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In this episode, we explore two common myths about science and how they relate to the world of dog training and behavior:Myth #1: Science is elitist and doesn't apply to the real world.The Truth: Science is for everyone! You don't need a fancy degree to understand and apply science in meaningful ways.Science is deeply connected to real-world applications, including the everyday work of dog training and behavior.Dr. Spaulding shares examples of research that directly informs and improves how we work with dogs.Myth #2: There are black-and-white answers about behavior.The Truth: Behavior and biological systems are incredibly complex.Oversimplifying them can hinder our ability to truly understand and help animals.Science evolves as we learn more, and this is a good thing! Progress means discovering better ways to do things, rather than sticking to outdated methods.Key Takeaways:Science matters! It can be approachable and valuable for anyone working with animals. Complexity is part of what makes science (and behavior) fascinating—and embracing it can lead to better outcomes.Learning and adapting as new evidence emerges is essential for growth, both as individuals and as practitioners.This episode is about making science less intimidating, highlighting how it connects to what you do every day, and encouraging curiosity about the way we approach training and behavior.Let's dive in!Unlocking Resilience course (starts February 5th, 2025): https://sciencemattersllc.com/unlocking-resilience Research Bites: https://sciencemattersllc.com/research-bites For more information, please check out my website and social media links below! https://sciencemattersllc.com/ Facebook Instagram
Come to a Dehoarding Accountability Zoom Session: http://www.overcomecompulsivehoarding.co.uk/ticket Subscribe to the podcast: https://www.overcomecompulsivehoarding.co.uk/subscribe Podcast show notes, links and transcript: http://www.overcomecompulsivehoarding.co.uk/ It's the 150th episode, and I've got a special one for you. I'm tackling the 13 pieces of hoarding advice that you're really tired of hearing, and I'm hitting them head on! We've all been on the receiving end of well-meaning but utterly unhelpful advice when it comes to hoarding. From "just get rid of it" to "you're being lazy"… the list goes on. They may seem harmless, but they often overlook the emotional complexities and serious mental health challenges faced by people who hoard. Most importantly, I explain why these pieces of advice do more harm than good. Oversimplified solutions just won't cut it when it comes to overcoming hoarding disorder. Terrible Hoarding Advice "Just get rid of it" underestimates the emotional attachment Emotional attachment to possessions Overwhelming nature of such advice "It's just stuff" overlooks the significance of possessions The significance of possessions to hoarders Dismissal of the emotional connection to items "Get rid of things that don't spark joy" oversimplified and doesn't consider complexities Oversimplification of the decluttering process Failure to recognise the complexities of hoarding disorder Blaming hoarders for being lazy, weak, or selfish is not helpful Stress and shame reinforcement The impact of negative reinforcement on mental health Telling hoarders to be embarrassed or ashamed is counterproductive Exacerbation of hoarding tendencies Implications for mental health and stigma "Just get a skip" advice may create time pressure, anxiety, and public display Pressure and anxiety for hoarders Public display of possessions and potential distress Cleaning up a hoarder's space without consent creates mistrust and anxiety Impact on trust and mental well-being Reinforcement of trauma responses Suggesting to sell or have a yard/car boot sale oversimplifies things Complexity of hoarding disorder Dismissal of mental health issues Decluttering advice of doing one room a day or week underestimates the difficulty Emotional challenges of decision-making Complexity of hoarding disorder Three piles for keep, give away, and throw away is not effective as stand-alone advice Emotional attachment and decision-making Complexity of decluttering for hoarders Telling someone to try harder and give 100% effort at all times is unrealistic Unrealistic expectations and burnout Impact on mental health and sustainability Long-term and complex nature of decluttering Understanding the complexity of the process Mental and emotional focus of decluttering Hoarding as a Complex Process Comparison of decluttering to a marathon The endurance required for decluttering Criticism of advice containing the word "just" Casual dismissal of hoarding tendencies Encouragement to reconsider using "hoarder" casually Impact on stigma and understanding Consider emotional attachment in addressing hoarding issues. Hoarding disorder is complex and deeply personal. Blaming hoarders reinforces shame and hinder recovery. Skips can be a stressful solution. Car boot sale: a communal yard sale. Oversimplifying, dismissing mental health issues - not helpful. Avoid burnout by pacing and considering emotions. Simplify, declutter, and be mindful of health. Reconsider comparing mild mess to hoarding. Advice to declutter doesn't consider emotional attachment; drastic approach may cause fear and anxiety. Hoarding disorder is complex, possessions hold deep meaning, and one-size-fits-all approaches don't work. Blaming hoarding on laziness is unhelpful and untrue. Using skips as a solution for decluttering can create anxiety for some as it puts their possessions on public display. Car boot sales are similar to yard sales, with people selling items from their car boots in a car park on Sundays. Sellers might not get much for their cherished items. Avoid burnout by pacing efforts for long-term decluttering, including handling emotionally charged items with care. Casual use of mental health terms. Hoarding is not just about having too much stuff; it affects emotions and living conditions. Avoid comparing mild mess to hoarding.
"I have trouble explaining to people why the genuinely decentralized nature of Bitcoin along with it's totally anonymous conception (in the sense that we do not know who made it) are central to it's superiority not only as a cryptocurrency but as a means of exchange and as a savings technology. Can you go over why those two aspects are so unique and important?""Stef in a recent question you answered you said that a person should stick to principles. My question is to what extent should a person value principles over virtuous goals? For example you would agree as you have previously stated that it would be immoral for a man to impregnate a prostitute as a prostitute would needless to say be a terrible mother. You would also say that it would be immoral to date a heroin addict single mom for similar reasons, now to clarify I don't want to strawman you so I don't necessarily believe these scenario's are all immoral or if they are just major red flags of dysfunction and that if such dysfunction were to occur you couldn't necessarily ascribe any innocence to such a man that puts himself in such a situation, see your prior answer to the heroin drug addict mother for example. This backdrop leads me to my main question, now I'm arguably in the top 1% of looks and I'm probably also in the top 1% of IQ, so the following question I am going to ask you is completely hypothetical, that said as you are a philosopher I believe you see tremendous value in hypothetical questions. My question is how much do principles matter in a scenario like this: if a man is below average looking, let's say as well he also has below average income and below average salary. For the sake of argument let's just say the man is an elephant man, if you are unaware an elephant man is a seriously disfigured man, see the David Lynch movie 'The Elephant Man' if you are not familiar with the term(a deeply philosophical movie by the way). Anyway back to my question if a man is well below average or for example you can take the extreme example, an elephant man, such a man would understandably find it extremely hard to get a wife, my question is should a man in such a position choose principles over the most important goal of man and arguably everyone's life regardless of whether they admit it or not, which is to have children. Such a man would have very limited choices in regards to women, especially in the 21st century where even good looking guys struggle to get women, such a man may very likely be presented with a choice to have children with a single mom or a take an extreme but in this case a very realistic alternative a prostitute. No men desire to date or especially marry and have kids with a prostitute but at the same time no women want to date men at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder, especially if he is also physically unattractive, short and/or in an extreme example disfigured as the result of war or genetic defects. My question is should such a man choose to follow principles and remain lonely and childless or reject principles by having children with a prostitute? This is why I said this question is hypothetical because it is easy as a guy who is good looking like me or a successful guy like you Stef to follow principals in choosing spouses but can we blame a man in such circumstances for not following principles?"Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!Get my new series on the Truth About the French Revolution, the Truth About Sadism, access to the audiobook for my new book 'Peaceful Parenting,' StefBOT-AI, private livestreams, premium call in shows, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and more!See you soon!https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2022
Your offer suite should show your expertise and the process of your work instead of simplifying it with different tiers of offers. In this episode, I share what I think about offer ladders and how you can design refined offers – especially if you recently switched from charging hourly or daily to packages..Listen in to learn some of the most common mistakes you can make by making an offer ladder, such as… Oversimplifying your servicesIncluding all your ideas without refining your core offerSelling services you don't believe inNot creating an upsell offerAnd, of course, more! Buckle up, I have A LOT to say about these low, mid and high ticket offers! ::FOLLOW + CONNECT WITH CEELShttps://www.instagram.com/ceels.lockley/https://www.linkedin.com/in/ceels/::GET MY WEEKLY EMAILSSubscribe for Profitable Peace, the weekly email series that teaches you how to double your corporate salary working just 20hrs/week:https://www.ceelslockley.co/email-list::APPLY FOR COACHINGSubmit an application for my 1:1 coaching and group programs:http://ceelslockley.co/application
I recently shared these thoughts on my Instagram page and I am bringing them to you here on my podcast. As someone who has been speaking and teaching about nervous systems for over 10 years, I've been anticipating the inevitability of social media influencers oversimplifying regulation tools as a cure-all. Not only does this perpetuate the cycles of bypassing that leave clients feeling broken or even more stuck, the sacred medicine of nervous system work is being exploited as yet another cure-all to sell using harmful marketing techniques. Deep bow of gratitude to the wise women who lent their voices to this conversation on Instagram: @nicolepasveer@nestandnourish@the_play_coach@nadinezumot Kat HoSoo Lee is a trauma-informed Spiritual Business Mentor and host of The Rooted Business Podcast. She uses the tools of somatic and emotional alchemy to guide soulful entrepreneurs to approach their business as a spiritual practice. This allows them to cultivate businesses that are rooted in conscious values, ethical marketing and purposeful service.Connect with Kat: Book a Free Connection Call Business Alchemist Mentorship Instagram Youtube This podcast is made possible with sound production by Andre Lagace.
