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Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Candát patří mezi naše absolutně nejlepší ryby. Stačí jen citron a sůl, abychom přiznali jeho chuť a nepřetloukli chuť ryby zbytečným kořením. Svěží a lehké jídlo s restovanou zeleninou a nadýchanou vinnou pěnou připravíte za chvilku.
Třebíč začíná s instalací vánoční výzdoby, která zkrášlí město na sváteční období. Centra vánočního osvětlení budou tradičně na Karlově náměstí a v parku na Hrádku.
Gabi Bury is a DJ and promoter from the Bieszczady Mountains, currently residing in Krakow. She is the initiator of the Fantasmagoria project and a resident DJ at the Krakow club Noce. Her sets navigate between atmospheric, dark experimental techno and fast, energetic grooves. She has shared the stage with artists such as Błażej Malinowski, Raär, and Axel Karakasis. Gabi Bury has gained recognition in the Polish music scene, performing in renowned clubs like Szpitalna 1, STK, Noce, Święta Krowa, and Luzztro. Social Media: FB: https://www.facebook.com/GabiBuryDJ IG: https://www.instagram.com/gabi_burydj SC: https://soundcloud.com/gabi_bury Playlist: 1. Jan Goertz - Amarus Loop (Jan Goertz Remix) 2. D.Dan - Hide and Seek 3. Taimer - Tunel Esoterico 4. Danny Wabbit - Eternity 5. Lindsey Herbert - Coming Into Contact 6. Toru Ikemoto - DONT PLAY 084 7. Kamellia - Se Leurrer 8. Nicolas Vogler, AD7USTMENT - Your 9. Egotot & Franz Jager - Spare Matrix 10. Klint - Menthe (Orginal Mix) 11. Ned Bennett - Meltdown (Orginal Mix) 12. J.Blofeld - Arcade (Orginal Mix) 13. Bours? - Another Mirage 14. Motion Symmetry - Torr 15. Red Rooms - Zoia 16. Alberto Tolo - Zone[ALT08] 17. Kuss & Mac Declos - Dhaka 18. Sons Of Hidden - Cristals Heal (Orginal Mix) 19. Paul Hauck - Wasteland 20. Rony Group - Dogwood 21. Amarou - Spiral
Magazín: Godzone tour; Brodfest; Vánoce spolu. Hovoří: Lukáš Valach, David Rajca, Zbyšek Šikula.
Klatovští rybáři zahájili sérii podzimních výlovů. Potrvá až do konce měsíce listopadu.
Vánoce budou v říjnu, nařídil venezuelský prezident Maduro. Co tím sleduje, se ptáme v magazínu Vertikály. Probereme světové reakce na to, že Ukrajina zakázala působení Ruské pravoslavné církve na svém území. A prozradíme, jak vypadaly „Posvátné hry”, které proběhly během paralympiády.Všechny díly podcastu Vertikála můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
"Tous ceux que vous trouverez, invitez-les à la noce" Méditation de l'évangile (Mt 22, 1-14) par le Père Michel QuesnelChant final : "Invités aux noces de l'agneau" par le Groupe de prière Abba
Samsung představil celou řadu nových produktů od nových ohebných telefonů Galaxy Z Fold6 a Galaxy Z Flip6, přes nové chytré hodinky Galaxy Watch Ultra a Galaxy Watch7 po nová přepracovaná svítící sluchátka Galaxy Buds3 a Buds3 Pro. Mimo to uvedl nové Galaxy AI funkce. My si novinky osahali a dnes si je rozebereme.
« Les invités de la noce pourraient-ils donc être en deuil pendant le temps où l'Époux est avec eux ? » (Mt 9, 14-17)Méditation par le Père Nicolas de BoccardChant Final : "Un vin nouveau" par HILLSONG (En français)
Devocional Diário | O QUE DEUS ESPERA DE VOCÊ | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário I A OBEDIÊNCIA ABENÇOA I Keila Noce
Devocional Diário I OLHOS ESPIRITUAIS I Keila Noce
Devocional Diário | UMA VIDA PLENA | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | ABRA SEUS OLHOS | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | A VERDADEIRA OBEDIÊNCIA | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário I A VERDADEIRA OBEDIÊNCIA I Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | LIVRE-SE DO EGOÍSMO | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | O QUE DEUS ESPERA DE VOCÊ | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | CONHECIMENTO QUE SALVA | Renan Noce
Devocional Diário | UM CORAÇÃO AJUSTADO | Renan Noce
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Devocional Diário | A SEMENTE DO MAIS | Renan Noce
Używki, domówki, nocne wyprawy po mieście, tańce z obcymi ludźmi… Cali my, prawda? Otóż takie właśnie historie nam się ostatnio przydarzyły. Posłuchajcie same!
Duda ODLECIAŁ. Samolot dla każdego? Dlaczego prezydent leci do największego sojusznika Putina? Tusk się na to godzi? Nowa książka "Noce z Dudą" Izabeli Pek. Prawa ręka Ziobry - Michał Woś - traci immunitet? Kto następny? 00:00:00 Wstęp 00:02:48 Flesz IPP TV 00:24:18 Duda: samolot dla każdego! 00:37:59 Duda spotka się z Xi Jinpingiem 01:03:38 Michał Woś straci immunitet? 01:15:23 "Noce z Dudą" - książka Izabeli Pek 01:28:34 Ogłoszenia #IPPTVNaŻywo #polityka #AndrzejDuda #Ziobro ----------------------------------------------------
La revue de presse internationale - Les correspondants d'Europe 1
Tous les jours de la semaine, Europe 1 décrypte trois articles de la presse du jour.
En matière de sexualité, le 19ème siècle semble être celui de la contradiction : on exige la chasteté des femmes avant le mariage. La sexualité en dehors du couple marié est condamnée par l'Eglise et semble dans les faits, n'être réservée qu'aux hommes. Dans ce contexte, l'initiation et l'apprentissage des corps, de l'intimité érotique du couple est parfois terriblement brutale. Pourtant, le thème de l'amour romantique, passionnel et fusionnel est omniprésent dans la littérature. Alors que devient-il lorsque les portes des chambres à coucher se referment et que le « devoir conjugal » doit être accompli ? Aïcha Limbada est chercheuse et docteure en histoire contemporaine, membre de l'Ecole française de Rome. Elle est l'autrice de l'ouvrage : « La nuit de noces, une histoire de l'intimité conjugale », paru aux éditions La Découverte. Elle répond aux questions de Céline Roduit. Attention oreilles sensibles s'abstenir, contenus sexuels explicites. Cet épisode parle également de viol conjugal et de violences sexuelles, merci de respecter vos limites et celles de vos proches.
