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Frauds or Fearsome? On this Kings of the North, Doug Lesmerises and Bill Landis play that game with college football teams across the South. Gotta keep an eye on those guys. From Georgia to Miami, from Clemson to Texas, from LSU to USC, the Doug and Bill run through 14 Non-Northern teams in rapid fire succession and decide whether anyone in the North needs to worry about them this season. Plus it's the conclusion of the bracket for the Most Important Person in Northern College Football. The Final Four is Penn State coach James Franklin, Kansas quarterback Jalon Daniels, Ohio State receiver Jeremiah Smith and Minnesota safety Koi Perich. Who will take home the crown? To start the show, it's a roundup of Northern college football news, including the new contract for Colorado's Deion Sanders. And should we have done an April Fool's Day prank? Thanks for joining Kings of the North. Chapters: • News around the north (03:00) • Fearsome or fraud of southern teams (32:00) • Most important northern person final four and champion (1:19:10)
From quarterback play at Syracuse to offensive line action at Pitt, from young stars at Oregon to a receiver search at Utah, from Nebraska offensive plans to Indiana pass protection, Kings of the North takes you around Northern spring football on this episode. Then it's the fourth region of our Most Important Person in Northern Football bracket. This time, Bill Landis has 16 seeds for Defensive Players in The North, and he and Doug Lesmerises have to pick a winner. Finally, it's Whatcha Watching, Eating and Thinking. Thanks for joining Kings of the North.
Penn State coach James Franklin is entering Year 12 leading the Nittany Lions, with his best chance at a national title yet. But there haven't been many modern coaches who won their first national title in Year 12. Is Franklin ready to lead a natty run this season? Doug Lesmerises and Bill Landis discuss that. They also open the show with their latest region for their Most Important Person in Northern College Football bracket -- and it's coaches. Franklin is in there, but what other Northern coaches -- head coaches and assistants -- will most define this season? They run through 16 options. Finally, it's a look at several issues around college football from the legal problems of a former Michigan assistant, the continuing arrests of Georgia players, and the departure of the Maryland athletic director. Thanks for joining Kings of the North. Chapters: • Most important northern coach region (09:00) • Can James Franklin win a title after being at Penn State for over a decade? (01:06:30) • News around the north (01:40:48)
Ideas shape the world, but only when they're communicated effectively. Some individuals have a remarkable ability to present their ideas in a way that captivates, influences, and inspires. A well-crafted and powerfully delivered idea doesn't just inform—it transforms. Imagine if you could unlock the exact techniques used by the world's best communicators, watch them deliver unforgettable presentations, and apply their secrets to engage your own audience. Carmine Gallo, has studied hundreds of TED Talks, interviewed top speakers, and worked alongside neuroscientists and psychologists to uncover why certain presentations resonate so deeply. Listen For8:02 Make Others Feel Like the Most Important Person in the Room11:43 The Rule of Three: Why Simplicity Wins16:27 Energy and Passion: Your First 20 Seconds Matter22:22 Answer to Last Episode's Question From Guest Anne GregoryGuest: Carmine GalloLinkedIn | X | Instagram | You Tube | Facebook | Threads | Bluesky | PinterestCheck out Carmine's newest book “The Bezos Blueprint”Rate this podcast with just one click Stories and Strategies WebsiteAre you a brand with a podcast that needs support? Book a meeting with Doug Downs to talk about it.Apply to be a guest on the podcastConnect with usLinkedIn | X | Instagram | You Tube | Facebook | ThreadsRequest a transcript of this episodeSupport the show
The Most Important Person in the World. Self-love, not that kind, but also not not that kind, is critical to living a contented, fulfilling life. But many of us struggle to like the person in the mirror. How come? And how do we fix that? Asking for a friend, who is us. Music pick of […]
Unyime Akpan - March 16th 2025 - The ‘Final Days' of Jesus The Last ‘Weeks' of the Most Important Person that Ever Lived Jesus Answers A Rich Young Ruler & His Disciples' Questions Mark 10:17-27; Luke 18:18-29; Matthew 19:18-Matthew 20:1-15 Eternal Life - John 17:2, John 3:16, John 17:2, It is not just unending life of prolonged duration. It is a quality of life, derived from a relationship with God. Having eternal life is being in relationship with the Father, the one true God, and Jesus Christ whom the Father sent. Romans 10:9-10 Jesus Speaks on Eternal Life - John 10:27-30 Wealth/Possession/Money Matthew 6:19-21 Luke 12:32-34 Matthew 6:24 Luke 16:13 Jesus Message about wealth/money (1) * Invest your wealth/money/possession, don't just spend it, don't worship it, * Send your wealth/money to heaven by giving more while on earth * ‘Parable' or account of the shrewd manager Luke 16 * Sandwich -Jesus identified lovers of money –the most religious people in the first century * ‘Parable' or account of the rich man and Lazarus Luke 16 * Wealth/money is a good tool and a terrible master * Don't make acquiring wealth your pursuit * Don't spend your time and life chasing it Impossibilities Luke 1:34-37 Matthew 19: 26 Mark 10:27 Luke 18:27 Jesus' life was filled with miracles and doing the impossible for ordinary people Expect Jesus' intervention in your life and impossible circumstances Don't limit God to your experience or that of others Get to know Jesus better Make listening to Jesus' words a daily routine We have 4 Gospels Matthew, Mark, Luke, John for a reason How about a personal project to listen to one gospel a week or a month In a year you would have gone through the 4 gospels 12 times or 3 times and will be more familiar with Jesus Christ –his words, acts Jesus Answers The Rich Young Ruler & His Disciples' Questions Mark 10:17-27; Luke 18:18-29; Matthew 19:18-Matthew 20:1-15 Rich Young Ruler Ran and knelt before Jesus and asked Good Teacher, what good thing must I do to inherit eternal life? Jesus Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone If you would enter life, keep the commandments Jesus Do not commit adultery, Do not murder, Do not steal, Do not bear false witness, Honour your father and murder, Do not defraud, Love your neighbour as yourself Rich Young Ruler All these I have kept, What do I still lack? Jesus One thing you still lack. Sell all that you have and distribute to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven and come and follow me Rich Young Ruler's Reaction Became very sad, for he was extremely rich Went away sorrowful for he had great possession Jesus How difficult it will be for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God Jesus Children, how difficult it is to enter the kingdom of heaven! It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God Jesus With man it is impossible, but not with God. For all things are possible with God. Luke 10:26-37
OA1118 and T3BE56 - Russell Vought lied in his confirmation hearing, but who is Vought and why should we care? Lydia gets us up to speed on this capital-d Doozy, with his background, some highlights from his confirmation hearing, and the great reporting that lets us confidently state that he lied in his hearing with the Senate Budget Committee. Then Heather Varanini joins for the answer to T3BE question 55 and brand new question 56! Who Is Russell Vought? Probably the Most Important Person in Trump 2.0., New York Times Opinion “Put Them in Trauma”: Inside a Key MAGA Leader's Plans for a New Trump Agenda, ProPublica Undercover in Project 2025, Centre for Climate Reporting If you'd like to play along with T3BE, here's what to do: hop on Bluesky, follow Openargs, find the post that has this episode, and quote it with your answer! Or, go to our Subreddit and look for the appropriate t3BE posting. Or best of all, become a patron at patreon.com/law and play there!
