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Paulo Cohelo nos lleva a una reflexión para conservar caminos, desde la encrucijada, el entender que no duran para siempre, honrarlo, cuidarlo, caminarlo con paciencia y sin comparaciones, pero sin ahondar más, ponle play para que lo escuches completo. Gracias por estár.
U N B E C O MING✨ Episodios cortos, prácticos y reflexivos para superar retos, sanar heridas y crecer nuestra mentalidad de éxito
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Today Fliss welcomes IESTYN onto 'A Wholeness Podcast'. A musician who is is on a mission to spread the message of self love, through his journey of healing, after the devastating times losing both of his parents in his early 20's.This is a moving and fun conversation between the pair, it's as if they've been friends for years.Fliss truly feels inspired by IESTYN and relates a lot to his lyrics. Fliss and IESTYN discuss the loss of their loved ones. Please be aware this conversation entails the topics of death, suicidal thoughts and euthanasia.Despite these topics touching hurt and sadness, we can guarantee you'll love the diverts these two go down, talking the likes of the journey of spirituality, the power of habituation, self awareness, hops of faith, grief, loss and a bunch more.Mentions in this podcast: Dr Joe Dispenza, Rainn Wilson, Book: Soul Boom, The Minimalists, Wayne Dyer, Paulo Cohelo, Book: The Alchemist, Light Watkins, Book: Travel Light, Johann Harri, Brett Moran, Cruse Bereavement, Rhonda Byrne, Book: The Secret, Rich Roll and Matt Haig.
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Uno de los libros más importantes de superación donde un joven pastor emprende un viaje que le cambiará la vida junto a todos los que escuchen esta reseña.
Hoy te traemos una frase de Paulo Cohelo que no te puedes perder, sólo aquí con Yordi en exa.
Gary Alexander cut his teeth in music by listening to his father’s records (Charles Alexander & The Carolina Five) on local jukeboxes around South Carolina. At 11 years old his personal journey in music began on 2 strings on a guitar he bought for 12$. “I couldn’t play chords because I only had 2 strings and well, because I did not know any. So I figured out how to tune the 2 strings to an open chord. I began writing songs straight away”. At 15 after the death of his mother Gary found himself living alone. He packed a bag and headed to Myrtle Beach SC. After struggling on the streets and sleeping on Ocean Blvd. Gary began to rise above the adversity. He soon began working for Country music stars Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers. Larry was a source of learning and inspiration for Gary and the term ‘Songsmith” began to take real meaning. Performance and the writing began to be two separate crafts. At the advice of Larry, Gary took a job with the legendary ‘Opryland” company performing in San Antonio. After a year of being exposed to and absorbing the Texas music sound Gary headed to Nashville TN to record his first demos at the Gatlin Brothers studio. With a 4 song Demo in Hand Gary decided to get back to his roots and moved back to Myrtle Beach. The demo began to make it to the airwaves of radio stations in Charleston, Greenville, Myrtle Beach, and Columbia SC. While performing in the night club circuit Gary began to perform as the comedian at Dolly Parton’s Dixie Stampede. Myrtle Beach was on the rise musically with the insurgence of Country Music stars opening theaters. Gary began to perform as Emcee for the National TV and Radio show “Crook & Chase”. In 2001 Gary was in need of change and inspiration. He caught a plane to Italy and boarded a cruise ship to perform for Celebrity Cruise lines. 9-11 occurred while Gary was in Greece. Being so far from home and away from everything familiar He began to write new material. An E.P. of this material was recorded in Brooklyn NY that unfortunately would never see the light of day. 2002 came and a random phone call brought Gary to Vegas for the next 11 years. After performing on the Vegas strip in show rooms Gary began to work in a new professional direction. Mixed Martial Arts (UFC) was exploding and Gary found himself in the fight capital of the world. Gary hosted an independent Online On Demand radio show called “The Ultimate Podcast”. This propelled Gary into the heart of the sport. Fighters Only Magazine soon came calling and Gary became the US Operations manager for the launch of their North American Editions. Vegas weighed heavy on Gary and eventually the Ocean was calling and he once again found himself at home in Myrtle Beach S.C . with new songs, a new outlook, more life experience and focus than ever. The musical journey that began listening to his father’s records on jukeboxes now continues as Gary has come full circle and come to terms with his musical identity and embraced all muses that come his way. “In so many ways it’s like a parallel to THE ALCHEMIST by Paulo Cohelo. My story is about finding treasure that was always under my feet, no matter where I was standing”. https://music.apple.com/us/artist/gary-alexander/434096629. https://open.spotify.com/artist/4YPZnDn2jjE5pWReSUL45R?si=a-Yr5JVDTMGjdbheimGaiQ
Esta es la historia que deja su carrera de sacerdote por ir a buscar un tesoro que había visto en sus sueños, en su trayecto conoce a muchas personas que son importantes para el y contribuyen a su búsqueda.