Tell Us The Truth Episode 81: American Idol Contestant Amari & Dr. Nikki Starr NoceThis episode of Tell Us The Truth is packed with inspiration! First, we meet Amari, the history-making contestant on American Idol - Amari opens up about her journey as the first openly Transgender singer to earn a Golden Ticket. She shares her gratitude for the judges, particularly Katy Perry, and discusses the challenges and excitement of transitioning from local star to national phenomenon.Amari also offers insightful advice for aspiring singers, especially those in the Trans community, who dream of following in her footsteps.In the second half, Dr. Nikki Starr Noce, a former Medical Doctor turned Spiritual Guide, joins the conversation. Dr. Nikki discusses her own transformation and how she helps others navigate the ever-changing world we live in, especially in the wake of recent global events. She delves into practices for self-empowerment and avoiding control from external forces, including religion.Don't miss this episode filled with stories of strength, self-discovery, and the courage to be your authentic self!Follow Amari's journey on social media @SryAmari.Visit DrNikkiStarr.Com to learn more about Dr. Nikki.*You can Subscribe to Tell Us The Truth on all leading podcast apps including the iHeart Radio App, Spreaker and iTunes/Apple Podcasts. Join us on Facebook and Twitter for daily discussion about top news.*
Esperant el Cometa #15 - Il·lustracions i cobertes al fantàstic (març 2024) Durada: 125 minuts. Benvinguts al quinzé episodi d'Esperant el Cometa, el podcast de l'Associació Cultural El Bibiblionauta. Avui parlarem de la il·lustració de les novel·les dels gèneres fantàstics amb dos grans experts del tema: en Ricard Efa i la Marina Vidal. Segur que heu vist les seves obres. La Marina és una gran il·lustradora de cobertes de fa molt temps, però darrerament se n'està parlant molt gràcies a la seva feina amb la col·lecció de novel·les de Discmon, de'n Terry Pratchett. En Ricard Efa, a part de ser l'autor de la sèrie de còmics de Noceà, també té una llarga trajectòria com a portadista. Esperem que gaudiu tant com nosaltres de la tertúlia. Aquest episodi és presentat per en Miquel Codony, l'Edgar Cotes i en Pablo Mallorquí. A la secció de ressenyes, en Miquel Codony ens parla de “L'altre costat”, d'Iván Ledesma; en Pablo Mallorquí ressenya l'assaig “Poe i el romanticisme fosc”, d'Emili Olcina; i l'Egar Cotes ens porta “Les dames de Grace Adieu”, de Susanna Clarke. Finalment, en Miquel Codony segresta la secció de còmic per palar de l'univers creatiu de l'Albert Monteys fent servir la recernt publicació d'Univers! com a excusa. Ens escoltem! Esperant al cometa és una iniciativa de l'Associació cultural El biblionauta, una entitat sense ànim de lucre dedicada a la divulgació de la literatura de ciència-ficció i fantasia en llengua catalana. Si ens voleu ajudar al manteniment de l'associació us en podeu fer mecenes a elbiblionauta.com. Moltes gràcies i us esperem al següent episodi d'Esperant al cometa!
Jimmy Hallinan and Willie Noce are two prolific coaches in the fitness industry who bring a very simplistic, yet informative approach to health & fitness. We discuss: - Mistakes we've made in the past with nutrition - Do we prefer to coach training or nutrition - How to set goals for 2024 - Common nutrition mistakes clients make before hiring a coach And MUCH MORE Connect with Will by clicking HERE, and with Jim by clicking HERE! Connect with Me: Click HERE to request your FREE Lifestyle Assessment! Get all your questions answered by clicking HERE! Check out my website, Amplify Lifestyle Coaching! Join over 500 subscribers getting 1-2 high value, free coaching content each week by clicking HERE! Join my FREE FACEBOOK COMMUNITY to get weekly exclusive FB lives and a motivating community of other like minded people.
In today's episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, we embark on a reflective journey through the lens of history. We examine the perceived hardships of modern life compared to past decades like the 1950s and 1960s. Drawing on personal experiences, I note how some aspects of the human condition remain unchanged despite technological and social evolution. Shifting to practical topics, we discuss strategies for leveraging intellectual property, especially during economic downturns. Adapting to changes and maintaining resilience emerge as significant when transforming ideas into tangible assets. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS In this episode we reflect on how technological advancements have transformed personal and societal challenges compared to past decades. Dan examines the prevalence of mental health discussions in contemporary society versus the silence around such issues in the 50s and 60s. We explore the philosophical implications of our tech-saturated age through the ideas of Italian philosopher Augusto del Noce on atheism and technology. Dan and I question if the abundance of knowledge and advancements in AI truly contribute to happiness or complicate our understanding of the world. We consider whether technology, like virtual reality, adds new dimensions to life or repackages what has always existed. discussions on the military's use of advanced technology, such as eye-controlled systems, and its trickle into civilian life. We share insights on the transformation of media consumption habits and the strategic benefits of converting intellectual property into tangible assets. I underscore the importance of adaptability and resilience, especially when leveraging intellectual property during economic challenges. Dan and I share personal experiences, noting that while the geographical footprint expands, human connection and existence remain constant. We ponder the impact of innovations on our daily lives and the need to adapt to chase tangible achievements in the face of technological change. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr Sullivan, Dan: Mr Jackson, Dean: it would be a tragedy if these calls were not recorded. It really would. Dan: That would be the truth. Dean: Isn't it nice? Dan: that they're automatically recorded and we don't have to remember to do it. Yeah, just feels organic, so welcome back. Yeah, it's been a few, a couple of weeks here. Dean: Yeah, you know, here's a, here's a thought that I was just pondering, that it seems to me that, as cloud by India expands people's real world experience not real world, but mainland experience they're both. Mainland experience seems to be more challenging and seems to be, in some cases, more vaccine and more traumatic. Okay, do you have some exhibits? That's my thought, that's my cheerful thought for the day. Dan: Do you have some exhibits for your argument? Dean: Well, there's such an emphasis now on meltdown, people having nervous breakdowns, which I don't remember at all growing up, you know 50s 60s? I don't remember any talk like this, but now it's constant, every day. You know people. Dan: And it's everywhere right. Dean: Like now this is. Yeah, I mean everywhere that I know it's much of the world in humanity that I don't know, but everywhere I know, it's not so much that the people that I'm talking to, our experience, and it's not that it's a narrative. You know that. You know these are the most trying times that humans have ever had, and I said well, first, of all. I don't even know how you would know that you know? Dan: how would you know? How would you know? Yes, I mean, if you haven't been there, you probably your knowledge of 150 years ago is probably pretty slim. Dean: How about the dark ages? That would have to be pretty yeah. Dan: Well, I, you know, I don't know, you know, I don't know. Dean: I mean, I think it's a comparison, and I think somebody's got a point to make. When they say the dark ages. Well, they probably weren't dark for the people who were in the dark ages. They probably weren't dark for the people who were in them. Dan: Right, exactly, that's so funny. Dean: Well, the Roman. Dan: Empire seemed to have a pretty good time, didn't they? Dean: Yeah, well, you know, life is life. You know, you know, and yeah, it's a discussion I have with people who are talking about the future and I said I'm going to guarantee you one thing about the future is that when you get there, it's going to feel normal. Dan: And we're going to. It's funny. Dean: I think that would be disappointing to a lot of people, because they think that the future is going to transform them. And I said well, not anymore than the past. Did I remember how? Dan: to find the old. I would say these are the good old times. Yeah, like that's the reality. Is wherever right now. It's just the distance of