An awesome chat with an absolute top bloke! This week I was joined by strength and conditioning coach, current serving soldier, and buster of fitness fads and myths, Dean Hammond. With a no sugar coating approach to putting content and information out there that actually helps you achieve your goals and filters through the nonsense that is just social media clickbait, you can see Dean genuinely cares about the people he works with and their results. In this chat, as well as a lot more topics and tangents, we covered: Oversimplifying Shifting your mindset away from the daily grind How to train like an athlete rather than a bodybuilder Follow Dean via the following links:
We explore the profound impact of attachment theory on relationship dynamics, focusing on overcoming fears of intimacy linked to avoidant attachment and the influence of childhood experiences on adult attachment styles.Discover practical tips for anxious attachers seeking relationship harmony and learn how creating a secure base in relationships encourages growth and exploration.Whether you're dealing with attachment style mismatches or seeking to enhance emotional intelligence based on attachment theory, we provide insights and strategies to navigate the complexities of love and attachment, aiming for happier, healthier partnerships.Magic MindThe world's first mental performance shotmagicmind.com/growthMS56% off code: GrowthMS20Growth Mindset podSam Webster Harris explores the psychology of happiness, satisfaction, purpose, and growth through the lens of self-improvement. Success and happiness is a state of mind unique to ourselves and is our responsibility to create.Watch the pod - YouTube (Growth Mindset)Mail - GrowthMindsetPodcast(at)gmail.comInsta - SamJam.zenChapters:00:00 Importance of Attachment03:09 Origin of Attachment Theory04:38 Secure Attachment05:32 Anxious Attachment06:38 Avoidant Attachment07:21 Disorganised Attachment07:43 Impact on relationships10:59 Ad - MagicMind12:36 Common Mistakes14:55 #1 Overgeneralize Attachment styles15:48 #2 Forgetting Context17:47 #3 Stigmatising Attachment styles19:11 #4 Oversimplifying relationships19:43 #5 Using Attachment as an excuse20:22 #6 Ignoring potential for change21:11 Mid-roll21:14 Improving attachment styles24:28 Improving Anxious attachment27:03 Avoidant attachment traits28:57 Improving avoidant attachment30:20 Deeper area to exploreTopics:understanding attachment theory in adult relationshipsovercoming anxious attachment style challengesbuilding secure attachments in romantic partnershipsstrategies for dealing with avoidant attachment in partnerscommon mistakes in interpreting attachment behaviorsfostering secure attachment dynamics in long-term relationshipsidentifying your attachment style for better relationship outcomestransforming anxious attachment into secure connectionsnavigating avoidant attachment tendencies in relationshipseffective communication strategies for different attachment styleshealing from insecure attachments through therapy and self-reflectionthe role of attachment theory in enhancing relationship satisfactionattachment style mismatches and resolving conflictdeveloping emotional intelligence based on attachment theoryattachment theory and its impact on relationship stabilitysigns of secure attachment in couples and how to cultivate itmanaging relationship anxiety with insights from attachment theoryattachment theory techniques for deepening emotional intimacyovercoming fears of intimacy linked to avoidant attachmentthe influence of childhood experiences on adult attachment stylespractical tips for anxious attachers seeking relationship harmony Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/growth-mindset-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On today's episode of The Future of Teamwork, host and HUDDL3 CEO Dane Groeneveld explores the transformative journey of Byron Morrison, a leadership coach who shares insights on redefining the CEO's role in team productivity and wellness. From decoding decision-making for CEOs to understanding the power of small teams, discover actionable insights to enhance productivity, foster better leadership, and cultivate a culture of well-being in the workplace. Tune in for practical strategies to reclaim control, avoid burnout, and empower your team for success.Key Takeaways[00:00 - 01:37] Byron Morrison episode intro and summary: redefining leadership and the essential role of the CEO in forming, planning, and evaluating team effectiveness, decoding decision-making for CEOs, and optimizing your work week.[01:50 - 04:24] Byron's journey of transformation after his dad's cancer, taking charge of his health and writing a book, running a company and helping people, studying psychology, and finding a niche in coaching first-time CEOs.[04:24 - 05:48] Wellness and productivity, getting life and business in sync and under control. Proper sleep, nutrition, and burnout's compounding negative effects on our health.[08:19 - 10:45] "I didn't get control back. I found it for the first time." — CEOs can be the biggest bottleneck in most businesses, stagnating growth. People want to do good work, but it creates frustration if you don't let them.[10:45 - 12:30] Oversimplifying the CEO role, and rethinking what the CEO should be doing as a leader. Freeing a leader up to do more skills they are already excellent at.[12:31 - 14:21] Zone of genius: check your ego and understand where you specialize and who to trust and listen to where you're not as strong.[14:22 - 17:35] Taking a step back and understanding if CEOs and leaders are pulled into too much they shouldn't be. An anecdote about using the tactic "explain it back to me."[17:35 - 19:48] Understanding how you bring out the best in people. Often comes down to slowing down.[19:50 - 21:08] Finding recurring patterns and understanding the pattern or where a team is not seeing results.[21:09 - 23:43] The belief in the power of small teams and avoiding having too many cooks in the kitchen. "Who needs to be involved?"[23:44 - 26:00] Three types of decisions to delegate to your team — day-to-day, broader implications or bigger stakes, involvement in decisions, and auditing ongoing involvement.[26:03 - 27:41] Discover and codify decisions for CEOs, empowering your team to work and make decisions.[27:42 - 29:06] Avoiding the micromanaging mentality but allowing for flexible structure and open communication.[29:06 - 33:30] Helping CEOs get control back, what Byron is doing for energy and energy management — finding productivity and examples from Byron's coaching experience.[33:29 - 34:51] The guilt associated with calling in or being sick as a boss. Finding a culture of building energy, high performance, and longevity.[34:51 - 37:57] How normalized bad behavior causes CEOs guilt, burnout, and depression from not taking more time for self-care.[37:57 - 41:56] The push/pull concept, getting stuff done intentionally and taking time to pull back and rest.[41:57 - 43:08] We're our own worst enemies as leaders and high performers.[43:07 - 43:59] Reaching Byron.
