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Irgendwie ist das heute schon witzig, der Marienmonat Mai, beginnt mit dem Gedenktag eines Mannes: des Heiligen Josef des Arbeiters.Manchmal hat die Kirche vorhandene Feste genommen, sie quasi getauft und ihnen einen christlichen Inhalt gegeben. Aus dem Wintersonnenwendfest wird Weihnachten, aus dem Fest der Frühlingsgöttin Ostera wird Ostern, und der 1. Mai, der altbekannte Kampftag der Arbeiterklasse, wird 1955 der Gedenktag des Hl. Josef des Arbeiters. Ein bisschen witzig klingt das in meinen Ohren schon. Aber andererseits: den Hl. Josef, den Zimmermann, zum Patron der Arbeiter zu machen, ist eigentlich auch eine gute Idee. Er hat das Zimmermannshandwerk wahrscheinlich von seinem Vater gelernt, hat es ausgeübt als er Maria kennengelernt hat, und dann mit seiner Hände Arbeit die Familie ernährt. Und wie es in vielen Familienbetrieben auch heute noch ist, hat auch Jesus von ihm das Zimmermannshandwerk gelernt. In den Zeiten nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, als sich die Welt immer mehr in zwei Lager geteilt hat, der vom Gegensatz zwischen Kommunismus und Kapitalismus geprägt war und den kalten Krieg befeuert hat, war es gut, einen Patron zu haben, der den Millionen Arbeitern in allen Ländern zur Seite stand und ihr Schutzpatron gegen alle Vereinnahmung und Indoktrinierung durch die Weltmächte geworden ist. Der bescheidene Handwerker aus Nazareth, stand damals und heute vor Gott und für die Menschen für die Würde der menschlichen Arbeit ein. Und als eine nette kleine Geschichte nebenher gibt es noch ein Gemälde im Hochchor des Bonner Münsters: es zeigt die Begegnung von Maria und Elisabeth. Im Evangelium ist da in keinem Wort von Josef die Rede. Aber auf dem Bild steht bescheiden im Hintergrund der heilige Josef mit dem Attribut der roten Arbeiterfahne.
Erlang wears three hats - it's a language, it's a platform, and it's an approach to making software run reliably once it's in production. Those last two are so interesting I sometimes wonder why those ideas haven't been ported to every language going. How much work would it be?This week we're going to dig right down into that question with Leandro Ostera. He's been working on Riot - a project to bring the best of Erlang's runtime system and philosophy to OCaml. But why OCaml? Is it possible to marry together OCaml's type system with Erlang's dynamic dispatch systems? And what is it about the recent release of OCaml5 that makes the whole project easier?–Leandro's Blog: https://www.abstractmachines.dev/Why Typing Erlang is Hard: https://www.abstractmachines.dev/posts/am012-why-typing-erlang-is-hard/Riot: https://riot.ml/Riot source: https://github.com/riot-ml/riotReasonML: https://reasonml.github.io/ReScript: https://rescript-lang.org/Leandro on Twitter: https://twitter.com/leosteraKris on Mastodon: http://mastodon.social/@krisajenkinsKris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/krisjenkins/Kris on Twitter: https://twitter.com/krisajenkins--#podcast #softwaredevelopment #erlang #ocaml #softwaredesign
Uma ferramenta que busca aumentar as taxas de sucesso de reprodução assistida a partir da análise dos óvulos com ajuda de inteligência artificial é tema do Radar de Inovação desta semana. O programa recebe Lucia Von Mengden, fundadora da startup Ostera, e Fábio Klamt, sócio e conselheiro científico da empresa, que é finalista da competição de startups do South Summit Brazil 2024.