My 2023 book, The Conservative Futurist, is based on the idea that we, as a society, are failing to meet our potential: Inefficiency, overregulation, and an overabundance of caution is robbing us of the world we might be living in.Nicole Kobie shares some of my frustrations in her recent book, The Long History of the Future: Why tomorrow's technology still isn't here. She explores the evolutionary history of past technologies and why we just can't seem to arrive at the future we've all been waiting for.Today on Faster, Please — The Podcast, I chat with Kobie about the role of regulators, the pace of progress, and what careers in journalism have taught us about innovation hypeKobie is a science and technology journalist whose articles appear in publications fromTeen Vogue, toNew Scientist, toGQ. She is the futures editor forPC Pro and a contributing editor forWired. She is based out of London.In This Episode* Repeating history (1:42)* The American system of innovation (7:12)* The cost of risk-aversion (16:10)* The problem dynamic (20:28)* Our future rate of change (23:34)Below is a lightly edited transcript of our conversation. Repeating history (1:42)I'm supposed to forget that I basically wrote the same version of this story a year ago . . .Pethokoukis: I wrote a book about a year ago, and I wrote that book out of frustration. I was frustrated, when I originally started writing it in 2020, that, how come we already didn't have a vaccine for Covid? And then I started thinking about all the other technologies that we didn't have, and it was that frustration that led me write my book.I'm guessing there was a frustration that led you to write your much better-written book.Kobie: So I think it's really interesting that you start with Covid vaccines because here, out in the UK, the vaccine that was developed here — this is not something of my area of expertise, but obviously all journalists ended up having to write about Covid quite a bit — but the reason we managed to create a vaccine so quickly (they usually take several years) is because we have this vaccine platform that they'd been coming up with, and they kind of had this virus in their heads of, “Oh, it would probably be this type of a virus, and if we were to design a system that would help us design a vaccine really quickly, what would it look like?” And they had it mostly done when everything hit, so actually we got quite lucky on that one. It could have been a lot worse, we could have been much further behind.But you're right, I have been writing about technology for a very long time and I keep hearing things about AI, things about driverless cars, and you just feel like you're writing the same headline time after time after time because news has such a short memory. I'm supposed to forget that I basically wrote the same version of this story a year ago, and that every year I'm writing about driverless cars and how they're going to be here imminently, and then 10 years goes by and I'm like, “Maybe I should have renewed my license.” That sort of a thing. And I find that very frustrating because I don't like hype. I like having the reality of the situation, even if it's a bit pessimistic, even if it's not the most happy scenario of what could happen with technology. I'd rather know the downsides and have a better sense of what is actually going to happen. So it really came out of that.I was writing a section for a British computing magazine called PC Pro, a future section, and it's a very cynical magazine a lot of the time, so I kind of got used to writing why things weren't going to happen and I had this whole list of these different technologies that I'm not necessarily pessimistic about, but I could see why they weren't going to happen as quickly as everyone has said. So just put it together in a book. So a little bit the same as you, but bit of a different story.So that phenomenon, and I wonder, is it partly sort of a reporter's problem? Because most reporters you have a certain . . . you don't want to write the same story over and over again. I think a lot of reporters have a soft spot for novelty. I think that's not just true with technology, I think it's with economic theories, it's with a lot of things. Then you have the founders or technologists themselves, many of whom probably would like to raise money and to continue raising money, so they're going to hype it, but yet, history would suggest that there's nothing new about this phenomenon, that things always take longer to get from the breakthrough to where it is a ubiquitous technology, everything from electrification, to PCs, to the internal combustion engine.Is there an actual problem or is it really a problem of our perceptions?I think it is a problem of perception. We have this idea that technology happens so quickly, that development happens so quickly, and it does, especially something like a smartphone. It went from being something you heard about to something you carried with you in a matter of years — very, very quickly. Of course, the technologies that make up a smartphone took many, many, several decades, a long, long time.The problem with a lot of innovation and development, especially when it's things like things like AI, they start as almost a philosophical, academic idea. Then they become science and we start to work out the science of how something's going to work. And then you have to engineer it and make it work physically. And then you have to commercialize it. And for every single different aspect of a technology, that's what you're kind of doing. That is a very long road involving very different people. And the academics are like, “Yeah, we solved this. I wrote a paper about this ages ago, a hundred years ago we were talking about AI.” And then the scientists who are doing stuff in the lab, they can make it work in the lab, they can make it work in theory, they can do that in-the-lab bit, and that's amazing. We read about those breakthroughs. Those are the kinds of things that make really great headlines and journalists love those kinds of stories because, hey, it's new. And then you've got engineers who've actually got to physically build it, and that is where the money really needs to come in because this is always harder. Building anything is harder than you think it's going to be. It doesn't matter what it is, it's always harder because you've got the real world, you're out of the lab and you have to think about all of the things that the scientists who were very smart people did not think about.And then you've got to try to come up with a way to make it work for people, and people are hard. You need to think about regulators, you need to think about business models, and all of that sort of thing. There's a lot of problems in all of that, and a lot of the time, the innovation isn't about that original academic idea. It's about how you're going to bring it to market, or how you're going to make it safe, and all of those kinds of things. There's so much to think about with even the smallest piece of technology.The American system of innovation (7:12)It's too easy for people to just kind of jump up and say, “Well, it's corporations being evil. That's the problem.” Well sometimes, yeah. “It's governments being too heavy-handed and regulators being too tight. That's the problem.” Well, it is until your plane crashes, then you definitely wish that those aviation regulators were stricter, right?I'm old enough to remember in the 1990s, I remember writing stories when I was a reporter about AI. There was a huge AI boom in the 1990s which then kind of fizzled out, and then it sort of came up again. So I've certainly heard about the hype about technologies, and when people talk about hype, often they'll point out the Internet Boom — but to me, that's, again, really just a case of things taking longer than what people expected because all the big moneymaking ideas in the 2010s about how to use the internet and apps — these are not new ideas. These are all ideas people had in the '90s, but what they lacked was bandwidth to make them work out, and we also lacked the smartphones, but the idea of ordering things online or the sharing economy, the technology wasn't there.Sometimes the problem is that the technology just isn't there yet. Is there an actual problem — you're in Great Britain — is there a problem with the American system of innovation, which, the stylized version of that would be: government funds lots of basic research on the kinds of questions that businesses would never really do their own — even though they do a lot of R&D, they don't do that kind of R&D because it's not immediately commercial — and that creates this stock of knowledge that then businesses can use to commercialize, see what people will actually buy as a way of valuing it., does it pass the market test, and then we end up with stuff that businesses and consumers can use — that, ideally, is the American system.Is that a good system? Can that system be improved? What is your contention?It depends what you're making. If you're making a consumer product, I think yeah, that works decently well. You can see in some ways where it doesn't work, and you can see in some ways where it does work, and to me that's where regulation and the government needs to sit, is to try to push things the right way. Obviously, social media probably needed something helping it along the way at some point so it didn't go down the road that we have now. Smartphones are pretty good, they're a pretty great technology, we're used to using them, there's some issues with surveillance and that sort of thing, but that kind of worked pretty well.But it depends on the technology. Like I mentioned, these Covid vaccines. Here in the UK, that wasn't a project that was funded by corporations. It definitely got out in the world and was mass-produced by them quickly, which was great, but it was something that came through the academic world here and there was a lot of government funding involved. Of course, the UK has a very strong academic system, and an academic network, and how you get funding for these things.It depends on the product, it depends what you're trying to buy, and this is the issue when you come into things like transport: so driverless cars, or goofy ideas like hyperloop, or flying taxis and things like that. Is that a consumer product? Is that public transport? How are we deciding what the value is in this? Is it just about how much money it makes for Google, or is it about how it solves problems for cities? And we probably need it to do both, and walking that line to make sure that it does both in a way that works for everybody is very difficult, and I don't think we have easy answers for any of that, partially some of this stuff is so new and partially because we're not very good at talking about these things.It's too easy for people to just kind of jump up and say, “Well, it's corporations being evil. That's the problem.” Well sometimes, yeah. “It's governments being too heavy-handed and regulators being too tight. That's the problem.” Well, it is until your plane crashes, then you definitely wish that those aviation regulators were stricter, right? So it depends on what the technology is, and we just use technology to cover such a range of innovation that maybe we need some different ways of talking about this.Flying cars has become such the example, but the reason there isn't a flying car, some might blame regulation, but I think, whether it's regulations were too heavy for some reason, or the technology wasn't there, it didn't make economic sense. And even though there's been a lot of flying taxi startups, it still may not make economic sense. So who determines if it makes economic sense? Does the government determine or do you need to raise money and then try out a product, then the entrepreneur realizes it doesn't make economic sense, and then the company collapses?To me, that's what I see as the American system, that somebody has an idea, maybe they base the idea off research, and then they try the idea, and they raise money, and then they actually try to create a product, and then the thing fails, and, well, now we know. Now we know that's probably not ready.Is there a different way of doing it? What country does it better?I think China does, and I think that's because companies in China and the government are much more linked, and they serve each other. That's not necessarily a good thing, to be clear, especially not for the wider world, all of the time, but China has driverless cars and they're out on the roads. It's not that they work better than the ones in the US, they don't, but there's less of a concern about some of the negative impacts. Where you fall on where that