En el episodio de hoy tuvimos la fortuna de platicar con una de las personas que más admiro. Con el lema "Los Buenos Somos Más" el periodista y conferencista Pablo Latapi Ortega nos hace una invitación a comenzar a practicar la bondad y encender nuestras antenas del Wifi emocional para poder contagiarla a través de las neuronas espejo. Con una trayectoria de más de 30 años como periodista, Pablo ha estado presente en acontecimientos históricos como la guerra de Irak, fue reportero desde la zona cero tras la caída de las torres gemelas, acompañó al presidente Zedillo en las giras presidenciales, entre otros grandes acontecimientos. Pablo ha podido entrevistar a personajes muy interesantes como Fidel Castro, Paulo Cohelo, Facundo Cabral, Bugs Bunny, entre otros. Después de haber visitado y conocido lugares aparentes de falta de esperanza, Pablo comparte el bien es mayoría y está en cada persona el poder encenderlo para compartirlo.
Brandon and Dillon, cofounders of the Tribe collective, reflect on their individual experiences and events that brought them together to create the idea of the “Tribe”. They provide testimonies of the South2North double marathon, dreams of Mt. Everest, their respective breakups, their mutual love for The Alchemist by Paulo Cohelo and more.
¿Como reaccionamos ante las ofensas? ¿Como deberíamos reaccionar? Paulo Cohelo, gracias a la culpa es de la vaca.
In the United States, the richest country in the world, every measure of mental health is plummeting. And has been before the pandemic. In a recent survey CDC entitled, "Mental Health, Substance Use, and Suicidal Ideation During the COVID-19 Pandemic" a full 10 percent of the U.S. population had seriously considered suicide in the month of June. For 18-24 year olds that number was 25. And 69.9% of 18-24 reported suffering from depressive or anxiety disorders. So, I'm going to talk about hope. And I'm going to talk about it in a hard-headed practical kind of way. Hope as a tool. Hope as, a crowbar of a kind. A great big unbreakable steel b*****d of a prybar. A lever long enough. 25 lbs of cold-forged Hope as a verb. As a thing that happens to other things and leaves them forever changed. Hope as a four-letter word. An explosive utterance that barks forth from a person in pain or in battle and gives them the strength they need to go on. HopeI believe that anything that makes you want to abandon hope is a lie. Abandoning Hope is literally the gateway to hell. That's why when Dante wrote the Inferno he made the sign above the gate read, "Abandon all hope ye who enter here." Maybe, just maybe, that inscription means not that there is no hope for the damned, but that, if you give up hope you are damned. But maybe that's not right, exactly. After all hope springs eternal. No, that's not right either. The closest I can get to it is what Emily Dickinson wrote, Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."We can't stop the bird from singing. Nor can we get rid of the bird, like a bird that flew into an airport terminal during construction, there just seems to be no good way to chase the damn thing out. All we have a is a choice, will we listen to the bird singing or will we listen to something else. Or deny the bird's existence altogether? Hope man, Hope. Hope Goddamn it. Grab a man by his jacket lapels, shake him vigorously and slap him full across the mouth, then shout it in his face, Hope goddamn it. The modern lie goes something like this. The world is just too big and too complicated and too corrupt and too out of control. There's nothing that I can do. The only way is for leaders to change it from the top-down, and all are leaders are just s**t. Just look at all of this awful news I keep doomscrolling by. The world's going to hell, there's no point, no change, no hope. Yet that bird is still singing. And there's great reason for hope. Go to ourworldindata.com. See how bad things used to be. See that we're at the pinnacle of human progress. Sure we have problems, but if all you see is the last 5, 10 or 20 years. If all you see is is the three feet of sidewalk in front of you don't see what a remarkable thing we really are. You don't see how far we've come. And how much farther yet we will go. As Ray Bradbury said:We are the miracle of force and matter making itself over into imagination and will. Incredible. The Life Force experimenting with forms. You for one. Me for another. The Universe has shouted itself alive. We are one of the shouts. Ray Bradbury. Look at us across 5,000 years. Consider the sacrifices that got us here. Look at child mortality since 1950.https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/child-mortality-around-the-worldGlobal population living in extreme