science and traditional medicine. She examines Ayurvedic principles on digestion and constitution types and reveals how, in addition to describing what we now call the microbiome, traditional Chinese Medicine has long recognized the importance of an adominal organ that modern science has only recently acknowledged, the mesentery, the tissues that connect and support the internal organs. Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, is a licensed acupuncturist, energy healer, writer, public speaker, and wellness educator who has been practicing traditional modalities for more than 20 years. Her private practice involves the integration of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine, and she teaches workshops on energy medicine, and healthy breathing. She's the author of Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda. Her book can be found at: https://www.innertraditions.com/books/cultivating-your-microbiome
Special Guest Bridgette Shea Discusses Her New Book, Cultivating Your Microbiome: Ayurvedic and Chinese Practices for a Healthy Gut and a Clear Mind. In this holistic guide to cultivating a healthy microbiome, Bridgette Shea explores digestive functioning from the perspectives of Western science and traditional medicine. She examines Ayurvedic principles on digestion and constitution types and reveals how, in addition to describing what we now call the microbiome, traditional Chinese Medicine has long recognized the importance of an adominal organ that modern science has only recently acknowledged, the mesentery, the tissues that connect and support the internal organs. Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, is a licensed acupuncturist, energy healer, writer, public speaker, and wellness educator who has been practicing traditional modalities for more than 20 years. Her private practice involves the integration of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine, and she teaches workshops on energy medicine, and healthy breathing. She's the author of Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda. Her book can be found at: https://www.innertraditions.com/books/cultivating-your-microbiome
Brandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, is a 2005 graduate of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin, and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine (NCCAOM). He lives and works in East Troy, Wisconsin, where he directs an integrative medical clinic. Brandon is a thought leader in the synthesis of traditional and functional medicine, having written numerous articles on the subject. He is the author of the book “Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself from the Silent Carcinogen of Electropollution”. In this episode, Dr LaGreca shares his own story with cancer and how that one diagnosis shifted his and his family's world. His ability to use his knowledge and tools helped him become cancer free within 8 months of his diagnosis. Drs Nick and Sonya Jensen get into the story behind the diagnosis. The causes, the emotions, the fears. Taking a deeper dive into our environmental toxins, including EMFs. What they do to our bodies, how we can reduce our exposure, and some tools you can implement today to support your wellbeing. Find more information on Brandon LaGreca below: https://brandonlagreca.com/
Brandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, is a 2005 graduate of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin, and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine. Having been exposed to acupuncture at a young age, Brandon began his formal study of traditional Chinese medicine through the practice of qi gong at age 13. After the completion of his master's degree in acupuncture and Oriental medicine, he continued his education with postgraduate clinical work in Nanjing, China.In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. Brandon created his Empowered Patient Blog to share his experience growing stronger through and beyond cancer. He now lectures and writes extensively on holistic cancer therapies and is a columnist for Acupuncture Today. He is also the author of Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself from the Silent Carcinogen of Electropollution.As the founder and director of East Troy Acupuncture, an integrative medical clinic serving southeast Wisconsin, Brandon specializes in whole food nutrition, ancestral health, and environmental medicine. For more information on Brandon, visit his website at https://brandonlagreca.com/For more episodes of Evolve, find us on iTunes at https://apple.co/2NpsIba, Spotify at https://spoti.fi/2NpSiN0, Acast at https://play./s/pete-evans, click the link on https://peteevans.com, or just look up "Evolve" in your favourite podcast app. I'd love to spread the knowledge in these podcasts far and wide. If you liked this episode, I'd love it if you could share it with your friends, and perhaps even leave a review on iTunes. This podcast is proudly presented by The Institute For Integrative Nutrition, or IIN for short.I've completed this amazing health training course through IIN, and I would thoroughly recommend it for anyone wanting to start a career in the health coaching and wellness space.This course is conducted over a year long period and it's constructed in a way that if you're a full time worker or a busy parent or wherever you are in your life will still be able to complete all the required curriculum and modules. Please see the link included in this post on my Facebook or Instagram page or on iTunes, to access the free sample class and first module of the program, to get a great taste of the format and structure as well as utilise my special discount that I can offer you if you decide to sign up.Make sure you tell the admission team that you're part of the Pete Evans tuition savings to claim your very substantial discount visit https://www.integrativenutrition.com Theme music by Mandharu. See /privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Join us from home for season 4, episode 2 with the following guests: Health: Amy BabbL.Ac. MAcOM- https://www.rootsofrenewalacupuncture.com/ From Amy: I am a licensed Acupuncturist and Chinese Herbal Medicine practitioner living in NWA for the past two years. Since 2009, I traveled with the wholistic tools of Oriental Medicine from Texas to Nepal, Oklahoma, Colorado, and Washington, D.C., bearing witness to thousands of people experiencing full relief of their ailments or a ss ignificant reduction in symptoms. I have seen numerous people use this medicine to live happily without the need for stronger interventions like pharmaceuticals and surgery. I have successfully worked with people on a variety of health issues ranging from post-stroke recovery to chronic urinary tract infections, fertility and irregular menstruation issues, weakened or hyper immune function, depression, anxiety, insomnia, chronic fatigue, digestive issues, post-radiation recovery and all types of physical pain I have a passion for helping people discover the root cause of a condition to promote healing and optimum wellness in mind, body, emotions, and spirit. I provide a calm meditative space for us to discover what your system needs and I believe that deep healing comes with joy and love. Green Zone- Rev. Dana Bland Rev. Dana is a decorated Veteran, nurse and cannabis patient. He had invented a bled of essential oils that seem to help with neuropathy. Here is the link to the product: https://www.alicecbd.com/product-page/neuro-soothe-roll-on Simple Conversations- Leilani Law https://www.studioleilani.com/index.html Leilani, a native of the Colorado Rockies earned a BFA from the School of the Art Institute/Chicago in 1986. Since that time she has been a passionate advocate for the arts through her active roles as studio artist, art instructor, art based business owner, and a producer of art events. Leilani regards herself primarily as a painter but her creative investigations have involved printmaking, sculpture, and mixed-media. Using art installation as a forum she has also created site-specific temporary public art pieces as well as gallery installations. Her artwork has been shown in solo and group exhibitions and resides in private collections throughout the United States. She has had gallery representation in the past but is currently self represented. Leilani has taught workshops and classes in art for children, adults, other artists and educators for the past 25 years. She has created curriculum and developed programs for public and private organizations and institutions. Music- Dominic B. Roy From Dominic: I am a Folk/Folk Rock/Rock/Oldies Singer-Songwriter based out of Siloam Springs, AR. I have traveled and played music all across Northwest Arkansas. As a professional musician, I sing with heartfelt vocals that correspond with well written original songs & Tasteful covers are always a crowd favorite because the audience is always singing along. Sponsors: 131 Inclusion Gallery https://www.facebook.com/131inclusion/ Karas Healthcare https://karashealthcare.com/ Buffalo Co https://www.getbuffaloco.com/ NWA Natural Living https://www.facebook.com/nwanaturallivingllc/ Lit Smoking Supplies https://www.litsmokingsupplies.com/ Alice CBD https://www.alicecbd.com/ Highlands Residential Mortgage https://www.facebook.com/LynseyCampMortgage/ Purely Natural CBD https://purelynaturalonline.com/ Back to Balance Wellness and Massage https://www.facebook.com/backtobalancepg/ Credits: This show is created by, written and produced by Wendy Love Edge and Topher Kogen Production consultant and cameras- Angela Edge Cameras- Adrian Sturdevant and Robyn Adair House Band- The Buds Derek Wieand, Sarah Loethen, Tanner Mackey, and Mike Kinkle Editing: Flint Woods Booking - Mikekinklebooking@gmail.com Intro music- Will Brand --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thewendyloveedgeshow/support
Brandon LaGreca, LAc, MAcOM, is a 2005 graduate of the Oregon College of Oriental Medicine, a licensed acupuncturist in the state of Wisconsin, and nationally certified in the practice of Oriental medicine. Having been exposed to acupuncture at a young age, Brandon began his formal study of traditional Chinese medicine through the practice of qi gong at age 13. After the completion of his master’s degree in acupuncture and Oriental medicine, he continued his education with postgraduate clinical work in Nanjing, China.In 2015, Brandon was diagnosed with stage 4 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He achieved full remission eight months later by following an integrative medicine protocol that included immunotherapy without the use of chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery. Brandon created his Empowered Patient Blog to share his experience growing stronger through and beyond cancer. He now lectures and writes extensively on holistic cancer therapies and is a columnist for Acupuncture Today. He is also the author of Cancer and EMF Radiation: How to Protect Yourself from the Silent Carcinogen of Electropollution.As the founder and director of East Troy Acupuncture, an integrative medical clinic serving southeast Wisconsin, Brandon specializes in whole food nutrition, ancestral health, and environmental medicine. For more information on Brandon, visit his website at https://brandonlagreca.com/For more episodes of Evolve, find us on iTunes at https://apple.co/2NpsIba, Spotify at https://spoti.fi/2NpSiN0, Acast at https://play.acast.com/s/pete-evans, click the link on https://peteevans.com, or just look up "Evolve" in your favourite podcast app. I'd love to spread the knowledge in these podcasts far and wide. If you liked this episode, I'd love it if you could share it with your friends, and perhaps even leave a review on iTunes. This podcast is proudly presented by The Institute For Integrative Nutrition, or IIN for short.I've completed this amazing health training course through IIN, and I would thoroughly recommend it for anyone wanting to start a career in the health coaching and wellness space.This course is conducted over a year long period and it's constructed in a way that if you're a full time worker or a busy parent or wherever you are in your life will still be able to complete all the required curriculum and modules. Please see the link included in this post on my Facebook or Instagram page or on iTunes, to access the free sample class and first module of the program, to get a great taste of the format and structure as well as utilise my special discount that I can offer you if you decide to sign up.Make sure you tell the admission team that you're part of the Pete Evans tuition savings to claim your very substantial discount visit https://www.integrativenutrition.com Theme music by Mandharu. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dr Zieve explores the idea of treating the root causes of illness with colleague and herbalist Jason Miller of Jade Mountain Medicine.Jason Miller, Lac, MAcOM, CH, CAK, specializes in the management of cancer, diabetes, and neuromuscular disorders, applying techniques and knowledge gained over years of study worldwide. He also serves as product specialist for Natura Health Products, Inc. where he offers consultations and technical support for Natura's professional clients. Jason is also a member of the Natura Board of Directors, and is on the Scientific Advisory Board of the Mederi Foundation. Read more at www.mederifoundation.org. If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element
Curious about what Acupuncture does for the body? Did you know that there are certain points on your body that help you feel more relaxed? Join Mel Afflerbach and special guest Sarah Ellen, a MAcOM, L.Ac. acupuncturist, herbalist, energy healer, and business owner of Mood Minded on this episode of acupuncture, oils, & Magnesium Balm ( that will change how you relax). Get ready to learn some hippie dippy topics and feel inspired to do more self care!!! Sarah Ellen IG: @moodminded Website: www.moodminded.com
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude review the Nov issue products, industry news for mergers/5G and event plans for next year. Sponsored by MACOM.