it right Like if you're thinking. You know, in the past, that was just a reflection of a moment in the present. At one point you know, yeah, well, the reason was we were thinking about the future. Dean: The reason was we were. We were at Genius Network this week and the subject of Apple's new Provision goggles came out. Okay, I don't know if you've experimented yet I haven't. And not, but they said this is going to change everything. Dan: And I said wait a minute. Dean: You're in a half. Ai was going to change everything. And you know I got up this morning and you know my life doesn't feel that much different than when the day before AI was introduced. Yes, at. Dan: GVT. Dean: Yes, and I said and so I began thinking about that that you're using basically a Cloud Landia phenomenon to save. That phenomenon is going to change everything. And and I said, well, you know, I mean who's talking. I mean my question is who's talking? Maybe it's going to change you, but you know, for most people there I mean half the world won't even know about it 10 years from now. Dan: Yeah, like that's. You know, it's so funny. It reminds me of the. You know, how do you? It's like asking a fish how do you like the water? Yeah, yeah, they don't have any recollection of what you're reading. The water, yeah, gen Z is now. You know, all the Gen Zs have no idea about a world without Internet and social media and everything on demand. I mean, they have no idea about there being three channels on TV that broadcast everything to everyone at the same time and not when you watch what they put out. I mean, that's pretty, it's pretty amazing, right, and it was in black and white. Dean: In black and white, on a dream. Dan: Yeah. Dean: You had to jiggle with the antenna to make sure that you're receiving that day. Yeah, you didn't think anything strange about it, that's just. You know, that's just what you had to do. Dan: Eating your TV dinner and it's tinfoil plate and your Jiffy popcorn. Dean: I remember those as being quite tasty. Dan: Yeah. Dean: Isn't that? Dan: funny though, dan. I mean, I do think about that a lot. I just I extended the southerly boundary of my footprint on the planet a couple of weekends ago. I was down in. Miami, in Brickle, at Giovanni Marceco's Archangel event. He invited me down and yeah, so it was just a you know another world. You know expand everything happening. You know people bustling around all in there, certainly a lot of traffic, every you know on the mainland things are Largely status quo, you know, and getting more. Dean: Yeah, you got to pick your time. You got to be more intelligent about picking when you decide to travel these things you know, but I got a feeling that's been that way, you know, Since we could transport ourselves. But I think the question I have is. What is it about, the president? That's not okay with you you know, and. I did this diagram, which I'm going to develop into a thinking exercise. I love that. Yeah, and it's, and I think you've seen it, I think you've seen it and what I have is a sheet of paper and the diagram goes from lower left to upper right. Okay, and down at the bottom there's a little circle and that's at the upper left. Upper right is a bigger circle, and underneath the little circle is here, and under above the Bigger circle in the upper right-hand corner is there, and then I draw a line that's got an arrow head you know, it's a straight arrowhead and it's called striving. Dan: And I said I'm. Dean: This is a portrait of your entire life. I'm going to tell you your as entrepreneurs. So I'm just going to tell you your entire life is. You're here and you're striving to get there. Striving, I said how many of you remember, this is the way it was at 10 years old, 30 years old, some of you 50 years old. I can remember 70 years old. Okay, that was just what I say. So let's say you start at 10 and now you're 60 years old and One thing is absolutely true you have a lifetime, 50 year habit every day, lifetime habit reinforced, of being here but striving to get there. I said so With that very pure habit in place. What do you think the chances are? At 60, you're going to be there. Dan: That's it's so, it's profound Right, but it fits in with the cap and the game too, in a way. Dean: Yeah, so actually 10 years ago. The reason I'm bringing this up is 10 years ago I Decided that I'm there and now, the job is not to get anywhere. The job is just to expand the quality and quantity of the there that I'm at mm-hmm okay and, and I had this exercise and you did, which is called your best decade ever, and I decided, when I look back, that I've achieved more Between 70 and a couple months, 80 70 to 80. I've achieved more in the last 10 years than I did in the previous 70 years. Dan: And what do you? Did you set out with that as your intention, or did you know? Is that my? Dean: intention. I just made a decision. I remember that 10 years ago, when I was 70 and yeah, there was, if you remember, there was a big party and I mean, how can I forget? Dan: you just recently forgave me for lying to you. Yeah there was a. Dean: Dirty lying culprit Involved in that and I love him in spite of that. Dan: I love, there we go, thank you. Dean: Thank you and anyway, but I was reflecting that I'm there, you know, I'm there and there's no. And it shows up in two ways, dean, and it is that I've noticed, and I this just occurred to me one day, because people say Would you like to meet so-and-so, and I said not really right really, and I don't have any particular reasons, it's like yeah, somebody said who's the person that, if you could, you would love most to have dinner with and I said Jackson. I said, certainly someone I know, certainly some what I know knows. You haven't met them yet. And I said, nah, I can't think of anyone you know. And they said yeah, but you know, yeah, I mean, is there anyone in the you know that's gonna be different in the future and I said yeah, but that just that's built into the formula. I said you know, every year we bring you know close to a thousand new entrepreneurs into the program and I know a lot of a thousand there's gonna be. You know a handful of them that I really get to know and they're you know, they're bright, they're exciting, they're ambitious, they're creative, they're doing all sorts of interesting things. I so, just as matter, of course, I'm gonna meet them and they said no. But you know, I mean, would you like to meet Taylor Swift? I said no, what would we talk about? And somebody was gonna introduce me Actually the I was described to this person. That person said I'd really like to meet him and it was a famous politician. They'd like to meet this guy. And so they said would you call him because he'd really like to talk to you? And I said but I don't have anything to say. He may think of a reason for meeting me, but I don't have any reason for meeting him, you know. And I've got so many really bright people that I know. That I'm having great conversations with I don't you know, I don't really want to. It would be a lot of effort, you know a lot of effort. Yeah it would be a, it would be a guess and a bet. Dan: Where I'm working with I'm working with guarantees, you know so. Dean: Anyway. But the other aspect of this where's the place in the world? You haven't been yet. I said can't think of any. You know that you'd like to really go to. I say I can't think of any. Right you know, maybe when I'm in London I'll head in the northwest direction rather than you know the other directions. Have already gone in to see what's five or six streets away and I know in. London. You're in London, you're always running into something new. No longer, no matter how long you're there, you're doing that. So I've got those two things and I think it's a function of the decision I made 10 years ago. You know that there's nobody I particularly want to meet. There's no one, a particular Place that I want to go, and I think the reason is because I've decided that. Dan: I'm there. Do you know? What's so funny, dan, is that is very similar thinking to what I did in 1999 with the. I know I'm being successful when I'm thinking about that. It's being is the state of being here. You can only, you can only be in the present doing it's being right being yeah, it's really interesting. Dean: I've been reading this several volume series by this Italian philosopher, truly a philosopher. Augusto del noce died around 1990 and it's on atheism. As it seems, that is Last 25 years of his life. He was just zeroing on this one subject of atheism, which is kind of a new thing on the planet, you know, goes back the beginning of it is maybe 400 years ago and it probably coincides when we to