poverty since 1977. https://ourworldindata.org/extreme-povertyTake the U.S. Everyone who lives in the U.S. is in the wealthiest 1% of people on Earth. Everyone in the United States has daily use of technologies to make their life better than the rich and powerful of 100 years ago could not even have imagined.Every single one of us is, in a material sense, is better off than the most powerful conquerer in the history of the world. Then why does everything feel so hopeless? Lack of context, sure. But I think it's more than that. Learned helplessness. Addictions of all shapes and sizes. Addictions to devices, to substances, to food, to comfort, to distraction to stress hormones, to the news. I do not stand aloof in judgment here. I live in the world. I wrestle with all of these things. I have been given great talents -- which I have taken some pains to develop, but a lot of the time they feel to me like unmerited gifts of grace. And what have I done with them? Ah, there they are. All the things I haven't written. The books I haven't read. The time I have squandered. All that I could have been and am not. And now, the voice whispers, you are getting old. You are passing through the gates now, it's not your fault, abandon all hope, ye who enter unto here. In my soul, the thing with feathers is still singing, but now she seems so far away, for how but how can I deny the rationality of the case brought against me?I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker,And I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker,And in short, I was afraid.(I am) not now that strength which in old daysMoved earth and heaven,And, really, when we cut through all the b******t and poetry, how much earth have I shoveled, and how much heaven have I managed to weave on the loom of my life? Not much. But still, the bird is singing. There's this true story about an early mail pilot recounted in Wind, Sand, and Stars by Antoine Du St. Exupery - the man who wrote The Little Prince. This pilot is carrying mail across the Andes and his plane crashes. He survives, but his leg is broken and it's cold and its snowing. He knows that he's going to die. But he's worried about his pension, because if his body isn't found -- then his wife and child will have to wait 5 years for his pension -- basically for his life insurance to pay out. So he sees this outcropping of rock a little further down the mountain, and says, well, that place might not be covered by snow -- it's a little bit better, so he hobbles down to that rock and sits down to die. But while he's sitting there, he sees another rock, a little further down the mountain and since he doesn't have anything else to do -- he hobbles on. And he repeats this process until he saves himself by walking out of the Andes.Here's why that story appeals to me. We are all the pilot. And the world is always the plane crash and the wounds and the mountain and the snow. We are all dying and leaving our loved one's behind. And hope, properly understood is not the hope of rescue or being reunited with your family or that everything will work out or be perfect. Hope, hope as a verb, hope as that big son-of-b***h of a prybar that you can use to can change the world, is as simple crawling to the next outcropping of rock you can see.You know this. because there's a thing with feathers singing in your soul. You can think of something that you could be doing that could make your situation better that you're not doing. Not a big thing, but a small thing. A think you could do or say right now. Hope is the doing of it even when you fully understand how it will work. Even, and especially when it feels silly. It's just one step at a time, a little better and a little better and a little better. And every time I've done this, in my life, I've gotten out of the mountains. Sure, there's no guarantee that you don't fall off a cliff along the way, or get caught in an avalanche. But, and this is the point, if the plane crash hasn't killed you, this approach gives you the greatest chance of success. As I said, I'm writing about all of this today, because of the suicide numbers in that CDC survey.Now, I have seriously considered suicide, both in the abstract and the concrete on more than one occasion. I think the examined life pretty much requires it. Most recently in 2013. My son was a year old. It was a Friday night. My wife and I had gotten in a horrible fight -- we were both exhausted. And there was alcohol involved. In the aftermath, I was thinking about divorce and how it would wreck me and be horrible and what it might do to my child and generally how just awful it would be. And then this thought popped into my head. Better to kill yourself than to go through that. Abandon