SPOILER WARNING!! Make sure to check out all our episodes on Spotify, Google Podcast, and Apple Podcast! New Episodes every Wednesday, Videos on Thursdays! Make sure to Join our Discord Server at the Misdirection Pirates! https://discord.gg/9VQZ9nU4 Make Sure to use our Link for 10% off your GFUEL order, and use code spoilerwarning at checkout for an additional 10% off! https://gfuel.com/?ref=GvAYLH9-wrARc9 T Use code "ALCHEMISTS" for $5 off your first #TokyoTreat box through my link: https://team.tokyotreat.com/animealchemists This week on the podcast we talk about all the new anime Gary's been watching and what he recommends. For those food lovers, this one is for you! The second half of the episode we talk about the new Tenkaichi 4 trailer and our thoughts, and then dive deep into some Pokemon and Palworld discussions, and whether or not we think Palworld is a ripoff of pokemon. If you guys ever have a fun topic please leave a comment and we will try to talk about it on the podcast. Thank you everyone who listens and watches. We can't do this without your continued support! Like, Subscribe, and turn that Notification on! To find the best app to listen to us on go to https://anchor.fm/emory-villalovos 00:00:00 Start 00:03:12 New Anime we been watching 00:09:28 The Daily life of the Immortal King anime 00:10:38 Amalee was in Mashle Magic and Muscles 00:14:09 What makes Gary and Martin watch Dub over Sub 00:19:14 Delicious in Dungeon Anime SLAPS According to Gary and Emory 00:28:19 A new... spicy anime for those degenerates out there 00:34:05 The wrong way to use Healing Magic reminds us of a certain... other spicy anime 00:37:21 Martin NEEDS to pick up Shangri La Frontier 00:42:18 A touch of Romance can make action anime amazing 00:44:23 New Budokai Tenkaichi 4 Trailer REACTION 00:53:21 New Pokemon Ripoff called Palworld? 00:57:08 A better Open World Pokemon game 01:09:00 Oversimplifying the game will hurt the potential success of Palworld 01:12:02 Gary and Emory need to finish Spider-man before committing to Palworld 01:16:17 The reason Emory won't play Palworld.... yet 01:19:44 Nothing at this point is 100% original anymore --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/emory-villalovos/support
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: [Valence series] 3. Valence & Beliefs, published by Steven Byrnes on December 13, 2023 on LessWrong. 3.1 Post summary / Table of contents Part of the Valence series. So far in the series, we defined valence ( Post 1) and talked about how it relates to the "normative" world of desires, values, preferences, and so on ( Post 2). Now we move on to the "positive" world of beliefs, expectations, concepts, etc. Here, valence is no longer the sine qua non at the center of everything, as it is in the "normative" magisterium. But it still plays a leading role. Actually, two leading roles! Section 3.2 distinguishes two paths by which valence affects beliefs: first, in its role as a control signal, and second, in its role as "interoceptive" sense data, which I discuss in turn: Section 3.3 discusses how valence-as-a-control-signal affects beliefs. This is the domain of motivated reasoning, confirmation bias, and related phenomena. I explain how it works both in general and through a nuts-and-bolts toy model. I also elaborate on "voluntary attention" versus "involuntary attention", in order to explain anxious rumination, which goes against the normal pattern (it involves thinking about something despite a strong motivation not to think about it). Section 3.4 discusses how valence-as-interoceptive-sense-data affects beliefs. I argue that, if concepts are "clusters in thingspace", then valence is one of the axes used by this clustering algorithm. I discuss how this relates to various difficulties in modeling and discussing the world separately from how we feel about it, along with the related "affect heuristic" and "halo effect". Section 3.5 briefly muses on whether future AI will have motivated reasoning, halo effect, etc., as we humans do. (My answer is "yes, but maybe it doesn't matter too much".) Section 3.6 is a brief conclusion. 3.2 Two paths for normative to bleed into positive Here's a diagram from the previous post: We have two paths by which valence can impact the world-model (a.k.a. "Thought Generator"): the normative path (upward black arrow) that helps control which thoughts get strengthened versus thrown out, and the positive path (curvy green arrow) that treats valence as one of the input signals to be incorporated into the world model. Corresponding to these two paths, we get two ways for valence to impact factual beliefs: Motivated reasoning / thinking / observing and confirmation bias - related to the upward black arrow, and discussed in §3.3 below; The entanglement of valence into our conceptual categories, which makes it difficult to think or talk about the world independently from how we feel about it - related to the curvy green arrow, and discussed in §3.4 below. Let's proceed with each in turn! 3.3 Motivated reasoning / thinking / observing, including confirmation bias Of the fifty-odd biases discovered by Kahneman, Tversky, and their successors, forty-nine are cute quirks, and one is destroying civilization. This last one is confirmation bias - our tendency to interpret evidence as confirming our pre-existing beliefs instead of changing our minds.… Scott Alexander 3.3.1 Attention-control and motor-control provide loopholes through which desires can manipulate beliefs Wishful thinking - where you believe something because it would be nice if it were true - is generally maladaptive: Imagine spending all day opening your wallet, over and over, expecting each time to find it overflowing with cash. We don't actually do that, which is an indication that our brains have effective systems to mitigate (albeit not eliminate, as we'll see) wishful thinking. How do those mitigations work? As discussed in Post 1, the brain works by model-based reinforcement learning (RL). Oversimplifying as usual, the "model" (predictive world-model, a.k.a. "Thought Generator") is traine...
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: [Valence series] 3. Valence & Beliefs, published by Steven Byrnes on December 13, 2023 on LessWrong. 3.1 Post summary / Table of contents Part of the Valence series. So far in the series, we defined valence ( Post 1) and talked about how it relates to the "normative" world of desires, values, preferences, and so on ( Post 2). Now we move on to the "positive" world of beliefs, expectations, concepts, etc. Here, valence is no longer the sine qua non at the center of everything, as it is in the "normative" magisterium. But it still plays a leading role. Actually, two leading roles! Section 3.2 distinguishes two paths by which valence affects beliefs: first, in its role as a control signal, and second, in its role as "interoceptive" sense data, which I discuss in turn: Section 3.3 discusses how valence-as-a-control-signal affects beliefs. This is the domain of motivated reasoning, confirmation bias, and related phenomena. I explain how it works both in general and through a nuts-and-bolts toy model. I also elaborate on "voluntary attention" versus "involuntary attention", in order to explain anxious rumination, which goes against the normal pattern (it involves thinking about something despite a strong motivation not to think about it). Section 3.4 discusses how valence-as-interoceptive-sense-data affects beliefs. I argue that, if concepts are "clusters in thingspace", then valence is one of the axes used by this clustering algorithm. I discuss how this relates to various difficulties in modeling and discussing the world separately from how we feel about it, along with the related "affect heuristic" and "halo effect". Section 3.5 briefly muses on whether future AI will have motivated reasoning, halo effect, etc., as we humans do. (My answer is "yes, but maybe it doesn't matter too much".) Section 3.6 is a brief conclusion. 3.2 Two paths for normative to bleed into positive Here's a diagram from the previous post: We have two paths by which valence can impact the world-model (a.k.a. "Thought Generator"): the normative path (upward black arrow) that helps control which thoughts get strengthened versus thrown out, and the positive path (curvy green arrow) that treats valence as one of the input signals to be incorporated into the world model. Corresponding to these two paths, we get two ways for valence to impact factual beliefs: Motivated reasoning / thinking / observing and confirmation bias - related to the upward black arrow, and discussed in §3.3 below; The entanglement of valence into our conceptual categories, which makes it difficult to think or talk about the world independently from how we feel about it - related to the curvy green arrow, and discussed in §3.4 below. Let's proceed with each in turn! 3.3 Motivated reasoning / thinking / observing, including confirmation bias Of the fifty-odd biases discovered by Kahneman, Tversky, and their successors, forty-nine are cute quirks, and one is destroying civilization. This last one is confirmation bias - our tendency to interpret evidence as confirming our pre-existing beliefs instead of changing our minds.… Scott Alexander 3.3.1 Attention-control and motor-control provide loopholes through which desires can manipulate beliefs Wishful thinking - where you believe something because it would be nice if it were true - is generally maladaptive: Imagine spending all day opening your wallet, over and over, expecting each time to find it overflowing with cash. We don't actually do that, which is an indication that our brains have effective systems to mitigate (albeit not eliminate, as we'll see) wishful thinking. How do those mitigations work? As discussed in Post 1, the brain works by model-based reinforcement learning (RL). Oversimplifying as usual, the "model" (predictive world-model, a.k.a. "Thought Generator") is traine...
A deepdive into the history of Vietnam, from a French colony to a split country and America's subsequent escalation in the conflict that has absolutely NO relation to anything going on today. Oversimplifying a complex issue. From French to Japanese rule. The rise of Ho Chi Minh, funded by the US. Funding France's fight in Vietnam. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A deepdive into the history of Vietnam, from a French colony to a split country and America's subsequent escalation in the conflict that has absolutely NO relation to anything going on today. Oversimplifying a complex issue. From French to Japanese rule. The rise of Ho Chi Minh, funded by the US. Funding France's fight in Vietnam. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In life, we find that answers to many of our questions can be found hidden in simplicity. The same holds true for business. Today we look at the silver lining of viewing our businesses through a very raw, elementary, and basic lens. Granted, we all thrive on selling a product or service that produces a payment, but what about the journey we take customers on to that payment? Often times it's in these “transactional stretches” that we create the most impactful favorable, or unfavorable impressions. Oversimplifying our companies allow us to see what the customer sees! What are we doing right? What are we doing wrong? What can we change to make the transactional journey a better experience for our customers? Enjoy!Support the show
Jackie Campbell talks about the misconceptions over annuities and how they can be oversimplified. Plus, where you park could influence your tax strategy. For more information on Campbell and Company or to schedule a consultation call 727-334-0024 or visit www.mycampbellandco.com
I'm a big advocate of the simplification of training, nutrition and mindset. Especially when it comes to lasting results, but not when it compromises your effort's.
Show Notes: A FFP interview with the CEO at Vercel, Guillermo Rauch. Guillermo is a highly accomplished fixture in the web development community with over a decade of experience in the field. He is widely recognized for his expertise and contributions, particularly for creating the popular JavaScript library, Socket.io, which allows for real-time bi-directional communication between web clients and servers. He has also played a key role in the success of several startups as a co-founder. Guillermo Rauch is currently the CEO of Vercel, a platform that simplifies the process of deploying and scaling web applications. Vercel has become a highly popular choice for developers, companies, and organizations to build and deploy their web projects. Throughout his career, Guillermo Rauch has achieved many notable accomplishments, including co-founding LearnBoost and Cloudup. His expertise, leadership, and contributions are recognized as a leader in the industry. Guillermo is frequently invited as a speaker to many conferences and events, and has been featured in multiple publications and media outlets. Hear Guillermo Rauch's perspective on: Staying Ahead Reverse Engineering Back Porting “Democratizing” Technology Access Typical CEO Day Oversimplifying Problems Infrastructure As Code Main Responsibilities Declarative Systems Driving Change Powerful Metaphors Links: Guillermo Rauch on Twitter Guillermo Rauch's blog Vercel We are currently hiring at Stellate. If you got interested in potentially working with us, please take a look at our hiring page.