sits, that's kind of up to individuals. Personally, I think a driverless car shouldn't be on the road if it's not perfectly safe, if it's not a really trusted technology, and I am willing to wait for that because I think it is a thing that is worth waiting for, or ensuring that we can actually build it in a way that's affordable. But they're out on the roads in China, they're being tested, you can catch a robot taxi there.But that should be a worse system because it sounds like you're very skeptical about how safe they are. The fact that they're only on the roads in this country in certain places, in certain cities, there's a slow rollout — that should be a better system.Personally, I think it is. Now, if you live in San Francisco or you live in the places that are kind of being treated as test labs for these vehicles, you might not be a fan of them, and there's been a lot of pushback in San Francisco around this, especially because it's taken so long and they can actually be quite disruptive to the cities when they don't work out, and it's not like you, as somebody who lives locally, gets compensated because you get delayed on your way to work because a Waymo car got on the way of your bus, or whatever.But I think that we do need to be slower with technology, and I think that there's nothing wrong with taking a bit of time to make sure that we get it right. It is very likely that, in the next couple of years, there are going to be cities that have these air taxis. To a certain extent, they're just electric helicopters that are cheaper and easier to fly, and we already have those to get people above traffic to get between places. That's an idea that already exists. This isn't a huge, massive leap forward. It is going to happen in cities where people are a little bit less afraid of disrupting everybody. But again, I'm not sure that that's right for people. That might be right for the company; so all of the various aviation companies that are trying this, they're going to end up flying for the first time in cities like Dubai and places like that that aren't worried about what everyday people on the ground think, they don't really care what you think. A place like New York or LA, it's going to be a little bit tougher to convince people that they should have to suffer the safety implications of this if one of these things crashes, because people in the US have a really great ability to be able to speak out about these technologies, and better government regulations, and things like that.I think it is a very tough question and I think it is almost impossible to get it perfectly, so the question is more about getting it to be good enough, and to me, what I think that requires is good communication between companies and regulators. And in aviation, that is pretty good— you will not talk to any company that is making the so-called “flying cars” and the air taxis. They all go on about how well they work with regulators and how much they appreciate the support of regulators, and I think that's a good thing, but regulators are probably also maybe not making it as easy as it could be to develop a new technology because one of the problems with these companies is that it takes a certain length of time to come up with this idea and how the technology is going to work, and then you have to get all these different certifications, and it is a long road — and this is good, you want to make sure the plane works, but by the time you're certified, the technology has come along enough that now you're out-of-date and your technology is out-of-date, so you want to drop a new piece of technology, a new battery, a new idea, AI, and whatever. To a certain extent you have to come back to the beginning, and now you're behind again, and by the time you get everything certified, that's out-of-date again. So we probably do need to come up with faster ways of looking at new technologies and finding new ways of letting these companies safely work in a new technology into an existing design, new things like that.The cost of risk-aversion (16:10)I don't want to talk about this really wide-ranging AI stuff. I want really specifics now, now that we're starting to apply this stuff and we have really specific AI models that work in a very specific way, let's talk about that. Isn't that kind of the big story, that the reason we don't have some of these technologies is because we've been — at least in the United States — we've been wildly risk-averse. That's the whole story of nuclear energy: We became very risk-averse, and now we're sitting here worried about climate change when we have an established technology that, had we not paused it, we would've had 50 years of improvements, and when we talk about small nuclear reactors, or microreactors, or even fusion, we're 50 years behind where we could be. So don't some of these tech folks have a point that there was a proper reaction in the '50s and '60s about regulation and the environment and then we had an overreaction, now it's become just very hard to build things in this country and get them deployed, whether it's flying taxis or nuclear reactors. Now we're going to have this debate about AI. Does does that sound logical to you?I'm not sure that that is always what is holding these things back. The thing that has been holding AI back is just processing power. Jeffrey Hinton was working on all of these ideas in the '90s, and he couldn't make it work because the technology wasn't there, and it has taken us this long to get to a point where maybe some of these systems are starting to do useful things. And it is being deployed, it is being used and we should do that.But some people don't want it deployed, they would like to pause it. You've described this ideal that we've been developing this, and the technology's not there yet, it repeatedly took longer than what people expected, I think you correctly know. And now we're at the point where it seems to maybe be there, and now the second it's there, they're like, “Stop it. Let's slow down.” That's sort of the exact problem you've identified.Yeah, I do think it is fair to be concerned about the impact of this huge technology. When the whole internet thing happened, we probably should have been slightly more afraid of it and slightly more careful, but you can kind of solve a lot of problems along the way and kind of, “Oh, okay, we need to think about safety of children online — probably should have thought of that a little bit sooner,” and things like that. There's problems that you can kind of solve as you go along, but I think the biggest problem with the discussion and the debate around AI now is we're talking about this huge range of technology. AI is not one thing. So when you say, “AI is here now,” well, AI has been here for decades, it's been doing things for decades, it's not new, but we're talking about a very specific type of AI, we're talking about generative AI that is run by large language models.Personally, I have absolutely no problem with a large language model generating an AI response to an email so I can just hit a button and say, “Yeah, thanks, that sounds good” without having to type it all out. No one is scared of that. Lots of people are concerned about if you start rolling this out in government widely, which is what the UK government is planning at the moment, and you're letting AI make decisions and reply to people. You're going to get some problems, you're going to get people getting letters from their doctor that are incorrect, or people getting turned down for benefits, and things like that when they should be getting those benefits.That doesn't mean we can't use AI, it just means we need to think about what are all the downsides. What are the ways that we can mitigate those downsides? What are the ways we can mitigate those risks? But if you ask anyone at an AI developing company now, “Well, how are we going to fix this?” They're like, “Oh, the AI will do it.” Well, how? I just want to specific answer. How are you going to use the AI? What's it actually going to do? What problems do you see and how are you going to fix those problems? Very specific. I don't want to talk about this really wide-ranging AI stuff. I want really specifics now, now that we're starting to apply this stuff and we have really specific AI models that work in a very specific way, let's talk about that. And I think people are capable of having that conversation, but we just really gloss over the details with this one a lot.The problem dynamic (20:28)We need more nuance, really, and realize that there aren't villains, this isn't us versus them, it doesn't need to be like this.So do you view as sort of the problem players here, are they regulators, are they technologists, are they entrepreneurs? Is it the public — which, again, has a very poor understanding of technology, what technology can do. A lot of people I know, when they first tried ChatGPT, they were a little disappointed because they figured, after watching all these sci-fi movies, “I thought computers were already supposed to be able to do this.”I don't want to say who are the villains, but who are the problem players and what do you do about it?I mean this in the nicest way possible, but I think that framing is the problem.Good, that's fine, attack my framing, that is totally permitted!I think all of this would be better if we didn't have an “us versus them” thing. I think it's great that OpenAI is trying to develop this technology and is trying to make it useful and to make it work in a way that we might benefit from it. That's what they say they're trying to do, they're trying to make a lot of money while doing it. That's great. That's how this all works. That's fine. Regulators are keeping a close eye on it and want more information from them, and they want to know more about what they're doing, and what they're planning, and how these things are going to work. That seems fair. That's not OpenAI battling regulators, that's not regulators slapping down OpenAI.Journalists have a lot of blame on this because of the way we frame things. Everything is a battle. Everything is people going head-to-head — no, this is how this is supposed to work. Regulators are supposed to keep them in check. That can be very difficult when you are trying to regulate a very, very new technology. How could you possibly know anything about it? Where are you going to get your information from? From the company themselves. That kind of brings in some inherent challenges, but I think that's all surmountable.It's kind of like this idea that you're either a Luddite, and you hate AI, and you think it's evil, or you're completely pro-AI and you just can't wait to have your brain uploaded — there's a lot of nuance and variety of what people actually think in between. I think what you mentioned about ChatGPT and how, when you go use it the first time, you're kind of like, “Huh, this is it, hey?”I think that is the number one thing: Everyone should go use it, and then you're going to be half impressed that this machine is talking to you, that this system can actually chat with you, but then also a little bit disappointed because it's making things up, it's incorrect, it's a bit silly sometimes, that sort of a thing. Personally, I look at it and I just go, I wouldn't trust my business to this. I wouldn't trust the running of a government to a system that operates like this.Could it write some letters to help the NHS out here not have to have a person sit and type all of these things out, or to send more personalized letters to people so they get better information, and things like that? Yeah, that sounds good. Is that going to completely change how government operates? No. So we need to be a bit more honest about the limitations. We need more nuance, really, and realize that there aren't villains, this isn't us versus them, it doesn't need to be like this. But I see why you think there's villains.Our future rate of change (23:34)I think we're really bad at tracking change mentally. We want to see a big, dramatic change and then we look back and we're like, “Whoa . . . This is all very different.”That was just more my provocative framing. This is a question that you may not like at all, but I'm still going to ask it: You've looked at all these technologies. Do you think that the world of 2035 will look significantly different? The difference between the world of 2025 versus 2015, whatever that change has been, do you anticipate a bigger change between 2025 and 2035, whether because of energy, AI, rockets, flying cars, CRISPR. . . ?I think it will be different, but I don't think it's going to be as different. I'm kind of thinking back to when I was a kid and how we all lived life pre-internet