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Meet Dr. Tamir Qadree who grew up one of 11 children in a 2-bedroom apartment in Chicago. When I asked him how 11 children and two parents lived in an apartment with only 2 bedrooms his response was that it is all about family. We all made it worked, and we all learned to love each other. Tamir heard about California before high school and wanted to move to that state. A brother, 8 years older than Tamir, was recently married and agreed to take Tamir to California since this brother and his new wife were moving there. Tamir always had a “servant attitude” toward others. He felt that he could learn to help others and, after attending some community college courses he decided to go another route from school. Tamir always felt he was selling and in sales. He tells us about that and points out that we all sell and receive results from others who sell in whatever we do. Dr. Qadree eventually discovered metaphysics which is about self-help and learning to adopt a mindset of improvement through self-analysis. We discuss this in detail as you will hear. Tamir offers many good life pointers and lessons we all can adopt. This episode is pack with useful ideas that we all can use to better our lives. About the Guest: ‘The Dean of Dynamic Results' “The Dean of Dynamic Results” has a Double Doctorate in the field of Metaphysical Philosophy, specializing in personal development coaching, mentoring, mind, and mystical research. The Powers of the Mind, Influence and Attraction has captured the minds and imagination of the world over the past 35 years. Dr. Tamir Qadree is a leader in the field of this study, and says that, “WE Can All Achieve Dynamic Results”! Tamir is the author of several books, audio programs. He conducts workshops, 2 day retreats and does one on one, exclusive coaching. His clientele has ranged from business developers in the fields of Network Marketing, Direct Sales, Real Estate, Legal, the Medical Professions, and Self-Help enthusiastic individuals, both nationally and internationally. Dr. Tamir Qadree, (Also known as TQ) carefully guides his audience and clients through the vast field of sales psychology, effective closing skills, prospecting mastery and all of the necessary communication skills needed in today's world. He also teaches and demonstrates the connection between ‘The Results the Reader or Listener Gets,' and his or her ‘Emotional States and Habits.' Tamir teaches his students how to ‘Feel' rather than to simply ‘Reason' everything through. He teaches that, feeling is more about ‘Intuition' while reason is often about ‘Ego' and knowledge gleaned from books on one level; but when they are both combined (Feeling and Reason) you have your road map to success and contentment. Tamir Qadree, writes with clarity, precision, and direct language, that is easy to read, simple to follow and are full of great content. His podcast, (Dean-Cast) are usually not planned. They flow from inspiration and direct knowledge from experience. What you read and listen to in his array of programs are genuine, authentic, and straight from ‘The Dean of Dynamic Results himself.' The information Tamir delivers, whether from audio book, eBook, audio programs or Dean-Cast, or Live Events, are carefully select and digested to bring to the reader, the listener, the audience, the best information. Often there are differences of opinion in matters of, ‘what to eat,' or ‘how to lose weight' or ‘scientific and technology.' These are all necessary to grow, to develop and to keep the mind moving and expanding. Welcome To The World of The Dean! Ways to connect with Dr.Tamir: New Podcast, "Dynamic Results On Fire!' Every Monday! https://tamirqadree.com https://learn.tamirqadree.com Https://coach.thedeanofdynamicresults.com dynamicyou@gmail.com (17) Dr. Tamir Qadree | LinkedIn (20+) Facebook Dr Tamir Qadree (@theresultscoach1) | TikTok (381) The 'Results' Coach - YouTube https://www.Instagram.com Ebooks and an audio program: Clear Vision – Mastermind Mastery Click and Grow Rich – Mastermind Mastery Super Potential – Mastermind Mastery The Esteem Success Factor – Mastermind Mastery About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson ** 01:21 Well, hi everyone, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset. I've told you all in the past about a program that I attend every so often called Podapalooza. And on the 19th, excuse me, the 18th of June, we had number 16 in the patapalooza series. And one of the people I got a chance to speak with was Dr Tamir Qadree. And Tamir is is our guest today. He calls himself or I want to find out if he calls himself that, or somebody else calls him that, the Dean of dynamic results. I want to hear more about that, certainly, but we're really glad that he's here. He has been involved in dealing with metaphysical philosophy. He's a coach. He does a lot of things that I think are very relevant to what we hear from a lot of people on this podcast. So I'm really looking forward to having a chance to chat with you. So Tamir, welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're glad you're here. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 02:25 I'm glad to be here. Thank you very much for inviting me. Michael Hingson ** 02:28 Well, we appreciate you coming and spending the time. We met Wednesday the 18th of June, and here it is the 24th and we're chatting. So that Dr Tamir Qadree ** 02:37 works. That works out for me well, Michael Hingson ** 02:41 so tell us a little bit about the early Tamir growing up. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 02:46 The early Tamir growing up, sure, interesting story that's always fun, because I grew up in Chicago on the west side, and during time I grew up, I grew up in in the 70s, that was coming out of the turbulent 60s of the youngster, then coming out of that, coming out of the the other protests and the civil rights movement and all that stuff. So I grew up in the 70s. Basically, life to me was a lot of it was. I had a lot of happy times in my life, although we had so called very little. My mom had a home with a partner with 13 children, 13 people at all times, two bedrooms. I don't know how she made that work, but she did. We had, we stayed cleaned the house. My like bleach. We smell like bleach. We smell like pine. Saw and so I got my my my cleanliness from that. I don't know how she did it. And we all ate, okay. And what I got from my childhood, me, my brother, we we've always been innovative. We've always been results driven, going out, knocking on doors. Before there was a Door Dash, we were knocking on doors, taking buying people's groceries, going to store for them. We're cutting their yards and doing odd things to earn money. So I've always been go get a results. Driven guy, not afraid to ask and looking to get the results, not just for the money, but the money was good to have. But I've always been like that. That's in a nutshell. Where I've always been, Michael Hingson ** 04:18 well, how did you all sleep? 13 people in the apartment? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 04:22 Well, it was my mom, my dad, before they separated, and it was 11, and then plus cousins, so that's 14. Hey, you know, buddy Michael, you make it work? Yeah, people say how it's not how. I think why is a better question. Because you're a family and you can make it work. It can work easier than people think it can, because we have love and togetherness and closeness, and you have two parents that are on top of their game is doing the best they can do. It works. That's a very good question. And you're the first person to have asked me, how did that work? You're the first person. Michael Hingson ** 04:56 Well, I can imagine that there are ways to make things work. Um. Um, as you said, you do have to be innovative, and you all have to learn that it's important to get along, and that's what family is really all about, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 05:09 that that's true and that we did not we had to get along. We live in a house with that many children, five boys and six girls, no six boys and five girls. I reversed it. You have to learn to get along. You have to learn to respect the different genders. You have to learn respect authority. You have to learn to share how to care for other people. Interesting about that, my mom would always bring people in from the street. She'd find people less privileged than us, believe it or not, let's we'll have one bathroom, by the way, less privileged. She would buy them clothes and feed them, and we abuse that person any kind of way we get it, where we get it? Okay, so I got that from also that's and that that leads me into how I am now. Michael Hingson ** 05:53 Well, we'll get there. So you went to school in Chicago, and how long did you live Dr Tamir Qadree ** 05:58 there? Why would the school I started high school in California? Okay? So California, okay? My freshman year in Cali. Yeah, California. Michael Hingson ** 06:07 So what caused you guys to move out to California? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 06:10 Well, my aunt came out maybe 20 years before. Then my sister came out. Two years after that, my sister came back bragging about California. Everybody in those days, everybody thought California the land of milk and honey, back in the Midwest and back east California, Judas, land of milk and honey. It really is. People will go California represented freedom to us, the promised land. It really did sort of a promised land thing. And I was just determined to get to California. My story, if I can tell you about me getting to California, we're in the household. I was 14. My sister had came and promised she'd take me with her. And I said, Okay, I'll go. I was her favorite, she promised. So I told everybody on the block, I'm going to California. 13 going on, 14 year old kid, and have people excited. He's going to California. Some were jealous, and I was telling people I would knock on their door and go and go pick up groceries for them and cut yards. And after the summer passed, my sister couldn't get me any people started laughing at me, Jeremy behind my back. He's not going to California. And some of my siblings were, of course, probably a little jealous, little envious. He's not going some people, yeah, you're not going anywhere. You stay down here with us, in this area, with us. And so I said, No, I'm going to California. And I watched this story the weekend before going to high school. My mother said she lied to you. She's not going to get you. She lied to you. You can give it up. My cousin said she lied to you. I said, No, I'm going to California. I had two pair of pants, one pair of shoes, two pair underwear and two shirts. That's all I had. I was going to go to school. Well, that Friday came, I said, I'm going to California that Friday. This is all summer. I've been saying that people started doubting me. My brother walked in the door. My older brother, eight years old, to me, walked in the door about an hour later and said, I just got married, me and my wife decided to go to California. Monday. You can come with us. That's why I got to California. Michael Hingson ** 07:52 There you go. Well, and again, it's really cool that family sticks together somehow, Too bad your sister misled you, but you you made it work. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 08:05 Well, I don't think she so much misled me. She couldn't make it work. She wanted to do it. She couldn't find the finance, little time or the effort. She couldn't make it work. She didn't make it work. You know, she obviously lied to me. That's what they thought. But no, I don't think I never thought that. Michael Hingson ** 08:19 Yeah, well, I understand. Well, at least you made it and you got to California. And so what did you find when you got out here? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 08:27 I found it to be what I thought it's going to be okay. I saw I was driving, we're driving. And came over the mountains. We saw the little the little lights on the freeway, the little on the road, the little reflectors. We're like, wow, there's diamonds in the streets of that night, right? With those reflected, we never seen nothing like that before. Wow. They're diamonds in the street. And then we look around like at San Jose, and I would see the lights up in the air. It was the mountains, with people living in the mountains, yeah, with the lights, we I thought, Oh, my God, this is heaven. I didn't know. Yeah, please know those houses the lights. So anyway, it was what I thought was going to be. Here's the land of milk and honey. Michael Hingson ** 09:05 For me, sure. I'm not sure what caused my parents to want to move to California. We moved in 1955 right? In fact, I mentioned earlier, we did patapalooza on the 18th of June, and today is the 24th that is the day we're recording this. So you'll see when this actually comes out. But June, 24 1955 was the day we arrived in California from Chicago. And I don't know what caused my father to want to sell his part in the television repair business that he and my uncle owned and wanted to get a job in California, whether they thought it was the land of milk and honey or what I've never, never did learn. But nevertheless, we moved out to California, and I think there was a lot to be said for they wanted to be out here. They felt that there were a lot of opportunity. And probably they wanted to get out of the city, but we did. So I have now been out here, other than living in other places as an adult. Part of the time I've lived out here 70 years. 70 years. Well, we came out in 1955 we got here on June 24 1955 so it's pretty cool. But anyway, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 10:25 I wasn't born, but you beat me. Well, there you go. Michael Hingson ** 10:28 Well, I think there's a lot to be said for California. It's, you know, I can make a lot of places work. I've lived in New Jersey, I've lived in Boston. I've lived in other places in Iowa for a little while and so on. And so I know there are places that are a lot colder than California, and where I even live in California, and there are places that are warmer but still enjoy it well. So you moved out to California when you went to high school here. And then did you did college. Where did you do college? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 11:03 Well, I did some community college at De Anza. I did some courses over there. Most of my learning came from self study, community college courses, self study and university. Finally, University of metaphysics. I got involved in metaphysics over 20 years ago, which is, metaphysics is really philosophy. Philosophy comes from the Greek word, I believe metaphysical from from philosophy. So it's philosophy. It's what it is. I got involved in that about 25 years ago, when I met speakers like Anthony Robbins Les Brown, I started listening to Norman, Vincent, Peale, you've heard of him. People like that. People like that. And then I got into I've always been, I've always been a voracious reader, even in Chicago, I've always been a voracious reader, someone that wanted to know. So my educational track really started. See education in the United States and in a lot of places, is them pouring some menu. But true education is what you bring out of you, is what you learn about yourself internally. That's the true education, instead of pumping stuff in what's inside of you. So you take what's taken outside of you and mix it with what's inside of you, and there you go. So I've always been a self starter, but the University of metaphysics is really, really with the jewel to me. I said there's actually a place that reward or they give you a degree and what Michael Hingson ** 12:21 you love. And where is that university? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 12:25 It's in Arizona. It's the largest metaphysical university in the world, the oldest metaphysical university in the world. In fact, Harvard just start off in metaphysical degrees in my in my field, about four years ago, which is a great thing, great. They finally came around to it and and they recognized it. Wait, wait a minute, they start offering the same degrees, metaphysical degrees. Now, yeah, Michael Hingson ** 12:49 well, but still, so did you go there and actually study there, or did you study remotely, as it were, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 12:56 instead of remotely, like Phoenix and all it's remote. I went there, of course, I graduated and going back and doing, get my third doctorate, to graduate, go across stage two. You have, we have ceremonies and all that. And we have, you know, we're renowned throughout the metaphysical world, throughout the world, as far as philosophy, right? Michael Hingson ** 13:14 What got you to decide that you wanted to take up a study of metaphysics? You know, you went to community college. You studied some things there, and what did? Well, let me do this first. What did you do after Community College? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 13:26 Community College, I was family man, working building. See, I've always been a self starter. I've never jobs. Never settle with me. See, so I've always been a student, a study here. I've always been someone to read the books. Mm hmm. Listen to the motivational thing. Listen to the philosophy. I've always wanted to know deeper knowledge. And I had my brother that brought me to California. He's always been a student too. He was in the service. He's always been a a person that study and contemplate. He studied politics, war, philosophies, religion, and I follow. I did the same thing. So it's something that's been inside of me, believe it or not, for a very long time. I've known this since I was like eight years old. I've actually known it, and people that knew me knew it. In fact, one lady told me this about four years ago. She knew because I was a baby. I hadn't talked to her in about 40 years. She said, Oh my God, she's really my cousin, but not blood. And she said, Oh my God. And she started telling me about myself. Hence, she told me. She said, when you were a baby in the crib, you would always stand up for what's right. How can I do that in the crib? She said, when somebody's done wrong, you let them know. When you're a baby, when you guys start to stand up, walking up, you'd always stand up for what's right. So I've always had this sense of me, of service to other people and a sense of justice. Okay, certainly, I've had my pitfalls too and all that. That's not the point, but I've always had that with me. I've always had that thing about service and helping others. So getting into self help, which is what metaphysics is, self help and self development gets it was right up my alley. It was right down my lane. It. Was a straight strike. When I did that, it's just a strike. It's a fit like a glove. The glove does fit, by the way. Michael Hingson ** 15:08 Well, what did you What is but what did you do after college? You had to support yourself and so on, until you decided to take this up. What did you do? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 15:16 No, no, I've been in sales all my life. Okay, I've been, I've been a salesman all my life. You've been sales, okay, yeah, sales, people, sales, good sales people will never starve. No, you always find a way to make it. That's it. I've been selling all my life, yeah? So that that that should answer that, yes, yeah. Michael Hingson ** 15:32 Now I understand well, and there's nothing wrong with being a good salesperson. I think that so many people don't understand that and misunderstand sales, but there are also a lot of people who do truly understand it, and they know that sales is all about developing trust. Sales is all about guiding somebody who needs something to the best solution for them, not just to make money, but as you said, it's all about self help and and helping others. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 16:01 Well, well, it's actually something real quick about sales. People that have issues with sales don't understand one thing you have issues with people that use sales in unethical way. Yeah, everything is sales, the phone you use and the headset using the house you get you to buy it from someone that sells the water that comes to your home is put there by somebody signing the contract. That's sales. Who going to bring the water to our home? What company? PG, e Edison cup, whatever. All everything is based on sales, sales communications. But because there's some people that are shysters, you blame the whole pot. You blame everybody. That's not the way it sells. Sales is sales is community. Sales is service. That's what sales Michael Hingson ** 16:41 is. Sales is service. That's what it appear. And simple, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 16:45 yeah, it's not some sheisty guy or woman trying to con you. And no, that's a con person. Michael Hingson ** 16:51 There are too many of those. There are way too many of those, but never every field. Yeah, in every field, yeah, sure. But what you say is true, sales is service in every sense of the word. And the best sales people are people, people who really understand that and put service above basically anything, because they know that what they do, they can do well, and they can help other people and make money, which is also part of what they do need to do, and that's okay. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 17:18 And without sales, nothing goes around. Sales is really communication. Sales connecting a product or service, fulfilling the need, getting rid of a pain or something you really don't want to bring you to what you want that sales is fulfilling, is uprooting the pain unfulfilled desire and bringing you to the pleasure side of getting what you need, whether it's food, clothing and shelter, all sales doing a bridging the gap, and the salesperson is a communicator that bridge that gap. And the reward is, once you have two satisfied sides, the company and the individual, the product, and the reward is you get paid to do it, right? So now it's like you're getting paid to do what you love, sure. Michael Hingson ** 18:01 Well, and there you go, well. So you have, however, been a person who's been very focused on the whole concept of self improvement for quite a while. Yes. So what got you started down that road? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 18:19 Here's what got me started down that road I'm gonna go way back to Chicago again. I remember I was 13 years old, and my uncle used to get he was a big beer drinker, and he just talked to me, invite me over and my auntie, and he wanted me to talk. He's wanted me he won't hear me talk. I always had these philosophical sayings, even I was 10 years old, philosophical quotes, these ideas that I didn't read, but just came to me, and one day I told him, life is a dream. We're here to play roles, and we leave the earth. You wake up. In other words, there's no real physical body passes on, but you wake up and you're boom, whatever. Anyway, these philosophies like that. And he was at the lake with me trying to catch fish. He was so busy drinking beer and talking, he wouldn't catch no fish. He told me, talk. Keep talking. I kept talking. And so one day, he brought out my other uncle with us, and we sit down at the lake. And my other uncle was saying, I wish he'd Shut up. He turned to me and say, Talk. Listen to this boy talk. He kept doing that. And one day my aunt said this, he brings Tamir over because he want him to talk. That's why he brings them over. So that kind of encouraged me to make me realize that I had something of value, not just talk, something to say, he would ask me. And then I knew, I knew, from then on that I had a place in life to assist and service others will not just talk, but practical ideas to get results. So I've been known that for a very long time, allowed me to be very successful in sales. I've been top producing billion dollar companies allow me to write books and to be on share the stage with some great people like Mark Victor, Hansen and Jim Rohn. It allowed me to get into a space to where I am now, where this flawless confidence that I can be doing half whatever I want to be but I. I'm able to show other people how to do the same. Those are receptive and those that afford me to show that I'm not for everybody. I understand that, Michael Hingson ** 20:07 right? You can only do what you can do, right? So you started down this, this path of dealing with self improvement, and how did that lead you into metaphysics? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 20:24 Well, remember now metaphysics and self is the same thing. It's just a different word. It's the same thing. Self improvement come from metaphysics. Michael Hingson ** 20:31 But what made you decided that you wanted to get, like, an advanced degree in it, and actually get degreed in it Dr Tamir Qadree ** 20:37 after studying over 1000 books in like a two year period. Literally, literally reading those books. Okay? After going through that kind of I went through a breakthrough in 2005 and I went to a breakthrough session called Breakthrough to success. And the gentleman told me something that's very interesting. I said, in this circle about 50 people around me, like I'm a fish in a fish bowl, he told me, I had high self confidence for low self esteem. In other words, I don't know what self esteem was. I had developed a Harvard vocabulary. I had spoken on stage and coached clients. I was top producing network marketing company. I don't know what self esteem I never thought about what self esteem was. He told me that if, for some reason, it really hit me, it really hit to the core of who I am. What do you mean low self esteem? You have had self confidence. And here's what I went home and I cried that night. I realized that what I realized what that meant, because I accept, I have to accept that, but I did. Here's what that meant. Self esteem is self confidence how you feel you can do outside of you. Self esteem is how you feel about yourself, okay, and there's no one like you. And I realized that self esteem by loving yourself and appreciating yourself, not trying to be anybody else, not trying to wish you with somebody else, not want anybody else, money, fame or fortune, but being you and loving you. When I got that, when I got that, my whole world shifted. Mm, hmm. It shifted from this having this confidence, knowing what I can do. I can communicate and speak and sell, but how do I I wasn't give enough attention to myself and appreciating who I was, my own value and that that go, Michael Hingson ** 22:08 and that certainly is something that people around you would sense, who who understand how to do that, right? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 22:16 Well, this guy certainly did, and, yeah, I guess he's the only one that says that, not just me, but other people. I said, Wait a minute. I said, is I never, had never thought about that. Then I wrote a book called from that. I mean, I must have cried for about 30 days straight, every day, tears of joy in my heart. I didn't care about fame or fortune or impressing nobody. I wasn't trying to be this big speaker, this big guy. I'm just being me. I'm I love me. I didn't care about none of that, but myself and what I call God. And from that point on, I begin to really get things come to me that I never have. My mind really opened up to why I didn't care about trying to please anybody I was enjoying every moment. And I wrote a book called reclining master, awaken one minute to healthy esteem. That's when I wrote that book. It talked about, it's like an autobiography. It talked about my journey to understanding that and what happened to me, what what caused me to have low self esteem, what caused not to even understand what self esteem was, and I was a child in that book. Remember the movie The Wolf Man, with Lon Chaney, Cheney, That movie scared be Jesus out of me. My siblings would take me and tell me I was The Wolf Man, Wally Wolf. They call me The Wolf Man, right? And That movie scared me, man, and it really had a psychological effect on my on me growing up, right? I was really, really afraid, and didn't know that that child in me was still afraid. It was afraid all that time. And that's the part that was really hurt by the low self esteem when I discovered that game was on. It was over as far as that. No, I love me. I'm good enough. I am that you're a bet, we're both that that's all there is that was it. Game was on after that. Michael Hingson ** 23:53 So does the boyfriend scare you today? No, I Dr Tamir Qadree ** 23:56 laugh at that. Okay, it's funny. That's funny as heck. I laugh at it. It's funny as heck to me and like, Wow. I look at again, like, wow, really, seriously, I can see how that could affect somebody. You tell a little kid something like that. Michael Hingson ** 24:09 Lon Chaney in that movie, comes across as not having great self esteem. But that's another story. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 24:16 Look well and i It's not to say I mimic that. Michael Hingson ** 24:19 I manage that? Yeah, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 24:23 people too. I get to fight side you bite, people too. Michael Hingson ** 24:27 So when did you essentially start doing your own business and start working toward coaching and teaching and finding ways to work with clients? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 24:39 2000 No, 1994 I began to really study the self improvement movement. And I would see guys like Les Brown, that's, wait a minute. Wait a minute. I like that. I was already that. I was already teaching. I was already doing that. I didn't know that was a field. I've told that. Years ago, a guy told me that, and I. The other field, like that. And I started to study those guys and see what they do. And I'm like, really interesting. They're doing their thing, they're talking they're assisting people. Okay, I can do that too. Then I get involved in network marketing. Network marketing is one of those fields where people are. They're some most open to self development I've ever seen out of all the fields, network marketing and direct sales, they are the most open people to self development. They will spend the money on themselves. People spend money on everything, on fancy cars, bigger housing, they need clothing, everything. But they lot of more spend money on good books and to self improve, right? So when I, when I, when I saw that, I said, Wait a minute. Hmm, here we go. Here we go. This is what I want to do. This what we'll do. So I took that with my sales ability, and I started to have that finance me as I go see sales and self improvement. The same thing, the best sales people have charmed character charisma and class. They have charm. Character charisma and class. They ask questions. They seek to see understand other people. They seek to appreciate other people. Those who appreciate it show appreciation. They seek to listen and to learn and to find out what the customer or client want. And they try to match that with that, out of all sincerity, and that's why I love sales. Sales and self improvement go together. Yeah, they go right together. Michael Hingson ** 26:25 And the best sales people are the ones who will even say, if their product isn't the right product, it won't work, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 26:32 it won't work. And that's the best coaches, the best anything. If I was coaching the client today, and she's a prospect and we're talking, and I told her that I don't want your money. No, no. This. This is a preliminary call. Okay, here's why. I don't know if I can assist you or not. I don't know what I have will assist your situation. I don't even know you yet. How can I ask you for money? She was so appreciative of that, because most people in our industry, they talk to you one time and offer you something. Wait a minute. You don't know what Michael needs. You haven't even diagnosed him. You heard what he's gonna say. You had a canned thing. You're gonna it was canned what you're gonna say to him. You do what you're gonna say. Well, me, I'm different, Michael, I don't know what I'm gonna say to you. That 30 minute call is really discovery call, sure. And if you qualify, if I qualify, let's set up another call in that call. Then at the end of that call, we may come to something, then I can make your offer. So I feel I can help you at if there's a match, boom. That's what a doctor does. No. Doctor, no. Doctor you go to is going to tell you your jaw hurt. You said, No. Doctor, my thigh hurts. Is a pain? No, your jaw hurts that doctor's a quack. That's a lot of coaches do. A lot of them are quacks. They just read something and they want to apply to micro plat. To Michael, apply to me. That may not even fit me. I may not be the one to help Michael, sure, and I have enough integrity and faith and confidence to command to know that in other way, I don't have commission breath. I'm going to get mine regardless. And nobody can stop Michael Hingson ** 27:54 it, sure. Well, and again, it's how you operate, and it's the ethics you operate with which is very important. Ethics. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 28:05 In fact, I it's, this is a shameless plug, but I'm gonna do it anyway. My third doctor I just finished, called conscious business ethics. Conscious business ethics. You see how we went from metaphysics to to the secular world, and Harvard went from the secular world to metaphysics, we both came together now. So we're doing one. I'm doing one now on conscious business ethics, which is a really big issue in business today. Oh yeah, business are more concerned about their bottom line than the people that work for them, until they treat their employees like customers. They always have those problems they don't need, Michael Hingson ** 28:39 and it's unfortunate, but I think there have always certainly been people who weren't overly ethical, but I think it used to be that a larger number of businesses were more loyal to employees than we see today. Now the response always is, this is what the stockholders want. That's what we have to listen to, and that's all we listen to. And that's just not true. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 29:05 Not only is it not true, is it not true? What a lot of companies are turned around, well, they begin to understand the value of self improvement, the value of treat the value of leadership versus management, the value of being a boss versus being a leader. There's a difference. Managers push leaders, pull managers tables. Do leaders encourage you. They change languages on how they talk to you, how to present to you. They that you understand. You have a family. This person has a family. Have needs and concerns outside this business, the way a lot of businesses do it now and have done in the past. This the business. This is our life. This what we want, regardless what you want if you fit in or you don't, well, they ran up on a I'm a rhino that never worked with me, brother. I am psychologically unemployable. I will work a job. I have to, even today, if I say it's quote, unquote, have to. I would do I gotta do to get what I gotta get. But I'm a rhino, I'm gonna I'm psychologically and terminally unemployable. I was taught by Yogananda, which is, you. One of my favorite teachers wrote Autobiography of a yoga you may have heard of yoga under and I've been his student for 15 years, and he said something very important that already knew, but he affirmed it, if you're, if you're, if you can't be subordinate to other people. Some, some of us are like that. That's not your style. Then do what you got to do until you get where you get where you got to go, be respectable who you with, take it and then move, but be working your way out of it. Yeah, but I, I've been terminally unemployable all my life. Brother, a renegade. Michael Hingson ** 30:32 Well, but that doesn't mean that you're not useful part of the system, or trustworthy or reliable. It just means that you operate in a slightly different way than most people are used to doing. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 30:46 Well, yeah, it means this You're right. It means this You're right. It means that you look into Apple to give you something. I'm going to create my own apple. That's what it means. I'm that kind of person. We need those kind of people. If we didn't, you wouldn't have this laptop. You wouldn't have the technology you have right now. Those people were innovators, entrepreneurs like me, you I'm an entrepreneur. I'm the entrepreneur solopreneur. They want to be apreneurs, and there's not a preneurs Don't even try go to work for somebody else. Don't even try to be apreneur. Some people just don't have it. So no, it doesn't mean anything that. It means that being psychologically employable. Mean that, okay? He is IBM, he is Apple, okay? He is Tesla, he is Cadillac, he is American airline. I'm like that. Whether I achieve that level, it's irrelevant. I'm one of those people that's all. That's it. Michael Hingson ** 31:36 So for you, who are the typical people who would be your client, who are your typical clients or your target audience today, entrepreneurs. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 31:49 I mean entrepreneurs in a real sense, those who understand sales and psychology, entertainers, athletes. Why say those people, those in network marketing and sales? Because those people traditionally understand mindset. They're coming to the mindset they they promote the books in their seminars and the reading and bringing the speakers. They're open to they're open to it, to what I have. They're ready for it. They're ready for it. That's my audience. That's my target. And I hold it on target, because people say, Well, my audience is everybody. Well, not true, not true. If you want to catch bass, you go to a bass lake. I have specific audience that I'm targeting, and I'm focused on the article that audience is open and receptive and to level I'm at. I don't teach kindergar. That's not my specialty. Okay, they gotta start too, okay. I teach those people that are in the field that want to get it, they have a glimpse of it, they want to get it now. They're ready. So with me, it's like a university level coaching. It doesn't mean you gotta, you have to, you have to have 10 years in the field. It means that you're open and receptive, to listen, to accept and to work. When I give somebody assignment, if you don't work it, don't talk to me about it, unless you have a question about it. If you didn't work it, I don't talk to you about it. I want you to. I'd rather you fail first, then come back to me, because the other side of failure is success. We got to tweak it or do something. But if you don't do the assignment I give you, let's talk about the next thing, not that we'll talk about that. When you do if you don't do it, I Michael Hingson ** 33:17 won't talk about it, yeah, unless there's some real, substantial reason why you didn't or couldn't do it, but that's different, but that's a different story. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 33:26 Amen. I agree with you that that's that's true, brother, Michael Hingson ** 33:30 that's always a different story, right, right? So you, at the same time, you have to earn money and survive. What are your thoughts about the whole concept of money? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 33:44 Money is a terrible master, but a wonderful servant. Yeah, money is money is necessary. Money has this place. Money is good, money is not bad, money is not evil, it's not wicked, and nothing like that. Money is neutral. Money serves you according to your level of service and how you expected to serve you, how you think about it. Money is a terrible masculine it's a wonderful servant. Money is that thing where can serve you, but it can be the one of the worst tyrants, second to sex, lust, that is the worst. But let me get back to Money. Money is a tool. Money is energy. That's why they call it currency. And it must flow. If it's not flowing, it ain't growing. If it ain't growing, you ain't knowing you feel me and that mean, that mean you ain't sowing the seed that rhymed. I just made that up, by the way. Good job. I just made that up, dude, off the top of my head, yeah, Michael Hingson ** 34:37 good job. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 34:38 This came to me. It happened to rhyme, we learning rhymes. Hickory Dickory Dock, the mouse went up the clock and all that kind of stuff. So that's what I think that's that's money. The concept of money is very fascinating, because money is the most easy thing I've ever manifested. See, money is actually easy to manifest, but people make it hard. Here's why, because they're running. After it. While you're running after it, it's right there in front of you, but you're chasing after it, and you want to knock on other people, to get with a light sheet and still to get it. Some people, some willing to con someone, to do unethical things, to get you to do it like the old commercial. What's this taste good? Like a cigarette should? Well, there's nothing good tasting about tobacco. I always Michael Hingson ** 35:21 wondered that myself, having never smoked, but yeah, I hear you, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 35:24 yeah, yeah, but telling you that, telling you that, getting your mind that frame gets you to spend your money. And we're so money conscious. You want to get money. I want to spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend. How about respecting the money? How can I make this money circulate? How can I one give something to somebody else in a service or calls? Okay, it's very good to do that, whether you call it tithing or just giving. That doesn't matter with the percentage. It doesn't matter. Give from the heart someone else. And then find a way to circulate that money. That money is actually energy. It will, it comes back to you. It actually comes back to it circulates. You create. You create a universal energy, a Goodwill has nothing to do with religion, politics or nothing, but I just said nothing. I just said has something to do with life and the laws of the universe, albeit which works the same for everybody, for everybody. Mm, hmm. Michael Hingson ** 36:17 Well, you clearly want to help people, and you want people to obtain results. What do you do? Or how do you how are you able to consistently help entrepreneurs and your clients and so on to achieve dynamic results and positive results? Another way of saying is, what do you do anyway? Go ahead, Dr Tamir Qadree ** 36:38 right? What do you Well, I'm a content creator. I create content. Okay? I create content. I have a course that's coming out really soon called create dynamic results, and it's a seven transformational steps to show people how to make these subtle mind shifts that become permanent. Okay? And I'm fortunate enough to be the guide through this program. In that program, what they learn to do is how to take those habits, those nagging, nagging habits. See, habits are what make us what we are. Habits. Period, you brush your teeth in the morning. It's a hat bleeding. You gotta think about you're gonna brush your teeth. You're not gonna think about it. You gotta get up and go do it. Period, in the story, you're not gonna more about it. Not gonna say maybe I don't feel like today, you gotta do it Okay. More like them do it okay. And because the habit, because that little bit happens, ingraining your brain, it's like a fluid. It's been ingrained, and it's like a track. Now, as soon as you wake up, soon as you wake up, waking up and open your eyes and get out of bed, is actually a trigger to go brush your teeth. Now it's a trigger, so you got to do it. Well, bad habits are the same way you have habits you don't want. They're the same way those habits you hear certain words or certain things that trigger anger certainly trigger hunger, certain thing will trigger lust, greed or violence or just whatever. Okay, so in order to have the habits that, that, that that that that support you, that benefits you, you have to transmute those by setting yourself on like a seven days. I'm just using seven days right now. Say, say, You tell yourself today I'm not going to get angry, period. Imma, remain calm. Now, when you say that, I guarantee you, I will guarantee you, I'll bet you $25 to a bucket of beans that you're going to get plenty opportunities to get angry that day. People going to say things. They're going to do things you're angry. Now here's the thing. The test is to remember what you said, what you said when it comes, ignore it, and then replace that with a different you keep doing that, you're going to change that habit. Eventually, it may take a year you're going to change that habit. So you've got a habit of procrastinating, not following up on your goals, your plans, not prospecting. You can change that habit by going through certain steps, by changing those grooves in the brain, okay to have that record play. One good example is that is the mother Turkey. The mother Turkey is one of the best mothers in creation. The mother Turkey love that baby, cleans that nurtures that baby. Just really, really, really, really, really, okay. And when that baby chirps, that baby chirps, that baby chirp that the turkey hearts melt. That mother Turkey heart will melt when that baby chirp, period. So now you have let me change some you have this pole cat. Pole cat is the universal enemy of a turkey. When Turkey see a pole cat, that Turkey go crazy and get crazy and want to kill. It this hard to death. Well, there's a spirit one day where they put a pole cat near the turkey, and the turkey went crazy, gonna kill it to protect his young. Well, they had a little walkie, a little radio inside of the a little device inside, the inside of stuffed turkey. That shirt like little baby birds, red Turkey chirp that Turkey. When that pole cat shirt, that Turkey was disarmed, that Turkey nurtured the phony pole cat. Cause of that chirp, nurtured it. Heard that shirt. That's what habits are. You're a certain sound, and you act like a robot. So actually, we're puppets on a string. This is getting a little deeper that. That's, in essence, what it is. So in assisting people how to change those habits and. Then how to concentrate Focus. Focus is so big in self improvement. All people great success have great focus skills, but very few people teach you how to focus. Have anyone ever taught you how to focus? Very few people have techniques like that how to focus. Then there's self analysis. When you self analysis, you analyze yourself. Then there's willpower, which is creative power. Then there's transportation and sexual energy, and then the words you speak to yourself, those six or seven things I just named, are the key and foundational to all of our success. Michael Hingson ** 40:31 The only thing I would add to that are the words that your inner voice is saying to you, and you need to learn to listen to them. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 40:36 That's and that's what I said about that self analysis. Yeah, right, right. And that's where you come in, concentrate and meditation, yeah. And so one thing about meditation really quickly, real quick meditation people, especially a lot of religious people, think, well, I'm this or that. I'm a Christian, Muslim or Judas or Jew or Buddhist. I don't do that meditation stuff. Stop, stop, stop. Here's where knowledge becomes power when you understand and use it. When you want to get stronger arms, you can do push ups when you want to shoot. Be a better shooter in basketball, you practice the shots anything you want. You practice Okay, in order to strengthen your mind, where you have the one point of focus on where you're calm you meditation is an exercise of the mind. That's it. No matter what religion you are, be quiet and learn how to calm down, to quiet the thoughts, all distracting thoughts. Once you quiet the thoughts, and then that lake becomes clear without any ripples, and you see the pure reflects of the moon, that's gonna become calm. That's when you get some stuff done. Now you can focus on that thing with laser focus and get it done. Nothing great was ever done without laser focus, ever? There are no accidents, Michael Hingson ** 41:46 right? Well, and also just the whole idea of clearing your mind, letting yourself calm down. It's perfectly okay to ask yourself, How do I accomplish this? The problem with most people is they won't listen for the answer, no. And whether you want to say it's God telling you your inner voice or whatever, it's really all the same thing. But the problem is, people won't listen. And then when they get the answer, they go, it can't be that simple. People don't listen to that inner voice. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 42:20 It's very powerful. I meant to the inner voice thing. I love meditation. I love doing it as once a little girl in the church, she's a Catholic, and she was she whenever, I believe the church, she'd sit there about 10 or 15 minutes every week. And so the cardinal, whoever given the service, came here and said, How you doing, little girl, when she stopped, Hi, how are you? I noticed after every service, everybody leave the chapel. Your parents leave outside too. But every Sunday, little girl, you sit here, I think she's about 12 years old, you sit here, and you keep praying. And he asked her, why may I ask? Why? Why? Why you do it like that? She said, Because. Now, watch this out of the mouth of babes, because everybody's praying to God. I want to hear what God has to say to has to say to me. Mm hmm. I want to listen. Bam. Mic drop. That's it. Mm hmm. Mic drop. That's how powerful being quiet in meditation is meditation exercising the mind. So if you say, Well, I'm a Christian, a Muslim, a Jew, I'm a Baha that doesn't matter. Meditation had nothing to do with that. It has nothing to do with that. Has them do it like you said, Brother internally, who you are, your inner self. This is that still small voice. And by the way, all those religions say that, but few people understand that. They all say the same. They all said the same thing. I know because I study them. I studied the world religions. I studied Buddhism, Islam, Christianity, Kabbalah. I studied new thought. I studied that stuff. I love it, but I understood something about it that we're all actually one. We're what we're actually one, Michael Hingson ** 43:56 viewed as the many. Do you generally find that you can get through to people who want to be your clients. Or how does that work? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 44:06 Can you repeat that, please? Michael Hingson ** 44:07 Okay, so somebody comes to you and says, I really want to hear what you have to say. I want to learn from you. And you've talked about the fact you don't teach kindergarteners. You you teach people who are further along the process. Do you? Do you ever miss assess or find that you're not teaching the right person or they just don't want to listen to you once you get started and working with them? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 44:29 I've never had that happen. I thank God never. I'll tell you why. When people come to me, okay, people want to make money, they want to increase their sale, they want to increase their contact, they want to increase their network. They will increase their productivity by me showing them how to increase their transformative value, to enhance their performative value, to get to the results they want. Here are the results we talk about. We talk about what they want. Now see when I'm talking to you right. Now, give me the philosophy, but the coaching is very different. The floats, the culture is actually the philosophy in action with what they're doing. You. I use the language they're doing, interacting what they're doing, how their prospect, who they're talking to, the attitude they have, the ideas how to shift certain things. What goals you hitting right now? Okay, what do you do? What what's what's the top person in the company doing? What are you doing? How do you rate yourself to that? What are you doing right now? Let me show you how to increase that by 25% 50% in the next month. Let me show you how to increase that. So I'll take what they're doing and I'll remember now all what I'm saying is good, but if you can't take it to fit the people and make it practical, it's just talk. All books, all books, religious or whatever, are just dead writings. Until you make them come alive, we have to make them come alive. So I take what I'm take talking now, and I apply it to the network marketing, the sales, the people, into coaching, the mind technology, you have to apply it. So I never had that problem. I haven't I thank the Creator for that. Never had that issue. Never, never had that because anyone even hit Michael Hingson ** 45:59 that, yeah, because you've had people that that when you accept them as a client, you've you've communicated with them, you've assessed what their needs are. They tell you what their needs are, and you come to agreement as to they're going to listen to you to deal with fulfilling those needs, right? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 46:17 You're going to follow it like in my in my course, that I'm at the part of the course creator. I'm court doing the videos right now, the intro and outro and all that. This one thing my class got to understand. When you get this course, if you don't do the work, don't talk to me about it. Now, if something come up where you can't get it done, you need a way to get it done. Let's talk. But you just didn't do it. You have not earned the right to come to me and tell me that, which is what I have to work before, right? Yeah, talk about before. So, so I'm really into getting you to move and to feel that result. See, everything is result of something, and you need to prove that to yourself. And no one can do that, but you, no one's gonna do but you, no one can do but you, no one should do but you, damn it. You should do it, but you can be guided, Michael Hingson ** 47:07 that's right, to how to do it. But then you have to make, but you have to make the choice to do it. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 47:14 That's right, see, and I don't care if it's Warren Buffett, I'll give you example about here's what coaching is all about, and mentoring is all about it's all about human beings having two things that they want to do. They want to avoid pain and suffering and gain pleasure, reach the desire. There's only two motivators we have. There are no other motivators, no other motivators in the universe. We only have two motivators, to avoid suffering and pain and to seek happiness and feel the desire. Okay? The idea is to solve the pain puzzle so that the person, place or thing, can enjoy the pleasure principle. If I can solve I don't give a warren buffett right now. If Warren Buffett, with all his billions, would approach me right now, if he had a problem that no one could solve all his life and it gnaws at him, he won't answer to it. He's dreamed about all these years. And if he met me right now and he felt that that's the one he can solve that problem. He would hire me right now. He would hire me right now. That's right, yep. Well, it doesn't matter how much money you have. When I learned that, when that dawn upon me, game on for anybody. There are people out there that are my clients, and I know it. I don't care how what your status is. I'll give you the king of England or the pet the United States. I don't care if you the Grand Poobah. I don't care if you have a trillion dollars in the bank. If you got an issue, and I'm the one you see can solve it, you're going to pay me, and I'm going to work with you, period. That's the commitment, though, there are no boundaries, right? Michael Hingson ** 48:39 That's That's the commitment. You are committing to do it. You're committing to help. You're committing to bring your skills to it. Bring my Dr Tamir Qadree ** 48:47 skill set to it. I don't have to have as much money as you to do it. I ain't got to have a bigger home than you to do that. I ain't got to be Michael Jordan to help. Michael Jordan if he had the problem of pain. So I don't have to be that. Once people that coach and teach get past that. A lot of my scared, why that person can't? Oh, hold on, I might have a answer to a thing that Anthony Robbins need help with. We all need some growth and development. We all do until we reach that level of a certain level where we're there and we're just helping other people. But most of us, most of us, 99% of us or more, have pain problems, get who you are and give you a story about Joseph in the Bible. You've heard the story about Joseph in the Bible, how Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers. Okay? He sold slavery by his brothers into prison, something he didn't do. And while he was in prison, he began to be known as his philosophy and his work and his spirituality. And people would talk to him. So one guy got out, Joseph said, Please tell the king, yada ya, or whatever. The guy got out and forgot about Joseph. Then tell Well, years more, more years passed by. Another guy got out. He went and told the king, or whatever, about Joseph. I know a guy can solve your dreams. I'm paraphrasing the story. And the king asked Joseph to come out. He's, I heard you can solve my problems. And. Joseph told him how to solve his problem. Well, Joseph became a billionaire overnight. Yeah, he solved the king's problem. That's not the exact story, but you see, no. So it doesn't matter who you are or your status in life, once you get past that thinking, well, I ain't, I can't do this. I only live in No, no, no, no, no, no. They do it work. It's like, it's like, it's like, needing, getting to car accident, okay? And your stomach is you got a gas in your stomach, okay? And say you're multi billionaire, okay? Or say you the biggest athlete in the planet or the richest king in the world, you're not going to say how much money that doctor make, or nothing like that. You're going to say, Please heal me. You don't care about that. That doctor had the skill to heal you to take care, and that's you want to take care. That's all you want. Gotta say, I don't want that doctor flying so and so from so and so. You're not gonna do that. And a lot of people understand that when you have something to give, you give it. You hone your skills, you bunker down, you walk with thoughtless confidence, command, you have the self esteem, doing the ambient maybe move forward. That's why I work with entrepreneurs and I will work with people that are not on that low. Get me wrong. Now, I'm not saying I will work with people that are newbies. All depends on the newbie. If they want sales training, I'll give it to them. Yes, I'll give it to them. They want sales training. They want training on how to close, how to be better communicated. Sales are the communication daughter, a daughter of charm character, Chris man, class, and the more charm character, charisma and class you add in appropriate form, you're able to connect, communicate and close. That's seven C's, yep, sell the seven C's. Michael Hingson ** 51:36 I counted four. Where are the other three? Charm, charm characterism Dr Tamir Qadree ** 51:40 in class. That's four, communicate, connect and close. Michael Hingson ** 51:44 Okay, just checking on you, because once Dr Tamir Qadree ** 51:47 you have those four, you open to bed. Line of communication. Add some more things in there. As far as you know, psychology and persuasion tools. Now you're connecting. Once you connect, then you can close. Michael Hingson ** 51:59 There you go. Just wanted to make sure we got to all seven. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 52:02 We got all Thank you. Thank you for holding me to that. Michael Hingson ** 52:06 No, I hear exactly what you're saying, and it is, it is so important to do that. So tell me what you know, with all the things that you're doing, you're clearly a person who cares, what's your take on giving back and charity and so on? Dr Tamir Qadree ** 52:26 Everything, everything, everything. And I'll tell you why I say everything, everything is a result of something the universe and life is always giving me something. Mm, hmm. See, life is what I call the creator's gift to us. What we give back is our gift to the creator for being on this planet. We are creators. Giving is a natural part of your being, who you are, your power. When you're your power, you can give from the heart, okay? And when you give, believe me, it's going to come back to you anyway. Now you don't give it for it to come back. You give it because you want to service and love because you you realize that we're one giving, giving from the heart empowers you. You want to feel empowered give you want to feel empowered every time somebody get paid, give something. I don't care if it's 10% of 5% give from your heart and keep it to yourself. Yeah, much as you can. Keep it to yourself, because you spoil your own goods. Keep it to yourself and let it flow the way it's going to flow, and then you will grow, and then you'll know, yep, how it goes. That Ryan too. I just made that up. That pretty Michael Hingson ** 53:36 well rhymes, yeah, but, but it's true. It's true. Too many people have to show off. Oh, I gave a million dollars to this charity. The problem is, you're not you shouldn't be doing it for notoriety. You should be doing it because it's the right thing to do. It's what you want to do. Dr Tamir Qadree ** 53:55 If somebody found out that's different, like Warren Buffett is one of my favorite. Warren Buffet is one of my favorites. Warren Buffett is one of the most humble giving people. His money 70 billion he gave out. It got out there because there's so much money. I bet he didn't, he didn't promote that. Okay, now I look, I look at one athlete. I won't mention a name here, always, they always say about how much he gives and how much he gives. And build this and build that. Always talk about that, about that guy, the other guy they compare him to, never opens his mouth about his giving. He gives all the time. Never opens his mouth. One guy always told me what he gives, and I said to myself, dude, that that that's taboo. This the opposite of giving. I'm not saying your heart ain't in it, but you're allowing this narrative to be there without comment on the narrative that's it's that is personal, that, in fact, giving to me is sacred. It is sacred. You're giving to help humanity, other people, my gift, my charity, which I have to do today, by the wa
Me ei suuda ise ka uskuda, et see episood on salvestatud samas ruumis. Me oleme SAMAS toas ja räägime juttu nii, et vaatame üksteisele silma. Peale kõiki neid aastaid... oli see väga veider! :D Muidugi ei saanud me oma kahte põdinat maha raputada ning palkasime nad taustale heliefekte tegema. Braavo neile, kes suudavad selle ära taluda :P Sellega on siis uus hooaeg avatud ning uued mõtted, jutud ja lood on tulekul. Juhhei!
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale shares a timeless lesson on the power of attitude. Through the inspiring story of Jesse Owens, Peale shows us that facts may be fixed, but our mindset can transform outcomes. Learn how belief, discipline, and a winning attitude can lift anyone beyond their circumstances — and why your attitude matters more than the facts themselves.Source: (Cassette tape from 1977) Dr Norman Vincent Peale - "How To Make Positive Thinking Work For You”Hosted by Sean CroxtonFollow me on Instagram Check out the NEW Black Excellence Daily podcast. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, and Amazon.
Bonnie Mead doesn't feel she has a story to tell. In fact, she could write a book. Before moving to Cold Spring in November, the 82-year-old won a demolition derby championship, worked with positive thinker Norman Vincent Peale, survived tornado alley and was shocked when, within four months, two of her neighbors in Vermont were attacked and killed - prompting her move. Mead was born in Danbury, Connecticut, and named after "Bonnie Blue," Scarlett O'Hara and Rhett Butler's daughter in Gone with the Wind. Mead's first job was at age 13; she helped a Pawling lawyer and his wife with the office, childcare and housework. "I got 35 cents an hour," Mead said, which would be $4 today. "Boy, I thought I was rich!" Tracking her jobs and hometowns over eight decades with a reporter was a challenge. She always worked two jobs. She was a bartender, veterinarian's assistant, dispatcher, medical assistant and physician's secretary. She lived in towns and villages from Vermont to Iowa. Married twice, she declined to say much about her first husband, whom she divorced. "He spent quite a bit of time in jail," she said, with a rueful smile. In 1967, she was living in Rock Rapids, Iowa, and not working - or at least not being paid for her work, which was raising her young children while her second husband, Gary Mead, drove a long-haul truck. It was there she experienced tornado alley; one "crossed right in front of my car while I was driving," she said. Beginning in 1978, she spent 12 years as a travel agent in Pawling. She was able to take some nice trips, including to Alaska, but hated flying. It was Gary, who raced stock cars, who convinced her to try the demolition derby. "I thought he was crazy but, after a couple races, I kind of liked it," Mead recalled. She competed in derbies throughout the Northeast from 1982 to 1985, driving her "old junker" to a championship at Islip Speedway on Long Island. She kept competing even after divorcing Gary. As it happened, "his new wife was also driving in derbies," Mead said. "I crashed into her, and she broke her nose!" She swears it was not intentional. Mead lost all her derby photos and trophies in a fire 30 years ago. In the early 1980s, she was hired as a secretary for Norman Vincent Peale at his Foundation for Christian Living in Pawling. A Protestant minister, Peale wrote The Power of Positive Thinking, which has sold more than 22 million copies in 42 languages. He was also the pastor at Marble Collegiate Church in Manhattan for 52 years and officiated at one of Donald Trump's three weddings. Asked if working for Peale gave her a more positive outlook, Mead said, "I never read his book." "He was all business, not overly friendly to his employees," she recalled, adding that her job was tedious. "I learned more ZIP codes than you can ever imagine." It did produce one surprise: "Big 18-wheelers came up every week, just full of money," she said. "They took big baskets of checks out of those trucks; I was amazed." At the same time, she also worked at the nearby YMCA Holiday Hills Conference Center, where actor James Earl Jones often performed in fundraisers. "I got to know him pretty well," she said. "He was one of the nicest people I've ever met." (Jones, who lived in Pawling, died last year at age 93.) Mead also found time to serve with the Amenia Fire Department for 12 years, from 1980 to 1992, as a volunteer firefighter and member of its rescue squad. She said her favorite job was driving a school bus for 11 years, from 2008 to 2019. "I loved it, loved the kids, even more so the special-needs kids," Mead said. But it wasn't easy for someone who stands less than 5 feet tall. "They always knew it was my bus because they couldn't see a driver." She'll never forget the day she drove a school bus to Albany to take her commercial driver's license test. On the way, the bus hit a wild turkey in flight. "There was blood and feathers all over the windshield," Mead said. "I was hysterical." She was still...