Diagnoses often oversimplify complex mental health problems. How can researchers and practitioners avoid oversimplifications, improve research, and provide more effective and customized clinical practices? A recent article published in Current Directions in Psychological Science presented the advantages of studying mental health problems as systems, not syndromes. The author, APS Fellow Eiko Fried, a psychologist and methodologist at Leiden University, explains this new approach to how we see and classify mental health problems and how mental-health professionals might create better tools to address early risk of certain conditions, such as depression. To read the transcript, see here.
An aviation expert says the Civil Aviation Authority has been oversimplifying the rules around drone safely in its advertising - and it's fuelling a public backlash against drone operators. Dr Isaac Henderson is a lecturer at Massey University's aviation school and chair of UAVNZ, and is concerned at recent CAA advertising which states there are "no-fly zones" for drones. He says such terminology is misleading, and that when certain requirements are met, drones can be operated, but he says such blanket messaging ends up with the public reporting legitimate drone operators to police - and in some cases leading to threats against them. Kathryn also speaks to Colin Aitchison, operations manager for GCH UAV, a company offering aerial photography and asset inspection using drones. He says threats toward commercial operators like himself have become extremely common.
Earlier this week I had a passionate chat with good friends; Zacca Newman and Chris Armstrong, hosts of the; ‘Better with Running Podcast' and acclaimed Run2PB running coaches. We discuss the tendency for runners to fall prey to ‘binary bias' or ‘black and white thinking'. We often over-simplify; running, life and the human body, for the ease of understanding. Rather than viewing things as a complex inter-related set of relationships that are ever changing. Shades of grey are hard to sit with, we get uncomfortable with not knowing and being uncertain. We are after the magic pill, that fixes/solves everything and everyone. The human body is more complex than this. Yes, we all know the pillars to optimizing human performance are a subtle interplay of; physical exercise/ sleep/ recovery/ nutrition and mental well being… but it's the application of all of the above to the ‘individual' in front of you, that carries all the conjecture. When ‘binary bias' thinking is ‘self serving' life is all merry. Life is easier to digest, we are improving or getting better, it all makes sense. Where it gets tricky is when your ‘black and white' thinking about a certain training method is no longer ‘serving you.' It is hard to be ‘open' in these moments, to be less attached to a certain method/behaviour that has served you so well in the past. We finish the chat by talking about a topic all three of us are particularly passionate about:…. The lost art of listening to your body? And the concept that anything that can be objectively seen in numbers is biased as a metric these days in training…Watch aside, lets get better at ‘tuning our internal dials'…'How did you feel across the ground? How was your rhythm? How was your timing? Did you feel strong? Fresh? Springy? Snappy? Sluggish? Fatigued? Tired? Heavy? Sore? Unmotivated? Raring to go? Excited?
Anxiety and depression resulting from overwhelming but subconscious awareness of death. Do you see too many death-related films? Is your emotional equilibrium harmed by over exposure to a death culture? Is your spiritual stability more fragile than it should be on account of a death culture around you? Oversimplifying the school shooting in Uvalde Texas or the one in Columbine, Colorado in April 1999. When people insist that there is one, and only one reason for a complex situation, they are dishonestly promoting an agenda. Did the police really stand around doing nothing for an hour while the killing inside continued? The same number of victims who were shot to death in Uvalde are murdered every 14 days in Chicago. And many more are shot with intent to kill but miraculous emergency room physicians keep them alive. Why no outrage? Are younger victims somehow more tragic? What about the youngest of all--babies killed in utero? Dealing with death. The ways in which the emotional and mental damage from death obsession resembles radiation poisoning from radioactive sources. Three practical strategies for dealing with the baleful impact of living in a culture of death and restoring joy to your life.
In episode 12 of The Green Life , I have the privileged to discuss the future of nutrition with the father of Modern Day Plant Based Nutrition, Dr T Colin Campbell. Based on his latest book by the same title, we discuss how oversimplifying nutrients has caused confusion, the negative impact of private financial incentives on food policies and more! T. Colin Campbell, PhD has been dedicated to the science of human health for more than 60 years. His primary focus is on the association between diet and disease, particularly cancer. Although largely known for the China Study–one of the most comprehensive studies of health and nutrition ever conducted, and recognized by The New York Times as the “Grand Prix of epidemiology”–Dr. Campbell's profound impact also includes extensive involvement in education, public policy, and laboratory research.Dr. Campbell grew up on a dairy farm and was the first in his family to go to college, where he studied pre-veterinary medicine at Pennsylvania State University. After obtaining his bachelor's degree, and while completing his first year at the University of Georgia veterinary school, he received a telegram from a well known professor at Cornell University, offering a scholarship and research opportunity too good to turn down. And so he completed his education at Cornell University (M.S., Ph.D.) and MIT (Research Associate) in nutrition, biochemistry and toxicology. He then spent 10 years on the faculty of Virginia Tech's Department of Biochemistry and Nutrition before returning to Cornell in 1975 where he presently holds his Endowed Chair as the Jacob Gould Schurman Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Biochemistry in the Division of Nutritional Sciences.Dr. Campbell's research experience includes both laboratory experiments and large-scale human studies. He has received over 70 grant-years of peer-reviewed research funding (mostly with NIH), served on grant review panels of multiple funding agencies, actively participated in the development of national and international nutrition policy, and authored over 350 research papers, most published in peer-reviewed science journals. Throughout his career, he has confronted a great deal of confusion surrounding nutrition and its effects. It is precisely this confusion that he has focused so much on, in recent years.In order to synthesize the findings of his long and rewarding career, and to give back to the public whose lives are threatened by rampant misinformation and special interests, Dr. Campbell co-wrote The China Study: Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health (2005, 2016), which has sold more than 3 million copies worldwide and has been translated into 50 foreign languages. He is also the author of the The New York Times bestseller Whole (2013), The Low Carb Fraud (2013), and The Future of Nutrition. An Insider's Look at the Science, Why We Keep Getting It Wrong and How to Start Getting It Right (2020). Several documentary films feature Dr. Campbell and his research, including Forks Over Knives, Eating You Alive, Food Matters, and PlantPure Nation. He continues to share evidence-based information on health and nutrition whenever given the opportunity. He has delivered hundreds of lectures around the world and he is the founder of the T. Colin Campbell Center for Nutrition Studies and the online Plant-Based Nutrition Certificate in partnership with eCornell.WELLNESS RETREAT TUCSON OCT 31T -NOV 5TH 2022With a focus on Whole Wellness, Dr. T. Colin Campbell and other leading experts will share WFPB nutrition and lifestyle medicine practices to help you live your best life, in addition, a handful of speakers who are highly sought-after wellness practitioners that usually only work at exclusive destination wellness resorts. So join for this special week, and learn about a wide range of topics: culinary medicine, sleep health, gut health, stress reduction, movement/activity, social connections, and more.To register and view a complete lineup of speakers and activities, please visit: https://wellness.nutritionstudies.org/ AMAZING PROJECT at the Centre of Nutrition Studies The T. Colin Campbell Center for Nutrition Studies (CNS) is committed to increasing awareness of the extraordinary impact that food has on the health of our bodies, our communities, and our planet. In support of this commitment, CNS is creating a Community Grants service initiative to empower sustainable food-based initiatives around the world. They will do this by providing grants to enable innovative start-ups and to propel the growth of existing initiatives. This initiative is overseen by Dr Cambell's daughter LeeAnne Campbell PDH
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What is the bigger picture of systemic oppression? Liana Maneese, the Founder of The Good Peoples Group's Center on Interracial Relationships dives deep into the concept of "cultural whiteness" and why you cannot disconnect it from eating disorders. "The body is political. The body is the mark of everything. And so we have to remember that no matter what we're talking about, we have to look at how are these bodies treated." -Liana
What is the bigger picture of systemic oppression? Liana Maneese, the Founder of The Good Peoples Group's Center on Interracial Relationships dives deep into the concept of "cultural whiteness" and why you cannot disconnect it from eating disorders. "The body is political. The body is the mark of everything. And so we have to remember that no matter what we're talking about, we have to look at how are these bodies treated." -Liana