and things like that, and things were genuinely different, and that gap between that and now is such a big difference. I think about my kid, when she's an adult, how different is it going to be? I think it's going to be different. I think we're going to look back at conversations like this and be like, “Oh gosh, we were naive. How could we have thought this, or not thought this?”Do I think that no one is going to be working because AI is going to do all work? No, I don't think it's going to be capable of that. Do I think that things like medicine could be really changed by technologies like CRISPR? I really hope so. I think we spend a lot of time talking about things like AI without seeing some of the really big-picture stuff. I write a lot of business technology stories, and it's a lot about how we can improve productivity by a few points, or it might impact a few thousand jobs — let's talk about some bigger things. Let's talk about how we can really change life. Let's talk about how we could work less. I would love to be able to see people actually working three or four days a week instead of these five-day weeks and still maintain productivity and still maintain salaries. I love that idea. I don't think that's going to happen. I think the changes are going to be small and incremental ones.I think we'll have a lot better transport options. I think all this driverless technology, even if we don't end up with the driverless cars that we fantasize about, it's definitely going to get applied to public transportation in some really good ways. I'm hoping that medicine will change. I'm worried about the climate change side of it because we are not putting our technology and our innovation into that, the mitigations for that, and I really think that that's where we need some very creative thinking for how we're going to deal with all of this.So 10, 15, 20 years from now, I think life is going to be relatively the same, but I think in certain industries it's going to be really, really different — but I think I'm still going to be working five days a week sitting in front of a computer, more often than not.That's because we're grinders, we love to grind.I don't, I do not, no.My last question, I'm not sure if this is quoted in the book, I think it was a Bill Gates quote, “We overestimate what we can accomplish in two years,” or “We underestimate what we can accomplish in 10 years,” something like that. Is that sort of the phenomenon, that there's an announcement and we figure everything's going to be different in 10 years, and then it isn't, and then we look back in 10 years, we're like, “Whoa, actually, there has been a lot of change!”I think we're really bad at tracking change mentally. We want to see a big, dramatic change and then we look back and we're like, “Whoa,” like you say, “What happened? This is all very different.”I think we're so focused on the here and now all of the time, we're so thinking about what's going to happen in the next quarter for our company or within the next year with our family, or our careers and things like that, that it's very easy for us to just get caught up in the day-to-day, and I think it is a good thing to look back. That's one of the reasons I wanted to write my book as a history. If you look back, we were talking about flying cars in the '50s, we were talking about AI . . . the mid-'50s is when this idea kind of really came to life. It takes a long time, but also we've done a lot in that time. There's been a huge amount of change and a huge amount of technologies that have started to enable all of this, and all of that is really positive.I can get accused of being a bit of a cynic because I'm like, “Where are driverless cars?” But if we manage to make driverless cars happen by 2035, I don't think that that's bad that it took that long. That's just how long it took — and hey, now we have driverless cars. Creating technology is sometimes just going to take longer than we want it to, and that's okay. That's not that the technology is wrong, that's just that we're bad at predicting timelines. I never know how long it's going to take me to finish a story, or get ready in the morning or, whatever, so I'm not surprised that these world-changing technologies were bad judges of that, too.On sale everywhere The Conservative Futurist: How To Create the Sci-Fi World We Were PromisedMicro Reads▶ Economics* Trump's Arrival Brightens U.S. Outlook, Darkens Everyone Else's - WSJ* Coup d'États, Institutional Change, and Productivity - SSRN* I, Google: Estimating the Impact of Corporate Involvement on AI Research - SSRN▶ Business* How Chinese A.I. Start-Up DeepSeek Is Competing With Silicon Valley Giants - NYT* OpenAI's Stargate Deal Heralds Shift Away From Microsoft - WSJ* Oracle Takes Run at Cloud's Big Three With Trump-Backed AI Pact - Bberg* Remote work matters, but culture is the elephant in the room - CEPR* Why Mark Zuckerberg Is Ditching Human Fact-Checkers - Wired* OpenAI spars with Elon Musk over $500bn Stargate project - FT* How Oracle Plays Cheaply in AI - WSJ▶ Policy/Politics* Who Is Russell Vought? Probably the Most Important Person in Trump 2.0. - NYT Opinion* Bannon berates Musk over his attacks on Trump's AI infrastructure project - Politico▶ AI/Digital* When A.I. Passes This Test, Look Out - NYT* Anthropic chief says AI could surpass “almost all humans at almost everything” shortly after 2027 - Ars* Elon Musk's Silence on AI Risks Is Deafening - Bberg Opinion* Worry About Sentient AI—Not for the Reasons You Think - IEEE* There can be no winners in a US-China AI arms race - MIT▶ Biotech/Health* Sam Altman-backed Retro Biosciences to raise $1bn for project to extend human life - FT* Scientists Complete First Comprehensive Map of Human DNA Recombination - The Debrief▶ Clean Energy/Climate* Private companies aim to demonstrate working fusion reactors in 2025 - Science* How Trump's executive orders could tilt US energy markets - E&E News* Trump's Dream of Energy Dominance Relies on Canada - Bberg Opinion* The Wind Industry Is Putting on a Brave Face - Heatmap▶ Space/Transportation* Beam me to the stars: Scientists propose wild new interstellar travel tech - Space* The Hyperloop: A 200-Year History of Hype and Failure - MIT Press▶ Up Wing/Down Wing* What Los Angeles Can Learn From Another Great American City That Burned - NYT Opinion▶ Substacks/Newsletters* What if AI timelines are too aggressive? - Understanding AI* Trump's executive orders: Five big takeaways - Noahpinion* Open-Source AI and the Future - Hyperdimensional* 'ChatGPT' Robotics Moment in 2025 - AI Supremacy* The Big Problem Paradox - Conversable EconomistFaster, Please! is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fasterplease.substack.com/subscribe
Homer, Mark Tauscher and Gary Ellerson react to the Packers 31-29 loss to the Vikings in Jordan Love's return to the field, how did Love look in his return, did Bradyn Narveson cost the Packers the game, will we see a different kicker for the Packers next Sunday, do the Packers need to start showing some urgency, who was the Most Important Person from today's game, do you believe the Packers defense can figure it out as the season goes on, is Jayden Reed a top receiver in the NFL, would the Packers have won if Narveson had made his two missed kicks, are the Packers still an ascending team, Packers reporter Jason Wilde joins the show with his thoughts on the loss including the play of Jordan Love and a preview of next Sunday's matchup with the NFL.
For this week's episode, we're sharing a recent meditation Scott Snibbe led for our new Train a Happy Mind community on letting go of suffering. Every Sunday morning, he leads a meditation on one of the topics from How to Train a Happy Mind. Sometimes he also expands into other topics or leads practices relating to current events. This topic's chapter is called Am I the Most Important Person in the Universe?In this talk and its meditation, Scott touches on how our own delusions of anger and attachment connect to the bigger problems in the world, like war and the activists working to stop it. He also shares some thoughts on what he's learned about how to be an effective activist from the book America's Racial Karma; and how racism, sexism, and colonialism connect to what Buddhists understand as the core delusion of pride.Episode 167: Freeing Ourselves from Suffering Anger, Craving, Pride, and WarWe've just launched a new online community where Scott Snibbe leads weekly live meditations for the topics shared in our podcast and How to Train a Happy Mind book. Anyone is welcome to join for free or by donation. Visit our new community website at trainahappymind.org to sign up, take classes, attend special events, and meet fellow students.Support the Show.
Listen to today's podcast... Have you experienced this? The driver in front of you is going slower and slower on the highway as they talk on their phone You are in the bookstore when the person walking beside you has their phone go off breaking the peace and silence. You are sitting at a restaurant enjoying the company and the meal when the person next to you engages in cell yell. I think that we have all been exposed to poor cell phone etiquette. Are you attached to your cell phone? I don't particularly like mine. In fact, I keep it off most of the time, unless I need to call my husband or remind my kids of something if I am on the road. But it is getting harder and harder to do that. Cell phones are an integral part of our technology-based world, and they won't be disappearing anytime soon. However, if we all practiced a little more courtesy using our phone, then maybe cell phones would not seem so annoying and intrusive. Take One Action Today To Build Your #Resiliency! Here are today's Tips For Building Resiliency and Celebrating Cell Phone Courtesy Month: Evaluate your own cell phone practices: Make sure you keep it down. No one wants to hear you on the phone Love the vibration. Use your phone's vibration mode when in public Try to excuse yourself when accepting a call in a group gathering Focus on the task at hand, not your cell phone And try to make the Person You are With Feel Like the Most Important Person you want to talk to Looking for more ways to build your resiliency? Take my free on-line resiliency test at worksmartlivesmart.com under the resources and courses tab. #mentalhealth #hr
Do you understand the Holy Spirit in the same way you understand the Father and the Son? Listen as Pastor Wayne asks and answers three critical questions about the Holy Spirit and addresses why the Holy Spirit is critical for our survival.Scriptures ReferencedDeuteronomy 5:7; Psalm 132:13-14; Mark 12:30; Luke 1:35; John 10:27-30, 14:16, 16:7; Acts 1:9; Romans 8:34; 1 Corinthians 3:16, 12:4-6; Ephesians 4:4-6; Colossians 2:9, 3:1-3Key InsightsOur relationship with the Holy Spirit is critical to our survival.The whole process of discipleship is centered on relationship, not head-knowledge.Power never precedes presence.Proximity is not the same as intimacy.About SpringhouseIf you're looking for a church in Smyrna, TN that is focused on Loving Big, Living Truth, and Healthy Family, we'd love to connect with you. We are home to a vibrant children's ministry, powerful middle school and youth ministries, and incredible ministries for men and women of all ages. Our local and global outreaches include partnerships with missionaries in the US and abroad, Isaiah 117 House, local retirement communities, and more. Additionally, we are home to Springhouse Theatre, an award-winning theatre in the Nashville area. Through the theatre, we serve both the greater Nashville theatre community, and thousands of patrons each year, and we are expanding our vision to impact the culture through the arts into additional mediums and through an expanding network of relationships.We would love it if you would consider joining us in person for one of our Sunday gatherings.Additional ResourcesMost Important Person On Earth by MUNROE MYLES | Amazon.com - Purchase from Amazon.The Most Important Person on Earth by Dr Myles Munroe (PDF) | Ezra Living Free - Download for free.The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit | Amazon.com - Purchase from Amazon.The Person and Work of The Holy Spirit by R. A. Torrey | Project Gutenberg - Download for free.Follow the podcast to listen on the goTithes & OfferingsJoin our livestreamChurch websiteChurch appConnect cardDownload the appGathering TimesSundays, 9:00 AMSundays, 10:30 AMContact InfoSpringhouse Church14119 Old Nashville HighwaySmyrna TN 37167615-459-3421 CCLI License 2070006
Who is the Most Important Person on the court? The standard answer is: I am. We explore the often neglected ability to dissect an opponent.