In this episode I am joined by Francois Breedt. After briefly reminding listeners of Francois' background, he describes how the "Falconry Gods" intervened and brought was he anticipated would be a very good season with his four-times inter-mewed female Peale's Scottish peregrine cross to an end. Francois explains what he anticipates he will do in response to the setback, and he talks about his dog work plus his most memorable day in the field.
Part 1 The Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peale SummaryThe Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peale is a self-help book that emphasizes the importance of a positive mental attitude in achieving personal and professional success. First published in 1952, the book combines motivational advice with practical techniques aimed at fostering a mindset that encourages optimism and resilience. Key Themes and Concepts:Belief in Self: Peale argues that believing in oneself is vital for success. He encourages readers to develop a strong sense of self-confidence as the foundation for achieving their goals.Positive Thoughts Lead to Positive Outcomes: The central premise of the book is that positive thinking can significantly influence one's life. Peale advocates for replacing negative thoughts with positive affirmations, which can improve one's circumstances and mindset.Visualization Techniques: Peale introduces methods such as visualization, where individuals are encouraged to picture their desired outcomes vividly to enhance motivation and increase the likelihood of actualizing their dreams.Dealing with Fear and Stress: The book outlines strategies for overcoming fear and stress, emphasizing the power of prayer and meditation as tools for gaining peace of mind and aligning one's thoughts towards positivity.The Importance of Faith: A significant aspect of Peale's philosophy is the role of faith—both in oneself and in a higher power. He suggests that faith can help individuals transcend their problems and instill a sense of hope.Building Strong Relationships: Peale highlights the importance of maintaining positive relationships with others. He encourages readers to practice kindness and empathy, which can lead to a more fulfilling life and create a supportive community. Practical Strategies:Daily Affirmations: Writing and reciting positive affirmations to reinforce self-belief.Gratitude Practice: Keeping a gratitude journal to focus on the positive aspects of life.Overcoming Obstacles: Using setbacks as opportunities for growth and learning. Healthy Mindset: Surrounding oneself with positive influences and engaging in uplifting activities that promote mental health. Conclusion:Norman Vincent Peale's The Power of Positive Thinking encourages readers to cultivate a positive mindset, overcome adversity, and embrace life with optimism. Through practical guidance and inspiring anecdotes, Peale illustrates how the power of thought can lead to transformation and fulfillment in various aspects of life. Ultimately, the book serves as a reminder that individuals have the ability to shape their own reality through their thoughts and beliefs.Part 2 The Power of Positive Thinking AuthorNorman Vincent Peale was an American minister and author, best known for his work in the field of positive thinking and self-help. He was born on May 31, 1898, in Bowersville, Ohio, and died on December 24, 1993. Peale is most famous for his book The Power of Positive Thinking, which was first published in 1952 and subsequently became a bestseller, selling millions of copies worldwide. Key Details about The Power of Positive Thinking: Publication Year: 1952 Overview: The book emphasizes the importance of maintaining a positive attitude and offers practical advice on achieving happiness, success, and peace of mind through positive thinking, affirmations, and a strong belief in oneself. Other Notable Works by Norman Vincent Peale: The Magic of Thinking Big (1959) Co-authored with Dr. David Schwartz, it discusses how to achieve large goals through thinking big. You Can Work Your Own Miracles (1971) Focusing on how individuals can achieve their dreams through positive thought.The Power of Positive Living (1985) A continuation of his themes on positivity applied to daily...
Iseoma laulu- ja tantsupeo tule teekond on jõudnud poole peale.
Peale inimese võiks linnas hea elada olla ka siilidel. Tartu linnas on siilide kaitse ja siilide heaoluvajaduse teadvustamine tõsiselt ette võetud. Muu hulgas kutsutakse linnarahvast üles rajama siiliväravaid, et loomakesed saaksid hõlpsamini ühest aiast teise.
Peale valitsusremonti muudeti ära kliimaministri portfelli nimetus ning taandati varupingile seni seda ametit pidanud Yoko Alender. Mida kliimaministeeriumi tegevuses uue juhtimise all muudetakse ning milline saab olema Eesti plaan energeetikas? Postimehe otsestuudios käis külas värske energeetika- ja keskkonnaminister Andres Sutt (RE). Saade oli eetris teisipäeval kell 16.
Kutsume külla ööklubi Hall vedaja Elena Natale, et uurida, mis täpsemalt toimub ühe Eesti olulisema underground-klubi elus, kuna peale teavitust sulgemisest toimuvad ikkagi sündmused. Peale targemaks saamist hindame muusikat Koidu ja Kaspariga.
Konservatiivses vestlussaates räägivad EKRE poliitikud Evelin ja Anti Poolamets viimastest arengutest elus ja poliitikas. Esimese teemana räägitakse sellest, kuidas põhikooli õpilased peavad koolis inimeseõpetuse tunnis kokku puutuma sunniviisiliselt sotsiaalsete sugudega.“Vaba sõna” on eetris laupäeviti kell 12 Tre-raadios, sagedustel 97,0 Lääne-Virumaal ja osaliselt Ida-Virumaal. Saade on järelkuulatav Uutes Uudistes ning aadressil treraadio.ee.
Experience the transformative wisdom of Norman Vincent Peale in The Power of Positive Thinking, one of the most influential self-help books of all time. Peale's timeless principles provide practical tools for overcoming challenges, cultivating a confident mindset, and achieving lasting success and happiness. With compelling examples and actionable advice, this audiobook empowers listeners to: Replace doubt...
Seekord on külas Dmitri Gostev, Askend senior front-end arendaja ja arendustiimi juht, kellega räägime tema kogemusest kahe projekti kolimisel AngularJS pealt Angular viimasele versioonile. Tuleb välja, et esmapilgul õige lähenemine ei pruugi üldse kõige lihtsam või efektiivsem olla.-----Episoodis mainitud ng-zorro Angular komponendid: https://ng.ant.design/Konveyor Kai AI põhine rakenduste moderniseerimine: https://github.com/konveyor/kaiJaga meile enda jaoks olulisimat mõtet episoodist meie Discord kanalis: https://discord.gg/8X5JTkDxccEpisoodi veavad Priit Liivak ja Marin KappAlgorütmi toetavad Patchstack https://patchstack.comNortal https://nortal.com/Veriff https://www.veriff.com/
Have you ever tried Christian mantras? You should. Feel and experience, the Light every single day. In this episode, I explore Philippians 4:13's powerful verse, "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." I learned about this verse through Norman Vincent Peale's book, "The Power of Positive Thinking." Though he didn't call them "mantras", Peale used them as such, repeating these verses of positivity throughout the day. Begin with this verse and try it this week!! Try it.
Politsei kontrollis roolis kõrvalisi tegevusi tegevaid juhte (loe: mobiil) ning võtame arutada, miks me ikka oleme sellised nagu me oleme. Martin sai trahvi ka, aga mitte selle eest. Imestame, et kust need Hiina autod nüüd kõik tulid ja tõdeme, et Telliskivis ei muutu niipea midagi. Ja liikluskindlustuse hinnastamises ilmselt ka mitte. Tõdeme veel mitmeid muidki asju. Saatejuhid on Tarmo Tähepõld ja Martin Mets Geeniuse uudisteportaalist.
Uus raamat "Dialoogid Tiiu Randviiruga" sündis Eesti ühe tuntuima priimabaleriini ja lavastaja Arne Miku vestlustest.
Räägime seekord Pipedrive avalikku pilve kolimise teekonnast. Juttu tuleb ka ette tulnud väljakutsetest ja üllatustest. Külas olid Pipedrive infrastruktuuri osakonna juht Kristjan Elias ja Infrastruktuuri arhitekt Vladimir Zulin.-----Rohkem infot:* AWS case study: https://aws.amazon.com/solutions/case-studies/pipedrive-case-study/* Rackspace case study: https://www.rackspace.com/case-studies/pipedrive-aws* AWS User Group Estonia kohtumine, kus Kristjan rääkis üldisemalt samast teemast: https://www.youtube.com/live/b60JoyVC8t0?si=92jVMp4VW8ci-M7w&t=1504-----Jaga meile enda jaoks olulisimat mõtet episoodist meie Discord kanalis: https://discord.gg/8X5JTkDxccEpisoodi veavad Priit Liivak, Martin Kapp ja Tiit PaananenAlgorütmi toetavad Patchstack https://patchstack.comNortal https://nortal.com/Veriff https://www.veriff.com/
The evangelist and author is best known for popularizing the concept of positive thinking.
Konservatiivses vestlussaates "Vaba sõna" räägivad Riigikogu EKRE fraktsiooni liikmed ja ühtlasi ka Euroopa Liidu Asjade Komisjoni liikmed Anti Poolamets ja Rain Epler nendest jaburustest, mida Euroopast meile peale surutakse, eriti seda, mis puudutab kliimahulkust.
1970. aastate lõpus kavatses sotsioloogiadoktor Kyriacos Markides kirjutada raamatu rahvusvahelisest terrorismist. Materjali otsingul läks ta oma kodusaarele Küprosele, kus ta tee ristus muljetavaldava kristliku müstiku ja tervendaja Daskalosega. "Ma nägin oma silmaga pealt asju, mida ma ei suuda siiani ratsionaalselt selgitada," ütles Markides Tähenduse teejuhtide 30. numbrile antud intervjuus ("Vaikuse mägi", 4.23) [1]. "Daskalos ravis 45 minutiga terveks selja naisel, kellele arstid olid öelnud, et ta jääb terveks eluks voodihaigeks. Kaheksa nädalat varem tehtud röntgenpilt näitas suurt vigastust. Uuel pildil oli selge terve. Daskalos katsus kolmveerand tundi kätega tema selga. Pärast seda tõusis naine voodist ja läks meile kööki kohvi tegema." Raamat terroristidest jääb pooleli: "Ma otsustasin, et müstikud on terroristidest huvitavamad," meenutab Markides [2].Paarkümmend aastat hiljem kutsub sõber Markidese Athose poolsaarele [3]. "Peale ebausu ja rumalate munkade ei lootnud ma sealt midagi leida. Athosel kohtasin ma aga isa Maximost. See muutis mu elu," ütles Markides meie intervjuus. Sel aastal eesti keeles ilmunud Kyriacos Markidese "Vaikuse mägi" [4] kujutab endast popuriid autori vestlustest isa Maximosega ning mõtisklustest Athosest, Küprosest ja kristlusest.Tänase jutuajamise lähtepunkt on kirjakoht "Vaikuse mäe" 13. peatüki ("Vaimulikud seaduspärasused") lõpust: "Ekklesia't kordas isa Maximos ikka ja jälle, peaks nägema vaimuliku haiglana, kus ravitakse haava inimeste ja Jumala vahel. Kui see paraneb, leiavad kõik maised probleemid lahenduse. Nägin, et selline arusaam oli jämedas vastuolus sekulaarse mõtteviisiga – selle mõtteviisiga, mida minagi olin treenitud kasutama."Peatse kohtumiseni!H. —————————————————[1] https://teejuhid.postimees.ee/7758633...[2] • Kyriacos Markides: "Ma leidsin, et mü... [3] • Athos - Mount Athos Monk's Republic D... [4] https://www.apollo.ee/vaikuse-magi.html Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Külas on üks Eesti edukaim räpiprodutsent, kes on paljude hittide sünni taga. Tema muusika sulatab kokku erinevaid žanre, tuues välja parima, mida Hip-Hop ja RnB suudavad pakkuda, lisades üllatavaid elemente. Külas on 372Kaspar ja saatejuht on Kerli Kivistu.
Lõuna-Koreas on viimastel aastakümnetel toimunud plahvatuslik majanduse areng. Piisab vaid Korea poolsaare öistest satelliidipiltidest, et saada aru, kummas on parem elujärg. Peale hüppelise majandusarengu tänu kõrgtehnoloogiliste toodete ekspordile on Lõuna-Korea võtnud suuna pehme jõu arendamisele popkultuuri kaudu: kõik meist on kuulnud K-popist ning Korea telesarjadest. Küll aga pole see edulugu tulnud sugugi probleemideta. Fassaadi taha vaadates ilmnevad tõsised sotsiaalmajanduslikud probleemkohad, millest aru saamiseks tuleb mõista ka riigi kultuurilist tausta ja olude järsu muutumise tagajärgi. Milline on K-popi staaride elu kulisside taga ja kuidas on see seotud Lõuna-Korea kultuurilise ja majandusliku taustaga? Miks keelduvad paljud Lõuna-Korea naised meestega suhetes olemisest ja laste saamisest? Miks moodustab Samsung Group rohkem kui viiendiku riigi SKTst? Eelmise aasta Democracy Indexi kohaselt on Lõuna-Korea täielik demokraatia, kuid millised probleemid riigis siiski võimude lahususe ja õigusriigi aspektist esinevad? Saates võtavad sõna Korea-temaatika eksperdid Jaana ja Aleksander. Vestlust juhib Harald ning saate lõikas kokku Tõnn.
