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Send us a textIn this episode, Dr. Maya Stein interviews Dr. Kevin Singh about the 2016 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiac Risk Assessment and Management for Patients Who Undergo Noncardiac Surgery.Produced and Hosted By: Dr. Maya Stein (Internal Medicine resident)Special Guest: Dr. Kevin Singh (General Internist)Sound Editing by: Dr. Alison Lai (General Internist)Do you ever feel like you can't get ahead of charting? Freed AI has an AI driven scribe for you! You can try Freed for free right now by going to getfreed.ai. Listeners can use the INTERN50 code for $50 off their first month!Support the show
“People can be wonderful”, is where we begin this week's conversation. How do we bring that forward, in the midst of all that can be so difficult, so that we can step-by-step make a world in which we meet one another with conversation, compassion, kindness, and welcome? And where do we need to start inside ourselves and with the ones closest to us in order to first glimpse and then act on this possibility? This week's Turning Towards Life is hosted, as always, by Lizzie Winn and Justin Wise of Thirdspace. Join Our Weekly Mailing: www.turningtowards.life/subscribe Support Us: www.buymeacoffee.com/turningtowardslife Turning Towards Life, a week-by-week conversation inviting us deeply into our lives, is a live 30 minute conversation hosted by Justin Wise and Lizzie Winn of Thirdspace. Find us on FaceBook to watch live and join in the lively conversation on this episode. You can find videos of every episode, and more about the project on the Turning Towards Life website, and you can also watch and listen on Instagram, YouTube, and as a podcast on Apple, Google, Amazon Music and Spotify. Highlights of our conversation: 00:00 Introduction and Reflections 03:13 The Power of Words and the Always Already Present Possibility of Human Goodness 06:08 Orienting to Ourselves and Others with Kindness 08:00 Maya Stein's Poem, ‘Believe' 12:01 The Struggle with Self-Judgement 14:52 Our Messiness and Incompleteness 18:05 Creating Safety Together 20:56 Realness 24:11 The Gifts and Curses of our Standards and Expectations 27:04 The Path of Repair and Connection 30:13 Practicing Kindness and Engaging With One Another 32:54 Effecting Repair Here's our source for this week: Believe Maybe the camera crew is at someone else's house, a spotlight haloing over another's fleshy story. Maybe the mailman is delivering the good news to your neighbor, or a different city entirely, and you come home to a rash of catalogues, the second notice for a doctor's bill, a plea from the do-gooders for whatever you can spare. Maybe you haven't cleaned your kitchen floor in weeks, forgotten to nourish the front garden, spilled too much coffee in your car, weaving through traffic. Maybe you are 10 pounds heavier than last year. Maybe your skin is betraying your age. Maybe winter is ravaging your heart. Maybe you are afraid, or lonely, or furious, or wanting out of every commitment you entered with such vigor and trust. Maybe you've bitten your nails down to the quick, chosen your meals badly, ignored the advice of those who know you best. Maybe you are stubborn as a toddler. Maybe you are clumsy or foolish or hasty or reckless. Maybe you haven't read all the books you're supposed to. Maybe your handwriting is still illegible after all these years. Maybe you spent too much on a pair of shoes you didn't need. Maybe you left the window open and the rain ruined the cake. Maybe you've destroyed everything you've ever wanted to save. Still. If anything, believe in your own strange loveliness. How your body, even as it stumbles, angles for light. The way you hold a dandelion with such yearning and tenderness, the whole world stops spinning. Maya Stein mayastein.com Photo by Anton Darius on Unsplash
It's not surprising, when we're in difficulty or overstretched, to find ourselves tuning out of the world, distancing ourselves from what and who is around us. The stories we're handed by our culture - that life is essentially meaningless - don't help. Who do we become if this is what we do? How might we, instead, learn to love again when we're ‘running out of things to love'? And how might we - as the poet Maya Stein invites us - ‘narrow the distance' between ourselves and the world, ourselves and one another, so we can let life flood in once again? Hosted, as always, by Lizzie Winn and Justin Wise of Thirdspace. Join Our Weekly Mailing: www.turningtowards.life/subscribe Support Us: www.buymeacoffee.com/turningtowardslife Turning Towards Life, a week-by-week conversation inviting us deeply into our lives, is a live 30 minute conversation hosted by Justin Wise and Lizzie Winn of Thirdspace. Find us on FaceBook to watch live and join in the lively conversation on this episode. You can find videos of every episode, and more about the project on the Turning Towards Life website, and you can also watch and listen on Instagram, YouTube, and as a podcast on Apple, Google, Amazon Music and Spotify. Here's our source for this week: what to love when you're running out of things to love Pick any landscape—a kitchen counter, a waiting room, that part of your body you shield from photographs—and narrow the distance between you. At first, the stains will monopolize your eye. Each blight and crack and overgrowth, a seismic disruption. If you can bear the stillness of not looking away, if you step even closer, the contours will begin to lose their meaning. The noise of an old story will fade. New shapes will emerge, like petals after a hard rain. I'm not saying you will desire, suddenly, the pits and pores of the world, or that your hands passing over every rough surface will feel fresh tenderness. But you'll notice your breathing has softened, your heart a door you can open past the jambs. How there's room for what you see, and everything you can't. Maya Stein mayastein.com Photo by After Exposure Studio on Unsplash