Larry talks about a Lexington politician's involvement with an upcoming drag show for charity and Time magazine has released their Most Important Person of the Year in hour 1. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen to today's podcast... Have you experienced this? The driver in front of you is going slower and slower on the highway as they talk on their phone You are in the bookstore when the person walking beside you has their phone go off breaking the peace and silence. You are sitting at a restaurant enjoying the company and the meal when the person next to you engages in cell yell. I think that we have all been exposed to poor cell phone etiquette. Are you attached to your cell phone? I don't particularly like mine. In fact, I keep it off most of the time, unless I need to call my husband or remind my kids of something if I am on the road. But it is getting harder and harder to do that. Cell phones are an integral part of our technology-based world, and they won't be disappearing anytime soon. However, if we all practiced a little more courtesy using our phone, then maybe cell phones would not seem so annoying and intrusive. Take One Action Today To Build Your #Resiliency! Here are today's Tips For Building Resiliency and Celebrating Cell Phone Courtesy Month: Evaluate your own cell phone practices: Make sure you keep it down. No one wants to hear you on the phone Love the vibration. Use your phone's vibration mode when in public Try to excuse yourself when accepting a call in a group gathering Focus on the task at hand, not your cell phone And try to make the Person You are With Feel Like the Most Important Person you want to talk to Looking for more ways to build your resiliency? Take my free on-line resiliency test at worksmartlivesmart.com under the resources and courses tab. #mentalhealth #hr
On this episode, we have a 5th-degree black belt who has been on the mats since the age of 10. Out of a small town in Texas, he currently leads one of the highest-ranked competition teams in the world.Today Bruno Bastos joins us to discuss how he started Jiu Jitsu by accident, how to deal with pressure, the importance of perspective, and a ton more.Here is The RŌL Radio with 5th-degree black belt, IBJJF Masters gi and NOGI World Champion, and owner instructor at Bastos Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Fitness, Professor Bruno Bastos.www.rolacademy.tv 30% discount with ROLRADIO code at checkout. Over 1000 videos for your Jiu-Jitsu journey.http://www.therolradio.comhttps://www.instagram.com/therolradio/https://www.facebook.com/therolradio/http://bastosbjj-fitness.com/https://www.instagram.com/brunobastosbjj/https://www.instagram.com/lead_bjj/https://www.instagram.com/bastosjiujitsu_official/https://bjjfanatics.com/products/visible-jiu-jitsu-the-half-guard-system-by-bruno-bastos?Episode Highlights:3:46 The RŌL Radio is Number 47:55 Jiu Jitsu Chose Me18:06 Bruno Competes After 2 Classes24:30 You Are Your Only Competition30:58 The Toughest Match40:09 Worth45:29 Perception52:46 Most Important Person is Me1:04:01 Josh McKinney's Question
The Most Important Person in the Room (broadcast date: 01/29/2023)
We look at why is Jesus the Most Important Person with the Most Important Message and what that means For 3 reasons: Jesus is from God He has a message There are two responses
“Follow the path of peace when we think about unhealthy relationships, not only with others but within ourselves. Some of us have toxic beliefs about ourselves, limiting thoughts, and self-sabotaging behaviors... Allowing yourself to really believe that you deserve the peace and kind of giving yourself permission to have a life that's full of it.” - Davia Roberts Welcome to Stay a While with Tommi Vincent! Ice Cube once said, “Check yourself before you wreck yourself” and while the song was a bop in the 90s, it still begs the question, “How often do we actually check ourselves?” Do we have the tools we need to recognize when we're being less than loving? When we're being petty? Do we know how to course-correct? And then, what about our boundaries? If others don't know how to check themselves, how do we set proper boundaries to maintain our peace of mind and forward movement? Well, of course, we're not just posing questions. We have Davia Roberts, a licensed professional therapist at the table and we're serving up some real talk on recognizing and navigating toxic behavior because nobody likes a Petty Betty. In 2020, the weight of our personal lives seeped into our careers more than ever. Some companies took note and made a commitment to integrating mental health and wellness into the company culture. I've had the pleasure to partner with companies like ServiceNow, Fidelity Investments, and Lululemon to develop therapeutic programming to support the mental health and wellbeing of their staff members. As a mental health consultant, I cultivate space for professionals to process their feelings and develop new tools for coping. Employees often share how they feel valued when leadership is willing to invest in their wellbeing. Plus, leadership notes the boost in morale. In 2021, I hope more companies become wellness-minded and I'd love to help more companies make the transition. - Davia Roberts In this episode we cover [00:01 - 04:16] Take a Seat at the Stay A While Table [04:17 - 10:52] Food Is Love, Therapeutic, and Nourishing [10:53 - 23:21] Identifying the What and the Who: Behavior, Abuse, and Relationships [23:22 - 36:55] The Intentional Call to Action - Paving the Path to Maturity [36:56 - 48:34] Becoming the Most Important Person in Your Life [48:35 - 52:56] Closing Segment Key Quotes “If we don't communicate what those things [boundaries] are, we're going to continue to be in a toxic relationship, because we're both contributing to this pattern of frustration, not having healthy boundaries or healthy communication... It's important to figure out or just start with the question, one, ‘What's really bothering me in this situation?', ‘What do I need to communicate as far as my hurt?', and ‘What do I need to communicate for my boundary or my need moving forward so we can have a healthy relationship?' And lastly, if that doesn't change, what am I willing to do about it?” - Davia Roberts “When you don't recognize that the environment that nurtured you, and, you know, formed you into the adult that you are, if you're not able to see the dynamics of that, the behavior you're learning is just going to carry over into your adult life, and into your relationships. And until you're able to see that for yourself, then you're not going to make the changes necessary to become an adult, and to be mature. ” - Davia Roberts “Yes, it is easier said than done. But I'm like, if you want something to be different, imagine or just revisit the discomfort you had when people use those same techniques on you when someone you cared about didn't speak to you for weeks when you didn't know what you did wrong, but you could feel the discontent and the strain in the relationship, even though you wanted to fix it.” - Davia Roberts See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“Follow the path of peace when we think about unhealthy relationships, not only with others but within ourselves. Some of us have toxic beliefs about ourselves, limiting thoughts, and self-sabotaging behaviors... Allowing yourself to really believe that you deserve the peace and kind of giving yourself permission to have a life that's full of it.” - Davia Roberts Welcome to Stay a While with Tommi Vincent! Ice Cube once said, “Check yourself before you wreck yourself” and while the song was a bop in the 90s, it still begs the question, “How often do we actually check ourselves?” Do we have the tools we need to recognize when we're being less than loving? When we're being petty? Do we know how to course-correct? And then, what about our boundaries? If others don't know how to check themselves, how do we set proper boundaries to maintain our peace of mind and forward movement? Well, of course, we're not just posing questions. We have Davia Roberts, a licensed professional therapist at the table and we're serving up some real talk on recognizing and navigating toxic behavior because nobody likes a Petty Betty. In 2020, the weight of our personal lives seeped into our careers more than ever. Some companies took note and made a commitment to integrating mental health and wellness into the company culture. I've had the pleasure to partner with companies like ServiceNow, Fidelity Investments, and Lululemon to develop therapeutic programming to support the mental health and wellbeing of their staff members. As a mental health consultant, I cultivate space for professionals to process their feelings and develop new tools for coping. Employees often share how they feel valued when leadership is willing to invest in their wellbeing. Plus, leadership notes the boost in morale. In 2021, I hope more companies become wellness-minded and I'd love to help more companies make the transition. - Davia Roberts In this episode we cover [00:01 - 04:16] Take a Seat at the Stay A While Table [04:17 - 10:52] Food Is Love, Therapeutic, and Nourishing [10:53 - 23:21] Identifying the What and the Who: Behavior, Abuse, and Relationships [23:22 - 36:55] The Intentional Call to Action - Paving the Path to Maturity [36:56 - 48:34] Becoming the Most Important Person in Your Life [48:35 - 52:56] Closing Segment Key Quotes “If we don't communicate what those things [boundaries] are, we're going to continue to be in a toxic relationship, because we're both contributing to this pattern of frustration, not having healthy boundaries or healthy communication... It's important to figure out or just start with the question, one, ‘What's really bothering me in this situation?', ‘What do I need to communicate as far as my hurt?', and ‘What do I need to communicate for my boundary or my need moving forward so we can have a healthy relationship?' And lastly, if that doesn't change, what am I willing to do about it?” - Davia Roberts “When you don't recognize that the environment that nurtured you, and, you know, formed you into the adult that you are, if you're not able to see the dynamics of that, the behavior you're learning is just going to carry over into your adult life, and into your relationships. And until you're able to see that for yourself, then you're not going to make the changes necessary to become an adult, and to be mature. ” - Davia Roberts “Yes, it is easier said than done. But I'm like, if you want something to be different, imagine or just revisit the discomfort you had when people use those same techniques on you when someone you cared about didn't speak to you for weeks when you didn't know what you did wrong, but you could feel the discontent and the strain in the relationship, even though you wanted to fix it.” - Davia Roberts See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“Follow the path of peace when we think about unhealthy relationships, not only with others, but within ourselves. Some of us have toxic beliefs about ourselves, limiting thoughts, and self sabotaging behaviors... Allowing yourself to really believe that you deserve the peace and kind of giving yourself permission to have a life that's full of it.” - Davia RobertsWelcome to Stay a While with Tommi Vincent! Ice Cube once said, “Check yourself before you wreck yourself” and while the song was a bop in the 90s, it still begs the question, “How often do we actually check ourselves?” Do we have the tools we need to recognize when we're being less than loving? When we're being petty? Do we know how to course-correct? And then, what about our boundaries? If others don't know how to check themselves, how do we set proper boundaries to maintain our peace of mind and forward movement? Well, of course we're not just posing questions. We have Davia Roberts, licensed professional therapist at the table and we're serving up some real talk on recognizing and navigating toxic behavior because nobody likes a Petty Betty.In 2020, the weight of our personal lives seeped into our careers more than ever. Some companies took note and made a commitment to integrating mental health and wellness into company culture. I've had the pleasure to partner with companies like ServiceNow, Fidelity Investments, and Lululemon to develop therapeutic programming to support the mental health and wellbeing of their staff members.As a mental health consultant, I cultivate space for professionals to process their feelings and develop new tools for coping. Employees often share how they feel valued when leadership is willing to invest in their wellbeing. Plus, leadership notes the boost in morale. In 2021, I hope more companies become wellness-minded and I'd love to help more companies make the transition. - Davia RobertsIn this episode we cover[00:01 - 04:16] Take a Seat at the Stay A While Table[04:17 - 10:52] Food Is Love, Therapeutic, and Nourishing[10:53 - 23:21] Identifying the What and the Who: Behavior, Abuse, and Relationships[23:22 - 36:55] The Intentional Call to Action - Paving the Path to Maturity[36:56 - 48:34] Becoming the Most Important Person in Your Life[48:35 - 52:56] Closing Segment Key Quotes“If we don't communicate what those things [boundaries] are, we're going to continue to be in a toxic relationship, because we're both contributing to this pattern of frustration, not having healthy boundaries or healthy communication... It's important to figure out or just start with the question, one, ‘What's really bothering me in this situation?', ‘What do I need to communicate as far as my hurt?', and ‘What do I need to communicate for my boundary or my need moving forward so we can have a healthy relationship?' And lastly, if that doesn't change, what am I willing to do about it?” - Davia Roberts“When you don't recognize that the environment that nurtured you, and, you know, formed you into the adult that you are, if you're not able to see the dynamics of that, the behavior you're learning is just going to carry over into your adult life, and into your relationships. And until you're able to see that for yourself, then you're not going to make the changes necessary to become an adult, and to be mature. ” - Davia Roberts“Yes, it is easier said than done. But I'm like, if you want something to be different, imagine or just revisit the discomfort you had when people use those same techniques on you, when someone you cared about didn't speak to you for weeks, when you didn't know what you did wrong, but you could feel the discontent and the strain in the relationship, even though you wanted to fix it.” - Davia Roberts“Love definitely does not intentionally hurt. And if you have hurt someone and you love them, then you want to resolve that because love should feel good." - Tommi Vincent“When we love people, and we make a decision to love them well, that means that we can have heavy conversations knowing that both of us have good intentions for one another because there's an understood love there.” - Davia RobertsConnect with Davia RobertsInstagram: https://instagram.com/justdaviaLearn more about Davia's practice, The Carrier Bradley Agency Website: https://www.carrierbradley.comInstagram: https://instagram.com/carrierbradley_ Connect with Me! You can reach Tommi on Instagram @cheftommivVisit https://vincentcountry.com and get connected with us on Vincent Country's Instagram @vincentcountry This episode was Produced By: Tommi Vincent, Tanner Vincent, and Skai Blue MediaMusic By: Stichiz - Big T. Music /Roj&TwinkiELEAVE A REVIEW + and SHARE this episode with someone who wants food for the soul, and the key ingredients to embracing their true, authentic self. Listen to previous episodes on Spotify, Spreaker, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts!