If I had a nickel for every guest on this show who went on to achieve wild success … TJ Parker from PillPack three years before they were bought by Amazon. Anyway, let me introduce this show with a clip from the recent podcast (EP325) with Dr. Mai Pham. We were talking about the rampant and very open secret of excessive upcoding in Medicare Advantage (MA) that is costing American taxpayers a fortune and is very not correlated with actual spend. Here we go with Dr. Mai Pham: Stacey: Do you have any thoughts relative to how you ensure that these MA plans that are becoming vast are still accountable to not game the system? How do you plug loopholes in a way that doesn't invite additional and more nefarious gaming? Dr. Pham: My fantasy has always been that CMS can develop, or somebody can develop, a black box machine learning–driven, risk-adjustment algorithm that no one can see into—not even the payer. It would very much level the playing field, assuming that it was developed correctly, appropriately, and you used unbiased data; but that's the kind of system and extreme solution that I think starts to sound almost necessary given the state of things and the rate of acceleration in upcoding. So, people may not have noticed that CMS had put out a request for — I think it was a challenge grant, maybe? And they recently announced a couple of winners. They were asking for artificial intelligence–driven approaches to predicting health outcomes, which I believe is just the first shadow approach, the first step that you take in thinking about artificial intelligence–driven risk adjustment. I also want the audience to understand, it's not like we're talking about replacing a really superlative gold standard, right? The majority of the most commonly used risk-adjustment approaches today produce a correlation with actual spend of only like 0.2. This is the best we can do? This is how we're deciding how we're going to spend a trillion dollars each year? Surely, we can do better. And, by the way, the winner of that CMS AI contest was ClosedLoop.ai; and Andrew Eye from ClosedLoop.ai was on the show. Cue Encore Episode here! In the original version of this show, there was a whole prelude about whether AI is or is not anything beyond an overused marketing pitch; but I think, in the time-space continuum, we're beyond that conversation now. Don't get me wrong, everybody still has AI in their cloud analytics platforms. And some of them are still, as they say, programmed in PowerPoint (that was a joke); but real deals are emerging from the fray. As mentioned, in this health care podcast I talk with Andrew Eye about AI. (He was born for this job.) Andrew is CEO over at ClosedLoop.ai. ClosedLoop.ai beat out over 300 rivals with their system that forecasts adverse health events and then plops warnings even in the EHR with action steps for clinicians to avoid the calamity in the making. You can imagine many things that CMS might be contemplating using this tool for, including as a control for false upcoding and all of the financial toxicity that goes along with that. By the way, keep in mind all the top-performing Medicare Advantage plans are using today, right now, some form of advanced analytics and artificial intelligence to risk stratify their populations and predict which members will, without intervention, become high cost in the near term. Others are using AI right now to do the kind of predictive analytics that you need to excel at population health. I get to ask Andrew some of the hard questions that have been bothering me about all the AI hype, and he set me straight a couple of times. Love it when that happens. You can learn more at closedloop.ai or by following Andrew (@andreweye) on Twitter. Andrew Eye's executive and entrepreneurial experience spans over 20 years in business to consumer and business to business for start-ups and Fortune 500 companies. Andrew founded and sold three technology companies and today is the CEO and founder of ClosedLoop.ai. In 2012, Andrew cofounded the mobile software company Boxer. Boxer developed mobile productivity software for individuals and large corporations. Boxer's flagship email product was downloaded by millions of users and received significant industry praise for its exceptional user interface, including a 2015 Webby Nomination as one of the top 5 productivity applications in the world. Boxer was purchased by VMWare (one of the top 10 largest software companies in the world) in 2015. Prior to Boxer, Andrew cofounded the cybersecurity firm Ciphent in 2007. Ciphent grew to nearly 100 employees with 1000 customers by 2010 before being acquired by Accuvant (now Optiv). With a three-year growth rate of 8900%, Ciphent was recognized by Inc. magazine as the 16th fastest-growing private company in the United States. During his tenure as SVP of services at Accuvant, Andrew oversaw a $50-million, 200-person organization and was responsible for doubling revenues in 18 months. Andrew also served as CEO of Bodkin Consulting Group, where he worked with Fortune 500 brands and technology companies to define their interactive marketing strategies. Andrew began his career as a software architect working with NASA, i2 technologies, and the US Marine Corps. Andrew graduated summa cum laude from Virginia Tech with a degree in management information technology. Andrew lives in Austin, Texas. 04:34 What exactly predictive analytics is. 05:05 The use cases of predictive analytics value. 07:23 The oversimplification of how people think about risk. 09:03 “Did you have an impact or not?” 09:17 The public scorecard for predictive analytics. 13:59 “Explainability is a real hot topic in artificial intelligence, specifically in health care.” 15:24 Data shaming—what's wrong with it, and why incomplete data are still important. 17:34 The possibilities that machine learning allows for in patient care in health care. 23:45 “Our health care system can't afford for that level of inefficiency.” 24:57 “It's not a question of if; it's a question of when.” 26:04 The diminishing returns of interoperability and more data for machine learning. 29:21 “You're running your business today, and whatever data you're using to run your business … you can use it to provide better patient care.” 30:01 Andrew's advice: Get started now. You can learn more at closedloop.ai or by following Andrew (@andreweye) on Twitter. Check out our newest #healthcarepodcast with @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai as he discusses #populationhealth and #artificialintelligence. #healthcare #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth What is #predictiveanalytics value to health care? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence Oversimplifying risk. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Did you have an impact or not?” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Explainability is a real hot topic in artificial intelligence, specifically in health care.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence What is data shaming, and why is it an issue? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence #Machinelearning in #patientcare. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Our health care system can't afford for that level of inefficiency.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “It's not a question of if; it's a question of when.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “You're running your business today, and whatever data you're using to run your business … you can use it to provide better patient care.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence
In this episode, Tracy and Luis speak to the leadership fallacy of oversimplification. As leaders, we're often busy, and this often translates into sitting in meetings all day while we are still trying to achieve results and develop our teams. Unfortunately, this means that vital initiatives like employee engagement, team building, and succession planning can get boiled down and oversimplified, and mean we end up moving in the wrong direction versus helping empower our team. Highlights include : How Employee Engagement is more than a buzz word, and how you and your team can build authentic engagement vs, falling into the “ping pong table trap” (3:06) Moving from one-day team-building events to on-going efforts to building teams that are empowered (15:51) Creating a succession plan that goes beyond planning the next role for a specific person to planning overall organizational development to build agile teams that support future growth. (24:28) Want to learn more about our approach visit us at https://teamesandco.com/about/meet-us (https://teamesandco.com/about/meet-us) Listen to Episode 4 to learn more about building your team with the help of a Team Assimilation (https://teamesandco.com/podcast/04 (https://teamesandco.com/podcast/04)) Views expressed by guests are their own and may not reflect the views of Teames and Co. Mention of particular products or services and participation of a guest does not imply an endorsement by Teames and Co. The information provided is for educational and entertainment purposes and should not be taken as professional advice.
Tom welcomes David Keller back to the show; David is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com. David discusses his fairly broad interests and why taking advantage of different disciplines can help with investing. Systems and practices can reduce emotional decision making. He recommends several books that can help investors avoid emotion and help them discover useful patterns. Investing is not easy and learning from your mistakes is vital. David's blogs are called "Market Misbehavior" and "Mindful Investor" and he gives some practical advice on how to become a better investor. Being mindful means learning techniques like meditation to reduce stress and help handle multiple events around you while increasing awareness. He believes that the number one consideration for an investor should be price followed by regularly watching trends of many asset classes. He says, "Price tells you where capital is moving towards, while breadth shows you what bets are being made, and sentiment reveals what people are saying." David gives some examples of breadth trends and why they provide a sneak peek into the markets' operation. The FAANG trade of mega-stocks has had an incredible run with staggering performance. However, most institutions are forced to acquire these stocks by their clients to maintain their relative performance. This results in additional upward pressure, but eventually, there will be a massive unwind. These markets are currently experiencing immense euphoria, but the breadth indicators hint at a coming rollover. He discusses this year's parabolic move in gold and why pullbacks are good for a healthy market. He says, "We are now consolidating and building momentum for the next leg higher." Lastly, he explains when and how to define an exit strategy for a trade and why you should have a routine for reviewing the charts. Time Stamp References:0:40 - Reading suggestions for investing.4:30 - Quantifying investor behavior.6:50 - Oversimplifying your thesis.8:55 - Being mindful as an investor.11:10 - Key parts of his thesis.14:15 - Breadth indicators.18:10 - The end of the FAANG trade.22:30 - S&P 500 Chart and analysis.25:20 - Why the gold chart is bullish.29:30 - Timing entry points and exits. Talking Points From This Episode Discipline and structure with investing.Mindfulness and broadening your awareness.Monitor the trends of multiple asset classes.FAANG performance and euphoric markets.Planning an exit strategy. Guest Links:Website & Articles: https://stockcharts.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/DKellerCMTBookList: https://www.marketmisbehavior.com/reading-listBlog: https://www.marketmisbehavior.com David Keller, CMT, is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com, where he helps investors minimize behavioral biases through technical analysis. He is a frequent host on StockCharts TV, and he relates mindfulness techniques to investor decision making in his blog, The Mindful Investor. David is also President and Chief Strategist at Sierra Alpha Research LLC. A boutique investment research firm focused on managing risk through market awareness. He combines the strengths of technical analysis, behavioral finance, and data visualization to identify investment opportunities and enrich relationships between advisors and clients. David's blog, Market Misbehavior, explores the intersection between behavioral psychology and the financial markets. David was previously a Managing Director of Research for Fidelity Investments in Boston, where he managed the Technical Research Department and the legendary Fidelity Chart Room. He also co-managed the Business Associate Program, a rotational program for recent undergraduates. A Past President of the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) Association, David most recently served as a Subject Matter Expert for Behavioral Finance. He is also a member of the Technical Securities Analysts Association, San Francisco, and the International Federation of Technical ...