In this episode, Dr. Maya Stein interviews Dr. Kevin Singh about the 2016 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Guidelines on Perioperative Cardiac Risk Assessment and Management for Patients Who Undergo Noncardiac Surgery.Produced and Hosted By: Dr. Maya Stein (Internal Medicine resident)Special Guest: Dr. Kevin Singh (General Internist)Sound Editing by: Dr. Alison Lai (General Internist)Support the show
You may know Cara MacB (they/them) for their videos on social media of a call centre operator fielding complaint calls from fatphobic people. Cara's content is brilliant, hilarious, and one of the ways that they try to change people's beliefs that fat is bad. In this episode, Cara shares how they dismantled their own fatphobia, discovered that they could use their inner class clown for good, and how lazy it is to use marginalized identities as the butt of jokes.Cara MacB is non-binary, queer. They bring an anti-diet approach to fat positive content creation & comedy. Their super viral Overweight Bitches Content Creators Helpline sketches have made them a leading voice in the UK anti-diet online world.Please connect with Cara on Instagram and TikTok.This episode's poem, “after takeoff”, is by Maya Stein.Please connect with Fat Joy on our website, Instagram, and YouTube (full video episodes here!). And please also give us a rating & subscribe.Deep thanks for their hard work go to Hi Bird Designs and AR Media for keeping this podcast looking and sounding joyful.
The Buddha said spiritual friendship is the whole of the holy life. In this episode I look at what spiritual friendship is by sharing about the spiritual friendship I had with my friend Mollie. I share an excerpt from this poem by Maya Stein, and share stories from 2 suttas: SN 45.2 and MN 32.
How do we make contact with our own kindness, generosity, creativity, patience, courage, compassion, fierce or gentle love, and our capacity to stay in contact with life, right when we're afraid or wanting to turn away? This week's Turning Towards Life is a conversation about how we find that in ourself that's ready to stay faithful, when other parts of us strongly want to turn away - and how we help one another to do that. Our conversation is seeded from a source from the wonderful work of Maya Stein. It's hosted as always by Lizzie Winn and Justin Wise of Thirdspace. This is Turning Towards Life, a weekly live 30 minute conversation hosted by Thirdspace in which Justin Wise and Lizzie Winn dive deep into big questions of human living. Find us on FaceBook to watch live and join in the lively conversation on this episode. You can find videos of every episode, and more about the project on the Turning Towards Life website, and you can also watch and listen on Instagram, YouTube, and as a podcast on Apple, Google and Spotify. You can find out more about our Professional Coaching Course, which we talk a little about in this episode, on the Thirdspace website here. Here's our source for this week: What If? Whatever you're afraid of. Whatever you're warding off, trying to hold back from being true. Whatever keeps sniffing at your legs, and whatever you keep kicking away. Whatever draft you're trying to seal. Whatever risk you push to the perimeter. Whatever old whisper you're turning from to deafen. Whatever exit you're avoiding, eyes locked on the straightaway. Whatever breakage you think is yours to mend, and the endless ministrations of that mending. Whatever call you keep not picking up. Whatever blank piece of paper. Whatever Hail Mary. Whatever salt you keep throwing over your shoulder. One day, it will stop being enough to keep you from your own magnificence. And what if, what if, what if this was that day? Maya Stein mayastein.substack.com Photo by Grant Whitty on Unsplash
This week I am so excited to chat with a writer that I really am inspired by. Her name is Maya Stein and she is a freelance writer/poet and has been for more than 20 years, and has self-published 5 books and hundreds of beautiful poems. I discovered Maya a while ago online and signed up for her 10-line Tuesdays emails where she sends out a 10-line poem every week, and her writing is spiritual to me. So honest. So present. So intentional. We are going to be talking about the intersection between creativity and spirituality this week.. not to mention she is going to read one of my favorite poems of hers!! You don't want to miss this conversation! | Maya Stein | ►Instagram | @mayastein ►Website | www.mayastein.com | Courtney Cole | ► Website ► Listen to "Light" ► Music Instagram ► The Love Freq Instagram ► WATCH the podcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thelovefreqpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thelovefreqpodcast/support
I got to meet Maya Stein for the first time when we sat down to talk about her writing, her passion, and her new project.