In deze aflevering van Lunadea's Heksenklets vertel ik jullie over Ostera en staat deze aflevering in het kader van de lente equinox op 21 maart. Tijdens de lente equinox is er een balans tussen dag en nacht, wat een symbool is voor de overgang van de winter naar het nieuwe, vruchtbare jaar. Historisch gezien zijn er weinig teruggevonden gebruiken rondom de lente equinox, toch neem ik je mee naar een aantal die wel bekend zijn, of zijn opgeschreven en daar vertel ik over in deze speciale aflevering over Ostera Het is belangrijk dat je zelf het moment kiest om de lente te vieren dat voor jou goed voelt. Dit kan op de dag van de lente equinox zelf zijn maar ook tijdens de volle maan of nieuwe maan na de lente equinox. Onze voorouders vierden Eostermonath gedurende de hele maand om de terugkeer van warmte en vruchtbaarheid te eren. Pak je koptelefoon en ga met mij mee op pad in de wereld van hekserij. Samen zullen we heersende vooroordelen en misvattingen doorbreken en de ware essentie van hekserij ontdekken. Heeft deze aflevering je geïnspireerd en wil je geen aflevering missen? Vergeet je dan niet te abonneren op mijn podcast. Wil je meer leren over hekserij? Op mijn Instagram en website deel ik regelmatig heksentips, voorbeeldrituelen en achtergrond informatie over gebruiken en tradities! “Hekserij is voor mij een levenswijze. Het is verweven met wie ik ben, wat ik uitstraal en is mijn dagelijks leven. Ik ben een heks, en zou niet anders kunnen zijn dan mezelf”.
Fredrik is joined by Emil Privér and Leandro Ostera for a discussion of the OCaml ecosystem, and making it Saas-ready by building Riot. First of all: OCaml. What is the thing with the language, and how you might get into it coming from other languages? The OCaml community is nice, interested in getting new people in, and pragmatic. And it has a nice mix of research and industry as well. Then, Leandro tells us about Riot - an experiment in bringing everything good about the Erlang and Elixir ecosystems into OCaml. The goal? Make OCaml saas-ready. Riot is not 1.0 just yet, but an impressive amount has been built in just five(!) months. Emil moves the discussion over to the mindset of shipping, and of finding and understanding good ideas in other places and picking them up rather than reinventing the wheel. Leandro highly recommends reading the code of other projects. Read and understand the code and solutions others have written, re-use good ideas and don't reinvent the wheel more often than you really have to. Last, but by no means least, shoutouts to some of the great people building the OCaml community, and a bit about Emil's project DBCaml. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlundand @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Emil Leo Leo on Twitch Previous Kodsnack appearances by Emil Riot Sinatra Backbone.js Ember.js Angularjs React Erlang Tarides - where Leandro currently works OCaml Robin Milner - designer of ML Caml Javacaml F# Imperative programming Object-oriented programming Pure functions and side effects Monads The OCaml compiler Reason - the language built by Jordan Walke, the creator of React Standard ML React was prototyped in Standard ML Melange - OCaml compiler backend producing Javascript OCaml by example The OCaml Discord The Reason Discord Rescript Jane street High-frequency trading The Dune build system Erlang process trees Caramel - earlier experiment of Leandro's Louis Pilfold Gleam Algebraic effects Continuations Pool - Emil's project Gluon Bytestring Atacama - connection pool inspired by Thousand island Nomad - inspired by Bandit Trail - middleware inspired by Plug Sidewinder - Livewire-like Saas - software as a service DBCaml Johan Öbrink Ecto Mint tea - inspired by Bubble tea Autobahn|Testsuite - test suite for specification compliance Serde - Rust and OCaml serialization framework S-expressions TOML Dillon Mulroy Metame - community kindness pillar welltypedwitch Sabine maintains ocaml.org OCaml playground OCaml cookbook - in beta, sort of teej_dv ocaml.org Pool party Drizzle SQLX SQL Join types (left, inner, and so on) dbca.ml internet.bs The Caravan Essentials of compilation Reading rainbow Titles Few people can have a massive impact Impact has been an