Marty continues his working relationship with the "Most Important Person to Make Film," Roger Corman, in this early 70's outlaw film. Barbara Hershey and David Carradine star, but Thelma Schoonmaker is nowhere to be seen?
In this episode, your host Laketta gives you her top tips to embrace being selfish. You do so much for others and seldom do we as women put ourselves as priorities first. Enough of taking on other people ish and not checking in with you. GET SELFISH! You are THE MOST IMPORTANT Person! It may hard but it's truly necessary. Loving on you is what you need to do! Follow the Confidence on Stilettos Movement on: IG: @Confidence_On_Stilettos FB: Confidence on Stilettos. Don't forget to get your journals and sweatshirts. TIME TO BOSS UP! We're getting our mental health together, getting organized on paper and crushing these goals! https://www.makeibeauty.com/product-page/confidence-on-stilettos-boss-girl-journal https://www.makeibeauty.com/product-page/unisex-heavy-blend-hooded-sweatshirt https://www.makeibeauty.com/product-page/confidence-on-stilettos-boss-girl-t-shirt ***For all Business Inquiries please email*** ConfidenceOnStilettos@gmail.com
Have you experienced this? The driver in front of you is going slower and slower on the highway as they talk on their phone You are in the bookstore when the person walking beside you has their phone go off breaking the peace and silence. You are sitting at a restaurant enjoying the company and the meal when the person next to you engages in cell yell. I think that we have all been exposed to poor cell phone etiquette. Are you attached to your cell phone? I don't particularly like mine. In fact, I keep it off most of the time, unless I need to call my husband or remind my kids of something if I am on the road. But it is getting harder and harder to do that. Cell phones are an integral part of our technology-based world, and they won't be disappearing anytime soon. However, if we all practiced a little more courtesy using our phone, then maybe cell phones would not seem so annoying and intrusive. So Here are today's Hot Tips For Building Resiliency and Celebrating Cell Phone Courtesy Month: Evaluate your own cell phone practices: Make sure you keep it down. No one wants to hear you on the phone Love the vibration. Use your phone's vibration mode when in public Try to excuse yourself when accepting a call in a group gathering Focus on the task at hand, not your cell phone And try to make the Person You are With Feel Like the Most Important Person you want to talk to Looking for more ways to build your resiliency? Take my free on-line resiliency test at worksmartlivesmart.com under the resources and courses tab.
A new MP3 sermon from First Scots Presbyterian (PCA) is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: The Most Important Person in the Church Subtitle: Christian Leadership Speaker: Alex Mark Broadcaster: First Scots Presbyterian (PCA) Event: Sunday Service Date: 6/20/2021 Bible: Ephesians 4:1-16 Length: 39 min.
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
In today's episode Lakeisha Carter takes us on a journey of how she took steps to free herself from the Superwoman Syndrome, is now striving to live an uncaped life, and how therapy is playing an integral part in her healing. She admits that living an uncaped life is challenging because she was introduced to the Superwoman mentality in childhood and kinda felt like Superwoman was her destiny, but after losing her father she knew it was time to do life differently. She reluctanlty sought support by way of therapy and is now takiing her life back. If you've ever felt alone, voiceless or hopeless, you'll want to tune in to hear Lakeisha talk about how she made it over and how uncaping has changed her life for good. WHAT'S INSIDE: How rocking the Superwoman cape left her feeling voiceless How "Black woman" labels became an hindrance for entering therapy The steps she took get her voice back and learn to speak up for herself The importance of being your authentic self. Tune in now AND don't forget to share with your friends. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Open Path Collective Affordable Counseling Shades of Strong Sista Circle of Healing Therapy for Black Girls Podcast Black Girls Heal Podcast Lakeisha Carter on Facebook Other Episodes in Season 4 The Power of Sista to Sista Friendships Is Your Mother Wound Keeping You Separated from the Joys of Sistahood? Can the Sistahood Circle Be Unbroken? Identifying the Layers of the Black Superwoman Cape Things We've Lost to the Superwoman Cape LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life Tools and Resources Available Through Shades of Strong Superwoman Quiz Take this 4 minute quiz & get a breakdown of your superwoman archetype & how you can use this knowledge to set healthy boundaries in life, love, and relationships. Not Your Superwoman Healing Circle The Black Woman's Seven-Day Journey to Healing the Little Black Girl Within CIRCLE STARTS JULY 5, 2021
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
Sis!!! You DO NOT have to be your own best friend. In this episode Natty and Shirl are joined by Lana Hunter and Melissa J. Nixon who have developed a friendship that few have the privilege of enjoying. Lana and Melissa both believe that despite how friendships ebb and flow, lasting friendships are very much possible and they are living proof of it. Today we chat it up about how they met, how long they've been friends, what keeps the friendship GROWING, and how we can ALL experience long lasting, sista to sista friendships by being intentional, considerate and consistent in our efforts. If you've been hurt, betrayed or lost a friend, you'll want to tune in to hear how these ladies view friendships, how during times of trauma they LEAN IN INSTEAD OF OUT and the TOP THREE things that keep them in each others lives. WHAT'S INSIDE: The work that goes into building lasting friendships What healthy friendships look like The importance of being open to new friendships even after being hurt Setting healthy boundaries in lasting friendships Recovering from broken friendships Being intentional in friendships This episode is the third and final conversation in the sistahood series. Tune in now AND be sure to check out the rapid fire questions at the end. And don't forget to share with your friends. LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Sundress and Big Hat Brunch Melissa J. Nixon -- Courageous Life Academy Sundress and Big Hat Instagram Melissa J Nixon Instagram Other Episodes in Season 4 Is Your Mother Wound Keeping You Separated from the Joys of Sistahood? Can the Sistahood Circle Be Unbroken? Identifying the Layers of the Black Superwoman Cape Things We’ve Lost to the Superwoman Cape LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life Tools and Resources Available Through Shades of Strong Superwoman Quiz Take this 4 minute quiz & get a breakdown of your superwoman archetype & how you can use this knowledge to set healthy boundaries in life, love, and relationships. Not Your Superwoman Healing Circle The Black Woman’s Seven-Day Journey to Healing the Little Black Girl Within CIRCLE STARTS JULY 5, 2021
Intro Song: "Let It Go" By Playboi Carti In this Long Awaited Episode, the Most Important Person in the World is, None Other Than, XuperP; A Man of Many Names, Talents, and Triumphs. XuperP Sheds Light on his Journey of Becoming One of the Most Important Key Figures in Cleveland's Underground Music Scene. We Speak About Persevering Thru the Struggle, the Importance of Networking, and Believing in Yourself. From Rap Talk and the Influence of Drug Music, to Post Covid Predictions and Aliens; We Stay Important. Outro Song: "Psychic City (Classixx Remix)" By Yacht
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
The mother wound -- the festering wound that we MUST heal in order to fully experience the joy of being in relationship with our sistas. Sistahood is the container where we GET to surrender to deeper levels of support, deeper levels of love and accountability, but it is virtually impossible to experience such deep connections when your mother wound is lingering in the unhealed crevices of your soul. If you find yourself mistrusting other women, playing small, or unable to feel at peace and grounded in yourself, you may be experiencing symptoms of a sister wound intertwined with a mother wound. In this episode Shirl and Natty are chatting it up about how the unhealed wounds from our mothers contribute to the broken sistahood and how we can begin the process of healing both. WHAT'S INSIDE: How the mother wound and sistahood wound are intertwined What the cape is costing us when the hurt from our mothers is unhealed Effectively grieving the loss of the mother you wish you had How the mother wound contributes to how we do relationship with others How healing the wounds from your mother starts the healing of the sistahood wound This episode is the second in the sistahood series. Tune in now. And don't forget to share with your friends. LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Superwoman Archetype Quiz Not Your Superwoman Healing Circle Shades of Strong Instagram Black Mother Wound Instagram Other Episodes in Season 4 Can the Sistahood Circle Be Unbroken? Identifying the Layers of the Black Superwoman Cape Things We’ve Lost to the Superwoman Cape LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