have the tools and we started to have a financing to do things scientifically, you know, and people notice that as they, they develop scientific concepts and then technology enabled them to measure In a way that they hadn't been able to measure. They discovered brand new things and they just said, since we have this growing ability and it seems like it'll grow forever why do we need God? So, why do we need heaven when we can create our own heaven here? And that was a guess in a bet and it's. It Seems to me that they haven't really been successful. But anyway, I was, I was just. I've read a couple of them twice and I'm on a new one right now, and he's just introduced this vast universe of different thinkers who contribute some aspect To what we would call atheism today. You know which is essentially the denial of that One there is a God and number two, that a God is needed. You know that perfectly okay, ourselves. And and since I've been writing that, I've just been increasingly aware of the topic, the subject I started the conversation with, on my part today. Which was, it seems to me, as we develop these incredible technological abilities. So there's no question that AI. I don't know anything about the new ones, so I don't have any opinion on it, but to that it's not making people happy right Like perfect. Dan: You know, there's great words that I heard Peter Diamandis talking about one time a perfect knowledge that you can see that we're moving to a place where we're wearing let's call them sunglasses now you know like goggles, not the big thing that apple just put out, but that's if we liken that to the first cell phones that were those big brick Cell phones. If we, you know, link that down to, if we take the progress of those, you know VR and AR, you know goggles to be more like, you know, super thin Sun glasses that just look like glasses and we couple that with the advancement in VR or in, you know, ai, in our pocket or attached to our Wrist or whatever, however that goes, that we will reach a point where we know we would have access to knowing everything about everything that's known by visual or auditory cues, right like being able to walk through A city and have, through facial recognition, everything about a particular person, or to walk through a forest and see every, you know, animal butterfly, you know all of those things then there's not going to be any mystery of things. I think you know, like if you just Fast-forward these things, the speed. Dean: Friction is what you're getting out of Peter D Amonus saying this. Dan: I'm saying, I'm looking, what Peter D Amonus said he was the one that I first heard say those words perfect knowledge and I'm translating it into when we're headed now, where we see that it's not too far of a stretch to see the combination of chat T AI and the, you know, ar Sunglasses augmented or virtual reality Sunglass or glasses to be able to view the world through those lenses and have reflected up on the screen or in front of us All the data about somebody or about anything that it sees. You know, it's really almost the way. You know, the need for the more friction Involved ways of gathering knowledge would have been like if you had to let's say you saw this amazing Flower or something out on a walk you'd have to remember, remember it or draw or make notes of it. Then you'd have to go to the encyclopedia you know a botany and you'd have to go through, or even go to the library and look in the dewy decimal card catalog system for Flowers and look for a book that you could scan through to find that maybe somebody has documented what this particular, what this particular flower is. The friction of gathering knowledge was so, you know, so involved in friction, and the more that you Knew, the more that you could store in your, in your brain. That was sort of a measure of Intelligence, right, or a measure of the fact that you knew stuff. That's an advantage for Things. But now if we get to a point where everybody has perfect knowledge, you don't. You have to look at it and see okay, that's the, you know Whatever that, whatever that is, or that person is this, or this product is this or that I'll get you. Dean: I'll give you someone who has a yearly experience of I'm very smart. You know him Peter Steven Poulter. The. IVF doctor and he says you know the thrill of being in this field because the all, basically most medical breakthroughs happen in the Pregnancy and like the first year of life. So most you know if you watch where the money goes and Medical science, it has to do with pregnancy, conception, pregnancy, birth and then probably the first year of life and the other one is the last 12 months of life. Okay, and that's Experimenting to see if we can keep someone alive. You know, beyond, yeah, normal and he says that. He says from my perspective as a Doctor and a scientist, he said every year it seems to me that we know 10 times more About pregnancy because he's an IVF doctor and vitro realization, and he's a great you know, and the Statistics gathered by the US government Indicate that's true he's in the top top. You know five and and he says but the problem is that when you know 10 times more, you're is set with the 10 times greater Universe of what you don't know. Dan: That the 10 times new knowledge has opened. Dean: Yes, yes okay. So, and I was just pondering this, as people are saying well, dan, have you tried out? There's a new provision, yet I haven't. Dan: I said no, I haven't. Dean: I haven't answered two questions. I don't have the answer to two questions. They said what's the questions? I said does this Experience a provision? Does it increase or decrease? Dan: I bet it just where would you put your main line, dopamine? Yeah, you don't even have to move your hands anymore. Dean: Yeah, yeah, that's the first question. The second thing, the second question I have if I don't do it, am I missing anything? Dan: I, you know. What's very interesting too is that to me, the visual that I'm getting also is that Even chat, gpt and all of those things are decidedly backward-looking, meaning it's only trained on what's known knowledge. Dean: Yeah, I'll actually. All creativity is backward-looking. Okay, I mean if it's worth anything, you know. Dan: I mean. Dean: I mean, the apple is really great at this, because apples never first to do anything, you know as right. Dan: There's a highly valued. Dean: You know on a consistent basis they're most highly valued corporation in the world. But they've never actually Done anything new. Just do what already exists a lot better. Dan: Wow, yes, so you wonder what is? So the probe and there is anything new. Dean: What I can see about the provision, because the goggles already exist. It's you know, it's an upgrade on you know what, palmer, lucky probably created the bag and then, you know emails already. They say you can do emails with your eyes and you know you can do search with your eyes. Dan: You can you know everything else. Dean: But I said, these things already exist. They're just pulling together and integrating something that wasn't able to be done. That the same time, you know, and you know it's really pricey, I mean it's, you know, I mean it's reassuringly expensive. They've tried other goggles how much is your program? Reassuringly expensive, that's that I'll tell you. The sales team is gonna have that line tomorrow. It's what? And they say, well, why is it? Reassure me? And I said you know, you know who's not going to be in the room. What they're doing is already exists with the US Air Force, and then All the pilots, that everything they, those pilots, do, is done with their eyes. They have this screen. That's not a screen. I mean, there's no screen, but they see a screen. They see the and they operate with five other planes. So almost every Mission where they sent one of the new hyperjets, the pilot feels himself as a group of six. He's a member of a group of six and he can tell exactly what the other five are doing. You know he doesn't have to turn. It said he doesn't because he can see it on the screen. Plus, he can see 500 miles in all direction. This is all done with the eyes. These pilots have to train themselves to do Everything with their eyes. Well, that already exists. You know they're bringing that down to a civilian, civilian thing. But you know the whole question I have are the stakes big enough that I would teach myself a new skill? Dan: Mmm, right, or does it fit, can you? Well, that's it right. This is. I've been Test-driving, by the way, dan the, and it gets good reaction. They can I. Is there any way for me to get this without doing anything Is a good place to start. Dean: Well, check your