important thing for me It's a language out there A very long lineage of thinking about programming languages Programs that never fail The functional version of Rust Melange is amazing This is not a toy project Yes, constraints! Wonders in community growth Arrow pointing toward growth Programs that don't crash A very different schoold of reliability Invert the arrow Very easy on the whiteboard Multicore for free An entire stack from scratch Built for the builders A massive tree of things Make OCaml saas-ready Leo is a shipper Standing on the shoulders of many, many giants Learn from other people I exude OCaml these days Sitting down and building against the spec You just give it something Your own inner join We build everything in public The gospel of the dunes
Fredrik is joined by Emil Privér and Leandro Ostera for a discussion of the OCaml ecosystem, and making it Saas-ready by building Riot. First of all: OCaml. What is the thing with the language, and how you might get into it coming from other languages? The OCaml community is nice, interested in getting new people in, and pragmatic. And it has a nice mix of research and industry as well. Then, Leandro tells us about Riot - an experiment in bringing everything good about the Erlang and Elixir ecosystems into OCaml. The goal? Make OCaml saas-ready. Riot is not 1.0 just yet, but an impressive amount has been built in just five(!) months. Emil moves the discussion over to the mindset of shipping, and of finding and understanding good ideas in other places and picking them up rather than reinventing the wheel. Leandro highly recommends reading the code of other projects. Read and understand the code and solutions others have written, re-use good ideas and don’t reinvent the wheel more often than you really have to. Last, but by no means least, shoutouts to some of the great people building the OCaml community, and a bit about Emil’s project DBCaml. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We a re @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! You can also support the podcast by buying us a coffee (or two!) through Ko-fi. Links Emil Leo Leo on Twitch Previous Kodsnack appearances by Emil Riot Sinatra Backbone.js Ember.js Angularjs React Erlang Tarides - where Leandro currently works OCaml Robin Milner - designer of ML Caml Javacaml F# Imperative programming Object-oriented programming Pure functions and side effects Monads The OCaml compiler Reason - the language built by Jordan Walke, the creator of React Standard ML React was prototyped in Standard ML Melange - OCaml compiler backend producing Javascript OCaml by example The OCaml Discord The Reason Discord Rescript Jane street High-frequency trading The Dune build system Erlang process trees Caramel - earlier experiment of Leandro’s Louis Pilfold Gleam Algebraic effects Continuations Pool - Emil’s project Gluon Bytestring Atacama - connection pool inspired by Thousand island Nomad - inspired by Bandit Trail - middleware inspired by Plug Sidewinder - Livewire-like Saas - software as a service DBCaml Johan Öbrink Ecto Mint tea - inspired by Bubble tea Autobahn|Testsuite - test suite for specification compliance Serde - Rust and OCaml serialization framework S-expressions TOML Dillon Mulroy Metame - community kindness pillar welltypedwitch Sabine maintains ocaml.org OCaml playground OCaml cookbook - in beta, sort of teej_dv ocaml.org Pool party Drizzle SQLX SQL Join types (left, inner, and so on) dbca.ml internet.bs The Caravan Essentials of compilation Reading rainbow Titles Few people can have a massive impact Impact has been an important thing for me It’s a language out there A very long lineage of thinking about programming languages Programs that never fail The functional version of Rust Melange is amazing This is not a toy project Yes, constraints! Wonders in community growth Arrow pointing toward growth Programs that don’t crash A very different schoold of reliability Invert the arrow Very easy on the whiteboard Multicore for free An entire stack from scratch Built for the builders A massive tree of things Make OCaml saas-ready Leo is a shipper Standing on the shoulders of many, many giants Learn from other people I exude OCaml these days Sitting down and building against the spec You just give it something Your own inner join We build everything in public The gospel of the dunes