The Whale Tales Podcast is back this month with two incredible guests! We welcomed researchers Caroline Weir and Morgan Martin to the pod to talk about their paper “Peale's dolphins (Lagenorhynchus australis) are acoustic mergers between dolphins and porpoises” (as featured in this month's Patreon Journal Club!) as well as all things Peale's Dolphins! We […]
What You Need to Know is Donald Trump's holy week message: Make prayer and Christianity fundamental again in America! There's a really neat story about Norman Vincent Peale (The Power of Positive Thinking) and Donald Trump's upbringing. Peale was always about the inspiration of Christ and faith. Trump's promotion of a new “God Bless the USA Bible” should only be seen as a good thing, particularly as we turn our attention to this Holy Week! Let's all put Scripture at the center. Brent Hamachek, Executive Vice President at Human Events and Board Member of Bridge Charity, joins Ed to discuss his new book: Dissidently Speaking: Change the Words, Change the War. The original ideas of America, including the limited form of government, have become dissident ideas like they were in the Communist rule of Eastern Europe. Hamachek explains to Ed how his book shows a path through the war we are fighting, not just with one another, but also within ourselves. Our sloppy use of language has clouded our ability to think clearly and skeptically. Get his book here! Col. John Mills (Ret.), retired army colonel and author of The Nation Will Follow and War Against the Deep State, joins Ed to discuss the government's censorship industrial complex. Col. Mills identifies how censorship impacts the citizenry directly, even experiencing de-platforming himself. There must be a better way for the common citizen to remedy the censorship issue rather than monumental and expensive court battles. Wrap Up: The DC Bar is starting a trial next week against Jeff Clark for being a good lawyer, a smart lawyer, a lawyer who was an advocate for his client - President Donald Trump. I regret that there aren't more lawyers saying out loud how wrong this is, what's happening to Jeff Clark.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What You Need to Know is Donald Trump's holy week message: Make prayer and Christianity fundamental again in America! There's a really neat story about Norman Vincent Peale (The Power of Positive Thinking) and Donald Trump's upbringing. Peale was always about the inspiration of Christ and faith. Trump's promotion of a new “God Bless the USA Bible” should only be seen as a good thing, particularly as we turn our attention to this Holy Week! Let's all put Scripture at the center. Dr. Jeffrey E. Paul is a professor and most recently author of Winning America's Second Civil War: Progressivism's Authoritarian Threat, Where It Came from, and How to Defeat It. He joins Ed to discuss his book and how the progressive long march through the institutions came about, resulting in the total domination of academia by left-wing forces. This has displaced the authoritative view in the United States: the view of the American founders. Wrap Up: The DC Bar is starting a trial next week against Jeff Clark for being a good lawyer, a smart lawyer, a lawyer who was an advocate for his client - President Donald Trump. I regret that there aren't more lawyers saying out loud how wrong this is, what's happening to Jeff Clark.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
With so many books out there, it's easy to get paralyzed and confused as to what to read. Today, I'm going to share the top ten books I would take with me if congress declared a law that said people can only own ten books. These are the books that have changed my life. The Top Ten Books for the growing Christian. Leaders are readers. Everything you want to become or achieve by definition is something you will have to learn to do or imitate from someone else. The quickest path to get there is to read and imitate those who have gone before you. John Wooden, who coached his UCLA team to 10 NCAA basketball championships, was a reader. On the day of his middle school graduation, his father gave him $2 and a card with the following advice: 1. Be true to yourself. 2. Help others. 3. Make each day your masterpiece. 4. Drink deeply from good books, especially the Bible. 5. Make friendship a fine art. 6. Build a shelter against a rainy day. 7. Pray for guidance and count and give thanks for your blessings every day. This is a great list, but I want to concentrate on item four: Drink deeply from good books, especially the Bible. Here are a couple of things to note about this advice. First, he mentions good books. There are a ton of books that aren't worth reading. You know you are reading a good book if the following criteria are met: · You can read and reread it · It inspires you to action, change or imitation · It moves you · It typically focuses on principles that are useful in a variety of situations · It's often been around a while and has a reputation for being good Secondly, Joshua Wooden highlights the Bible as especially unique. The Bible meets all of the above criteria while adding: · A clear path to eternal life · How to know who God is, what he is like and what he expects of us · Comfort, encouragement and guidance in life Reading won't necessarily make you a great coach, but it will increase your chances of making this life count. I'd like to give you my top ten list of good books. These are books that I've read and reread many times. I've read many books and these have impacted me greatly. I will classify them by genre. · The Bible. This goes without saying, but there is a reason we should be reading, rereading and memorizing this on a daily basis. If we don't read anything else, this is the one book that we need to know cover to cover. 1. Spiritual Book: “The Imitation of Christ” by Thomas A'Kempis a. This is my most read book outside of the Bible. “Spiritual Formation” is a buzzword in Christian circles today. A'Kempis wrote the book on spiritual formation 500 years ago. Written by a man living in a monastery, it is filled with scripture and insight into living a godly and holy life. I can't read it without getting completely convicted about the state of my interior life, motivations and sinful nature. Two bits of advice when starting this book: i. Read it one chapter a day along with your Bible. This is a book for meditation and consideration not rapid consumption ii. Get past the age and religious bias against this book. Yes, he was a Catholic monk. Yes, it's an old book. However, human nature doesn't change and the issues he deals with in this book are as relevant as the day it was originally printed. 2. Time management and priorities, “The One Thing” by Gary Keller a. Keller is the founder of Keller Williams Real Estate Corporation. He helps us get out of the weedy third soil by advising his readers to daily ask themselves the question, “What's the one thing I can do such that by doing it everything else will be easier or unnecessary?” b. This book will enable you to overcome paralysis caused by too much information, distraction, busyness and other demands that can overwhelm us. 3. Personal Growth: “How to fail at almost everything and still win big” by Scott Adams a. Adams created the Dilbert cartoon series. In this book he shares about his life, medical challenges, setbacks and successes and offer suggestions on how to find a path for growth that fits how God made you. Some of the ideas that I go back to over and over again: i. Develop your “Talent Stack.” You may not have legendary talent in one area, but through grit and determination you can become really good at five or more skills. The combination of five “pretty talented” areas is remarkable. ii. Use affirmations. I find this advice an updated and repackaged version of Jesus' teaching on faith in Mark 11:24, “…Whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” 4. How to build your faith level and become more optimistic. “The Power of Positive Thinking” by Norman Vincent Peale. a. Peale wrote this book while working as a church minister. He borrows scripture from the Bible and creates a “crossover” book that helps non-disciples apply Jesus' teaching on faith to tackle real world problems like making money, getting promoted or anything else. As a disciple, this book has incredible value in both the spiritual and secular parts of life. Since Jesus said, “According to your faith will it be done to you” in Matthew 9:29, we should be constantly looking for methods of increasing our faith in an increasingly cynical world. Peale offers sound advice on how to build a firm foundation of faith. 5. Books on Relationship Building. “How to Win Friends and Influence People” by Dale Carnegie. a. This is the GOAT (greatest of all time) when it comes to building and developing relationships. Your Friendships, business relationships, family relationships and relationships with non-believers will start multiplying and deepening when you put Carnegie's lessons into practice. b. Carnegie's advice to be interested in people and ask questions is worth the price of the book alone. This trait is completely missing in about 90% of the people I meet and leads to dead, one-way relationships. Assimilate this one tip and you will immediately distinguish yourself as a friend magnet. 6. Books on money and money management. “The Millionaire Next Door” by Thomas Stanley. a. This was a tough one. There are a lot of books on money out there. I've never been great at handling or saving money. In order to compensate for this weakness, I've read a ton of books on money management. This area is an example of how knowing more won't make you better, it's all about practicing time-honored principles. The reason why I like Stanley's book is that he devoted his life to understand how rich people get rich. The paradoxical message is that most rich people got that way by not acting “rich.” They save money from every paycheck, never pay more than $10 for a bottle of wine, and don't drive fancy cars. Instead of reading mind-numbing insight on the benefits of hedge-fund investing, it helped me identify and imitate the key traits of people who were better at money management than me. It's paid off for me. 7. Fantasy books. “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy by JRR Tolkien a. My mom was an English teacher and she would bring home books from her classes for me to read at home. I became a fantasy fan by reading from Robert Heinlein and JRR Tolkein. I remember reading “The Hobbit” and falling in love with fantasy. Upon rereading Tolkien's work, I'm struck by how writers have gotten much better over the last 100 years. Tolkien needed a good editor to cut out entire chapters of his trilogy. Peter Jackson did a great job reducing the trilogy to its essential content in his movie series. However, the Lord of the Rings is still the gamechanger when it comes to fantasy. All other books are measured against his groundbreaking “world-building” novel. Another side benefit is the messianic theme running throughout the book. This book honors courage, masculinity, sacrifice and brotherhood in an age where these qualities are often under attack. 8. Biography. “The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt” by Edmund Morris. a. I've read so many great biographies that this was hard to choose. Morris highlights Roosevelt's journey from sickly, weakling childhood to robust, vigorous, and courageous manhood. In the past, people learned from biography as the primary source of instruction. I couldn't help but be both inspired and called higher by Roosevelt's conscious labor to become a better man. Here is his counsel on how to overcome fear: i. “at the outset almost every man is frightened when he goes into action, but that the course to follow is for the man to keep such a grip on himself that he can act just as if he was not frightened. After this is kept up long enough it changes from pretense to reality, and the man does in very fact become fearless by sheer dint of practicing fearlessness when he does not feel it.” 9. Books on mindset. “As a man thinketh” by James Allen a. The King James Version of Proverbs 23:7 reads “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” This book develops the idea that our outer, physical world is simply a reflection of our inner, mental or spiritual world. Nothing is more relevant for a strong disciple than this concept. Paul echoes the importance of taking charge of our thought life in 1 Corinthians 10:5, “…we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” This book went on to form the foundation for so many other books like “Think and Grow Rich” and “The Secret.” Each one is built on the idea that if you change your thinking, you will change your life. If you don't like to read, you'll like this one. It's a tiny book. 10. Books on Marriage. “The Seven Principles for making marriage work” by John Gottman. a. This book is the best of all books on marriage. He studied marriage in his “love lab” and found out how to predict whether a couple would be stay married or divorce with over 90% accuracy. The principles of strong marriages and the traits of weak marriages offer a pathway to a life of ever-strengthening love. One of the primary triggers for me to seek God originally was my desire to have a successful marriage. The combination of God, God's word and advice from books like Gottman's have enabled me to exceed my most fanciful wishes. 11. Other notable mentions a. Any book by Brian Tracy. His books repeat over and over, but his best is “Maximum Achievement.” You will hear echoes from this book in his other books. b. I would hate to be limited to only ten books. I read voraciously and don't want to give the impression you should cap your reading at only a few. But I'd like to leave you with a few more thoughts: i. It's better to choose a few “good books” and reread them than to simply hope the next book will offer a silver bullet for your problem. ii. Find a way to take in more reading. Many people are limited by their reading ability or lack of desire to read. There are so many ways to take in good reading. Chief in my mind is audiobooks. Even if you don't like reading, you can gain the benefit of books simply by listening to them read to you. Find a way to love reading.
5. märtsi "Mehed ei nuta" peateemad: - Johannes Erm kerkis sise-MMil seitsmevõistluses pronksini. Selge tõestus, et töö käib ja õiges suunas? Äkki on just Erm Eesti esilootus olümpial? - WRC otsustas äkitselt loobuda hübriidmootoritest. Mida see nüüd praktikas tähendab? - Jalgpalli ja korvpalli eestvedamisel püütakse Tallinna rajada 12 000 pealtvaatajat mahutavat halli. On see realistlik? On see üldse vajalik - või vastab sellele küsimusele uudis novembrikuise Eesti-Poola EM-valikmängu väljamüümisest juba täna? - Kodune jalgpallihooaeg algas, aga esialgu ilma intriigita? - Selver/TalTechi võrkpallimeeskond tõukas maratonfinaali järel Balti liiga troonilt Tartu BigBanki. Tartu jäi teiseks ka naiste seas, kaotades Läti klubile RSU/MSG. - HC Tallinn panigi meistriliiga ja esiliiga võistkondadega "poe kinni". - Kas Eesti meistritiitel küsimärgi all: BC Kalev/Cramo jääb ilmselt hooaja lõpuni ilma Mihkel Kirvesest?