Tom welcomes David Keller back to the show; David is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com. David discusses his fairly broad interests and why taking advantage of different disciplines can help with investing. Systems and practices can reduce emotional decision making. He recommends several books that can help investors avoid emotion and help them discover useful patterns. Investing is not easy and learning from your mistakes is vital. David's blogs are called "Market Misbehavior" and "Mindful Investor" and he gives some practical advice on how to become a better investor. Being mindful means learning techniques like meditation to reduce stress and help handle multiple events around you while increasing awareness. He believes that the number one consideration for an investor should be price followed by regularly watching trends of many asset classes. He says, "Price tells you where capital is moving towards, while breadth shows you what bets are being made, and sentiment reveals what people are saying." David gives some examples of breadth trends and why they provide a sneak peek into the markets' operation. The FAANG trade of mega-stocks has had an incredible run with staggering performance. However, most institutions are forced to acquire these stocks by their clients to maintain their relative performance. This results in additional upward pressure, but eventually, there will be a massive unwind. These markets are currently experiencing immense euphoria, but the breadth indicators hint at a coming rollover. He discusses this year's parabolic move in gold and why pullbacks are good for a healthy market. He says, "We are now consolidating and building momentum for the next leg higher." Lastly, he explains when and how to define an exit strategy for a trade and why you should have a routine for reviewing the charts. Time Stamp References:0:40 - Reading suggestions for investing.4:30 - Quantifying investor behavior.6:50 - Oversimplifying your thesis.8:55 - Being mindful as an investor.11:10 - Key parts of his thesis.14:15 - Breadth indicators.18:10 - The end of the FAANG trade.22:30 - S&P 500 Chart and analysis.25:20 - Why the gold chart is bullish.29:30 - Timing entry points and exits. Talking Points From This Episode Discipline and structure with investing.Mindfulness and broadening your awareness.Monitor the trends of multiple asset classes.FAANG performance and euphoric markets.Planning an exit strategy. Guest Links:Website & Articles: https://stockcharts.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/DKellerCMTBookList: https://www.marketmisbehavior.com/reading-listBlog: https://www.marketmisbehavior.com David Keller, CMT, is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com, where he helps investors minimize behavioral biases through technical analysis. He is a frequent host on StockCharts TV, and he relates mindfulness techniques to investor decision making in his blog, The Mindful Investor. David is also President and Chief Strategist at Sierra Alpha Research LLC. A boutique investment research firm focused on managing risk through market awareness. He combines the strengths of technical analysis, behavioral finance, and data visualization to identify investment opportunities and enrich relationships between advisors and clients. David's blog, Market Misbehavior, explores the intersection between behavioral psychology and the financial markets. David was previously a Managing Director of Research for Fidelity Investments in Boston, where he managed the Technical Research Department and the legendary Fidelity Chart Room. He also co-managed the Business Associate Program, a rotational program for recent undergraduates. A Past President of the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) Association, David most recently served as a Subject Matter Expert for Behavioral Finance. He is also a member of the Technical Securities Analysts Association, San Francisco, and the International Federation of Technical ...
When searching for a solution to overcome pornography, try looking at the big picture and expect the process to take time. Creed and Crishelle explore this idea with Dr. Adam Moore as they discuss how to approach recovery from two perspectives: that using pornography causes problems in peoples’ lives and relationships, and is also a symptom of an underlying issue. Coming from both angles can offer the boost for lasting change. Dr. Adam M. Moore is a licensed marriage and family therapist and co-owner of Sela Health, which operates mental health counseling offices in Utah and Nevada. In this episode: Recovery is complicated and there is not a one-size-fits-all solution. Anything that matters is worth putting effort into. Oversimplifying addiction recovery is detrimental to those experiencing it. Getting feedback from a therapist or family member can give you better insight on your progress. The amazing space shuttle analogy for getting velocity in early recovery Dr. Moore's Links: Pocket Therapist podcast -- a mental health and relationship podcast -- www.yourpockettherapist.com My free content about recovery from compulsive pornography use -- www.adammmoore.com/media The counseling practice I manage - Utah Valley Counseling -- www.utahvalleycounseling.com The counseling practice I manage in Nevada - Las Vegas Counseling -- www.lasvegascounseling.com My Recovery Portal - my online education portal for free and paid content for pornography addiction recovery -- www.myrecoveryportal.com Pornography addiction recovery workbook - http://www.myrecoveryportal.com/product/the-recovery-workbook-for-sexual-addiction-compulsive-sexual-behaviors/ Show notes: Submit anonymous questions, stories, or comments here. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram for more! Contact us at hello@reach10.org. Learn more about our nonprofit at Reach 10.
Here’s the thing: All the top-performing Medicare Advantage plans are using, today, right now, some form of advanced analytics and artificial intelligence (AI) to risk-stratify their populations and predict which members will, without intervention, become high cost in the near term. The idea is then to intervene to mitigate risk and stop bad things from happening—bad things that stink if you’re the patient and also cost a lot if you’re the plan. That’s what population health management is all about, after all. Others using AI, right now, to do the kind of predictive analytics that you need to excel at pop health include PCP groups and other providers, mainly those at risk to manage populations or readmissions. In this health care podcast, I talk with Andrew Eye about AI. Andrew is CEO over at ClosedLoop. I get to ask Andrew some of the hard questions that have been bothering me about all the AI hype, and he set me straight a couple of times. Love it when that happens. You can learn more at closedloop.ai or by following Andrew (@andreweye) on Twitter. Andrew Eye’s executive and entrepreneurial experience spans over 20 years in business to consumer and business to business for start-ups and Fortune 500 companies. Andrew founded and sold three technology companies and today is the CEO and founder of ClosedLoop.ai. In 2017, Andrew founded his fourth technology company, ClosedLoop.ai. ClosedLoop.ai is a next-generation predictive analytics platform provider leveraging the latest in artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies to rapidly create predictive models from diverse sources of raw, messy, real-world health care data. Prior to founding ClosedLoop, Andrew cofounded the mobile software company Boxer. Boxer developed mobile productivity software for individuals and large corporations. Boxer’s flagship email product was downloaded by millions of users and received significant industry praise for its exceptional user interface, including a 2015 Webby nomination as one of the top 5 productivity applications in the world. Boxer was purchased by VMWare (one of the top 10 largest software companies in the world) in 2015. Prior to Boxer, Andrew cofounded the cybersecurity firm Ciphent in 2007. Ciphent grew to nearly 100 employees with 1000 customers by 2010 before being acquired by Accuvant (now Optiv). With a three-year growth rate of 8900%, Ciphent was recognized by Inc. magazine as the 16th fastest-growing private company in the United States. During his tenure as SVP of services at Accuvant, Andrew oversaw a $50-million, 200-person organization and was responsible for doubling revenues in 18 months. Andrew also served as CEO of Bodkin Consulting Group, where he worked with Fortune 500 brands and technology companies to define their interactive marketing strategies. Andrew began his career as a software architect working with NASA, i2 technologies, and the US Marine Corps. Andrew graduated summa cum laude from Virginia Tech with a degree in management information technology. Andrew lives in Austin, Texas, with his two daughters and champion “Dock Dog” Sophie. 01:50 Artificial intelligence in health care, and the different things that this means to the health care community. 02:06 Image analysis, also known as replacing doctors with robots. 02:25 Chatbots for health care. 02:43 Predictive analytics. 04:39 “What they really care about is, How can this impact our business? How can this improve patient lives?” 04:51 “For us, this is all just better math.” 08:13 What exactly predictive analytics is. 08:40 The use cases of predictive analytics value. 11:33 The oversimplification of how people think about risk. 13:13 “Did you have an impact or not?” 13:27 The public scorecard for predictive analytics. 18:16 “Explainability is a real hot topic in artificial intelligence, specifically in health care.” 19:46 Data shaming—what’s wrong with it, and why incomplete data are still important. 21:53 The possibilities that machine learning allows for in patient care in health care. 28:08 “Our health care system can’t afford for that level of inefficiency.” 29:21 “It’s not a question of if; it’s a question of when.” 30:37 The diminishing returns of interoperability and more data for machine learning. 33:54 “You’re running your business today, and whatever data you’re using to run your business … you can use it to provide better patient care.” 34:34 Andrew’s advice: Get started now. You can learn more at closedloop.ai or by following Andrew (@andreweye) on Twitter. Check out our newest #healthcarepodcast with @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai as he discusses #populationhealth and #artificialintelligence. #healthcare #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #Artificialintelligence in #healthcare. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth What difference does #artificialintelligence mean to the #healthcarecommunity? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #healthcare #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth Replacing #doctors with #robots. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses #artificialintelligence. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth Chatbots and health care. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses #artificialintelligence. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth What is #predictiveanalytics? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “What they really care about is, How can this impact our business? How can this improve patient lives?” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “For us, this is all just better math.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence What is #predictiveanalytics value to health care? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence Oversimplifying risk. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Did you have an impact or not?” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Explainability is a real hot topic in artificial intelligence, specifically in health care.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence What is data shaming, and why is it an issue? @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence #Machinelearning in #patientcare. @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “Our health care system can’t afford for that level of inefficiency.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “It’s not a question of if; it’s a question of when.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence “You’re running your business today, and whatever data you’re using to run your business … you can use it to provide better patient care.” @andreweye of @ClosedLoopai discusses. #healthcarepodcast #populationhealth #podcast #ai #pophealth #digitalhealth #artificialintelligence
What’s the most ridiculous fitness myth that you’ve ever heard? Are there any fitness myths that sound reasonable at first that you might be buying into? In today’s episode, Rachael and Kelsea take on some of the fitness myths that are most commonly repeated and debunk them with real information. Listen to part 1 of this episode to hear about whether or not cardio is really the best way to burn fat, whether sugar in fruit should be avoided, whether you should worry about being sore the day after a workout, and more. More fitness myths to come next week in part 2! Topics Discussed in Today’s Episode: Where fitness myths start Oversimplifying complex information about the body Inspiration for discussing fitness myths Fitness myths hold people back from accomplishing the things they want to accomplish Whether cardio is the best way to burn fat Fat burning zones Cardio vs. weight training as it relates to fat burning Making certain food groups an enemy Eliminating fat or carbs Soreness the day after a workout Fruit doesn’t make you fat Related Links Our Fitness FB Group. Thick Thighs Save Lives Workout Programs Constantly Varied Gear's Workout Leggings Our Fitness Blog. Behind the scenes at CVG.