Practically Magick: The Essence of Paganism and Connection to the Land In this episode of 'Practically Magick', host Courtney Pearl discusses various aspects of paganism. She begins with a tarot card read from the True Heart Tarot deck, connecting the Eight of Swords card to the idea of trust. She dives into the concept of Ostera, a pagan holiday embodying both pagan and Christian traditions. Courtney shares a story from Ostera about the transformation of a bird into an egg-laying bunny, possibly the origin of the Easter Bunny. She also explores her personal shift towards paganism, drawing on Celtic and Native American influences and emphasizing the importance of connecting deeply with the land. She encourages listeners to see the magic in daily life, particularly in nature, and navigate their spiritual journeys according to what feels true to their heart. Courtney concludes by discussing healing through colors, previewing the next episode's topic, and answering a listener's question about color preferences shifting from purple to emerald green. #PracticallyMagick #Paganism #TrueMagic #NatureSpirituality #AncientWisdom #HealingWithColors #ColorTherapy 00:00 Introduction and Personal Background 00:32 Tarot Card Reading: The Eight of Swords 04:11 Introduction to Paganism and Ostera 07:17 The Story of Ostera and the Easter Bunny 09:05 Paganism, Christianity, and Cultural Blending 10:39 Personal Journey to Paganism 13:37 Paganism and Relationship with the Land 20:18 Ancestral Connection and Land Acknowledgement 24:12 Pagan Practices and Personal Experiences 31:16 Listener's Question: Color Preferences 37:14 Conclusion and Contact Information
Irgendwie ist das heute schon witzig: Der Marienmonat Mai, der seit vielen Jahrhunderten als der Gebetsmonat zur Gottesmutter in der Kirche gilt, beginnt mit dem Gedenktag eines Mannes: des Heiligen Josef des Arbeiters. Manchmal hat die Kirche vorhandene Feste genommen, sie quasi getauft und ihnen einen christlichen Inhalt gegeben. Aus dem Wintersonnenwendfest wird Weihnachten, aus dem Fest der Frühlingsgöttin Ostera wird Ostern, das Fest der Auferstehung, und der 1. Mai, der altbekannte Kampftag der Arbeiterklasse wird 1955 der Gedenktag des Heiligen Josef des Arbeiters. Ein bisschen witzig klingt das in meinen Ohren schon. Aber andererseits: Den Heiligen Josef, den Zimmermann, zum Patron der Arbeiter zu machen, ist eigentlich auch eine gute Idee. Er hat das Zimmermannshandwerk wahrscheinlich von seinem Vater gelernt, hat es ausgeübt, als er Maria kennengelernt hat, und dann mit seiner Hände Arbeit die Familie ernährt. Und wie es in vielen Familienbetrieben auch heute noch ist, hat auch Jesus von ihm das Zimmermannshandwerk gelernt. In den Zeiten nach dem zweiten Weltkrieg, als sich die Welt immer mehr in zwei Lager geteilt hat, der vom Gegensatz zwischen Kommunismus und Kapitalismus geprägt war und den Kalten Krieg befeuert hat, war es gut, einen Patron zu haben, der den Millionen Arbeitern in allen Ländern zur Seite stand und ihr Schutzpatron gegen alle Vereinnahmung und Indoktrinierung durch die Weltmächte geworden ist. Der bescheidene Handwerker aus Nazareth stand damals und heute vor Gott und für die Menschen für die Würde der menschlichen Arbeit ein. Und als eine nette kleine Geschichte nebenher gibt es noch ein Gemälde im Hochchor des Bonner Münsters: Es zeigt die Begegnung von Maria und Elisabeth. Im Evangelium ist da in keinem Wort von Josef die Rede. Aber auf dem Bild steht bescheiden im Hintergrund der Heilige Josef mit dem Attribut der roten Arbeiterfahne.
If you're in honoring your body and your vulva as a way of connecting to your deep power and decolonizing from systems of oppression, this episode is for you. My guest, Sasha Ostara, is a Mexican multicultural woman, Somatic Feminist, and the Creatrix of Vulvalchemy™ Tune into today's episode to hear more about the invitation that led Sasha to explore her own body, how to go about being kinder and more compassionate to your own body, and how connecting to your sexual energy can allow you to reclaim your wholeness as a woman.