Sistahood, the bond that keeps Black women together... …until it doesn't, right? Contrary to what mainstream media would have you believe, Black women are the original GIRLFRIENDS -- the original sistahood. Seriously, NOBODY has your back like Black women do. But the reality is, whether intentional or unintentional, Black women DO hurt Black women. …and it's time to have a conversation about it. In this episode Shirl and Natty are chatting it up about how Black women have each other's backs and how sometimes things happen and they don't anymore. WHAT'S INSIDE: The TOP FIVE challenges that contribute to broken friendships and sistahoods Hindrances to healing from broken sistahood wounds. The "superwoman shield" that protects us from being hurt again. Steps we can take to start healing from and rebuilding the sistahood wound. The unique bonds that keep Black sistahood together. Like every episode, Shirl and Natty POURED out a lot. Take what YOU need, and leave the rest. And don't forget to share with your friends. LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: Superwoman Archetype Quiz Not Your Superwoman Healing Circle Shades of Strong Instagram Shades of Strong Facebook. Sisterhood |They Smile in Your Face Other Episodes in Season 4 Identifying the Layers of the Black Superwoman Cape Things We’ve Lost to the Superwoman Cape LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
Black women have been rocking the Black superwoman cape since we were little Black girls. Don't believe it? Check out Shirl's "Red Rover" story in this first episode of Season 4. Tune in as Shirl and Natty give you a behind the scenes look at what caping, masking and hiding looks like for them, how it all started, the NUMBER ONE thing the cape is costing them and how they're learning to ditch the cape piece by piece, layer by layer. This episode also takes a look at: How the superwoman cape often forces us to "edit" ourselves and shrink back for the benefit of others. Why/how we started caping and how we're drowning in the "debt" of it all. The different coping mechanisms we use when caping, masking and hiding. How superwoman is NOT a lifestyle but one big ball of emotional and mental drudgery. How the superwoman lifestyle is somewhat comparable to the Stepford wife lifestyle. Healing the little Black girl behind the Black superwoman by redefining our super powers. As you can see, there's A LOT of pouring it out happening in this episode and there's so much more to come, so kick your shoes off. Get comfortable. Stay a while. Links mentioned in this episode: Not Your Superwoman Healing Circle Shades of Strong Instagram Shades of Strong Facebook. LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
Sis, aren't you tired of rocking that Superwoman cape? Aren't you tired of letting "them" tell you how to do life, how to do strong? If you answered yes, season four is just what you need to start the journey to uncaping. The theme for this season is "Things We've Lost to the [Superwoman] Cape" and we're talking about ALL THE THINGS the cape is costing us and how we ditch the cape piece by piece layer by layer. The cape is costing ALOT: Sisterhood and community Relationship and intimacy Our emotional standards Our right to be respected and protected Our right to NOT be exploited Our right to NOT be abused---verbally, physically & emotionally …and that's just the tip of the iceberg. We're going in this season and it all starts NOW. LISTEN TO EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Healing the Little Black Girl Behind the Strong Black Woman Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life
The Most Important Person on Earth is the Holy Spirit John 7:38,39
Intro Song: "AQUABERRY DOLPHiN" By RiffRaff The Most Important Podcast is Back! Your Favorite Hosts, Q & Harry, are Joined by Today's Most Important Person, Jerald Spohn. Jerald is a Mixed Martial Artist and Amateur Comedian. This Episode we Dive into the Fight World; Discussing the Mentality of a Fighter, the Importance of Failure, and what Puts the Art in Martial Arts. A lot of fun was had, A lot of Jokes were Cracked, and as Always We Keep it Ticklish. Stay important! Outro Song: "Psychic City (Classixx Remix)" By Yacht
Shades of Strong | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative
It's time to heal the little Black girl behind the strong Black woman. The life you long for, the deep connections you desire are buried inside the little Black girl behind the Strong Black woman. The little Black girl who was conditioned to never cry, ask for help or need anyone, the little Black girl who was taught to mimic happiness even when her heart was breaking, the little Black girl who was led to believe that it’s better to be seen and not heard. Aren’t you ready to reacquaint yourself with her? You don't have to morph into somebody else's version of the Strong Black Woman. You don't have to be the fixer like Olivia Pope, slay giants like Cookie Lyon, be the Queen in the conference room like Mary Jane OR save EVERYBODY like Annalise Keating. Join Shirl in this episode as she talks about: Her personal journey of uncaping, unmasking and unhiding by way of a very vulnerable journal entry Uncaping, Unmasking, Unhiding, Unlearning and Relearning How the Superwoman lifestyle/mindset was birthed in childhood How network television has gone from one extreme (the mammy, the Jezebel, the sapphire) to the next (the self-sacrificing Strong Black Woman), thereby perpetuating the idea that the Strong Black Woman has to sacrifice herself to be ALL THE THINGS to ALL THE PEOPLE. How to listeners can start to heal the little Black girl behind the Strong Black Woman Autonomy of your emotional standards as a Strong Black Woman Leave us a direct message on Instagram to get on the waitlist for the Not Your Superwoman Starter Kit. LISTEN TO THESE OTHER EPISODES in the Not Your Superwoman Mini-Series Rest. Because Sometimes Your Strength Gets Tired The Fine Line Between Independent and Too Independent Never Let What They Think of You Silence You You Get to Be Strong and Vulnerable Strong Black Women Feel Things Too You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life
In this episode Joanne Williams, LCSW discusses with Debbie Weisman the Dream Coach, She a Best-selling Author, Writer or contributor to 29 books, including Chicken Soup for the Soul, In addition to her coaching work, Debbie is the co-owner of a film and video production company with films including the film What the Bleep Do We Know! and the Dreaming Heaven a spiritual documentary. Debbie is also the best-selling author of over twenty novels, including five of the original books in the popular Sweet Valley High series. She credits her dream work with inspiring her to return to writing. Her most recent books include 101 Dream Dates: How to Say I love You To the Most Important Person in Your Life-- Summary of today Podcast: Why Dreams are important or why we should pay attention to them. Why you need a Dream coach? A system for turning those nightmares into sweet dreams. Believe your dreams How can one dream change your life? How can my dreams affect me if I don't remember them? Question for today is? What are some of the most frequently dreams dreamed? Debbie helps dreamers understand their dreams. She asks aspects of the Dream or Symbols that the dreamer interprets according to what they mean to the dreamer, until they understand what is means to them. She can answer general questions about dreams or help you understand how your dreams can lead to greater self-awareness. self-confidence and self-love. She has a Process to interpret dreams: You need to Believe that a dream has answers for you Notice the feelings in the dream Understand how this relates to your life Honor the information that is discovered Take action to honor the dream There is a term called Dream Recrafting where you can go into a dream and reconstruct the ending to have it have the ending that you want. Especially if this is a nightmare or you are a victim in the dream. You can recraft it to become the superhero instead of being a victim. Or you can do this after the dream through rewriting the ending. Some of the most frequent dreams are of fear, being naked or losing teeth. Debbie is happy to answer general questions about dreams or help you understand how your dreams can lead to greater self-awareness. self-confidence and self-love. Go to her website: thedreamcoach.net and click on the link to schedule an appointment for a complementary 30-minute Dream Discovery Session, her email- Debbie@thedreamcoach.net Debbie has her own podcast Dream Life coach on Dream Power Radio Join the Conversation Our favorite part of recording is answering your questions, from Facebook at AnxietySimplified.net. Leave comments in the comment section, we will answer on a Podcast on that subject. So, listen for your question. Or share it with someone who may be helped with that answer. Our next podcast: Steven Marks-Weight loss- The No BS, No Gimmick, (Sort Of) Easy Way to Lose Weight and Keep It Off Forever See other podcast at AnxietySimplified.net
Have you experienced this? The driver in front of you is going slower and slower on the highway as they talk on their phone You are in the bookstore when the person walking beside you has their phone go off breaking the peace and silence. You are sitting at a restaurant enjoying the company and the meal when the person next to you engages in cell yell. I think that we have all been exposed to poor cell phone etiquette. Are you attached to your cell phone? I don't particularly like mine. In fact, I keep it off most of the time, unless I need to call my husband or remind my kids of something if I am on the road. But it is getting harder and harder to do that. Cell phones are an integral part of our technology-based world, and they won't be disappearing anytime soon. However, if we all practiced a little more courtesy using our phone, then maybe cell phones would not seem so annoying and intrusive. So Here are today's Hot Tips For Building Resiliency and Celebrating Cell Phone Courtesy Month: Evaluate your own cell phone practices: Make sure you keep it down. No one wants to hear you on the phone Love the vibration. Use your phone's vibration mode when in public Try to excuse yourself when accepting a call in a group gathering Focus on the task at hand, not your cell phone And try to make the Person You are With Feel Like the Most Important Person you want to talk to Looking for more ways to build your resiliency? Take my free on-line resiliency test at worksmartlivesmart.com under the resources and courses tab.