limit on your card. Yeah, and first of all it's an anti-social activity because you're putting goggles on, so nobody's going to be around you when you have your goggles. But Mike Kenix was there the other day and Mike said you know, he says you have your mind, has no grasp of you until you've done it. And I says that's fair. I said that's totally fair. I understand that the question Is there enough of a compelling offer that I would even want to have experience? And I think that would be measured measured in the mainland, not in, not in Kauvalandia, I think, whether it was worse. I think whether anything is worth it. It really has a function. Does it register? Is it measurable? Progress in the mainland, right, I think you're right. Well, I'll give you an idea, your studio, your great studio which, yes, we'll have our will have a copy of in September or October of this year. I'll see that the team is in there now. We have eight studios. I have eight studios and they're gonna be you know, up-to-date technologically and and but the thing that compelled me to, first of all, for us to Follow your lead and really investigate what your studio is doing, one of our team members whose key to the Execution here came down to Orlando you know, yes you're. And went there and they said it's fantastic and they're very helpful and they'll help us any way we want, and. But the thing was suggest how much you get done in the mainland was what prompted us to look into it. Dan: Yeah, I mean, that's it's so. You know, that was kind of that before you brought it up, even thinking, I remember the day sitting in the cafe writing in my journal about okay, I want to start doing more video stuff, and asking myself the equivalent of that. You know thinking, because I'm definitely trained in thinking who, not how. But I caught myself really going down a how path of thinking okay, what do I need? You know, at least two of these. I need two cameras, I need lighting, I need what am I going to have for the background? I was already visualizing how I would rearrange one of the rooms in my office to be the, you know, always ready studio kind of thing. And then it really dawned on me about that that it's already there. Is there? That's the equivalent of is there any way I can get this without doing anything? And we literally went, you know, straight there and set up, signed a contract and recorded the very next morning. I mean, it's just so funny that the pressure not allowed and I realized that was you know. I was at the end of the 12 weeks. I signed a 12 week contract that. I had already, you know, I had 12 weeks worth of content in you know, created and already documented, and we hadn't even reached the point of what one of those cameras would cost. Dean: Like. Each of them got three cameras that are $6,000. Dan: You know the microphones are $1,000 each. The that sound for the studio environment. I mean the whole thing, the software, the all of it. It's a crazy thing when you really start thinking about it's the only way to do this without doing anything, and that's part it's so parallel you know I've been talking about. Imagine if you apply your self SELF, sphere is things around you. Is there somebody else as a service or someone that you know that could just do this without you having to do anything? Dean: Yeah, the thing is that I'll you know, I can think of some team members that. I'll encourage and we'll you know we'll finance it. Have some finance. Who would be interested in looking that provision and see what application it would have to the normal course of business, of speeding things up, making things easier, you know, and everything, and so funny. I was having a conversation with someone and he said I mean, he was texting you know and about. We were with him for about two hours and he probably texted you know 15 times to our hours and received text and you know and to our he's excuse me, I just have to take five minutes to do this. And so I said what would you see on the average day that you're involved in texting busy? And I said, and I suspect, if you do it on five days a week, you actually do it on seven days a week. Dan: Yeah, exactly. Dean: I don't think you take a weekend off from this habit. So so anyway, and he says well, you know, a light day is maybe a hundred texts and you know, a really filled, filled up day is 400 texts. Dan: And. Dean: I said you know that you're lower number, 100. That's more than I've done in my lifetime. Dan: More than more texts than you've done. Yeah, yeah, 100. I haven't done 100. Dean: I haven't done 100 texts in my lifetime. I mean, yeah and it's, and that would be 95% to Babs, you know and you know, and mostly I use emojis. I've become very Egyptian. I can do. I can do hieroglyphics with emojis and I can get a message and I like it. You know thumbs up times three. You know times. Dan: Smiley guy with sunglasses you know, I mean, you can do a lot of creative work with emojis, but except that we're apart. Dean: The only reason I'm doing this because we're apart, you know we're not in the same location, otherwise we just chat. But the thing is that this person, when I look at what he gets done, I get sometimes more done than he does in a day, certainly in a week or a month, you know, a week, a month or a quarter I get 10 times more done and I don't do any of it. You know, I don't do any of that stuff. Dan: Yeah. Dean: I bet. That's part of the I mean it's not profitable productivity, it's the feeling, it's dopamine busyness yes, I agree 100%. Dan: That's exactly where I that's what I've been catching myself, you know is this is really taking a look at that and realizing how much of this is, you know, really counterproductive. You know a lot of ways. I was saying I had a breakthrough blueprint at celebration last week Monday, Tuesday, wednesday and we were talking about, you know, 19,. I was bringing up the idea that you and I had been talking about the 25 year frames, and you know we're talking about your 70 to 80 best decade ever, and how. You know, three years I'm going to be 60 and then it'll be 20. The next 25 year framework I'll be 85, you know. So, looking back 28 years ago you're not discussed like that takes you all the way back to, you know, 1996, 1995, whatever that, whatever that is and realizing that everything that we look at right now that is so important to our lives wasn't even in existence. Then you know, like we, I still remember in 1997, when internet was just starting to become mainstream and it was definitely a place out there that you went to go to. You know you would go to the internet from your primary world on the mainland and it was a distraction, it was something it was starting to dip into. Maybe you know TV time or something that you would do otherwise. And then I remember, you know, gradually it became more and more, and 2007 I view as the tipping point, when we started with the iPhone bringing the internet with us and the app world becoming vital functions for going through our days. And now we're at a point where it's so woven into our existence that it's like water and we don't even remember, you know, I mean, all the talk now is what would happen if the grid went down. Indeed, dan, what would happen if the grid, the internet, went down? Not the power, not electricity, but let's say that the network goes down. So many things would be, you know, so many things would be messed up. We don't know how to survive without it. I was joking about that article. I remember, in the New York Times or GQ, I think it was magazine had a journalist that they sent, you know, to try and survive in New York City for a week where their only means of contact with the outside world was the internet see if he could make it. And he searched, you know, in this bulletin board, and he found this restaurant, this Chinese restaurant that had a menu and they would. You could order delivery on the internet, you know, and he slowly survived with those things. But now it's so exactly the opposite that it would be challenging to survive in New York City a week without the internet you know, it's just so how things have switched. You're the closest thing you're the closest thing I know of to being, you know, amish in the I've been involved in it. Dean: Yeah, I mean yeah, and one is, my life is not that much different. I mean, I certainly made use of the technology. I mean there's no question and I enjoy the. You know, I enjoy the internet and I mostly enjoy it for YouTube, I would say YouTube yeah, because I can get really in-depth, one-hour explanations of a particular topic you know, and Peter Zion is very good at his eight minute, 10 minute, 15, very, very good at it and. I