"Ostera bizi bizian" jaialdian eskainiko du kontzertua bihar gauean Bilboko Kafe Antzokian, Olatz Salvador eta Xamanak taldearekin batera...
This week Miss Syren talks about Ostera, and relates some events from the past week.
Introduction to Episode Further celebrations of the return of light. We began our light return celebrations with Yule, and we will continue with IMbolc. Podcast Episode Summary In this episode, I, Michelle Lasley, your host, pontificate about the merging of seasons. I review where we are on the wheel of the year and where we are going. Note, I align the “start” of the year with Aries Season or Ostera, the Astrological start of the year I argue Imbolc is both the end and a beginning Note other holidays with the same date: Ground Hog’s Day, Candlemas, and Brigid’s Day A note on Candlemas Celebrates Jesus’ initial presentation When Jesus first enters the template, around age 12 The purification of the Virgin Mary Other traditions show the Green God goes through a similar trial, where he grows from boy to teen. The dawning corresponds with the maiden stage, or the young woman. Imbolc is one of three fertility festivals. And, since one aspect is purification, now is a great time for cleansing your home, your spring cleaning. Also, be sure to finish your reflections. I offer some herb and oil supports. Herbs Sage: “The desire of sage is to render man immortal.” The root, salvere, is defined by being in good health. Rosemary: strengthens memory, purifies the air Mint: a symbol of hospitality Rue: clear sight and visioning, traditional anti-plague herb Oils Lime: zest for life Peppermint: a buoyant heart Clary Sage: clarity and vision Thyme: releasing and forgiving Quotables Season blend Seasons merge One day you look the sun is brighter the birds are louder There is a lightness to the air The wind has shifted The buds are waking up and they are showing their first colors The earth is shrugging off the cold - Shrugging off its chill winter coat It is spring. Recommended Resources Imbolc last year: https://michellelasley.com/2020/02/how-do-you-celebrate-imbolc/ (https://michellelasley.com/2020/02/how-do-you-celebrate-imbolc/) Bremness, Lesley. The Complete Book of Herbs: A Practical Guide to Growing and Using Herbs. London, UK: Dorling Kindersley Limited, 1988. Casey, Caroline W. Visionary Activist Astrology: Become a Secret Agent for Transformation. Sounds True, 2015. (skip to the chapter on the sun) Emotions & Essential Oils: Your Guide to Process, Release, and Live Free. 8th ed. Enlighten Healing, LLC, 2019. Lawless, Julie. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Essential Oils: The Complete Guide to the Use of Oils in Aromatherapy and Herbalism. Element Books, 1995. For more information about Michelle, Balance Shared, events, and projects, please visit http://www.michellelasley.com (www.michellelasley.com). Support this podcast
Andrea es fotógrafa, oriunda de la localidad de Salto Grande pero residente en Rosario desde hace tiempo. En la Universidad Nacional de Rosario completa sus estudios de grado y en 1992 se muda a Nueva York (EEUU), para participar del programa de Estudios Generales en Fotografía, en el International Center of Photography. Su obra integra las colecciones del Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Buenos Aires), Museo de Arte Moderno (Buenos Aires), Museo de Bellas Artes J. B. Castagnino (Rosario), Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Bahía Blanca). Entre las distinciones recibidas figuran, la Beca Fulbright - FNA (1999), los Subsidios a la Creación del FNA (PK) (1998) y Fundación Antorchas (PK) (1997) y la Beca Kuitca (1997).
Monica and Shana sit down to talk about their coven's traditions for Ostara and the significance of Spring Equinox. Shana tells the story of Persephone.