all hope.And it stopped me right in my tracks. I remember it clearly because I had gone in search of something to eat. Which means I got to have this existential crisis standing in the pantry. I don't write absurd things. Life writes absurd things, I file reports. And I'm just standing in the pantry and I'm scared. Because I'm trapped in there with a guy who's literally trying to kill me. And his line of thinking is making an awful lot of sense. It seems perfectly rational and utilitarian. I couldn't come up with an argument against it. And that was terrifying. So, right out loud, I said this, "We could do that. I've got a pistol upstairs. It's not a complicated procedure, but it's pretty irreversible. So is there anything else you could think of we could try first?"And I stood in my pantry and thought of things. In essence, I looked around to see if there was an outcropping of rock that I could make it to. And when I got to five of them. I grabbed a fistful of pretzels and went back to watching T.V. And the next morning, when my wife said, "I think we have a big problem" I said, "I don't think we do." I said, "I think we have a small problem that might be easy to fix." She disagreed. She said that we were fighting all the time and we would have to go see a counselor and even then, it didn't seem good. I said, "I don't think so." Then I told her about the pantry. She became very concerned. And then I said, "Before we get divorced, is there anything else we can think of to do." I asked, "Do we ever fight in the morning?" She said no. I asked, "Do we ever fight on a Wednesday evening?" She said no. I said, "It's always Friday night. Because it's the end of the week and we're both exhausted. Because we've got this baby and we're both working. And I think you're doing too much. You've got that terrible commute and you're getting up extra early to take the boy to preschool. So what I would like to do is take some of these things off your plate and see if it gets any betterBecause I think the problem is we're just tired. "And she said, "Do you really think that's the problem?"I said, "Well, the world is filled with problems. But that one we can fix. We can also do something about the pretzels."And she said, "You got drunk and ate all the pretzels again?"St. Augustine wrote Hope has two beautiful daughters; Their names are Anger and Courage. Anger at the way things are, and Courage to see that they do not remain as they are.Augustine died in 430 AD. Since Hope is eternal, I think she's had time to have at least two more daughters. Increment and Perseverance. Increment: Who tells you to do the smallest easiest thing you can think of first. And Perseverance who tells you to keep doing things long enough to see some of them will work. This is hope as a verb. And hope isn't rational, it a feeling, small at first and then powerful. A thing with feathers singing quietly at first and then as one of the loudest things in the universe. A signing bird that becomes Beethoven's Ode to Joy. Because even the most humble seed can crack concrete when it knows that the sun will shine, the rain will come.But this is not why hope is powerful. Hope is powerful because rings other people like a bell. It is infectious in the best sense of the word. Paulo Cohelo summed it up like this: When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better too. But here's the catch, for this kind of thinking to work, you have to focus on you first. The world is a mess. Yes, it is. And it always has been and always will be. Oh, we've made it so much better, but it's a mess. But I don't think we can fix it directly. I don't think leaders or politicians can fix it from the top down. But I think we can fix it. Because if we each become better than we are, everything around each of us becomes better too. And I think that's so powerful that nothing can stop it. And that idea gives me hope. Get full access to How It's Written by Patrick E. McLean at patrickemclean.substack.com/subscribe
Cri Cri. Paulo Cohelo. Aprieta todos los botones. Ámate. Heeey, gracias por escucharme. https://instagram.com/ismaelhmdo
Hello Dear Listener! Darian Here. Laureen and I have been so excited to launch our OFFICIAL FIRST EPISODE!!! I share a story from my amazing sister. You can find the story and artwork here: http://www.talesfantastic.com/organ-enchantment/ Laureen shares how The Alchemist by Paulo Cohelo changed the way she sees the world. Other things we discuss: Atomic Habits by James Clear We would love for you to share a story, and we have a few ways for you to connect with us. Like our page on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Instagram. Support us and join our community of storytellers on Patreon.