Today I talk with Writer and artist Maya Stein, who just published a new book The Poser: 38 Portraits Reimagined. In it she documents how she transcended the pandemic isolation by re-creating contemporary portraits as part of the “museum at home” movement. For more information and photos of this project, please go to our website, Tough on Art .comJEN TOUGH GALLERY 2.0Jen Tough Gallery is rebuilding! Follow us along as we move online, offering a larger roster, auctions and deeper artist profiles. Check it out at www.JenTough.galleryJOIN THE ARTIST ALLIANCE If you're interested in joining our online community for artists, we'd love to have you! Sign up for our waiting list to know when we begin open enrollment, or when a spot opens up at ArtistAllianceMembership.com
Heidi welcomes the New Year with Poetry! POEMS "An Essential Worker's List of Pandemic Chores for the Kids" by Wendy Stead "I want that Goose to be a Tree" by Brooke McNamara "This is a Hammer" by Maya Stein www.heidirose.com // @heidiroserobbins
In between our certainty that we’re too small, or too inadequate to meet life, and our fantasies (perhaps even expectations) of perfection, mastery of life, and personal power, there is a middle place. And the middle, if we’ll meet ourselves and one another there, is far from a place of mediocrity. Instead it’s a way in which we can be real with one another, truthful about our messiness and our gloriousness, and the messiness and gloriousness of life. Will you meet us there? This episode of Turning Towards Life is a conversation which invites a new understanding of ‘middling’ – less as an adjective, more as a verb, something we can actively do to find a dignified ‘right size’ in our lives; hosted as always by Lizzie Winn and Justin Wise of Thirdspace. This is Turning Towards Life, a weekly live 30 minute conversation hosted by Thirdspace (http://www.wearethirdspace.org/) in which Justin Wise and Lizzie Winn dive deep into big questions of human living. Find us on FaceBook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/turningtowardslife/) to watch live and join in the lively conversation on this episode. We’re also on YouTube, and as a podcast on Apple, Google and Spotify. You can find videos of every episode, and more about the project on the Turning Towards Life website (https://turningtowards.life/) . Our source this week is brought to us by Justin, and written by Maya Stein: It looks like the sky is coming apart and together at the same time… by Maya Stein https://bit.ly/3nJVKEu (https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fbit.ly%2F3nJVKEu%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR1G7Q2LzWPRlPm4SHW_Dwa5dR32xwO5WEazh52qEgB1NWeQk3EKcsECBdA&h=AT2jrULK8E4fGksExvVG3Zf5QF9R7-RxzXDWtqbsJfvQaxfB6SlGlCeexO9ES11jkeyQJhjGvNF-qfz_vblRszTqQB-JZgyUGNJc7aql2LBIjqP37MhFzrbZ9feOkoy_7AZr1PW0&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT3jip8dakj6tQWLZmf4eCwPW4on0ppGk32Hy3oWJmXj4BUx2DkcwYXx8bN-OsRQSHydvI9Tu0o0YVjwPet4b5fmlpkTIalnovIbeGYxaDKDcr5qJ9XVkJRr-30i1Olao03-rpx11f8wLB5n6j2l6-Eq_7GED8F2XuUe-mrvn2h-uMbDGp1XAH_ByL6Ggq6xVoy083rtx1Zw8uL9) And the body is holding its losses like a fist. And a fleshy hope is opening to an unprecedented vastness. And whatever we think we are leaving behind will keep insisting. And the things we desire will elude us. And our efforts will pose as failure. And we will not recognize how far we’ve come. And we will solve one problem and create another. And we will feel broken. And we will not be broken. And the silence will be deafening. And we will love destructively. And no one will appear to be listening. And there will be too many doors to choose from. And we will keep saying, “I don’t know how to do this.” And we will be more capable than we ever imagined. Photo by Nick Scheerbart (https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Funsplash.com%2F%40nck%3Futm_source%3Dunsplash%26utm_medium%3Dreferral%26utm_content%3DcreditCopyText%26fbclid%3DIwAR10eDyt_XNlBHjMpSmRgEOMuYUtQjU06dzfSwgiddYTHTxBn_dZ79NOBnc&h=AT3Avid6vzvNADK4oJ5uL30rRFg3xW4yPnfEzl_0eM7eSsybCSmHHfYUQsavT7OQNrq9lcwo_2GVFVPCdWUw4hhkpPsebA7wtrNnsUmel8eyQFShFkejoYTsW5bpzWEJdVW0TPjr&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT3jip8dakj6tQWLZmf4eCwPW4on0ppGk32Hy3oWJmXj4BUx2DkcwYXx8bN-OsRQSHydvI9Tu0o0YVjwPet4b5fmlpkTIalnovIbeGYxaDKDcr5qJ9XVkJRr-30i1Olao03-rpx11f8wLB5n6j2l6-Eq_7GED8F2XuUe-mrvn2h-uMbDGp1XAH_ByL6Ggq6xVoy083rtx1Zw8uL9) on Unsplash (https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Funsplash.com%2Fs%2Fphotos%2Fsky%3Futm_source%3Dunsplash%26utm_medium%3Dreferral%26utm_content%3DcreditCopyText%26fbclid%3DIwAR1d89MLo-evIdxt8u1onGl_wpLoTAVM_XXbSIMzehnUXGHAPB7-1LcDDZ4&h=AT0XlQwXf81EWshwvI2S0VPLAJpuOxcrxHgRrHWO7SaPwEYPgpsKr_e4vmktAn0k8Y_wh1gtxbdwHdGLM6dMsdq1gBqQBIM1IrFt4f2CyGx5Wz0yWOhF2wy8goFhSClfD3fcv1g4&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT3jip8dakj6tQWLZmf4eCwPW4on0ppGk32Hy3oWJmXj4BUx2DkcwYXx8bN-OsRQSHydvI9Tu0o0YVjwPet4b5fmlpkTIalnovIbeGYxaDKDcr5qJ9XVkJRr-30i1Olao03-rpx11f8wLB5n6j2l6-Eq_7GED8F2XuUe-mrvn2h-uMbDGp1XAH_ByL6Ggq6xVoy083rtx1Zw8uL9)
In this episode of the Ontario Society of Occupational Therapists' new OTs on the Block Podcast, Lindsay sits down with new grads Laya Polowin, Emma, Emily, Brett Hnatiw and Maya Stein to answer your questions and talk about the good, the bad and the ugly of being a new occupational therapy graduate. This episode is part 2 of a 2 part Q&A session inspired by questions submitted by second year occupational therapy students from across the province. In part 2, adjusting to life post-graduation, being a new graduate, and advice for the transition are discussed. Resources and Links OSOT's New Graduate Resource Page Contact Us! Phone: 416-322-3011 E-mail: osot@osot.on.ca Website: www.osot.on.ca Follow us on Twitter @OSOTvoice or on Facebook @OntarioOTs Connect with us on LinkedIN
In this episode of the Ontario Society of Occupational Therapists' New OTs on the Block Podcast, Lindsay sits down with new grads Laya Polowin, Emma, Emily, Brett Hnatiw and Maya Stein to answer your questions and talk about the good, the bad and the ugly of being a new occupational therapy graduate. This episode is part 1 of a 2 part Q&A session inspired by questions submitted by second year occupational therapy students from across the province. Part 1 covers topics including the national certification exam, interviewing and job searching. Resources and Links OSOT Career Postings OSOT's New Graduate Resource Page Contact Us! Phone: 416-322-3011 E-mail: osot@osot.on.ca Website: www.osot.on.ca Follow us on Twitter @OSOTvoice or on Facebook @OntarioOTs Connect with us on LinkedIN
From being greeted by trees in the morning to picking up trash in the neighborhood, there is always a story waiting to unfold. Find out how The Typewriter in the Hallway Experience sparked the birth of The Creativity Caravan with Maya Stein. Learn to look for the experiences that makes you excited and what you […]
From being greeted by trees in the morning to picking up trash in the neighborhood, there is always a story waiting to unfold. Find out how The Typewriter in the Hallway Experience sparked the birth of The Creativity Caravan with Maya Stein. Learn to look for the experiences that makes you excited and what you can do to make things exciting for someone else.