Afterbuzz Hosts Tehran Von Ghasri @IAmTehran, Ashleigh Morghan, Veronica Valencia discuss NETFLIX's CHILLING ADVENTURES OF SABRINA - SEASON 3 - EPISODE 4 - CHAPTER 24 - THE HARE MOON The Hare Moon celebration is upon us. The coven has a picnic in honor of the occasion and hope to restore their powers through the use of a moon ritual. Zelda keeps the real reason for the loss of power from the coven. The Pagans also celebrate this occasion except in the form of Ostera, a worship to the Pagan Gods. The two groups find themselves in the same clearing and join their celebrations. The festivities do not last long as the bitter tension leads to a separation. The pagans, offended by the coven do their part in fouling up the moon ritual plan. Sabrina and Nicholas are having their own separation. After finding Nicholas engaged in inappropriate activities which he had kept secret, Nicholas and Sabrina have a conversation which quickly leads to Nicholas telling Sabrina his truth about her and its not so nice. As if there wasnt enough trouble brewing, Lucifer is loose and plotting revenge for his deemed disrespect and the Pagans give the powerless witches an ultimatum to leave Greendale or else. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Auch im Mai gibt es einiges an Neuigkeiten zu berichten. Agent Christoph und Tourist Jürgen plaudern über Kosmos, Kolossal Games, Heidelberger Spieleverlag, Neue Verlage: TL Games - Dachshund - Wyrmgold, die beeple Ostera(u)ktion und den Herner Spielewahnsinn.
Ep.54 We return to Chef's Table to see what Nancy Silverton is all about; apparently it's doing a whole lot of different things. We explore bread-making obsessions, coaxing flavour out of ingredients, and grilled cheese nights! Plus we provide some channel updates right at the top of the episode, so don't miss that. Make sure to follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook to keep up with news, to join the discussion about food, and to check out all of our personal recipes! Music Credits: "Carpe Diem" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Was a Germanic goddess Eostre or Ostara ever honored in the old days? Are Easter and the German 'Ostern' named after her? Does the widespread Easter lore have roots in ancient pagan rituals? The answers to these questions are disputed among both laymen and scholars. Often it can be hard to distinguish between faith and facts. Therefore, the available sources have been brought together in this book and offered with explanatory notes. However, it is left to the reader to consider whether in Germany a goddess Ostara, Eostar or Ostera was worshiped as was Eostre in England. In this episode, Jan Tjeerd discusses the book by GardenStone for Ostara. Eostre Ostara Eostar by GardenStone is available from GardenStone's website and on Amazon. Ostara Artwork by Connla Freyjason - Iaconography. Poem by Jan Tjeerd. Visit the Gifts of the Wyrd webpage for the #Heathenry50 challenge blog posts. Music: Intro to episode 16: Stanza 31: Valkyries Assemble from Voluspa by Tonya Threet. available on CDBaby. Facebook page: Tonya Threet Outgoing: When the Dead Walk by Hauk from Apple Blossoms and Abandoned Tracks. Music by Hauk Heimdallsman Hauk is currently on Bandcamp but you can find him on Facebook @HaukMusic. Jan has some copies his albums. email at giftsofthewyrd@gmail.com All music selections on this podcast are written, produced, and copywritten by their respective creators/owners. They are used with permission. Check out The Cartomancer magazine. The Cartomancer is a quarterly journal featuring original content in the form of articles, reviews, artwork and more. Gifts of the Wyrd contact: Twitter: @WyrdGifts Facebook: @GiftsoftheWyrd Email: GiftsoftheWyrd@gmail.com Please leave feedback on iTunes. This helps the podcast to be found easier. Interested in a rune consultation or bindrune? Email me for availabilty and pricing. GiftsoftheWyrd@gmail.com Logo Created by Xander Folmer of Huginn's Heathenhof. Contact Xander for logo designs for all your needs. Logo based on the Vanic boar created by Vanatru Priestess Ember of the Vanic Conspiracy (Ember was interviewed on episode 7). Studio recordings by Zencastr and Audacity.