Matt Dorsey, BSc, MAcOM, LAc of East-West Alchemist and Peoples Rx, joins us to talk about combining Eastern and Western philosophies, biohacking, as well as his amazing and free drug induced nutrient depletion resource found here! cultivatewellnesspodcast.com @cultivatewellnesspodcast Always brought to you by Peoples Rx, Austin's Favorite Pharmacy!
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude review the technical features in the Nov Gov't & Military Electronics issue, 5G/China news and EDI CON Online/AOC events. Sponsored by MACOM.
April Yanda returns for the first episode to hit Youtube! April and I discuss bizarre Donald Trump stories, American Horror Story, aliens, hamster sized whales and much more!
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude review the Oct Passive and Control Components issue products, mobile/5G news and MWC Los Angeles event. Sponsored by MACOM.
In this episode, Steven Barrett and I recount the 3 weeks we spent together on a work trip in Fort Smith, Arkansas. We tell all of our crazy stories from getting a glock drawn on us to being chased by homeless people! In-between our wild stories we talk about the Joker movie and much more!
Jake Mesa and I met at a Hideaway. I wait tables and he makes my salads :). After months of chit-chat and banter in-between tables and salads, he put in his two weeks :(. This episode kinda serves as his memoir and final goodbye to the Hideaway gang. BUT, that's not all this episode is about, we cover Twitch streaming, movies, Pacsun, and much, much, more :)
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude discuss the Sept issue articles including high voltage GaN, 5G news and EuMW/EDI CON Online events. Sponsored by MACOM.
Will Lemons is a nomadic dude who lives his life moment to moment which has caused him to accumulate a ton of stories and life experiences. Will tells the tales of partying with strippers, being under attack by hackers, and even throwing an outrageous, Project X-style block party! In between his stories, he gives his insight on Star Wars, Disney Plus, work drama, and much more! Check him out on snapchat: will_lemons12
April Yanda is a writer, film student, and fashion enthusiast. She discusses her travels from staying at the most haunted hotel in America to a junkyard school bus in the middle of a Colorado desert. In between stories, April gives her opinions and thoughts on Sugar daddies, art, brogurt, weight loss, and so much more. Her newest project is a clothing page on depop.com, which you can visit here: www.instagram.com/daysan_ www.depop.com/AprilYanda www.Instagram.com/yxanda
In our first episode of Qi Time Kathy Taromina, Academic Dean, had the opportunity to interview Lisa Taylor-Swanson at the 2019 meeting of the Society for Acupuncture Research (SAR) about the WA State research trial that helped expand acupuncture coverage for injured workers. Lisa Taylor-Swanson, PhD, MAcOM, LAc, is a graduate of Seattle Institute of East Asian Medicine (MAcOM, 2001) and the University of Washington School of Nursing (PhD, 2015).
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude review the March Test & Measurement issue articles with a focus on 5G OTA Testing plus coverage of MWC19 that took place in Barcelona. Sponsored by MACOM
Microwave Journal editors Pat Hindle and Gary Lerude discuss the technical features in the Feb High Frequency Components and PCBs issue, 5G/smartphone news and DesignCon/MWC events. Sponsored by MACOM.