really enjoy that. And then I'll watch all the action scenes out of Denzel Washington's new Sicily film, you know and. I mean, you don't have to watch a whole Denzel Washington movie to get the essence, you know it's about 20 minutes of really hardcore violence, you know. Dan: Yeah right. Dean: And he, you know, and he wishes the other person hadn't gotten him into this situation. He says no, I was just going about my life here. You know, it would have been better if you left me alone but here we are, you know and you got about 10 seconds to decide whether you're going to live or not, you know. So I'm just looking at my watch right now and three seconds to say you know, and I enjoy that, it's like a little you know palate, you know refreshing. And then I'll go back and I'll look at some question that occurs to me. I wonder you know what happened in this historical situation? Sure enough, you can find one or two or three you know, yeah movies, or you know videos, or something on the internet. you know and you can do that and it's very conducive for my ADB brain to have that activity and people say well, how much. You read a lot. No, I told people you know I haven't watched television at all, and Joe I. It'll be six years that I haven't watched nothing. All the football. I haven't watched any of it, Nothing. I haven't watched anything, but what I've discovered is that no football game has more than 10 minutes of action. And so I just watched the highlights. And then I don't want to see the highlights for the other teams, I just want to see the highlights for my team. That's about six minutes. And I said, geez, all those games I spent watching hour after hour on television. I could have gotten 10 or 15 of the men and the time it would take to do it, but you know, you kind of zero in on what's the dopamine part of the exercise. You know the activity so, but I resist the notion that this is going to change my life. I just resist the idea. Well, this changes everything. And I said, well, you know, speak for yourself you know, change anything for me, right? Dan: And we're both tourists. Dean: We're both tourists, yes, and we will sacrifice no pleasure for something new. Dan: Right, oh man, that's so funny. Dean: Any existing pleasure. We will not put that on the table as a bet. Dan: Yeah, we like our current pleasures, that's right. Dean: Oh yeah, so you know, and the thing is, the world is made up of all sorts, and so you've got to have the people who are, you know, the people who are just crazy nuts about the future, you know and you know, and there's people who say well, you know, as far as human nature goes, I haven't seen anything particularly new in 79 years. Right, interesting, I'm not saying not interesting. I just haven't seen a lot of new stuff happening with the fundamental change in people. Dan: Right yeah. So how are you? How are you looking at your next best decade ever? You're months away, days away. Dean: Yeah, the big thing is that we've discovered a great capability in the last two years, and that is that our thinking tools, coach tools, seem to translate easily into patents. Okay, so we started in April with a big batch. We you know we put in dozens of applications and they're starting to come in and we've got 12 now since April, we've got 12 patents and these are, you know, these have asset values. They're like every patent is like you created a house, you know, and it's got a marketplace value. The moment you get the asset, you know, you get the you know notification from the patent bureau that this is now a patent. And there seems to be something good about our thinking tools. You know strategy circle, pre-focus and buffer days. There seems to be something about our thinking tools that resonate with what they consider to be a patent. You know, something that can be granted a patent. So this is very exciting, because all we're doing is taking stuff that's been created over the last 35 years and giving it an asset value beyond just getting paid for it in workshops, you know. So it's it's growing and we're not doing that. It's a whole team of other people. We just write it a check. And you know a year later, we get back an asset that is, at the minimum, 10 times more you know, greater than our investment. Dan: I mean that's you know 10 to one in a year is pretty good to return that investment. Dean: So I'm very excited about that because we just have vast Dean. You can't believe how much stuff we've got in the store room. You know just a sheer number of ideas that we have and all of them are popping up in my mind. We're going back through documents I created 25 years ago. I said, geez, that was a great idea, but it had no present use so it didn't have a value. But here you can take everything and increase the value. I would say, the next 10 years, the amount of asset value we will create in intellectual property and on patents will equal the total amount of, will be the total amount of revenues we've created since 1989. Wow, yeah. So that's what I'm excited about. Dan: Wow, and that's where the program is. Dean: That's where the program is going. I mean, Dean, if you went through all your, all your notes, all the notebooks that you created and everything else. I bet there's a gold mine there that it can't. Dan: No, I understand that intellectually, I understand that there's lots of that. I get that. I just I can't. When I have a hard time wrapping my mind around is to what end? You know like. I wonder what the. Dean: If you were ever in, you know. First of all, that tells you that its property is the fact that you can barrel against it, not that we need it. Dan: Right. Dean: And I will tell you, we had this scamper a little bit during COVID and we had this scamper a little bit during the meltdown in 0809 where we lost the bottom of our program. I mean the revenues for the people who were at the lowest level. We just instantly lost it, you know, for a year and a half or two years, and unfortunately we went into our own reserves, our own personal reserves. Dan: Absolutely. Dean: And we could. You know we could finance the company but it was nervous. Used up weeks of her time you know, I don't want to hear you just call a number and you say I'd like to. You know the way it's all set up now with the, you know, the appraisal companies and then the loans loan companies. It's all set up and we'll get to know all those people. So the assessed value is up to date every day, and so it puts you in a position where your cash confidence. I like the game that the strategic coach represents and I just wanted to go on and on, and I don't want to be, wasting time with nervous crises, right exactly. Dan: Yes, it's a good way of putting it nervous crises, that's a. Dean: Yeah, yeah, I mean, there's creative crises, but the nervous ones I could do without, right? Oh, that's so funny. Is there any way I can solve this problem? By doing nothing? That's right, I'm not doing anything. Dan: Well, that's as close as you could get. I guess, when you think about it like that seems to me perfect knowledge. Dean: Yes exactly All this numbers. Dan: Yeah. Dean: I don't get the value of knowing everything you know I don't get the value of instantaneously knowing what would. Yeah, and besides, we already created that technology. Dan: Who was that? Who was the famous? You know the old story of the gentleman that said he doesn't need to know those things. He has a button on his desk and whenever I need to know anything I'll push that button and seven men will show up in here and one of them will know the answer to what I'm looking for Henry Ford yeah it was Henry Ford, that's right. Dean: Yes, I could summon someone, but we've already created the technology for perfect knowledge. And you're going to say, dan, what is the technology? Dan: for perfect knowledge. Well, what is it? Dean: Dan, it's called God. Okay, so they don't have access to it. But they said, no, we're going to get off, we're going to get away. You know, and I'm not joking here, because when you read these books, you realize that it's a desire not to be dependent upon at all, upon the entity that created you. And I said, well, I'm okay with it, right, right. And they say, well, it's like you're dependent upon God. And I said, hey, well, first of all, I'm very comfortable to know that he exists, or she, whatever, in this transgender age Anyway. But I have a feeling. You know, I've had a feeling since I was a kid that I'm connected to something that's transformative and it's way above my ability to know things, and you know I'm okay with that, I don't lose any energy over that, but I think there's this one of the. In reading these many books on atheism