Any life-threatening medical diagnosis is a traumatic event and can invoke a complex mix of fear, sorrow, anger and confusion. The capacity to deal with such a trauma both during and after treatment involves a massive amount of energy and courage. Here we explore the emotional healing of survivorship. Cheryl Krauter is the author of Surviving the Storm: A Workbook for Telling Your Cancer StoryTags: Cheryl Krauter, survivor, cancer, deep listening, trauma, Maya Stein, How to Climb a Mountain poem, health advocate, fear, depression, grief, caregivers, tyranny of positive thinking, health support groups, Health & Healing, Personal Transformation
Any life-threatening medical diagnosis is a traumatic event and can invoke a complex mix of fear, sorrow, anger and confusion. The capacity to deal with such a trauma both during and after treatment involves a massive amount of energy and courage. Here we explore the emotional healing of survivorship. Cheryl Krauter is the author of Surviving the Storm: A Workbook for Telling Your Cancer StoryTags: Cheryl Krauter, survivor, cancer, deep listening, trauma, Maya Stein, How to Climb a Mountain poem, health advocate, fear, depression, grief, caregivers, tyranny of positive thinking, health support groups, Health & Healing, Personal Transformation
This week's guest on In Her Room is ninja poet and feral hairstylist Maya Stein. I loved sitting down to talk with her about finding our voice, adventures in cycling, and the importance of a regular writing practice. There is a kind of danger in telling the truth. Here are some things mentioned in this episode:Maya's websiteMaya's blogMaya's booksMaya on InstagramWorking with Maya10-Line Tuesdays :: Maya's weekly poemFeral Writing :: one of Maya's writing workshopsSpoke & Word :: a creative retreat with Maya and Amy of Food for the Soul TrainTour de Word :: Maya's cross-country adventureType Rider & Type Rider II
More than 30 of this year's podcast guests tell us about the favorite books they read in 2014! Guests include Maria Alexander, Ashton Applewhite, David Baerwald, Nina Bunjevac, Roz Chast, Sarah Deming, Michael Dirda, Jules Feiffer, Mark Feltskog, Mary Fleener, Nathan Fox, Josh Alan Friedman, Richard Gehr, Paul Gravett, Sam Gross, Rachel Hadas, Kaz, Daniel Levine, Sara Lippmann, Merrill Markoe, Brett Martin, Mimi Pond, George Prochnik, Emily Raboteau, Jonathan Rose, Ron Rosenbaum, Dmitry Samarov, Seth, Katie Skelly, Ron Slate, Maya Stein, Rupert Thomson, and Frank Wilson! Check out the list of books at our site!
From the “everywoman” to exemplars such as Hillary Clinton, Madeleine Albright, and Maya Stein, author/ artists Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch have gathered fierce and feisty females to empower women on the topics of leadership, friendship, purpose, adventurousness, cooperation, collaboration, risk-taking, resourcefulness, happiness, compassion, and much more. SHE: A CELEBRATION OF GREATNESS IN EVERY WOMAN pays tribute to all women’s everyday inspirational richness. Along with their best advice for our life journey, the contributors portray what it really means to inspire. Each page spread features vintage art and ephemera elegantly designed by Liz Kalloch to represent a quality, along with a tribute to women's strength, character, and the extraordinary capabilities within each and every woman. SHE gathers the wisdom of many wise women, including Madeleine L'Engle, Laura Schlessinger, Erica Jong, Rachel Carson, Oprah Winfrey, Harper Lee, Lucille Ball, Mother Teresa, Pearl Buck, Cheri Huber, Julia Child, Drew Barrymore, and many more. With the help of beautiful images and snippets of empowering wisdom, SHE is truly a book of qualities that illustrates the greatness of women and how they represent the very best in the human spirit.