Seekord oli Algorütmis külas Omniva innovatsiooni- ja tehnoloogiajuht Martti Kuldma, kes jagas kogemusi Omniva organisatsiooni transformatsioonist. Räägitud sai ka lugusid Skype ja Pipedrive ammustest muutustest ning nende pikemast mõjust.Episoodi veavad Tiit Paananen ja Martin Kapp.Algorütmi toetavad Pipedrive, Nortal ja Veriff.
Tänases saates räägime, miks kohtusid Eesti mänguarendajad kultuuriministriga ja arutame uute graafikakaartide üle. Peale kõige muu. Kõige muu sees räägime Apple Vision Prost, mis tuleb varsti ja koos mängudega. Sonyl on ka mingi kiiver tulemas, mis see teeb? Martin on mänginud indihitt Planet of Lanat, Rein on Laika: Aged Through Bloodi läbi teinud, aga juttu tuleb veel paljudest muudest mängudest. Soovituseks on Steami majandamismängude allahindlus. Lingilist: https://www.eurogamer.net/digitalfoundry-2024-nvidia-announces-rtx-40-series-super-graphics-cards https://www.currys.co.uk/techtalk/gaming-news/best-gaming-computing-tech-ces-2024.html https://www.eurogamer.net/apple-vision-pro-will-receive-new-spatial-games-including-what-the-golf-and-more https://www.theverge.com/2024/1/8/24030930/sony-vr-spatial-smart-control-ring-ces https://www.eurogamer.net/sea-of-thieves-reportedly-being-considered-for-playstation-and-switch-release https://www.eurogamer.net/xbox-developer-direct-coming-this-month-featuring-indiana-jones-avowed-and-hellblade-2
The Power of Positive Thinking by Norman Vincent Peale is a self-help book that explores the impact of optimism and positive thoughts on your life. Peale emphasizes the influence of one's thoughts on shaping experiences and achieving success. This small book has sold over 5 million copies since it was first published in 1952. I recently purchased a copy from our local Barnes & Noble and reread it because our lives were changing again. Let me explain. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/patrick-ball/message
Apple is preparing to stop sales of the Apple Watch in the U.S. after a decision by the ITC left the company with little choice. GM is putting its worst foot forward in trying to explain why it is not supporting CarPlay in future cars—this time they say it is for safety reasons. The Apple vs Beeper battle is still ongoing this week. Brought to you by: MasterClass: This holiday season, Give One Annual Membership and Get One Free at MASTERCLASS.com/dalrymple. Right now you can get Two Memberships for the Price of One at MASTERCLASS.com/dalrymple. Offer terms apply. Show Notes: The Athletic joins Apple News+ Apple Pausing Sales of Apple Watch Series 9 and Ultra 2 in U.S. Due to Patent Dispute Beeper vs Apple battle intensifies: Lawmakers demand DOJ investigation NordVPN app now available on Apple TV GM's ‘Safety' Excuse for Dropping CarPlay Shows and movies we're watching Echoes, Netflix Young Wallander, Netflix Collateral, Netflix The Innocent, Netflix House, Hulu Key and Peale, Netflix
The Poulenc Trio, who is internationally recognized for their classical and contemporary chamber music, dropped by Midday in advance of their upcoming Candlelight Concert performance at The Peale Musuem. Two members of the trio, pianist Irina Kaplan Lande and bassoonist Bryan Young, joined Tom to give a glimpse of what audiences can expect tomorrow. The Poulenc Trio will perform December 2nd at the Peale Museum in Baltimore. The next show in the Candlelight Concert Series is December 10th at Howard County Community College and will feature musicians from the Heifetz International Music Institute.Email us at midday@wypr.org, tweet us: @MiddayWYPR, or call us at 410-662-8780.
Today's episode features: Artist Titian Ramsay Peale Sponsored by 2 Complicated 4 History Produced by Primary Source Media
Day 231 Today's Reading: 1 John 1 My wife and I have been married for more than two decades, and what she told me at the beginning of our marriage was both genius and biblical. Cindy said to me, “I will never complain or fight you on the amount of time you spend in the Word and in prayer. Because when you pray and read the Bible, you are a better husband, a better father, a better pastor, and a better man.” My wife is a very wise woman. Cindy and the apostle John give us the prerequisite for great relationships. Here's how John puts it: “If we keep living in the pure light that surrounds him, we share unbroken fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, continually cleanses us from all sin” (1 John 1:7, TPT). Fellowship with one another. The word fellowship is a strong relationship word in the Bible. The word itself means “to share” and “to be in partnership with.” Real fellowship is walking in agreement and in the same direction. In The Living Church, pastor and writer John R. W. Stott provides the three components of true Christian fellowship: our common inheritance, our common service, and our mutual responsibility. Where does this fellowship start? This is important: our fellowship with people is contingent on our walk with God. In order for there to be fellowship, according to 1 John 1:7, there must be light and blood. The light keeps everything open and accountable; the blood keeps everything forgivable if there is a sin encounter. When Cindy was urging me to my knees and the Bible, she was protecting our fellowship as husband and wife. There is no healthy, thriving relationship without light and blood. We need light and blood to deal with sin because sin is the corrupter of all relationships, starting with the most important one, with God. Why is sin damaging to all relationships? Sin alters all relationships. The essence of sin is selfishness. It's always “me and mine” first, where God, who is without sin, thinks of you and me first. In Why Prayers Are Unanswered, John A. Lavender retells a story about Norman Vincent Peale. When Peale was a boy, he found a cigar, so he slipped into an alley and lit up. It didn't taste very good, but it made him feel very grown-up—until he spotted his father coming toward him. Knowing he'd get into trouble if his father caught him smoking, he quickly put the cigar behind his back and tried to act casual. Desperate to divert his father's attention, Norman pointed to a billboard advertising the circus. “Can I go, Dad? Please, let's go when the circus comes to town.” His father's reply taught Peale a lesson he never forgot. “Son,” he answered quietly but firmly, “never make a petition while at the same time trying to hide a smoldering disobedience.” Light exposes sin. Blood forgives sin. My walk with Jesus has a direct bearing on my fellowship, not only with my family but with all people. If I am walking in the light, then I have fellowship, John says. What does it mean to walk in the light? It is to live a life that is scrutinized by the Spirit, and that's open and honest to those around you. When there is no darkness, that means nothing is hidden. When I am giving marital counseling and seeing that there is a great divide in the relationship between husband and wife, my first question to them is, “Tell me about your devotional life.” While the couple is wanting to fix a toilet seat not put down, socks not picked up, and meals not on time, the real issue is light and blood. Inevitably I hear from them both that their time in the Word and prayer is nonexistent—and so is their relationship with each other. Fellowship with one another is contingent on light that exposes our life, and blood forgives whatever is expo
Is rural America endangered, thriving, or just scraping by? The answer depends on who you ask and where you ask. As we finish our mini-series on change in rural communities, we're exploring the challenges and opportunities of rural life in the 21st century. Hear from everyday people reflecting on their communities and how they are adapting and reinventing themselves. View the episode transcript. Visit the Museum on Main Street website's story portal to share your own story about rural America! Thanks to our storytelling partners at Be Here Stories at The Peale, Baltimore's Community Museum. Use the online recording tool to tell the Smithsonian about how you experience rural America. This episode was written, produced and edited by Better Lemon Creative Audio. Your hosts are Hannah Hethmon and Bobby Harley.
Rural America has always been more nuanced and diverse than you often see in popular depictions. People have always experienced rural America in different ways -- for better or worse -- and their experiences have helped shape our rural culture. In this episode, join us in exploring rural identity. What does it mean to grow up in a small townhow? How do people in rural areas build and maintain their identities? How do they define themselves? View the episode transcript. Visit the Museum on Main Street website's story portal to share your own story about rural America! Thanks to our storytelling partners at Be Here Stories at The Peale, Baltimore's Community Museum. Use the online recording tool to tell the Smithsonian about how your have experienced rural America. This episode was produced for the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service by Better Lemon Creative Audio. Hannah Hethmon and Bobby Harley are your hosts. Produced, written and edited by Hannah Hethmon. Additional writing by Bobby Harley.
Listen in as rural Americans talk about the work -- creative, unique, and sometimes exhausting -- they do. It's a revealing look at how work helps form the backbone of American society, no matter where you live. We all contribute our efforts (paid or unpaid) to the life, economy, and character of our communities. Rural communities today are at a new crossroads -- a meeting point of ideas where they can chart their future. In this episode, we're exploring the past, present and future of work in rural America through the voices of everyday people. First jobs, hard jobs, odd jobs, unusual jobs, ancient jobs ... these storytellers have seen it all. View the episode transcript. Visit the Museum on Main Street website's story portal to share your own story about rural America! Thanks to our storytelling partners at Be Here Stories at The Peale, Baltimore's Community Museum. Use the online recording tool to tell the Smithsonian about how you have experienced rural America. This episode was produced for the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service by Better Lemon Creative Audio. Hannah Hethmon and Bobby Harley are your hosts. Produced, written and edited by Hannah Hethmon.
Tänases saates räägime riistvara- ja tarkvaraarenduse suhetest Eesti idufirma Vool näitel. Millised on suurimad väljakutsed, kui sa teed üht tarka laadijat, millega suhtleb paarkümmend erinevat API-t? Mis teeb Tesla API eriliseks? Miks on erinevad arendajad eri tubades? Saatekülaliseks on Voolu peaarhitekt Elar Nellis. Algorütmi veavad Priit Liivak Nortalist, Martin Kapp Pipedrive'ist ja Tiit Paananen Veriffist.
------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter 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 This show is sponsored by Enlites, Learning & Development done differently. Check the website here: http://enlites.com/ Dr. Lee Dugatkin is a Professor of Biology and Distinguished Arts and Sciences Scholar in the Department of Biology at the University of Louisville. He is a behavioral ecologist and historian of science and his main area of research interest is the evolution of social behavior. He is the author of numerous books, including, Behind the Crimson Curtain: The Rise and Fall of Peale's Museum, How to Tame a Fox and Build a Dog, and textbooks like Principles of Animal Behavior, and Evolution. His latest book is Power in the Wild: The Subtle and Not-So-Subtle Ways Animals Strive for Control over Others. In this episode, we focus on Power in the Wild. We talk about dominance, and the relationship between dominance and cooperation. We discuss the costs of power. We talk about how animals assess potential opponents, and bystander effects and audience effects in challenges. We discuss how high-ranking individuals can promote prosociality within the group. We talk about power struggles between individuals of opposites sexes. Finally, we discuss group power. -- A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS/SUPPORTERS: PER HELGE LARSEN, JERRY MULLER, HANS FREDRIK SUNDE, BERNARDO SEIXAS, OLAF ALEX, ADAM KESSEL, MATTHEW WHITINGBIRD, ARNAUD WOLFF, TIM HOLLOSY, HENRIK AHLENIUS, JOHN CONNORS, FILIP FORS CONNOLLY, DAN DEMETRIOU, ROBERT WINDHAGER, RUI INACIO, ZOOP, MARCO NEVES, COLIN HOLBROOK, SIMON COLUMBUS, PHIL KAVANAGH, MIKKEL STORMYR, SAMUEL ANDREEFF, FRANCIS FORDE, TIAGO NUNES, ALEXANDER DANNBAUER, FERGAL CUSSEN, HAL HERZOG, NUNO MACHADO, JONATHAN LEIBRANT, JOÃO LINHARES, STANTON T, SAMUEL CORREA, ERIK HAINES, MARK SMITH, JOÃO EIRA, TOM HUMMEL, SARDUS FRANCE, DAVID SLOAN WILSON, YACILA DEZA-ARAUJO, ROMAIN ROCH, DIEGO LONDOÑO CORREA, YANICK PUNTER, ADANER USMANI, CHARLOTTE BLEASE, NICOLE BARBARO, ADAM HUNT, PAWEL OSTASZEWSKI, NELLEKE BAK, GUY MADISON, GARY G HELLMANN, SAIMA AFZAL, ADRIAN JAEGGI, NICK GOLDEN, PAULO TOLENTINO, JOÃO BARBOSA, JULIAN PRICE, EDWARD HALL, HEDIN BRØNNER, DOUGLAS FRY, FRANCA BORTOLOTTI, GABRIEL PONS CORTÈS, URSULA LITZCKE, SCOTT, ZACHARY FISH, TIM DUFFY, SUNNY SMITH, JON WISMAN, MORTEN EIKELAND, DANIEL FRIEDMAN, WILLIAM BUCKNER, PAUL-GEORGE ARNAUD, LUKE GLOWACKI, GEORGIOS THEOPHANOUS, CHRIS WILLIAMSON, PETER WOLOSZYN, DAVID WILLIAMS, DIOGO COSTA, ANTON ERIKSSON, CHARLES MOREY, ALEX CHAU, AMAURI MARTÍNEZ, CORALIE CHEVALLIER, BANGALORE ATHEISTS, LARRY D. LEE JR., OLD HERRINGBONE, STARRY, MICHAEL BAILEY, DAN SPERBER, ROBERT GRESSIS, TOM ROTH, IGOR N, JEFF MCMAHAN, JAKE ZUEHL, BARNABAS RADICS, MARK CAMPBELL, TOMAS DAUBNER, LUKE NISSEN, CHRIS STORY, MANUEL OLIVEIRA, KIMBERLY JOHNSON, AND BENJAMIN GELBART! A SPECIAL THANKS TO MY PRODUCERS, YZAR WEHBE, JIM FRANK, ŁUKASZ STAFINIAK, TOM VANEGDOM, BERNARD HUGUENEY, CURTIS DIXON, BENEDIKT MUELLER, VEGA GIDEY, THOMAS TRUMBLE, KATHRINE AND PATRICK TOBIN, JONCARLO MONTENEGRO, AND AL NICK ORTIZ! AND TO MY EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS, MATTHEW LAVENDER, SERGIU CODREANU, AND BOGDAN KANIVETS!