Guest: Andrea Shaw Nevins Age: 53 Location: Fort Lauderdale, FL Bio: Andrea Shaw Nevins is a life coach, an academic, and a motivational blogger. She completed the Martha Beck Life Coach Training Program and offers a range of services and products that support people on the path to boundless possibilities. She is also a professor, chair of the Department of History and Political Science, and assistant dean for academic affairs in the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences at Nova Southeastern University. She is the author of The Embodiment of Disobedience: Fat Black Women's Unruly Political Bodies. Her forthcoming book Working Juju: Representations of the Caribbean Fantastic will be published by the University of Georgia Press in 2019. Her fiction, as well as her scholarly writing, have been published in numerous journals, including Small Axe, World Literature Today, MaComére, The Caribbean Writer, Crab Orchard Review, Feminist Media Studies, and Social Semiotics. She graduated from the University of Miami with a Ph.D. in English and from Florida International University with an M.F.A in creative writing. The World Needs More: 1. Embracing of fear and disappointment as guides to our paths. WOW factor: ability to help folks reconceptualize of their lives and believe in new possibilities. Moments: My transition from being a struggling small business owner to a student immersed in the passionate study of English and the way how everything on my path rose up to meet me. Favorite Color: Purple
Bridgette's love of ancient healing practices started with a trip to the Healing Temple of Aesklepios in Old Epidaurus, Greece in 1992. Having had a meaningful dream life since an early age, finding the Asklepion dream healing temple complex was life changing. It opened a new door that connected dreaming not only with the occult sciences but with healing as a whole. Since then, Bridgette has been studying, practicing, and sharing ancient healing wisdom and how it can be used in our modern times. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Asian Studies with a minor in Communications from SUNY Albany, and her Master’s from Seattle Institute of Oriental Medicine. While working on her MAcOM, she received extensive training in acupuncture, herbal medicine, and translation of Chinese medical and Taoist texts. Prior to this, Bridgette travelled through India studying yoga, Sanskrit, pranayama, and meditation. Since the mid nineties she has been studying and teaching energy healing and transformational bodywork. Bridgette lives with her family in Saratoga Springs, NY. When she is not spending quality time at home, working in her private practice Ageless Acupuncture, or writing, she is teaching workshops on energy medicine, healthy breathing, and the wisdom contained in living traditional medicines. https://www.bridgetteshea.com/
Join Dr. Karen as she interviews Alexa Gilmore, LAc, MAcOM, LIVE, on how to understand skin health and skin dis-ease according to Chinese medicine practices. In this dynamic presentation you will learn: -the basics of maintaining healthy skin -several self-care rituals to support your skin, skin health, and healthy aging -foods to help you age well -how your current food choices may be impacting your skin health And also that: …you have options! There is more than one way to treat your skin concern(s). …you have agency! You need not be held hostage by the whims of your skin disease—or any disease. …how your skin is reflecting your broader health, and you’ll leave with a better understanding of what it’s trying to tell you. Alexa Gilmore is a vitality warrior who takes a stand for your fullest potential. As an acupuncturist, Chinese herbalist, bodyworker, and coach, she takes a no-nonsense approach to the healing arts and expects positive outcomes: function rebalanced, harmony restored, resilience renewed. She welcomes guests from around the county to her clinic in Portland, Maine, where she specializes in chronic illness, women’s health, and skin disease. Her passion is to use optimal health as a vehicle for personal transformation. For more of Alexa's work, visit http://www.atxacu.com and http://www.atxskin.com.
Jason Interviews Author Bridgette Shea, Author of the Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda. Her book provides a comprehensive reference tool for maximizing healing of the mind, body, and spirit through a holistic synergy of Chinese medicine and Ayurveda Shea details the foundational principles of each tradition and the many concepts they share, such as qi and prana, meridians and nadis, and energy centers and chakras. She provides tools for self-assessment including a primer on tongue diagnosis and a mental, emotional, and physical constitutional questionnaire Her book offers breathing exercises, dietary regimens, herbal recommendations, and guides for detoxification, including safe and gentle at-home cleansing Chinese medicine and Ayurveda are two of the oldest healing systems in use today. Each is a complete art, in and of itself, and has profoundly contributed to the health and well-being of millions of people around the world. Drawing on their shared roots and spiritual principles, Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, shows how these two practices integrate seamlessly, with the two traditions' individual strengths harmonizing to form a practical basis for prevention, wellness, detoxification, and treatment. Sharing case studies that highlight the interconnectedness of these approaches, Shea provides a comprehensive guide for self-healing of body, mind, and spirit and a practitioner's resource to cross-reference complex questions with respect to both healing traditions.
Jason Interviews Author Bridgette Shea, Author of the Handbook of Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda. Her book provides a comprehensive reference tool for maximizing healing of the mind, body, and spirit through a holistic synergy of Chinese medicine and Ayurveda Shea details the foundational principles of each tradition and the many concepts they share, such as qi and prana, meridians and nadis, and energy centers and chakras. She provides tools for self-assessment including a primer on tongue diagnosis and a mental, emotional, and physical constitutional questionnaire Her book offers breathing exercises, dietary regimens, herbal recommendations, and guides for detoxification, including safe and gentle at-home cleansing Chinese medicine and Ayurveda are two of the oldest healing systems in use today. Each is a complete art, in and of itself, and has profoundly contributed to the health and well-being of millions of people around the world. Drawing on their shared roots and spiritual principles, Bridgette Shea, L.Ac., MAcOM, shows how these two practices integrate seamlessly, with the two traditions’ individual strengths harmonizing to form a practical basis for prevention, wellness, detoxification, and treatment. Sharing case studies that highlight the interconnectedness of these approaches, Shea provides a comprehensive guide for self-healing of body, mind, and spirit and a practitioner’s resource to cross-reference complex questions with respect to both healing traditions.
(Bloomberg) -- Taking Stock with Kathleen Hays and Pimm Fox. GUEST: John Croteau, CEO of semiconductor company Macom, on their 5G wireless technologies, and powering the fiber optic networks for the "cloud" economy.