I automatically translate. When I read a lot that is very deep subject and a person has spent their whole life doing it I always think is there some aspect of this that I can just capture and write a quarterly book on? And it came to me after I've been reading El Noce, the Italian philosopher, for about a year and what I came to is a title. I always go for the title. Dan: Yeah, of course that'll see. Dean: Yeah, and the title is atheism is very hard work. Dan: Oh boy. Dean: It's very hard work. Yeah, these guys people were atheists just have to. I mean, it's 24, seven. I tell you there's no harder work on the planet than being an atheist, oh my goodness. Because they're on the lookout for anybody who even suggests that there's a God, and you know it, they get angry and they you know they have to get into an argument. I said, geez, that's a lot of work, that's a lot of work. Dan: Yes, it's so funny, dan, and observant and true, it's like those things. It's funny. It's like those isms, right, like veganism. Yeah, you know, yeah. Dean: I mean you can't sleep, compel even jelly. I mean you can't relax, you can't sleep. I mean isms. Dan: I mean you know except quick start ism. Right, yes, you watch Dan Tucker Carlson's interview with Putin. Dean: Yeah, I think Tucker Carlson did himself a lot of good, uh-huh. Dan: I think so Absolutely. Dean: Yeah, I mean, he wasn't any different with Putin. Dan: You know, I mean, this is the guy who's gonna get you thrown off the top of the building. Dean: You know he didn't see many more you know, yeah, he's got more sex than he is with anyone Anyone. You know he just Right, right right. As a matter of fact, there's a couple of situations where he just kind of broke out laughing. Yes, exactly. Dan: I can't believe. Dean: You just said that. Dan: Right, but it was very interesting to hear Putin's history lessons. You know, going all the way back. Dean: Yeah, well you know, you gotta look at it from their point of view. They are the easiest country historically to invade. I mean they have about 13 different gateways where enemies can send their troops. It's a flat country, you know. Dan: Yeah. Dean: I mean US has 3000 mile moat on the east and they have a 5000 mile moat on the west and they've got pot smoking Canadians on the north, you know, I see their no threat, oh my goodness. And then you have the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean on the south and then where they're connected to Mexico, it's 200 miles of desert mountains. I mean you can die before you can get across that thing. So the US, but Russia is just the opposite. I mean not only can people invade, they've been invaded 50 times since his 800 number, you know, whatever the year is. I mean Right, they have real honesty, got reason for being paranoid. Dan: Yeah, it's so funny. I thought it was funny when he was saying how you know, he asked about joining NATO. I thought to myself because this isn't the whole purpose of NATO to protect against Soviet expansion. Well, let's get in on that. Why don't we join that too? Dean: But you know you got to look at it from his you know, I mean you don't have to agree with his point of view, but you at least have to know what his point of view is. And if I was his point of view, I mean he was born to nobody and he you know. Through diligence and hard work he got to be a colonel in the KGB. And I have to tell you if you were in the Soviet Union before it collapsed there was no more better job and status in the world than being, you know, a, you know, up and coming officer in the KGB. They got to travel, they had their own stores, they could have somebody arrested and killed. You know, you know pretty easily, and everything else I said you know. You can see it. He took his career, took a real drop when the wall fell. You know so well. Dan: Dan, we said it all. How do we do it? How do we do? I mean, we said it all really, but there's always knowledge though there's always more. Dean: That's exactly right, yeah, the one thing about what knowledge is being made up on a daily basis, so I don't know how the word perfect fits in there, right? I mean, we just created over the last hour, we just created some new knowledge. Dan: That's exactly right. That's what. So it's visually like. It's really interesting. That's my vision of that. It's future blind. You know that GPT it's all only feeds on what's already been created. Dean: Yeah, you know but there's still got to be some, if technology had feelings, which I don't think it does. I think AI should be more nervous about humanity than humanity should be nervous. Dan: Right. Dean: What are they going to come up with today? You know? I mean I feel like we've got it all organized every night and you know, at the morning and the morning we get back and the rock is down at the bottom of the hill again. We've got to push it up. That's so funny. That's so funny. Yeah, I think it's technology that's trying to keep up with humanity, and not the other way around. Dan: Well, I'm excited, dan. It's almost a couple of weeks. Yeah, we've got a calendar date. Dean: Yeah. I tell you we're going down the Thursday before we're arriving in the evening of the Thursday before. So, we've got Friday, saturday, sunday, monday. I think we got four days and we're at the four seasons. Dan: Yes, that's great. When are you leaving? Dean: Wednesday, the day after you know the day after the yeah, yeah, okay, yeah. Dan: So we will have some time. We're on track. Dean: We're on for next week. We're on for next week I like that, okay, perfect. Yeah, great Dan, we'll have a great week then. Great Dan, I will talk to you next week. Dan: Thanks Okay, bye.
Donald Trump expressed being taken aback by Tim Scott's engagement announcement — and the ex-president asked a crowd of his supporters 'What's going on?' when talking about the news, RadarOnline.com has learned.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this heartwarming and candid episode of the slowczech podcast, Eliška greets listeners with her signature warmth and spontaneity. With no script in hand, she dives into an improvised narrative that promises to be as engaging as it is personal. … The post (283***) Eliška: Improvizace – Jaké byly naše Vánoce appeared first on slowczech.
Oggi avremo il piacere di fare un viaggio con Marco Della Noce, un artista che passa dal calcare i palchi più prestigiosi della comicità, alla rovina, per poi rinascere attraverso la filosofia Buddhista. Il dream team di One More Time é composto da: Giovanni Zaccaria, Mauro Medaglia, Samar Abdel Basset, Davide Tessari, Alice Gagliardi e Tommaso Galli.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
V této epizodě ti nejen popřeju veselé Vánoce a šťastný nový rok, ale řeknu ti také výsledky hry pravda-lež, kterou jsem si s posluchači zahrál v minulé epizodě a přečteme si, jak se v této aktivitě vedlo divákům mého YouTube kanálu. video z této epizody: https://youtu.be/Xpa2_tdcBu0 ________________________________________________________________________ Chceš kurz zdarma? Tady je: Kurz zdarma _________________________________________________________________________ ✅Chceš se zúčastnit netradičního kurzu české KONVERZACE se Zdeňkem?
Tohle je naše vánoční přání pro všechny posluchače podcastu Kanárci v síti. Už zítra přijde Ježíšek a my vám chceme popřát klidné Vánoce a úspěšný, a také pokud možno bezpečný, rok 2024. A také poděkovat, že jste nás celý rok pilně poslouchali či nás dokonce podporovali na herohero.co.Podpořte nás na https://www.herohero.co/kanarcivsiti . A nebo si kupte naše trička na https://www.neverenough.shop/kanarci . Podcast pro Vás připravují @alexalvarova a @holyj . Hudba a sound engineering: Psyek a deafmutedrecords.com . Twitter Spaces moderuje @jiribulan .Najdete nás na www.kanarci.online
Skutečně se to stalo. V jakési britské instituci dávali dohromady kalendář a dali si tak velký pozor, aby do něj nezapomněli zanést úplně všechny svátky, jaké kdy lidstvo slavilo – od Holi, Diwali, Íd-al-Fitru, Chanuky, Bogojavlenia, Samhainu, Beltanu a tak dál až po dávno zapomenuté svátky starých Májů či Aztéků, protože co kdyby i ty dnes někdo slavil, že ve své pilnosti zapomněli na – Vánoce!
Vánoce chceme prožít s bližními, v bezpečí, v teple, světle a hojnosti. Touží po tom i miliony lidí na Ukrajině, kteří čelí nemilosrdným ruským útokům. O šťastných Vánocích s rodinou, stromečkem a dárky snily i statisíce vězňů nacistických a komunistických vyhlazovacích a pracovních táborů, bojovníci na frontách 2. světové války.Všechny díly podcastu Příběhy 20. století můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
Największy klasyk komedii romantycznej... w rozmowie z Sebastianem Smolińskim.