We're coming at you today with a host-only show! This episode launches our month-long series on 2020 Reset. Today's topic is How to Reset Your Mind, where hosts Rachel and Raquel cover three main barriers to resetting and how to break them down, some short-term reset ideas, and New Year's Eve? Here's a list of the resources mentioned in the show: Article: New Years Resolutions Don't Last. Do This Instead. Article: To Achieve Big Goals, Start with Small Habits Article: Mind Matters: How to Effortlessly Have More Positive Thoughts Article: 7 Steps to Take to Be Nicer to the Most Important Person in Your Life Article: Micro-Habits Changed My Life Article: Is Comparison Really the Thief of Joy? Article: 10 Ways to Reset Your Mind Book: Atomic Habits - An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits and Break Bad Ones
The Darryl Mobley Show: Your Life Coach On The Radio PODCAST
More than 98% of those who say they are NOT making satisfactory progress towards their life goals do NOT have The One Person They Must Have In Their Lives in order to reach those goals. America's #1 Life Coach, Darryl Mobley - shares that in all likelihood, you don't have that one person active in your life that you most need to have…if you want to reach your life goals, become happier, achieve more professional success, achieve more personal success...In this episode #12 of The Darryl Mobley Show: Your Life Coach On The Radio, Coach Mobley tells you about the missing person in your life. He provides valuable information and an amazing personal example of how you can find The One Person You Must Have In Your Life so that YOU. LIVE. YOUR. BEST. LIFE! Here's a secret: The One Person You Must Have In Your Life is NOT who you think it is! Coach Mobley tells you who already in your life IS NOT The One Person You Must Have In Your Life.Once you find The One Person You Must Have In Your Life…You will achieve more in a shorter time than you ever thought possible. You will make steady progress towards your goals. Your happiness will increase. You will begin to live your best life. Each day will be an exciting step in your journey. It's just the best!Spoiler Alert: The One Person You Must Have In Your Life may be more than one person.Click HERE to get Coach Mobley's "Live Your Best Life!" Newsletter. It's FREE!Click HERE to Get the "Best Life Coach On The Planet!" Click bit.ly/get-life-coachingAs Coach Mobley says, "No negativity allowed," and "Enjoy Life!"Contact Coach Mobley at: CoachMobley.com Twitter.com/CoachMobley Instagram.com/LifeCoachMobley
Episode 92: Most Important Person in Crypto Returns? In this episode, we discuss these topics—Satoshi possibly moving 50 BTC from a wallet that hasn't had any activity since 2009, a coin that just announced a partnership with a video game maker, and a host of one of the most popular podcasts in the world signing an exclusive deal with Spotify. For News Break, we talk about the story that Satoshi Nakamoto possibly just moved 50 BTC from a wallet that's been dormant since 2009. Is this true? What is the implication of this story to the crypto space? We discuss this developing story in News Break. In Token Time, we feature Litecoin and its partnership with video game maker Atari. How will this partnership play out for the online gaming community? How will this pan out for both parties? Find out the answers in this segment. For Manspreading, we talk about Joe Rogan and his whopping exclusive deal with Spotify for $100 Million. What is the ripple effect of this huge contract to YouTube, Podcasting, and Audio Content Creation? We weigh in on Joe Rogan's move and statement. Get $50 for FREE when you get the #MCO $MCO card through the Beards & Bitcoins Crypto Podcast! Head over to http://mco.beards.live Time Stamps of Segments 07:03 News Break 14:52 Token Time 21:53 Manspreading If you have questions for us, head over to ask.beards.live and record your audio question. This episode is sponsored by Monarch Wallet. Rule your own financial kingdom from the palm of your hand. A team at Monarch is working hard to bring you the one app to access all the best crypto services. They believe in delivering tech, not hype. With the universal decentralized Monarch Wallet, you can buy, store, spend, and earn crypto and with Monarch Pay you can set up and accept recurring crypto payments. Monarch Wallet and Monarch Pay are designed to make receiving and paying recurring crypto payments safer, faster, and easier for consumers and merchants alike. For more information, check out and download Monarch Wallet on App Store or Google Play or head over to https://monarchwallet.com Unite the Crypto Community! We now have a way for you to show your love for who is your favorite host. We have Team JChains and Team BitBoy shirts. Check out the merch on beardsandbitcoins.com—just click Merch on the top right side of the website and show us some love. Thanks for tuning into this week’s episode of Beards and Bitcoins—the podcast bringing you news, information, and stories to spread awareness about cryptocurrency. If you enjoyed this episode, head over to Apple Podcasts, subscribe to the show, and leave us a rating and review. Help us spread the word by sharing your favorite episodes on social media. And don’t forget to visit our website, grab your favorite Beards and Bitcoins merch, and follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter! Please also note we do not provide financial advice. Always do your own research when investing or making financial decisions. Get your daily dose of crypto wisdom on Twitter: @BeardsBitcoins Read more about cryptocurrency on our website: BeardsAndBitcoins.com Join us as we take the discussion further on Telegram: https://t.me/beardsandbitcoins Connect with us on Twitter! BitBoy: @BitBoy_Crypto JChains: @CryptoJChains
PODCAST PERKS: CLICK HERE for your FREE downloadable resource! or visit www.subscribepage.com/PodcastPerks18 EPISODE 18: Improve Your Relationship with the Most Important Person in Your Life: YOU! No, I don't mean in a selfish and narcissistic way. But your relationship with yourself overflows and affects the people you love most. So, just like putting your oxygen mask on first in an airplane emergency, we're going to work on one simple step today to improve your relationship with YOU. About The Simple Steps to Thrive™ Podcast: Each episode, you'll get practical and easy to implement Simple Steps to Thrive™. You'll also have access to a free PODCAST PERKS resource with every episode. Download it and apply the Simple Step from this episode directly into your own life. And once you're subscribed to my VIP Podcast Perks email list, I'll send the perk directly to your inbox every week. Easy-peasy. Are you ready to take your life back? Are you ready to overcome? Let's get started. One simple step at a time. NEW episodes on Fridays!
Like what you see? Please give generously. http://www.thinktechhawaii.com Realize That You Are the Most Important Person in Your Life. Self-care means the focus is on self, not everyone else. How many people rush around to take care of others before taking care of one’s self. YOU are the most important person in your life. You have to realize and actualize this belief first before you can take care of others well. The host for this episode is Eileen Paulo-Chrisco. The guest for this episode is Anthony Chrisco.
Eddie Alterman is the Chief Brand Officer for Hearst Autos. He develops new areas of business for Hearst Autos’ consumer brands, Car and Driver and Road & Track. Previously Eddie served as Editor-in-Chief of Car and Driver, the world’s largest car magazine brand. While at the University of Michigan, Eddie began writing for Automobile Magazine, and stayed there for 13 years, rising to senior editor. He later founded MPH magazine; contributed to Men’s Journal, GQ, the New York Times, and New York Magazine; and launched motivemag.com, an automotive-lifestyle website. Widely regarded as the nation’s top automotive editor, Eddie was named 38th Most Important Person in the Automotive Industry by Complex Magazine. In 2005, he was named one of Crain’s Detroit Business “40 Under 40.”
With the legalization of cannabis, licensed cannabis operators are now seeing that the focus is clearly shifting towards financial compliance. And if you want to be a successful cannabis company, you must have a competent Chief Financial Officer (internal or outsourced) who can help your company navigate the treacherous waters of financial regulations. In this […] The post Why Your CFO is the MOST Important Person in Your Cannabis Company appeared first on GreenGrowth CPAs.
With the legalization of cannabis, licensed cannabis operators are now seeing that the focus is clearly shifting towards financial compliance. And if you want to be a successful cannabis company, you must have a competent Chief Financial Officer (internal or outsourced) who can help your company navigate the treacherous waters of financial regulations. In this […] The post Why Your CFO is the MOST Important Person in Your Cannabis Company appeared first on GreenGrowth CPAs.
With the legalization of cannabis, licensed cannabis operators are now seeing that the focus is clearly shifting towards financial compliance. And if you want to be a successful cannabis company, you must have a competent Chief Financial Officer (internal or outsourced) who can help your company navigate the treacherous waters of financial regulations. In this […] The post Why Your CFO is the MOST Important Person in Your Cannabis Company appeared first on GreenGrowth CPAs.
Who is the Most Important Person to Study in the World?http://www.patrickbetdavid.com
Who Does Jesus Say He Is? Thinking Rightly about the Most Important Person in History (Matthew 11)Dr. Steve Wellum Jesus Views Himself as the Lord of History (Matthew 11:1-15). Jesus Views Our Response to Him as a Matter of Life or Death (Matthew 11:16-24). Jesus Views Himself as Equal with the Father and thus God the Son Incarnate Who Alone Sovereignly Rules and Redeems (Matthew 11:25-30). Conclusion: We cannot be neutral about this Jesus.
IL #266: Who is the Most Important Person in Your Mastermind Group?
Topics Include: - A Total Bizarre Analysis of Whether or Not Anyone Should Ever Come Out! - There's Still Hope: Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal! - Disneyland: The Crappiest? Or the Bestest?! - Xenu?! Forced Abortions?! The Cult of Scientology! - Is Tom Cruise the Most Important Person on this Planet?! And so much more! So sit back, relax, and enjoy the most downloaded podcast in the world! The Unimaginary Friendcast! The Unimaginary Friendcast is hosted by David Monster, Erin Marie Bette Davis Jr. and Nathan Edmondson. www.unimaginaryfriend.com/friendcast And find us on Facebook!
The Most Important Person in Your Support System This month’s theme is Support System Management and you can get the worksheet at AffirmationPod.com/support The Most Important Person in Your Support System is YOU. Wherever you are, there you are. And you have the most impact and influence on who you are and who you are becoming. Here's three reflection questions I share in this episode: What messages do you give yourself? What actions are you taking to support yourself? What changes are you making to step into the future you want? Want More? Download the App! Feel better, stronger and more confident with the Affirmation Pod App! This episode is in the category "Self-Care” The AP Access App is where you can easily mark your favorites, make your own playlist, download to listen offline and a whole lot more! It's also where you can sign up for premium access, which gives you all episodes with no ads and no announcements plus bonus content you won’t find on the podcast. Download the App at AffirmationPodApp.com!
Potch 11h00 "The Most Important Person on Earth"
Potch 11h00 "The Most Important Person on Earth"
We only believe we're loved & accepted as much as the Most Important Person in our life says we are. Discover the power of spoken blessing!
We only believe we're loved & accepted as much as the Most Important Person in our life says we are. Discover the power of spoken blessing!
"Taking Care of #1 - The Most Important Person", Chris Hodge