Chiropractor Chris McNeil Discusses Disc Treatment and Therapies in Latest Podcast Lower back pain is an incredibly common ailment today and one which drives people to chiropractors for help in treating. There are multiple reasons for lower back pain, such as: sprains, Spondylolisthesis, injury, skeletal irregularity, herniated discs, and sciatica. This is by no means a comprehensive list. Spinal issues can stem from a wide range of causes and conditions, including tumors, which is why it is so important to seek diagnosis from a medical professional rather than allowing self-medication or self-treatment to go on indefinitely. This is the topic of the latest of Dr. Chris McNeil's Chiropractic podcasts, one where he explains the causes of back pain and addresses some of the disc treatment options available for those who have these symptoms. “Discs are a shock absorber,” says McNeil. “They play a vital role in how the body functions. Having a nice plump disc is essential to a healthy body and nervous system. When people experience disc issues it can disrupt their whole life. I wanted to get this information out so that people understand that even if they've tried more conventional therapies we have had a great deal of breakthrough in our treatment practice. Chiropractic medicine has really grown even in the time that I have been practicing. We are always finding new ways of addressing pain and issues in our patients and sharing these modalities with each other to create a web of information that can be applied to instances in our own practice. This latest podcast was informative about what causes disc issues and some of the approaches that I use in my own Detroit chiropractic clinic to deal with those.” Dr. Chris McNeil Macomb Township Chiropractic Clinic Director explains in the podcast that the typical physician approach to back injury is to mask the symptoms with pain pills, which does little but prevent people from seeing how bad the condition is deteriorating. The approach used by chiropractors at the Metro Detroit Chiropractors Clinics is to perform non-surgical disc decompression therapy. They use a special table that gently tractions the bones in the spine that causes a negative vacuum or a negative suction that over time pulls that disc material that disc matter back in and pull more nutrients into the disc and help the disc heal. Other treatments include: cold laser, hot laser, ultrasound, micro stimulation, modified vibration therapy, heat and ice massage, and chiropractic adjustments. Research has shown that 85% of the patients who use this therapy have what they listed as “favorable results.” For more information on this treatment or the podcast visit: http://chrismcneilchiropractic.com/
Discuss the Afsaneh Art and Cultural Society, which celebrates Central Asian art in the Bay AreaTRANSCRIPTSpeaker 1:Okay. [inaudible] Speaker 2:essentially, Asia is the crossroads of the world and for many centuries was the main trade route between Europe and Asia because of the influences of so many cultures. The art that was emanated from that region is astounding. From dance to music, [00:00:30] to science, to literature, poetry. There's a long and rich tradition of essential Asian art today with us. We have Charlene Sawyer, the founder of Asana Arts and Cultural Society, a nonprofit that has been celebrating Central Asian culture in the bay area for over 30 years. Stay with us. Speaker 3:So Charlene, first, um, tell us a little, Speaker 4:what about kind of your background [00:01:00] and how you came to, um, the appreciation of central Asian culture. Speaker 3:Wow. It's a, it's kind of a, you, you can't predict where you're going to fall in love. And I fell in love with Central Asian, uh, specifically Persian music when I was quite young. And in fact my parents were here, uh, in Berkeley. I grew up mostly in Berkeley and we had friends that were from that part of the world. [00:01:30] Uh, we're just, we're just so lucky here in the bay area. I mean really we are so lucky. And it, you know, in my early childhood we had friends, we'd go over to dinner and someone would whip out a Centaur and a violin and everybody would be singing, taking turns singing their favorite songs. And I was just enamored of the music and it followed me. It was just that was it. I was smitten. So from an early age [00:02:00] you were exposed and it was love. It was just for the love of, yeah, love at first, listen. And then as a dance artist, which is what I, that was my path in life, I became more immersed in dances of this region and more immersed in the culture and the history and being kind of a history buff, I really got excited about the inner reaction, the interactions of cultures along this enormous area of your Asia, [00:02:30] which had informed, you know, so much of your, our European culture. And it was just a lifelong learning experience that continues to this day. Speaker 4:Yeah, it is. It's such the crossroads of the world. And so amazing when you see the people from that part of the world, the features that they have, the really, really come from all four corners of the globe. They can, you know, these incredible green eyes you can have is Yannick features are just, it's so incredible. And people see the Buddhist statues in that part of the world. Speaker 3:They [00:03:00] look different from other parts of, you know, eastern Asia, Buddhist type statues. They have all these different features just to make, take the makeup of the gene pool. That's the incredible, that's their other constantly, it's like somebody described it like the roundabout of your Asia that like Afghanistan and bacteria was Becca's Don Tajikistan, uh, parts of Iran. We're, we're kind of like where all of the traffic came together and started to circle and it was this incredible diversity [00:03:30] of, of cultures and peoples that makes it in that area. Very, very a multiethnic. Yeah. Yeah. So you had a love for it and you have a dance background. Tell us a little bit about that. Well, like every, every good young girl pretty much. And in America, I was able to take ballet and modern dance and just all the advantages as far as dance goes. Speaker 3:And also world dance, which was offered here by various people who were from various parts of the [00:04:00] world. And that took African dance and Flamenco and uh, Middle Eastern dance and uh, folk dance of Bulgaria, the Balkans, you just everything. I was just soaking it up like a sponge. Uh, I