Holiday season is here, which means the DYC team is traveling all over the country and enjoying time with family! This will be a shorter episode, but packed with food for thought from our second article on digital advertising effectiveness. Story Time: (1:04) Becca is building a Thanksgiving table in one weekend and it's kind of like trying to sell inventory homes at the end of the year. Kevin lays out the roadmap to marketing success. Also, we have a special gift for the very next caller! Leave any questions or comments about this episode or any other at 404-369-2595. In the News: (8:50) This week we discuss the counterpoint article to Kevin's favorite article of 2019: Digital advertising is not the dot com bubble, improper attribution is (MarketingLand.com) – Kirk Williams from Zato Marketing says that the real problem in paid search right now is our belief that we can track everything. We don't disagree… Do we have tunnel vision when it comes to attribution? Paid search vs. branding What are we actually tracking – what does it mean and how to does it help us form our marketing strategy? Oversimplifying the customer journey – it's not linear; it's more like a bouncing ball There's no perfect attribution model – more complicated doesn't necessarily mean better In summary, marketing is complicated! Last QOTW: What's on your holiday wish list? Answer here for a chance to win a personalized gift from Kevin that you cannot buy! Footnotes: Here is the DYC funnel Kevin mentioned in the episode DYC's 2019 Holiday Gift Guide is here! If you're not on Facebook, or just prefer LinkedIn, you can now join our LinkedIn Market Proof Marketing group! Subscribe on iTunes —> https://now.doyouconvert.com/mpm-itunes Follow on Spotify —> https://now.doyouconvert.com/mpm-spotify Subscribe on Google Play —> https://now.doyouconvert.com/mpm-gplay A weekly new home marketing podcast for home builders and developers. Each week Kevin Oakley, Andrew Peek, and others from Do You Convert will break down the headlines, share best-practices and stories from the front line, and perform a deep dive on a relevant marketing topic. We're here to help you – not to sell you! The post Ep 77: Advertising, Attribution and Branding – Trust Us, It's Complicated appeared first on Online Sales and Marketing for Home Builders - DYC. The post Ep 77: Advertising, Attribution and Branding – Trust Us, It's Complicated appeared first on Online Sales and Marketing for Home Builders - DYC.
For this week’s journal club, David, Thomas, and Audrey bring listeners short overviews of three articles. Audrey discusses an article published in the journal Pediatrics Dec 18 2017, called Exemptions from Mandatory Immunization After Legally Mandated Parental Counseling by Saad Omer, Kristen Allen, DH Chang, Beryl Guterman, Robert Bednarczyk, Alex Jordan, Alison Buttenheim, Malia Jones, Claire Hannan, Patricia deHart, and Daniel Salmon. David chats about the Dec 14, 2017 commentary published in New England Journal of Medicine by Dr. Lisa Rosenbaum entitled The Less is More Crusade – Are we Overmedicalizing or Oversimplifying. And Thomas shares a Health Affairs article, Government spending health and nonhealth sectors associated with improvement in county health rankings, published in their November 2016 issue. If you enjoy the show, please give us 5 stars wherever you listen. Tweet us your thoughts @RoSpodcast and leave us a message on our facebook page at www.facebook.com/reviewofsystems. Or, you can email me at audrey@rospod.org. We’d love to hear from you, and thanks for listening.
Dr. Uddipta Biswas joins us in this episode to add another chapter to the perennial Nature vs Nurture debate. This time, however, rather than trying to proclaim a definitive winner we expound on what might constitute the ultimate bridge between both: the relatively novel science of epigenetics. As we hope it becomes clear, Nature and Nurture are not opposite sides in an irreconcilable dichotomy. They feed onto each other through intricately orchestrated biochemical mechanisms, some of which have been elucidated thanks to large scale real life tragedies such as the "Dutch hunger winter" or the seasonal Overkalix famines. Oversimplifying a little, nature predisposes and Nurture enhances (or frustrates). So, can we all become Einsteins, Eulers, Gausses given the right nurturing? It is not that simple... Find us in: Our website: https://tillthebottom.com/home/ Our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMXM2Vc0d21wjDt5chP26sQ?view_as=subscriber Our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Tillthebottom/ Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tillthebottom
------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter SubscribeStar: https://www.subscribestar.com/the-dissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter PayPal Subscription 1 Dollar: https://tinyurl.com/yb3acuuy PayPal Subscription 3 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ybn6bg9l PayPal Subscription 5 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ycmr9gpz PayPal Subscription 10 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y9r3fc9m PayPal Subscription 20 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y95uvkao ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thedissenteryt/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT Dr. David Zaruk is the Risk-Monger. He has been an EU risk and science communications specialist since 2000, active in EU policy events from REACH and SCALE to the Pesticides Directive, from Science in Society questions to the use of the Precautionary Principle. He was part of the team that set up GreenFacts to encourage a wider use of evidence-based decision-making in the EU on environmental health matters. Dr. Zaruk is a professor at Odisee University College where he lectures on Communications, Marketing, EU Lobbying and PR. In this episode, we start off by talking about the tactics that bad environmental activists use, how they oversimplify complex problems, and their anti-capitalism ideology. After referring to the importance of experts consulting environmental and health policy, we talk about the antiscientific approach that has been dominating the European Union, when it comes to agriculture, energy and the environment. We then move on to the SlimeGate series that Dr. Zaruk has been releasing, and an exposé of how tort law firms, scientists, NGOs, activists and politicians get together to promote pseudoscience and get easy money. Toward the end, we speak about the important difference between hazard and risk, and how fearmongers exploit people's ignorance about that topic, and also about how the incidence of cancer has been declining over time. Time Links: 01:04 Good and bad environmental activism 03:00 Oversimplifying complex problems 05:04 Anti-corporativism and anti-capitalism approaches 08:29 We need more experts in politics 15:00 The EU, glyphosate, GMOs, and organic farming 28:33 EU's policies on climate change, nuclear energy, and renewables 36:43 The SlimeGate series: tort law firms, paid scientists, NGOs, activists and politicians 50:40 Hazard vs Risk, and how fearmongers exploit this difference 1:01:34 The incidence of cancer is going down 1:05:28 Follow Dr. Zaruk's work! -- Follow Dr. Zaruk's work: Risk-Monger blog: https://risk-monger.com/ Facebook page: https://tinyurl.com/ybqghrp7 Twitter handle: @zaruk -- A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS: KARIN LIETZCKE, ANN BLANCHETTE, SCIMED, PER HELGE HAAKSTD LARSEN, LAU GUERREIRO, RUI BELEZA, MIGUEL ESTRADA, ANTÓNIO CUNHA, CHANTEL GELINAS, JIM FRANK, JERRY MULLER, FRANCIS FORD, HANS FREDRIK SUNDE, BRIAN RIVERA, ADRIANO ANDRADE, YEVHEN BODRENKO, SERGIU CODREANU, ADAM BJERRE AND JUSTIN WATERS! A SPECIAL THANKS TO MY FIRST PRODUCER,
Oversimplifying the Law of Attraction can leave you thinking that somehow you caused your loss because of negative thoughts. I don't think that's useful at all! In fact, I believe that not everything that happens to you is a result ... Read More The post Ep #20 Loss and the Law of Attraction appeared first on Build A Life After Loss.