This week Coach Cafe is delighted to welcome Mary Ann Radmacher and Liz Kalloch, the authors of SHE: A Celebration of Greatness in Every Woman. SHE is a book of qualities illustrating the greatness of women. From "everywoman" to exemplars such as Hillary Clinton and Madeline Albright to visionary artist Shiloh McCloud and poet Maya Stein, these many women represent the very best in the human spirit. Mary Anne and Liz have gathered these fierce and feisty females along with their best advice for our life's journey on the topics of leadership, friendship, purpose, adventurousness, cooperation, collaboration, risk-taking, resourcefulness, happiness, compassion, and more. Mary Anne Radmacher's words and art travel the world to homes, hospitals, offices and school rooms, commencement speeches, in trade and professional journals, in eulogies, and on commercial products. Her work is licensed to Quotable Cards and Brushdance. She is included in the most recent edition of the Oxford Dictionary of American Quotations. CNN, HGTV, Oprah, the New Yorker, and many others, have featured her work. maryanneradmacher.net Liz Kalloch is an artist, illustrator, graphic designer and writer. Her paintings have been shown at galleries around the country, and appear in several private collections. Her illustration work has appeared in publications by Jen Lee Productions, Institute of Noetic Sciences, and Brush Dance, and is featured on the cover of a newly released book called Listening to Our Grandmothers by Mary Ann Mhina. lizkallochdesigns.com.
“There's a sort of romance in riding a bicycle across the country. It's something that some people would fantasize about, and when they saw me ride into their town, it brought them back to their own dreams, their own wishes about what they wanted to fill their life with." Maya Stein is a poet, a teacher, a photographer, and more. We sat down in her restored trailer, M.A.U.D.E. (Mobile Art Unit Designed for Everyone), to talk about her life as an artist, how she built an audience for her work over the years, how she got the idea to ride a bicycle (towing a typewriter, folding table and folding chair) from Massachusetts to Wisconsin, and how she got that Type Rider journey funded on Kickstarter. “I think about 'making a living' as 'making a life'. I don't think about money being the driving force behind the decisions I make as a writer or artist." We also talk about writing prompts, her new initiative to build Little Free Libraries via Type Rider II, and her epiphany in Elkhart, Indiana. And you get to hear my theory on how the internet makes us all normal (except for the crazy people)! Give it a listen! About our Guest Maya Stein is a Ninja poet, writing guide, and creative adventuress. Among her latest escapades are a 1,200-mile bicycle journey with a typewriter, a cross-country poetry trip, a French crepe stand at a Massachusetts farmers market, a relocation from San Francisco to suburban New Jersey and most recently, a collaboration — Food for the Soul Train — turning a vintage trailer into a mobile creative workshop space. (She also ran a catering business for six years and specialized in hors d'oeuvres and the finer points of napkin folding.) Her favorite body part is her left hand, as it has gifted her with the ability to sink a nearly invincible hook shot, peel a whole apple without a break, and transcribe the poems living in her heart. You can learn more about Maya's adventures at www.mayastein.com. Credits: This episode's music is Typewriter (Tip Tip Tip) by Kisore Kumar & Asha Bhosle. The conversation was recorded at M.A.U.D.E on a pair of Blue enCORE 200 microphones, feeding into a Zoom H4n recorder. The intro and outro were recorded on Blue Yeti USB Microphone. Processing was done in Audacity and Garage Band. There was a space heater going, so I used a noise removal filter in Audacity. Photo of Ms. Stein (solo) by me, and photo of Ms. Stein and me by Amy Roth.
Poet Maya Stein reads "Strong"
Poet Maya Stein reads an original poem.
Poet Maya Stein is gearing up for her latest community writing project/adventure, "Type Rider".