started performing as a performing artist when I was maybe 12 years old and then started directing dance companies at about the age of 18. So ballet of Sauna. The grew out of that experience and my deep love for [00:04:30] this particular region of the world. And uh, I formed that company in 1986 in, uh, in a very interesting time as far as, you know, the politics of that part of the world went and my friends who are in the Persian community, it's a very, you know, Post Revolutionary Post Islamic revolution and a lot of, uh, a lot of people in the community were very, uh, there was a lot of profiling that was going on at that time. Speaker 3:And it was very [00:05:00] important to have some kind of, uh, self-expression that could also be a universal language for, for others in, you know, the general population to know more about their culture rather than, you know, what's behind the headlines. Interesting. But it's the Berkeley girl that started and not a lot of Iranian, well, you know, it was interesting. We, there were several Iranians who, who have, uh, been in the dance world and were here either in Los Angeles [00:05:30] or in California or would pass through. But there are other concerns, you know, when you're a recent immigrant who's coming to terms with, oh, well, I guess we're staying here for a while. Perhaps dance and the arts are not the first thing on your mind. Uh, so we were able to work with some of those dancers that were from, from Iran and had, you know, had learning that they had brought with them and also musicians who are here in the area and to start [00:06:00] to save and reconstruct and preserve and also to innovate, uh, in that genre. Speaker 3:And then became quickly aware that it was impossible to separate along national borders. The dance traditions or the music traditions or the cultural traditions of literature of this region, because the borders are really arbitrary. Yes. And relatively [00:06:30] recent politically speaking of we're, we see that there's some unifying factors. You know, you see Persian poetry in north India and you see Persian poetry in Istanbul, you see in Asia minor, you see Persian poetry and in Cairo, I mean these are, these are unifying forces. You see McCombs systems that are very similar in western China or what is called western China now, which [00:07:00] could be called Turkistan depending on which, which aspect you're, you're looking at. Uh, but those MACOM systems are fairly similar all the way through the entire Eurasian area that we're, we're interested in. Speaker 4:And it's so interesting that you said that you started it in somewhat in response to the revolutionary times of the 80s, but it's almost more even more relevant now with the beat of drum [00:07:30] going on. The, the, the war drums beating Iran, Afghanistan has been in chaos for over 30 years. Um, and you know, it's, it's so relevant to bring the beauty of that part of the world to this part of the world so that people can understand that there's more to those people than what you see on CNN or you know, the kind of the gory headlines that we, Speaker 3:right. It's hard to vilify someone whose music moves you or whose dance [00:08:00] is you're responding to the art and the culture and the history. It's a little hard to vilify that, that other as the other. Uh, and that's been kind of my subversive nature, you know, being at Berkeley, a good Berkeley girl, and having grown up with a family that it was all about social justice and civil rights and that this just tended to be my path. Speaker 4:You're listening to k a l x Berkeley 90.7 FM. This is method to the madness, a 30 minutes [00:08:30] show by the innovative spirit of the bay area. And I'm your host Ali Nasar. Thanks for listening. Today we're visiting with Charlene Sawyer, the founder and director of ballet off Santa and the off center arts and Cultural Society. We've been talking about Central Asian art and the beauty of it. I'm a big fan. My family's from there, have heritage there. Speaker 3:It's been a wonderful journey and I don't think I could have chosen to do anything else. It was almost [00:09:00] like, you know, the hand of fate grabbed you by the collar and pulls you along. Speaker 4:So let's talk about a little bit about, um, the performances that you guys do. And so you have yearly performances, you have a schedule. How many of you performances on your a year on average do you, do you do? Speaker 3:Yeah, we average about 18 to 20 public performances a year. Some of those are very small. Might be one, one solo, uh, artists at, uh, a community gathering or it might be [00:09:30] a 30 artists at of a large festival event or I think we went and did a New York, uh, parade out in New York for the awry, the Persian New Year parade. And we brought 30 dancers out for that. And it's a collaborating through the year. We do university performances. We've gone to the British Museum in London, so we're traveling quite a bit as well, uh, with the professional ensemble. [00:10:00] And then we have more of a community participatory group. Uh, ethnic dance festival has been a mainstay of our year for, for many, many years. I think I was performing myself and the first festival and uh, Speaker 4:yeah, I attended that a couple of years ago. Tell the audience a little bit about the ethnic dance festival. It's a really wonderful event. Speaker 3:Oh my God. There's nothing like it anywhere in the world. This is a festival that brings the enormous wealth of multicultural bay area ethnicities [00:10:30] that have all of these amazing groups that are either PR professional, pre-professional, or just folks getting together very high caliber work that's being turned out. And these are local northern California groups or specifically bay area. There are over, there are over 150 artists, most festivals. And it goes for three or four weekends in San Francisco. Uh, usually the palace of [00:11:00] fine arts, but they've started doing performances in other locations here. But Bueno, uh, at this point this year. And that takes place in June. And it's just, it's been a, a huge asset for San Francisco to help develop these diverse dance groups, specifically focused on dance. Interestingly enough, the media here has taken notice and it's very popular, but it took somebody from New York [00:11:30] doing a review of it to finally wake people up. You know, he was, uh, McCauley did this wonderful reviews, like where else, but San Francisco could you