Oversimplifying the Law of Attraction can leave you thinking that somehow you caused your loss because of negative thoughts. I don’t think that’s useful at all! In fact, I believe that not everything that happens to you is a result of your thoughts. Thinking that the loss of your child is due to something that […]
Oversimplifying the customer journey can have serious impacts on your ability to provide buyers with the information they need to make an informed purchase. Today on the 3Q Digital Download podcast, host Joe Kerschbaum dives into navigating a customer journey as complex as the human experience. Joe is joined by Amanda Farley, Partner at SS Digital and Co-Founder of a tattoo and art studio, who recently led a session at SMX West called, “People Do Not Live in a Silo and Neither Should Your Strategy”. Together, they cover: What the customer journey is How to define your customers’ journey Why traditional views of the customer journey are ill-conceived Why marketers so frequently misunderstand who their actual customers are What “high funnel tunnel vision” means and why you should avoid it Creating a multi-tiered approach And much more! Subscribe to the 3Q Digital Download Podcast via iTunes, Stitcher, or wherever you listen! Intro/Outro Music Credit: Jazzy French via Bensound.com
https://accadandkoka.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/i-ef_i0j-e1546732779629.jpg ()Lisa Rosenbaum, MD It doesn’t take great insight to assert that healthcare waste is rampant. There is an obvious epidemic of testing and treatments that make no difference in patients’ lives or could possible even harm. But what is the cause of the epidemic and what should be done about it? In the last decade, a popular narrative has emerged, claiming that the waste has obvious causes and remedies. That narrative, however, overlooks the complexities of the problem and the trade-offs and potential harms of the remedies proposed. Our guest to discuss the “Less-Is-More” movement is Lisa Rosenbaum, MD, one of the best medical writers of our generation. Dr. Rosenbaum is a national correspondent for the New England Journal of Medicine, a cardiologist at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. GUEST: Lisa Rosenbaum, MD. https://twitter.com/LisaRosenbaum17 (Twitter) LINKS: Lisa Rosenbaum. The Less-Is-More Crusade—Are We Overmedicalizing or Oversimplifying? (2017 New England Journal of Medicine. Free https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMms1713248 (preview) available) Lisa Rosenbaum. Let Fear Guide Early Breast Cancer Detection. (2015, https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/27/opinion/let-fear-guide-early-stage-breast-cancer-decisions.html (Open access) in The New York Times) Lisa Rosenbaum. The Problem With Knowing How Much Your Health Care Costs. (2013, https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/the-problem-with-knowing-how-much-your-health-care-costs (Open access) in the New Yorker) Michel Accad. http://alertandoriented.com/the-apostles-of-less-is-more/ (The Apostles of Less-Is-More) (blog post on Alert and Oriented) Michel Accad. http://alertandoriented.com/squanderingmedicaresmoney/ (On Squandering Medicare’s Money) (blog post on Alert and Oriented) Michel Accad. http://alertandoriented.com/overdiagnosis-the-disease-that-cannot-be-diagnosed/ (Overdiagnosis:) http://alertandoriented.com/overdiagnosis-the-disease-that-cannot-be-diagnosed/ (The Disease That Cannot be Diagnosed.) (blog post on Alert and Oriented) RELATED EPISODES https://accadandkoka.com/episode12/ (Ep. 12 John Mandrola: The Case for Less-Is-More) WATCH ON YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/bgUwFkq7xqE (Watch the episode) on our YouTube channel Support this podcast
Stephan Guyenet is back on the show and we’re chatting all about how to know whom to trust in the fitness and health field. Specifics include… The reason Stephan came up with this process Is formal education and experience essential? Oversimplifying complex topics Acknowledging nuance The ability to change one’s mind in light of evidence Leaning on conspiracy too heavily Cherry picking data Implying ill intent Ideas and personal identity Please share, subscribe & ENJOY! -- Connect w/ Stephan: Website – StephanGuyenet.com Book – The Hungry Brain Social - Twitter -- Would you like to be coached by Marcus? Contact him HERE! Online Nutritional Coaching Online Workout Design Connect w/ Marcus: Facebook | Instagram | YouTube
Matt Waldman's RSP Cast hosts @alltwentytwo for a conversation about new and old offenses in the NFL, the subject of scouting talent, analytics, and running back value. Betz is a Twitter mainstay in the football community. A veteran of the Air Force getting his undergrad, Betz developed an interest in football while reading Chris Brown's work at Grantland. Soon after, he found his way to coaching forums and began studying tape to learn the structures of football. He's truly a student of the game. In this episode, Betz and I discuss a variety of topics that I believe you'll find interesting an informative: The origins of the Chiefs offense, the Air Raid, and how it works. What makes Patrick Mahomes a special prospect? What made Chad Kelly compelling to him? And why Kelly's self-destructive behavior is also disappointing for an enthusiast of scheme and strategy? Where public analytics writers are on and off the mark about running backs. On the mark: Situational blocking scheme usage. Off the mark: Oversimplifying what they see on film because they don't understand the technique, concepts, and strategies the position requires. Why Betz has no interest in scouting talent. Betz's path of study with football and suggestions to others. I had a lot of fun talking with Betz. He's a thoughtful, intelligent guest with a good sense of humor. I look forward to having him on again in the future. I think you will, too. For the most in-depth analysis of offensive skill players available (QB, RB, WR, and TE), get the 2019 Rookie Scouting Portfolio. If you’re a fantasy owner the Post-Draft Add-on comes with the 2012 – 2018 RSPs at no additional charge. Best, yet, 10 percent of every sale is donated to Darkness to Light to combat sexual abuse. You can purchase past editions of the Rookie Scouting Portfolio for just $9.95 each. You can pre-order the 2019 RSP now through December 28 and get a 10 percent discount.
In December 2017, the NEJM's national corespondent, Lisa Rosenbaum, published an article “The Less-Is-More Crusade — Are We Overmedicalizing or Oversimplifying?” The article aimed a broadside against those who are campaigning against the overuse of medicine, and the over diagnosis of treatment. This week in the BMJ we've published a rebuttal to that article, and in this podcast we talk to Steve Woloshin and Lisa Schwartz - both professors at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. Steve and Lisa's article carefully deconstructs some of the ideas advanced by Rosenbaum, but in this podcast we discuss how much separate camps are forming in this debate - and how to have a constructive dialogue across that divide. Read Steve and Lisa's essay https://www.bmj.com/content/361/bmj.k2035 Iona Heath's essay - The role of fear in overdiagnosis https://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g6123 Stacy Carter's interview about moral shocks https://soundcloud.com/bmjpodcasts/preventing-overdiagnosis-2017-stacy-carter-on-the-culture-of-overmedicalisation
What does marriage mean to you? Depending on who you ask, in what society, in what culture, in what place you ask the answer will most likely be different. For most, the first concepts, ideas, and notions of marriage you get are from your parents. Oversimplifying things a bit, you could say if your parents had a good marriage, then you would be more inclined to get married. Parents had a bad marriage? Well the opposite would be more true. Bethany and Charles didn't see great marriages growing up. While the above mentioned generalization was true for HisFI. HerFI still wanted marriage. Is it a boy vs girl thing? Man vs woman? Probably not. Only a reflection of our societies ideas embedded in our lives. HerFI was raised in an environment that heavily promoted marriage for young girls, quite possibly even a requirement. It's against all habits to challenge our childhood beliefs. What you see is what is true. believing is seeing. It's only when you are introduced to the world, meet people with different beliefs, do those childhood understandings begin to change. Meeting somebody and starting a relationship with them changes the entire recipe though. Now you have to incorporate another human mind into the decision-making. One that will never always agree to everything. For us, we met while being younger. We didn't have careers, no college degrees. We were nurturing this relationship while trying to finish college. These can be obstacles to marriage, busyness is the greatest excuse to delaying something. The longer we were together the more our internal beliefs of marriage peeped their heads. Communication is key, we weren't great at communicating. When you don't express something through words, you end up finding other ways to share it. This created some tumultuous times, but luckily we had the busyness to fall back on. The interesting thing about delaying marriage is there is so much self-development that happens in people's 20's that the very idea of marriage changes in your mind. Join us today, as some late 20 something millennial's with some self-development under their belts, share what marriage means to them and what they think of it now. Hit that play button and find out why we haven't gotten married yet, even after 6 years. You can find the shownotes for this episode at hisandherfi.com/10
Monday morning quarterbacks are always oversimplifying. There are no general suicides. LaFern Cusack and Bill Burns discuss Aaron Hernandez, the crime of suicide and why some people think murder is a solution.
Transition from the Dossier Introduction Oversimplifying good and bad The "next war" The Squad as "monsters" (according to whom?) Enchantress's display of powers ARGUS and Justice League Dark Thanks to Alessandro Maniscalco Transcript of the episode Man of Steel Answers, Suicide Squadcast, DCU_Club subreddit