In dieser Podcastfolge geht es um ein einziges Wort, das wahnsinnig befreiend sein kann: NEIN Unsere Zeit und Energie sind die wertvollsten Ressourcen die wir haben und immer wenn wir Ja sagen, investieren wir genau diese wertvollen Ressourcen. Deshalb ist es wichtig, dass wir auch ausreichend dieser Ressourcen für uns selbst zur Verfügung haben und vor lauter Ja sagen auf Bitten anderer, nicht leer ausgehen und ausbrennen. Paulo Cohelo hat hierzu gesagt: "Wenn du Ja zu anderen sagst, pass auf, dass du nicht Nein zu dir selber sagst." In dieser Folge gehen wir der Frage auf den Grund, warum wir so oft Ja sagen, obwohl wir eigentlich Nein sagen wollen. Warum wir uns aufopfern für andere, obwohl wir selbst keine Zeit, Kapazität, Lust oder Kraft mehr haben. Außerdem teile ich vier ganz praktische Tipps, die dir beim Nein sagen helfen, damit du nicht mehr Ja sagst, wenn du eigentlich NEIN meinst. +++ Mein Buch "Leb das Leben, das du leben willst" ist jetzt da: https://linktr.ee/sarah.desai +++ Melde dich an für den wöchentlichen Mindful Newsletter: http://sarahdesai.de/about/ Werde Teil der #EineLiebe Community https://www.facebook.com/groups/793550024179281/ Mehr Infos findest du unter: www.sarah.desai.de www.facebook.com/sarahdesai-themindfulsessions Instagram @sarah.desai
(500) podcast juntos. El programa en el que fotógrafos y videógrafos de boda hablamos de cine y series. Nada de bodas y sin pretensiones. Sólo lo que de verdad nos gusta. Yo soy Daniel Alonso, de www.peopleproducciones.com y esto es 500 podcast juntos En este decimoséptimo episodio de la segunda temporada nos acompaña Marta Guillén quién junto a su pareja Eider llevan PaiPai Producions. 1. ¿Cual es la película de tu vida? Cadena Perpetua / Los Puentes de Madison 2. Una película que todo el mundo ame y tú no soportes. Y viceversa. Star Wars / Avatar / Señor de los anillos 3. ¿Cual es tu episodio favorito de "Friends"? Todos en general, sobretodo de Ross y Rachel, cuando ella se va a Paris pero vuelve por él. 4. Una película que te pone feliz y otra triste Feliz: Up /Pequeña Miss Sunshine Triste: Siempre a tu lado Hachicko / Un Paseo para recordar y Carol 5. Tu serie de drama favorita y tu serie de comedia favorita Drama: The OC / The L Word /Cinco Hermanos Comedia: Plats bruts /Les Teresines / Roseanne y Mr Bean 6. Tu personaje favorito de una película y/o serie Julia Roberts en Erin Brockovich 7. ¿Cual es tu banda sonora favorita? Into the Wild – Eddie Vedder 8. Una película o serie que antes te encantaba pero ahora ya no Expediente X 9. Tu documental favorito Kissed By God de Andy Irons / Super Size me / Bowling for columbine 10. ¿Qué personaje de una serie o peli crees que tendría la mejor cuenta de Instagram? Phoebe de Friends 11. Si fueran a hacer una película de tu vida: ¿Quién sería el director/a? Nancy Meyers ¿Quién sería el actor/actriz que te interpretase? Millie Bobbie Brown / Blake Lively 12. Tu escena favorita de una película Momento coche Los puentes de Madison / E.T cuando vuelan 13. Si estuvieras en una hipotética situación en la que vas a morir y sólo puedes hacer una cosa y esa cosa es ver cine: ¿qué tres películas verías antes de morir? Liberad a Willy Notting Hill Los Amos de Dogtown - Recomendaciones exprés: -Película Identidad Borrada -Serie Big Little Lies / Merlí / This is England serie y peli -Libro Brida de Paulo Cohelo
Podríamos decir que los padres de antes tenían una serie de frases que nosotros, grosso modo, podríamos resumir en tres tipos: Frases amenazantes, frases de tipo reproche y frases en las que tus padres te estaban vacilando directamente, como por ejemplo: ¿Qué hay de comer? y tu madre te respondía: ¡Comida! Los padres usaban estas interjecciones, porque todavía no se había inventado Facebook y por lo tanto no nos habían llegado en masa las frases de Paulo Cohelo. El profesor Lebrato nos traerá la palabra en vías de extinción “MAGUÉ” mientras que nuestra admirada Patricia Guerrero nos trae la biografía demítico psicoanalista y bebedor de Briks de tinto, Sigmund Freud. Zafarrancho Vilima se emite todos los lunes a las 22h en Radio Sevilla 96.5 FM y 792 AM y para todo el planeta en la aplicación de la Cadena SER EN FACEBOOK E INSTAGRAM: Zafarrancho Vilima EN TWITTER: @Vilimadas Y NUESTRO CORREO ELECTRÓNICO PARA LO QUE GUSTEN: Zafarranchovilima@gmail.com