find this? And it's just, it's really not to be missed. Speaker 4:Yeah, it's breathtaking. I mean, you literally, it's every part of the world seems to be, you know, represented. So you'll be sitting there and you'll see a dance from Africa and you'll see one from China. [inaudible] Speaker 3:Korea. Yeah. Tycho I all over Asia. I mean, it's just the entire [00:12:00] world. And I, I like to think of San Francisco barrier is kind of kind of like a, uh, a city on the Silk Road and the old, the old historic Silk Road. It's, it's almost that this is now, you know, one of those cities, one of those diverse cities where the exchange of ideas and the, the fantastic sparking of new new culture and new flavor becomes, becomes possible with that diversity. Speaker 4:Yeah, that's [00:12:30] very much what my show is about is about the innovative spirit of the bay. And I think a lot of it is because of that, you know, the melting pot that we have here and, and there's so many different cultures represented and that's the promise of America. But I think the bay area being a very progressive place and more accepting, I think that there's a lot more celebration of those differences here or there might be in other parts of the country. Speaker 3:Yeah. I, I start to get that feeling as we travel, you know, and we oftentimes we're asked and you know, [00:13:00] in the old days it used to be asked here in the bay area, well, Joan, you're, you're doing dances from Iran and dances from Afghanistan. How come you guys aren't, you know, covered up when some kind of Burka situation, you know, I was like, well, you know, all these places are not all like that. You know, it's a very diverse area and there's a process of education that goes on and we still get those questions in, in many areas. Oh really? They play music is very interesting. Speaker 4:Yeah. [00:13:30] I'm not just music, beautiful music, a long history, a long tradition of music. Speaker 3:Amazing and, and very eclectic. You, you have everything from these very rough sounding, very rural, uh, rural pieces to this highly refined, highly developed, very, uh, ambitious compositionally. Uh, the, the mathematics, the sciences, the what, what we don't know about as a, as general American speaking as a general American [00:14:00] about the history and the contribution of that particular region of the world to world science, culture, religion, art. It's beyond, it's beyond measure. We, we know so little and it's high time that we know. Speaker 4:Yeah. Yeah, definitely. I think, you know, I always tell people about, um, then, you know, during the dark ages of, of Europe, this is, this is the part of the world I'd kept [00:14:30] the, the light of flame, a lot of the Greek knowledge came through, was transferred over and a Persian because that's, that's, those were the people who were interested at that time or in Arabic. And that's how it was preserved. Absolutely. Well, um, you know, I wanted to ask about, you talked about the Silk Road is I've always loved the Silk Road too, and that, um, just the, the romance Speaker 3:of it. Now this is huge. We've told total, tell listeners about the Silk Road. What, what is it? Okay. The basic facts, uh, 7,000 miles [00:15:00] of intersecting trade routes by land and by sea. Various points in history when it was in its heyday, I'd say one was, you know, 200 BC was, uh, a big, uh, big marker for, for the Silk Road Trade. And then we go into the, like you say, the medieval period from Europe when your Europe languished through the Dark Ages. And yet this enormous flourishing of art culture or science ideas was, was [00:15:30] it, you know, emanating from those regions in Eurasia, the Central Asia in particular. And then we move into the renaissance period, which were, was the benefit to Europe from that, that particular time on the Silk Road. That was the trade. It was coming straight out of China coming all the way through and meandering through with, by land, by sea, and eventually ending up in Venice, ending up in Istanbul [00:16:00] menace. Speaker 3:And that's where a lot of that, that knowledge sparked the renaissance in Europe and then was able to go on from there. So, uh, the link, it represented like the metaphorical, what it was actually a physical link between east and west. And this was, uh, this was a series of trade routes, various ways. He, I have a, a map that we bring to our festival that shows all of these intersecting routes. And it's, it's so much fun because we'll have an audience, oh, [00:16:30] we haven't even talked about the festival. Yeah, we'll get there. Yeah, we'll get there. But we'll have people in our audiences come up and point to where their family was from or you know, here's where, you know, this happened or, you know, and then at a certain point, all of the, the trade routes started to go by way of the sea. Speaker 3:You know, so the overland trade routes started to die out as a, as a conduit. And that was an interesting point in history. 1492, [00:17:00] Magellan and his crew young of all remember that that's when they were trying to find a way to circumvent those overland routes into China. And a lot of it had to do with the silk trade. A lot of it had to do with the fact that Rome and every empire after that, and Damascus as in Damask cloth as in Venice, uh, merchants who are hungry for silk and brocade, [00:17:30] which was controlled by the overland trade routes and all going through some Arakan Bukhara, uh, parts of parts of Iran, parts of the various countries. And those that we now know is countries in those areas and discovering a sea route and spices of course, discovering a sea route was imperative. It was like, we don't want to have to pay this high price for this stuff. Sure. Speaker 4:You're listening to k a LX, Berkeley [00:18:00] 90.7 FM university community sponsored radio. This is method to the madness, a 30 minutes show that celebrates the innovative spirit of the bay area. I'm your host. Tallinn is r and today we've had with us Sharlin Sawyer, the founder of Asana Arts and Culture Society and Belly Offs Center, a local dance troupe that celebrates central Asian culture here in the bay area. Yeah. So, um, you've built the, the kind of jewel of the belly off sauna. Um, season is the festival of the Silk Road. [00:18:30] It's going to be a celebration of this romantic time. So tell us a little bit about that. It's coming up soon, right? Speaker 3:Yeah, it's coming up on May 6th down in San Jose at the Mexican Heritage Plaza, which is a fabulous theater and a great garden venue. It's just this wonderful place to have this festival. And we started this as a home season back in 2001 for ballet off Sony and we had a great uh, several years where we were just doing it as an exclusively [00:19:00] ballet of Sana with our collaborators. And about 2008 we realized that this was getting prohibitively expensive for everybody involved. Production costs were going way up. Most of our sister companies in the bay area, the people that we were collaborating with and that we would often see at various performances, we're starting to feel the pinch and it was just a great idea. It's like, okay, let's just get together and do this all at the same [00:19:30] time and share the cost, share the work and be able to bring this in as a community. Speaker 3:Bring us together, celebrate and it's not exclusively traditional anymore. We have this, we're talking about self representation of peoples and communities who are not preserved in amber. I mean we're, we're innovating all the time and being able to innovate is part of what the Silk Road in my, [00:20:00] you know, in my opinion was about, it's like, what is it about, you know, bringing together different cultures and sparking some kind of creativity together. It doesn't just leave you as one thing. You're now being able to work with each other and create new ideas based on that input. So we look at the Silk Road is a metaphor for cultures in collaboration. So there's, there's these wonderful, they're wonderful innovative pieces [00:20:30] that are performed in the concert at the festival, the Silk Road. There's wonderful innovative goods and delicious food that are, you know, that are made that are there at the, at the bazaar we call the Silk Road Bazar there for the asking you. So it's this become wonderful community event. Speaker 4:So it's one evening May, is that what you said? Speaker 3:Yeah, it's actually, we're starting the at in the afternoon. Okay. Now this is something we remember, we started this during the crash of, you know, after the crash of 2008 [00:21:00] yeah. When everybody was, oh gee, can we really bring, even even bring in an audience, will our audience have the gas money to get to let alone buy a ticket? So we reduced the ticket prices to half. We brought in everybody and we started with an extended evening with a Silk Road, bizarre and the concert and just kept yearning to do an afternoon component to be able to bring in more folk dance and participatory [00:21:30] dances and more participation during the afternoon for kids and families. And this is the first year we're taking the plunge this year. So we're really excited about that. Not only is there a concert with master artists and performing next to young talent, but we're also going as the afternoon with some Turkish folklore dancing. You know, they're bringing in the big bagpipes and the dark hole. And we were just taking over the garden in the afternoon with the bazaar and the, [00:22:00] the various activities. Speaker 4:Wow, that sounds exciting. So that's may six, Speaker 3:May 6th, uh, we start at three o'clock in the afternoon and go, the concert gets done. We're starting the concert early because it's a Sunday night. And you know, the kids and the older folks have to get home at some point. So we'll probably be ending between nine 30, 10 o'clock and stay open another little bit, which is okay. Speaker 4:Yeah. And for the um, uh, listeners haven't been in the Mexican Mexican heritage hall, it is a really beautiful, Speaker 3:yeah, [00:22:30] that's [inaudible] Mexican Heritage Plaza Theater. Uh, it's, it's actually pretty convenient to east bay. I don't know how many of your listeners are from the East Bay, but it's, you just go straight down eight 80 and right where highway one oh one and eight 80 collide. That's the, that's the exit. Speaker 4:Yeah. We'll put it on our website, methods of the metastatic or you'll get a link to that if you want to go check it out and we'll put a link to, um, to Charlene's website as well. So give us a little bit, I always end my interviews with asking about the [00:23:00] future, the vision. So you've been doing this for a long time, but it's also, it seems to, in the recent time, the Silk Road Festival, you've, you've innovated and come to any place. So what, what does it look like in the future? What's your, your vision for the, uh, the arts and Culture Society? Speaker 3:Well, we fully expect to keep going. And the reason that I'm hopeful and excited about that right now is that we have a younger generation of artists who are now starting to, you know, [00:23:30] really go full full bore. They're really starting to take the reins of the administrative side of it and grapple with the, with the organizational side and the, the various ramifications of that. And you know, not only as artists but as you know, vital members of a community that forms a platform that can be a platform that lasts for, do the ages for people to either get their start or support their projects. So [00:24:00] that's what we, where we see our role at this point. Uh, yes, we still have our professional performance ensemble and yes, that's a big, uh, big flagship program for us. But we're looking, we also innovate in that we've got projects and various, uh, fiscal sponsored projects. [inaudible] Speaker 3:excuse me. The fiscally sponsored projects that we help bring to fruit and collaborate with our younger artists and our younger people who are in the community. [00:24:30] So it's starting to really, there's some changes afoot that are really getting exciting and as much more, uh, the community trust, uh, trust aspect of this is starting to emerge in a big way. That's great because that's the goal I think of. I've interviewed a lot of founders and been part of organizations and their founding, and that's almost always the goal is to create something that outlasts you. LSU, your participation absolutely indoors and it sounds like you're on the path. So congratulations. And thanks for coming in today. [00:25:00] Hey, thank you Ali. It's been great to be here Speaker 2:to learn more about the festival, the Silk Road, or the arts and arts and cultural society. Check out the links from our website, [inaudible] dot org you've been listening to minutes commanders on k eight LX, perfectly happy Friday. Everybody. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.