We're coming back at ya with a Q&A all about functional nutrition by answering your questions from Instagram! Here's what we cover in today's episode - What are general signs of hormonal imbalances? Can healthy eating heal chrons How do you do supplements? Are they safe? It can seem sketchy online with influencers promoting random health products What about the 80/20 rule for food? What if I enjoy sweets? I just give them up?! What the heck are mineral drinks? Confuses me! How did you know you had PCOS? I ovulate late, is that a sign? Advice for someone looking to lose baby weight? Advice for building better food habits?? Recommendations for a healthier way to sweeten coffee that's not sugar? Can hormone imbalances cause miscarriage? Can you naturally increase progesterone? Tips for regulating cycle post birth control Best one thing overall you can do to improve health and hormones?I struggle with getting veggies/greens in my diet- is a “greens powder” supplement okay to replace with? How to keep hormones balanced (night shift nurse, PP mom, etc.) Do you have any free guides with food ideas? Or books with recipe ideas? Interviewee bio: Ginny founded The Women's Health RN fueled by her personal mission to help women learn how to optimize their hormonal health through functional nutrition and cycle charting (FEMM). After seven years of frustrating experiences in seeking traditional medical advice for her own hormonal imbalance — Ginny became impassioned by the idea of ensuring as many women as possible would be saved from wasting time and resources walking down the same path.Through years of research, education, training, and experience practicing as a nurse in a women's health and fertility clinic — Ginny learned how hormonal health is connected to a variety of symptoms and what the root-cause of hormonal imbalances are. Unlike most traditional medical providers, Ginny's approach to fixing the symptoms these imbalances present as are grounded in principles of Functional Medicine and a food-first philosophy.SHOWNOTES: The Women's Health RN: https://thewomenshealthrn.com/Ginny Noce on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewomenshealthrn/Work with Ginny 1:1: https://share.hsforms.com/168wfLz_BSSioXA39gPlEhgdfxy5Hormone Academy (next round starts in January 2024!): https://share.hsforms.com/10AIy8GB5Sw6eM7U_Eu1jCQdfxy5 Ginny's recommended supplements: https://us.fullscript.com/welcome/thewomenshealthrn/signup?preview=true Nutrition by Robyn mineral drink recipes free guides: https://www.instagram.com/nutritionbyrobyn/?hl=enRachael's Good Eats cookbook: https://amzn.to/3Q7mEWqSHOP MY AMAZON STOREFRONT: https://amzn.to/3MRxbTCSHOP MY BEAUTY & SKINCARE PRODUCTS: https://www.beautycounter.com/bridgetbusackerDISCOUNT CODES: 20% OFF PROOV TEST STRIPS: https://proovtest.com/?wly=5789320% OFF YOUR FIRST OLIVE & JUNE MANI KIT: http://fbuy.me/v/bridgetbusackerbc10% OFF YOUR TEMPDROP: http://www.tempdrop.com/discount/managingyourfertility3 MONTHS FREE & 20% OFF YOUR HALLOW SUBSCRIPTION: hallow.com/managingyourfertility10% OFF YOUR ODER AT EMBER CO: https://www.theember.co/?ref=91010% OFF YOUR ORDER AT BE A HEART: fbeaheart.com/managingyourfertility10% OFF YOUR ORDER AT ABUNDANTLY YOURS: abundantlyyours.org/bridget DISCLOSURE: This description may include affiliate links for products or services mentioned in the podcast. If you purchase products or services at these links I receive a small commission for the referral. I appreciate your support of my business!
Have you ever wondered if food can help the body heal? Do some foods negatively impact your health (sleep, cycle, etc.)? What if you could eat differently and achieve the results you want for your hormonal health?Today, I'm talking with Ginny Noce, MS, RN, CNC, Certified FEMM Instructor and founder of The Women's Health RN. She helps women learn how to optimize their hormonal health through functional nutrition and cycle charting. Her passion stems from her own experiences struggling to find answers to her own hormonal imbalance and her journey led her to find the root cause of hormonal health issues for others. We talk about what functional nutrition is, if food can be medicine for your body and health, what it means to take a root-cause approach, intuitive eating, and so much more! This episode is all about the foundational understanding of functional nutrition and how it can benefit your health and I'm so excited for you to listen! Interviewee bio: Ginny founded The Women's Health RN fueled by her personal mission to help women learn how to optimize their hormonal health through functional nutrition and cycle charting (FEMM). After seven years of frustrating experiences in seeking traditional medical advice for her own hormonal imbalance — Ginny became impassioned by the idea of ensuring as many women as possible would be saved from wasting time and resources walking down the same path.Through years of research, education, training, and experience practicing as a nurse in a women's health and fertility clinic — Ginny learned how hormonal health is connected to a variety of symptoms and what the root-cause of hormonal imbalances are. Unlike most traditional medical providers, Ginny's approach to fixing the symptoms these imbalances present as are grounded in principles of Functional Medicine and a food-first philosophy.SHOWNOTES: The Women's Health RN: https://thewomenshealthrn.com/Ginny Noce on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewomenshealthrn/Work with Ginny one-on-one: https://share.hsforms.com/168wfLz_BSSioXA39gPlEhgdfxy5Hormone Academy (next round starts in January 2024!): https://share.hsforms.com/10AIy8GB5Sw6eM7U_Eu1jCQdfxy5 SHOP MY AMAZON STOREFRONT: https://amzn.to/3MRxbTCSHOP MY BEAUTY & SKINCARE PRODUCTS: https://www.beautycounter.com/bridgetbusackerDISCOUNT CODES: 20% OFF PROOV TEST STRIPS: https://proovtest.com/?wly=5789320% OFF YOUR FIRST OLIVE & JUNE MANI KIT: http://fbuy.me/v/bridgetbusackerbc10% OFF YOUR TEMPDROP: http://www.tempdrop.com/discount/managingyourfertility3 MONTHS FREE & 20% OFF YOUR HALLOW SUBSCRIPTION: hallow.com/managingyourfertility10% OFF YOUR ODER AT EMBER CO: https://www.theember.co/?ref=91010% OFF YOUR ORDER AT BE A HEART: fbeaheart.com/managingyourfertility10% OFF YOUR ORDER AT ABUNDANTLY YOURS: abundantlyyours.org/bridget DISCLOSURE: This description may include affiliate links for products or services mentioned in the podcast. If you purchase products or services at these links I receive a small commission for the referral. I appreciate your support of my business!
It's time for another monthly edition of iHearIC Radio here on the RHC feed! This time, bassist Blake Shaw came over to talk about all his various projects and play some tracks, including a couple from when he was just 18 years old! Buy some music from Blake at https://blakeshawbass.bandcamp.com Go see Blake open for Kurt Elling & Charlie Hunter at the Englert on 9/30: https://ci.ovationtix.com/36399/performance/11282346 and go see the Blake Shaw Big(ish) Band at Noce in Des Moines on 10/13: https://www.simpletix.com/e/the-blake-shaw-big-ish-band-tickets-138421 Here's the Little Village article about Blake: https://littlevillagemag.com/blake-shaw-jazz-department (also where I pulled the photo for this episode's image; photo credit to Sid Peterson) BCJsPs w/ M Denney at PS1 Close House on 11/17: https://www.facebook.com/events/879851253559552 Find all the old iHearIC stuff at http://ihearic.com, and stay subscribed to Rock Hard Caucus to get future podcast episodes. https://rockhardcauc.us