Podríamos decir que los padres de antes tenían una serie de frases que nosotros, grosso modo, podríamos resumir en tres tipos: Frases amenazantes, frases de tipo reproche y frases en las que tus padres te estaban vacilando directamente, como por ejemplo: ¿Qué hay de comer? y tu madre te respondía: ¡Comida! Los padres usaban estas interjecciones, porque todavía no se había inventado Facebook y por lo tanto no nos habían llegado en masa las frases de Paulo Cohelo. El profesor Lebrato nos traerá la palabra en vías de extinción “MAGUÉ” mientras que nuestra admirada Patricia Guerrero nos trae la biografía demítico psicoanalista y bebedor de Briks de tinto, Sigmund Freud. Zafarrancho Vilima se emite todos los lunes a las 22h en Radio Sevilla 96.5 FM y 792 AM y para todo el planeta en la aplicación de la Cadena SER EN FACEBOOK E INSTAGRAM: Zafarrancho Vilima EN TWITTER: @Vilimadas Y NUESTRO CORREO ELECTRÓNICO PARA LO QUE GUSTEN: Zafarranchovilima@gmail.com
¿Sabes que es lo más raro de la felicidad en España? Que las ventas de Mr. Wonderful no dejan de subir junto con las de antidepresivos y ansioliticos. ¿Será que la felicidad está en una pastilla? La vida no es un atardecer rosa por mucho que Deepak Chopra o Rafael Santandreu te lo quieran hacer creer. A veces es una tormenta otras un mar en calma… A los 21 años Lucas Burgueño sufrió una depresión mientras estudiaba psicología en Estados Unidos ¿sabes que es lo más duro de querer ser feliz? Que cuando lo conviertes en una obligación paradójicamente te lleva a más ansiedad y depresión. Si las casas están tan llenas de libros de autoayuda y Paulo Cohelo no deja de darnos las claves de la felicidad ¿qué estamos haciendo mal? Libros como El Secreto, Y tú que sabes, El poder del Ahora, Tus Zonas erróneas, Ser feliz en Alaska… ¿qué nos estamos perdiendo? Lo que no hemos hecho es aprender a dudar… el papel de un libro lo aguanta todo… pero somos mamíferos … reaccionamos y tenemos un cableado que antes que ser feliz desea sobrevivir. Lo que Lucas no había aprendido por estar distraído con recetas fáciles era la parte científica de nuestra psicología. Estos gurús lo reducen todo a una mezcla de palabras y pensamientos positivos y actitud “buen rollista” – Tú y yo sabemos que NO FUNCIONA tal como prometen. Actúa 2019 es un Show sobre la Felicidad, mitos y realidad. Desde la ciencia real de tu psicología. La primera parte de #Actúa 2019 desenmascarará los 3 mitos más alimentados por los gurús de la felicidad. Porque cada día que vives con esos mitos, o impones esos mitos a otros, te haces un poco más miserable… y te alejas de meterle mano a lo que realmente transforma tu vida. Tu propia acción. En la segunda parte desarrollaremos los 3 pasos para dirigir tu vida en la tormenta que a veces es la vida, una vida satisfactoria, sin recetas mágicas, con acciones efectivas y realistas que van hacer que tu 2019 sea un año donde tú serás el protagonista. Con Lucas Burgueño nos vemos en #Actúa2019.
¿Sabes que es lo más raro de la felicidad en España? Que las ventas de Mr. Wonderful no dejan de subir junto con las de antidepresivos y ansiolíticos. ¿Será que la felicidad está en una pastilla? La vida no es un atardecer rosa por mucho que Deepak Chopra o Rafael Santandreu te lo quieran hacer creer. A veces es una tormenta otras un mar en calma… A los 21 años Lucas Burgueño sufrió una depresión mientras estudiaba psicología en Estados Unidos ¿sabes que es lo más duro de querer ser feliz? Que cuando lo conviertes en una obligación paradójicamente te lleva a más ansiedad y depresión. Si las casas están tan llenas de libros de autoayuda y Paulo Cohelo no deja de darnos las claves de la felicidad ¿qué estamos haciendo mal? Libros como El Secreto, Y tú que sabes, El poder del Ahora, Tus Zonas erróneas, Ser feliz en Alaska… ¿qué nos estamos perdiendo? Lo que no hemos hecho es aprender a dudar… el papel de un libro lo aguanta todo… pero somos mamíferos … reaccionamos y tenemos un cableado que antes que ser feliz desea sobrevivir. Lo que Lucas no había aprendido por estar distraído con recetas fáciles era la parte científica de nuestra psicología. Estos gurús lo reducen todo a una mezcla de palabras y pensamientos positivos y actitud “buen rollista” – Tú y yo sabemos que NO FUNCIONA tal como prometen. Actúa 2019 es un Show sobre la Felicidad, mitos y realidad. Desde la ciencia real de tu psicología. La primera parte de #Actúa 2019 desenmascarará los 3 mitos más alimentados por los gurús de la felicidad. Porque cada día que vives con esos mitos, o impones esos mitos a otros, te haces un poco más miserable… y te alejas de meterle mano a lo que realmente transforma tu vida. Tu propia acción. En la segunda parte desarrollaremos los 3 pasos para dirigir tu vida en la tormenta que a veces es la vida, una vida satisfactoria, sin recetas mágicas, con acciones efectivas y realistas que van hacer que tu 2019 sea un año donde tú serás el protagonista. Con Lucas Burgueño nos vemos en #Actúa2019.
Nick and book mega-fan Katy Betz, talk about book adaptations in anticipation of "Ready Player One". We discuss lack of creativity in Hollywood, and what some of the best movies adapted from books have done right, as well as some that fell short. 00:00 - Avengers Infinity War Giveaway! 01:31 - Intro 02:03 - Welcome and Guest Host 06:04 - Have you seen anything good recently? 'Black Panther' 'Game Night' Noticing things you didn't before Moviepass drops to $6.95/mo 'The Men Who Made America' on History 14:18 - Book Adaptations! 14:47 - Some book adaptations throughout history 16:09 - Lack of creativity in Hollywood? 19:26 - Writing adapted screenplays 21:57 - Good acting vs good writing 24:30 - Favorite adaptations from books 'Lord of the Rings'/ 'The Hobbit' 26:47 - 'Pride and Prejudice' (not the Kiera Knightly version) 28:02 - 'Sherlock Holmes' 29:13 - 'To Kill A Mockingbird' 30:01 - Dan Brown Novels 32:25 - 'Silence of the Lambs'/ 'Memoirs of a Geisha' 33:50 - 'Life of Pi'/ 'The Alchemist' 37:40 - Dan Brown novels (yes, again) 39:02 - 'Forrest Gump' 39:29 - 'Harry Potter' series 40:26 - Read the book first, or see the movie? 43:01 - Adaptations that we would like to see? 'The Thirteenth Tale' 43:38 - Maeve Binchy books 44:36 - 'Wheel of Time' series 45:49 - 'Redeeming Love' 46:04 - 'Micro' by Michael Crichton/ 'Dragon Teeth' 48:13 - 'Armada' by Ernest Cline 49:10 - 'The Alchemist' by Paulo Cohelo 49:35 - Authors whose work is adapted a lot: Elmore Leonard/ John Grisham/ Robert Ludlum/ H.G. Wells 53:49 - Most adaptations by author: Shakespeare/ Stephen King/ Philip K. Dick/ Michael Crichton 55:23 - 'Ready Player One' book review 01:04:26 - Katy's plea to read a book 01:06:49 - Nick's trophy books 01:08:27 - What are you looking forward to? 'Outlander' series 'Avengers Infinity War' 01:11:29 - Sign off Avengers Infinity War Giveaway: https://youtu.be/2fX6htHLu8c
Imagine growing your income 10 times over in just a few short years? Maybe even working fewer hours along the way? Today's guest has done just that, as the founder of New York Book Editors. Natasa Lekic founded the company three years ago after working at a publishing house and wanting to break free from a firm she describes as a "sinking ship" and working overtime earning $50,000 a year. NY Book Editors caters to a sweet spot in the ever evolving publishing world. It's a company that provides editorial services and courses for authors and authors-to-be. The company's editors are veterans of the publishing industry and have worked with well-known authors from Stephen King to Paulo Cohelo to former So Money guests Arianna Huffington and James Altucher (he's been on So Money not one but two times!). In the interview we discuss Natasa's rise to success came with some insecurities around money. She shares how she overcame those fears and the strange connection to her great grandfather that gave her all her answers. And how to successfully publish a book these days - maybe even get a six figure advance - if you're an aspiring author with NO platform. For more information visit www.somoneypodcast.com.
LA TRAMPA DE LA NEW AGE (Podcast) - www.poderato.com/james58
Kabbalah, alquimia, Eneagrama, Paulo Cohelo, Deepak Chopra.