Join Pacific Mammal Research (PacMam) scientists to learn about different marine mammals each episode! We discuss a little about the biology, behavior and fun facts about each species. Have fun and learn about marine mammals with PacMam! This week: The Commerson's dolphin Presenters: Cindy Elliser, Katrina MacIver Music by Josh Burns Sources: https://www.marinebio.org/species/commersons-dolphins/cephalorhynchus-commersonii/ https://oceanwide-expeditions.com/blog/mysteries-of-antarctica-the-commerson-s-dolphin https://seaworld.org/animals/facts/mammals/commersons-dolphin/ https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Cephalorhynchus_commersonii/#A9D5ED70-5253-4F4F-9369-E324EA316FEF https://oceanwide-expeditions.com/to-do/wildlife/commerson-s-dolphin https://us.whales.org/whales-dolphins/species-guide/commersons-dolphin/ New research: Kyhn et al 2010 - Narrowband high frequency clicks: https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/213/11/1940/9821/Echolocation-in-sympatric-Peale-s-dolphins Garaffo et al 2011 - Modeling habitat of Peales, Dusky and Commersons: https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v421/p217-227/ Yoshida et al 2014 - Sound variation in captivity: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0376635714001855 Riccialdelli et al 2013 - Ontogenetic diet shift: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00300-013-1289-5 Coscarella et al 2011 - body size and ranging patterns relating to sociality https://academic.oup.com/jmammal/article/92/3/544/866487 Durante et al 2022 - Population structure with female philopatry and male dispersal https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-26192-0
Today's Flashback Friday is from episode 560, published last August 26, 2015. If you are in control of your life your kids do not talk back to you, you tell the waiter your food is subpar and you believe in every single word you say. If the aforementioned doesn't ring true for you then you need to “grow a pair” and get your house in order. If you decide not to tell someone they are stealing your time and money at your business then by default you are condoning it. Larry believes you are providing people a service by telling them the truth. They need to experience the failure and the pain in order to allow them to learn from their mistakes. Keeping quiet doesn't help anybody. https://larrywinget.com/ Last call for Jason Hartman University Live in San Diego. Key Takeaways: Jason's Editorial 1:58 Our 2 day content driven real estate investment course, JHU Live! in sunny San Diego 3:33 The Venture Alliance trip to Newport Rhode Island in the last days of September 4:56 Is this the beginning of the economic meltdown 6:04 Content for JHU Live includes specialists in land contracts and investment property lenders Larry Winget Interview 8:07 Entitlement is the biggest enemy to our society 8:59 People need stronger opinions and need to stand up for them 9:44 Living on the edge is what gets one into history books 10:50 The “I have a pair” test 12:16 If you put up with something you condone it 12:50 If you want to do the other party a service speak up about crappy service 13:54 Peale's “ruined by praise than saved by criticism” quote 14:57 Ground your opinion and refuse to create drama 16:14 I provoke people on purpose 17:33 Which is better having rabid fans or rabid enemies 19:35 I can count on my haters, they buy my products 20:28 Numbness is a caused by a of lack of confidence in a speaker's' faith in what they say 21:51 Businesses can grow a pair by refusing to tolerate thieves or 20% of their employees 23:27 We expect more out of our government than we expect out of ourselves 25:21 Being in the middle is a safe place but it's no fun 27:12 Honest and open communication isn't welcome in a world of political correctness 28:44 I respect all opinions on my social media page 30:38 It's not about changing somebody else it's always about yourself 32:49 Kid's need to experience failure and friends need the truth Follow Jason on TWITTER, INSTAGRAM & LINKEDIN Twitter.com/JasonHartmanROI Instagram.com/jasonhartman1/ Linkedin.com/in/jasonhartmaninvestor/ Call our Investment Counselors at: 1-800-HARTMAN (US) or visit: https://www.jasonhartman.com/ Free Class: Easily get up to $250,000 in funding for real estate, business or anything else: http://JasonHartman.com/Fund CYA Protect Your Assets, Save Taxes & Estate Planning: http://JasonHartman.com/Protect Get wholesale real estate deals for investment or build a great business – Free Course: https://www.jasonhartman.com/deals Special Offer from Ron LeGrand: https://JasonHartman.com/Ron Free Mini-Book on Pandemic Investing: https://www.PandemicInvesting.com
Apple kuulutas välja enda AR/VR-prillid Vision Pro. Mis me sellest arvame ja kas see on üldse mängimiseks mõeldud seade? Rein on mänginud Diablo IV, Martin on mänginud System Shocki ja Rainer on mänginud Street Fighter VI ja viimast Zeldat. Paar uudist on ka veel, nii Meta Questi, Counter-Strike 2 ja Disco Elysiumi kohta. Soovituseks on Payday 2, mis on Epicus tasuta. Lingid: https://www.eurogamer.net/apple-unveils-3499-augmented-reality-vision-pro-headset https://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/meta-quest-gaming-showcase-2023-everything-announced/ https://www.eurogamer.net/report-details-allegations-of-toxic-behaviour-ip-theft-at-disco-elysium-developer https://www.eurogamer.net/digitalfoundry-2023-counter-strike-2s-first-major-update-has-arrived-ahead-of-its-summer-launch https://www.eurogamer.net/nintendos-1-2-switch-sequel-announced-out-this-month https://www.eurogamer.net/nintendo-reportedly-sitting-on-1-2-switch-sequel-after-it-tested-horrib
Inside the Wolf’s Den an Entrepreneurial Journey with Shawn and Joni Wolfswinkel
In this riveting Inside The Wolfs Den episode, Shawn and Joni interview successful real estate entrepreneur Mark Owens. Now a thriving mentor and multi-millionaire with over 100 rental units, Mark coaches investors to acquire and build robust property portfolios. However, life was not always so bright for the passionate real estate investor. Listen in as he recounts the incredible true life stories of his early years in Baltimore, where he navigated a dark path riddled with drugs, guns, and crime, culminating in a slew of bank robberies and ultimately serving a lengthy sentence in federal prison. While inside, Mark stumbled across the book You Can If You Think You Can by best-selling self-help author Norman Vincent Peale. The chance encounter with Dr. Peale's powerful philosophies would alter Mark's course forever and turn his life around. He recommitted his talents, energy, and experiences toward establishing credit and beginning his transformational real estate journey. Mark's fantastic breakthrough and story of triumph is one that he wants to share with the world as he encourages those who are struggling that it gets better; how anyone can start at rock bottom and become successful. "You can if you think you can." The three business leaders discuss having a strong mindset, believing in yourself, taking complete ownership of your life, and accepting 100% accountability. Mark Owens Link: http://markowens.com
Meil on käes värskelt välja tulnud PlayStation VR2 peakomplekt koos Horizon Call of the Mountain mänguga. Rein räägib, kas see on tõesti kõik nii hea, nagu lubati. Peale selle räägime mõnest uudisest, nagu Angry Birdsi matustest ja Microsofti-Activisioni diilist, ja veel mõnest mängust. Martin on läbi teinud Return to Monkey Islandi ja Rainer on mänginud vastuolulist Atomic Hearti, Rein veel lisaks Call of Duty't ja Returnalit. Soovituseks on Duskers, mis on Epicus tasuta. Lingid: https://www.eurogamer.net/all-xbox-pc-games-set-for-geforce-now-including-call-of-duty-if-microsoft-buys-activision-blizzard https://www.eurogamer.net/microsoft-and-nintendo-sign-binding-10-year-agreement-for-call-of-duty https://www.eurogamer.net/angry-birds-will-leave-android-store-developer-says-its-just-too-popular https://www.theverge.com/2023/2/22/23611152/valve-steam-sale-dates-2023-spring-summer-autumn-winter
Eelmise aasta viimases saates kurtsime, et pole ammu kuulnud, kuidas serverlessi maailmas läheb. Tänases saates me parandame selle vea. Selles oleme saatesse palunud Taavi Rehemägi ja Marek Tihkani Dashbirdist. Taavi oli külaline meie kolmandas episoodis, aastal 2019 ja siis oli Dashbird parajasti raha kaasamas. Kui kaugele nad tänaseks jõudnud on ja millised on olnud arengud serverlessi valdkonnas üldiselt? Teemad: Milleks ta sobib ja milleks mitte Lead time to response Deployment tooling Peamised vead serverlessi juurutamisel Kuidas on arenenud pilveplatvormide toetus serverlessile Milline on serverlessi ja masinõppe kokkupuude Algorütmi veavad Priit Liivak Nortalist, Martin Kapp Pipedrive'ist ja Tiit Paananen Veriffist.
Brief summary of episode:A recent graduate of the IMDA program at UMBC, Adam Droneburg creates wearable art. His art is based in the future apocalypse and created using found objects. His thesis exhibition, Post US, has been recently exhibited in Spark: New Light at the Peale Museum. He is currently the Programs and Exhibition Manager at the Peale museum. The Truth In This ArtThe Truth In This Art is a podcast interview series supporting vibrancy and development of Baltimore & beyond's arts and culture.Mentioned in this episode:Adam DroneburgTo find more amazing stories from the artist and entrepreneurial scenes in & around Baltimore, check out my episode directory. Stay in TouchNewsletter sign-upSupport my podcastShareable link to episodeSPONSORSforaged. a hyper-seasonal eatery: Farm-fresh seasonal plates, beer & wine served in a warm, casual space lined with greenery. each item on the menu is comprised of local and seasonal ingredients. the concept is true to chef Chris Amendola's ethos in the kitchen, one that is deeply rooted in the woods. foragedeatery.com ★ Support this podcast ★
Houdini Peale and George Washington will be linked forever.
Book Vs. Movie: The Adeventures of Captain Underpants The First Children's Book by Dav Pilkey Vs. the 2017 Movie The Margos end their Banned Book Month with a children's media empire, the Captain Underpants series, that has helped millions of kids who were not big fans of reading learn to love books. For some reason, this book and many of its sequels have been banned from libraries in America. In this episode, we try to dig into the popularity, the story behind Dav Pikley's creations, and why people across America are storming school library meetings to ban books. Dav Pilkey of Cleveland, Ohio, went to elementary school in the 1970s and was diagnosed with hyperactive disorder and dyslexia, making him want to avoid the constrictions of regular school life. He drew comic books, wrote stories, and was usually punished for not being able to sit still. Sitting at a desk alone in the school hallways, he created ‘Captain Underpants,” -a superhero who wore underwear and a cape because that is what most superheroes wear in action. In college, he wrote his first book World War Won, about the U.S./USSR arms scare, and won a national competition for student authors. In addition to Captain Underpants, the “Dragon Gets By” series, Dumb Bunnies, and Dog Man are among his many creations. The original Captain Underpants YA novel is about fourth graders George Beard and Harold Hutchins of Piqua, Ohio. They are best friends who write stories and pull lots of pranks at Jerome Horowitz Elementary School. Their teachers and principal are the main antagonists in their daily life, and their adventures are a naughty delight. We are talking fart, poop jokes galore, and using a hypnotizing ring to make their Principal Benny Krupp turn into Captain Underpants. The movie produced by DreamWorks is directed by Nicholas Stoller and has an incredible cast of comedic actors to bring the story to life. It's a delight and was such a hit that Netflix has plenty of Captain Underpants content. So between the book and the film, which did we like better?In this ep, the Margos discuss:Dav Pilkey and how he created so many children's books that click with “tough readers.”Why is this book on the “banned” list so often?The themes of the book The cast: Kevin Hart (George Beard,) Thomas Middleditch (Harold Hutchins,) Ed Helms (Principal Krupp/Captain Underpants,) Nick Kroll (Professor Poopypants,) Jordan Peale (Melvin Sneedly,) Kristen Schaal (Edith,) Brian Posehn (Morty Fyde,) and Dee Dee Rescher as Ms. Tara Ribble.Clips used:The boys in the principal's officeCaptain Underpants: The First Epic Movie 2017 trailerMeet teacher PoopypantsThe principal gets hypnotizedThe boys try to figure out the teacher's name using Captain UnderpantsWeird Al Yankovic theme song Captain UnderpantsMusic: “Think” by Adam LambertBook Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine