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Dans Complètement Foot, David Houdret, Christine Schréder et Nordin Jbari ont débriefé la victoire du Club de Bruges face à Charleroi (4-2). Simon Mignolet a dû sortir sur civière après un violent contact avec Jérémy Petris. Complètement foot - Débriefing des matches du Football belge, Football européen, Diables Rouges, de l'Euro et Coupe du Monde avec les Diables Rouges. Tous les matches de la Jupiler Pro League avec Anderlecht, Club Brugge, Charleroi, Standard, Antwerp, Union Saint-Gilloise, RWDM, Seraing, AS Eupen, KRC Genk, KAA Gent, RFC Liège, les Francs Borains. Mais aussi la Champions League - Ligue des Champions, l'Europa League et la Conference League avec le Barca, le Real Madrid, l'Atletico Madrid, Manchester City, Liverpool, Chelsea, Manchester United, le PSG, Juventus, Inter, Milan AC, Naples, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund. Avec les Diables Rouges : Kevin De Bruyne, Romelu Lukaku, Eden Hazard, Thibaut Courtois, Jérémy Doku, Jan Vertonghen, Koen Casteels, Timothy Castagne, Wout Faes, Arthur Theate, Orel Mangala, Youri Tielemans, Amadou Onana, Yannick Carrasco, Leandro Trossard, Zeno Debast, Dodi Lukebakio, Johan Bakayoko, Michy Batshuayi, Lois Openda, Charles Dekaetelaere, Mike Trésor... Et aussi les plus grands joueurs : Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Kylian Mbappé, Karim Benzema, Mohamed Salah, Harry Kane, Bruno Fernandes, Erling Haaland... C'est le 1er talkshow radio du foot en Belgique. Le dimanche sur VivaCité, radio de la RTBF. Et plus si affinités. Avec David Houdret et la RTBF Sport. Nos consultants sont : Alex Teklak, Nordin Jbari, Clément Tainmont et Guillaume Gillet. Font aussi partie de l'équipe : Christine Schréder, Pieter-Jan Calcoen du journal Het Nieuwsblad, Guillaume Gautier du magazine Le Vif, Jonathan Lange et Christophe Franken de La DH Les Sports+. Merci pour votre écoute Complètement foot, c'est également en direct tous les dimanche de 20h20 à 23h sur www.rtbf.be/vivacité Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Complètement foot sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/1391 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Born, Carolin www.deutschlandfunk.de, Europa heute
Born, Carolin www.deutschlandfunk.de, Europa heute
Born, Carolin www.deutschlandfunk.de, Europa heute
- “La libertà è una conquista preziosa”, spiega il pastore riformato Angelo Cassano nella sua meditazione biblica. Ma tale libertà è un dono prezioso che arriva da Dio attraverso Gesù Cristo, secondo il passo biblico dell'apostolo Paolo che aggiunge un invito: “Non vi lasciate porre di nuovo sotto il giogo della schiavitù”. Proteggere questo dono di Cristo – aggiunge il pastore – è la chiamata che ci è rivolta.- 500 anni fa nasceva il movimento anabattista, nell'ambito dei processi di riforma della Chiesa avviati nel 1517 in Germania ad opera di Martin Lutero. Gli anabattisti furono perseguitati tanto dai cattolici quanto dai riformatori protestanti (in particolare nella Zurigo del riformatore Ulrich Zwingli), a causa della loro pratica del battesimo degli adulti. La pena che veniva loro comminata consisteva, per tragica ironia, nell'annegamento. Il pastore riformato Paolo de Petris, specialista di questa materia storica, ci aiuta a comprendere gli snodi che portarono alla nascita di questo movimento, i cui eredi oggi sono principalmente i mennoniti (presenti negli Stati Uniti) e gli hutteriti. - Il mensile “Voce Evangelica”, della Conferenza delle Chiese evangeliche di lingua italiana in Svizzera, presenta, nel suo numero di febbraio, un dossier a partire dalla “Settimana mondiale dell'armonia interreligiosa”, occasione per parlare della Casa delle religioni di Berna, iniziativa di dialogo e convivenza, che ha appena celebrato i suoi primi 10 anni di vita.
C'est le TGV du flanc carolo, un Zèbre raffolant des aller-retours. Carolo depuis près d'un an, il s'est hissé parmi les meilleurs joueurs de couloir de Pro-League. Il évoque la discipline, Donald Trump, la malbouffe, un Tsunami du flanc, les centres de formation, Mogi Bayat, les Play-Offs, Adem Zorgane et l'esprit tueur. Mais aussi Parait Guiaguon, les transitions, son « papa » Rik De Mil, les frérots, FIFA 2024, les interviews, Samuel Edozie, le laser game, les Matitinos et les fiches de paie. Et bien sûr… le 3e Ronaldo. Jérémy Petris passe « Sur Le Gril ».
They might be two from two so far - but are the Wallabies a genuine shot for the Grand Slam?Christy Doran and Dan Parks return to examine the latest weekend of rugby in the Autumn Nations Series - and the Wallabies' against Scotland and Ireland with former Wallabies assistant coach Petrus du Plessis, and one of the legends of the 1984 Grand Slam tour, Roger Gould. Hosts: Christy Doran & Dan ParksGuests: Roger Gould & Petrus du PlessisProducer: Nick Wasiliev Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-“Caino, dov'è tuo fratello?”. Nel quarto capitolo del libro biblico della Genesi, Dio giudica il primo omicida, Caino, richiamandolo alla responsabilità verso Abele. Eppure il racconto non termina con la condanna a morte del colpevole, bensì con una possibilità di apertura, forse di pentimento, sotto la protezione di Dio. Su questo tema si tiene la meditazione del pastore Paolo de Petris, che nel corso delle ultime settimane ha proposto approfondimenti biblici sui primi quattro capitoli della Genesi.-Una chiesa che discute e che guarda al futuro: le comunità evangeliche riformate ticinesi si sono date appuntamento per una giornata di riflessione sul presente e sulle sfide future delle chiese, promossa dalla Chiesa evangelica riformata nel Ticino (CERT). Gli aspetti critici – come il calo della partecipazione ai culti o la difficoltà ad aggregare le persone giovani – sono stati “messi sul tavolo”, insieme ai progetti nuovi, per un processo continuo di riforma: delle strutture ecclesiastiche, ma anche della vocazione e predicazione.
-La domanda insidiosa del serpente, nel giardino dell'Eden, spinge Adamo ed Eva a credere che, mangiando il frutto proibito, saranno come Dio, avendo la conoscenza del bene e del male. Da questo racconto biblico, tratto dal libro della Genesi, prende avvio la meditazione condotta dal pastore Paolo de Petris. In queste settimane il pastore de Petris tiene un ciclo di riflessioni sui testi biblici che narrano della creazione del mondo e degli esseri umani.-La prevenzione e la formazione sono le strade da percorrere per prevenire abusi e maltrattamenti sui minori. Per la Chiesa evangelica riformata nel Ticino (CERT) bisogna muoversi per tempo, ma anche fare da “sentinelle” nella società. La chiesa organizza un corso sul tema della prevenzione, indirizzato alle persone che insegnano religione evangelica nelle scuole elementari. A realizzare questo incontro, l'ASPI, Fondazione della Svizzera italiana che si occupa di aiuto, sostegno e protezione dell'infanzia. Ce ne parla il presidente della CERT, il pastore Stefano D'Archino e la psicologa Raffaella Brenni Tonella dell'ASPI.
Riconoscere l'altra persona nella sua diversità: è questo il senso della creazione divina del genere umano. Il pastore Paolo de Petris in queste settimane tiene alcuni interventi biblici a partire dai primi quattro capitoli del libro della Genesi. Oggi si sofferma sulla creazione di Eva da parte di Dio. Non sottoposta, ma pari, nella sua singolarità e diversità, nella sua relazione vitale con Adamo.“Non sta a te completare l'opera, ma non puoi esimerti dal provarci”: così la tradizione ebraica esige che, nell'imperfezione che è propria del mondo, ciascuno si rimbocchi le maniche per rendere la realtà migliore, giorno per giorno, pur nella consapevolezza che nessuno potrà portare a compimento il lavoro. Elena Loewenthal, scrittrice e traduttrice, in occasione della recente edizione di “Torino Spiritualità” ha proposto un intervento sul tema “Riparare il mondo”, richiamando alcuni concetti della tradizione ebraica. La creazione di Dio non è perfetta – e l'ebraismo non teme tale imperfezione -, ma la vocazione di ciascuna persona è di fare la propria parte per “aggiustare” qualcosa nel mondo.
‘-I primi capitoli del libro biblico della Genesi sono al centro delle quattro meditazioni proposte dal pastore Paolo de Petris, a partire da questa puntata. Si parte dal tema della creazione: il racconto biblico non vuole tanto spiegare “come” sia nato l'universo, ma “perché” esso sia venuto alla luce, come gesto gratuito e amorevole di Dio. -La spiritualità riformata è troppo cerebrale? “L'intellettualismo teologico”, tipico di certi ambienti protestanti, frena l'esercizio di una spiritualità piena? Una cosa è certa: la spiritualità è una dimensione imprescindibile dell'essere umano, e in quanto tale non può essere né soppressa, né elusa. Ne è convinto Gilles Bourquin, pastore della minoranza francofona della Chiesa cantonale di Berna-Giura-Soletta. Il teologo punta il dito contro un atteggiamento abbastanza diffuso nel mondo protestante storico, e cioè quello di trascurare gli aspetti più propriamente spirituali della fede. -In distribuzione in questi giorni il numero di ottobre del mensile “Voce Evangelica”, della Conferenza delle chiese evangeliche di lingua italiana in Svizzera. Il numero presenta un Dossier sul tema della solidarietà: in questo ambito le comunità di fede, con le loro organizzazioni di aiuto e soccorso, con i loro progetti in tutto il mondo, sono attrici molto importanti. Uno sguardo alla situazione svizzera e in particolare a ciò che succede in casa protestante.
- Mosè, che secondo il libro biblico del Deuteronomio parlava faccia a faccia con Dio, all'inizio della sua missione non si sente all'altezza del compito, perché “pesante di parola”, afflitto cioè da un problema di espressione verbale… eppure Dio lo sceglie: il suo “balbettio” sarà in realtà profetico. Ne parla nella sua riflessione biblica il rabbino Haim Fabrizio Cipriani.- Ansia, pressione alta, insonnia, tachicardia… senza ombra di dubbio, se abbiamo disturbi simili, ci può aiutare soltanto la medicina, quella tradizionale. Esistono però, e la cosa è interessante, degli studi che mettono in relazione la pratica della preghiera e della meditazione con il miglioramento della salute. La preghiera come alleata, anche del nostro fisico. Ne parliamo con il pastore riformato Paolo de Petris, che ha recentemente tenuto una conferenza sull'argomento in Val Bregaglia.
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Tuesday February 13, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Tuesday February 13, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
- L'annuncio della nascita di Gesù a Betlemme è accompagnato dalla parola “pace”, proclamata dagli angeli celesti. Non è un caso, perché per la Bibbia la parola pace indica non solo assenza di conflitti e tensioni, ma anche benessere, quiete, ordine, concordia. La meditazione biblica di questa Vigilia di Natale è tenuta dal pastore Paolo de Petris.- La storia di Natale vista con gli occhi… di un gatto. Scritta da Michael Foreman (editrice Camelozampa, traduttrice Sara Saorin), questa favola racconta, con tratti ironici e molta poesia, i fatti accaduti in quella notte fredda in una stalla: la nascita di un bambino, l'arrivo dei pastori e quello dei magi. Tutto è descritto dal punto di vista di un gatto, che assiste curioso a quanto sta accadendo in quella notte così diversa dalle altre.
- “Vieni, Signore Gesù”: con queste parole si conclude il libro dell'Apocalisse, l'ultimo della Bibbia. Una invocazione che riguarda i credenti di tutti i tempi e che anima ancora oggi la Chiesa, intesa come comunità di credenti. Una parola che offre speranza, mentre si celebra il tempo liturgico dell'Avvento. Su questo testo si tiene la meditazione biblica del pastore Paolo de Petris.- Il fenomeno della povertà è in crescita in Ticino. Riguarda persone di ogni tipo – anziani, giovani, famiglie, singoli – e dopo la pandemia ha visto una progressiva impennata. Il Soccorso d'Inverno – impegnato sul territorio per il sostegno a chi è in difficoltà – ha quasi triplicato i suoi interventi nel giro di pochi anni. Ne parliamo con la direttrice, Paola Eicher. Per commentare i dati sulla povertà e offrire una prospettiva biblica sul tema, interviene anche il pastore Stefano D'Archino, presidente della Chiesa evangelica riformata nel Ticino (CERT).
- L'epistola di Giacomo (cap. 5) chiede di essere pazienti fino alla venuta del Signore. Di quale tipo di pazienza si parla qui? È quella degli oppressi, di coloro che aspettano giustizia e non possono più tollerare la violenza a cui sono sottoposti. Con queste riflessioni il pastore Paolo de Petris tiene una meditazione biblica in occasione di questa seconda domenica di Avvento.- 75 anni fa veniva firmata la Dichiarazione universale dei diritti umani. Un testo di fondamentale valore che nasceva sulle macerie della Seconda guerra mondiale e dello sterminio degli ebrei. Mentre si ricorda che ogni essere umano è portatore di diritti inviolabili, è inevitabile ricordare che nel mondo ancora oggi tante persone soffrono per la violazione di tali diritti. Le donne evangeliche italiane e della Svizzera italiana hanno appena celebrato i “16 giorni di attivismo contro la violenza di genere”, ricordando che le violazioni contro le donne continuano ad avere un terribile impatto su molte sfere della loro vita. Ne parliamo con Daniela Lucci-Cassano.
- Qual è il contenuto della speranza, che ci raggiunge in questa prima domenica di Avvento? Il pastore Paolo de Petris tiene una riflessione biblica a partire da un passo di Geremia, in cui il profeta rivolge parole di speranza ad un popolo che sta vivendo l'esilio. Tali parole arrivano anche oggi a chi vive il Natale come capacità di accogliere il racconto della nascita di Gesù.- La Chiesa evangelica riformata in Svizzera ha realizzato un calendario dell'Avvento online sul tema “il coraggio”. Dal 1 dicembre e fino alla Vigilia di Natale, ogni giorno sarà possibile accedere a un video di una personalità del mondo protestante svizzero, che svelerà un passaggio di un romanzo, di uno scritto, di un racconto che per lui o lei è particolarmente significativo e richiama il tema del coraggio. Le singole porticine possono essere aperte giornalmente andando sui siti mutmacherkalender.ch oppure calendrier-courage.ch
The landmark Lanterman-Petris-Short Act of 1967 was intended to to “end the inappropriate, indefinite, and involuntary commitment of persons with mental health disorders” by setting strict guidelines for handling the involuntary civil commitment of individuals to mental health institutions. While lauded by civil rights advocates, critics contend the law is actually an impediment to care for those suffering from severe mental illnesses, often leading to them being homeless or incarcerated. On this episode of the Capitol Weekly podcast, Rich Ehisen and Dan Morain welcome Sens. Susan Talamantes-Eggman and Roger Niello, two of the three primary sponsors on SB 43, a bill that would add new criteria to the definition of what constitutes someone being considered "gravely disabled," the standard by which a person can be involuntarily held for treatment. 2:28 What is SB 43?3:45 Why Niello is co-sponsoring7:10 A return to institutions?8:50 Jails and mental health10:30 Are we spending state mental dollars wisely?12:30 SB 43's potential impact17:00 Local governments25:00 personal connections27:00 What's different from last year's failed bill?29:40 Worst Week, Dianne Feinstein Want to support the Capitol Weekly Podcast? Make your tax deductible donation here: capitolweekly.net/donations/Capitol Weekly Podcast theme is "Pickin' My Way" by Eddie Lang "#WorstWeekCA" Beat provided by freebeats.io
Welcome to a journey down the rabbit hole of modern society. In this podcast, we dive into the controversial and often overlooked topics that impact our daily lives. From the rising threat of Chinese spy balloons to the ongoing J.K Rowling/ Harry Potter Video Game controversy, we examine the facts and challenge popular beliefs. We also shed light on how industrialized school systems may be indoctrinating future generations and explore the dark side of the music industry with the recent "satanic" Grammy performance by pop artist Sam Smith. Join us as we uncover the truth and spark thought-provoking discussions around current events. Subscribe and leave a 5-star review! ----more---- Donate to support the show by going to https://givesendgo.com/redpillrevolution Our website https://redpillrevolution.co/ Podcast Companion: https://redpillrevolution.substack.com ----more---- Full Transcription Welcome to the Revolution. Hello and welcome. It's Red Pill Revolution. My name is Austin Adams and thank you so much for listening today. I appreciate it. We're gonna jump right into it. We have some very interesting articles that we're gonna discuss from current events, and then we are going to talk all about the topic of the week, which is this week is going to be the education system and the industrialization of the education system more primarily. So we're gonna go back and talk about actually when the Amer Modern American education system came to be. What it is today, how it came to be, what it is today, who the money was provided by through the General Education Board for it to become what it is today, which is an industrialized factory pushing out children and literally, Programming you to become a conformist and somebody who is passive and somebody who is non-creative and a factory worker, just as the man who funded it himself said. So we will discuss that. Before we discuss that though, we are also going to discuss the Satanic performance during the Grammys by performer Sam Smith. All right. Sam Smith performed his hit song, unholy, right? Starting off to a good start there, unholy in a Satanic outfit with, uh, women in bondage all around him with flames all around him. And uh, yeah. And then immediately after that, there's a certain company that was promoting this and sponsoring this show, which is hilarious, and we will talk about who that was once we get into it. After that, we're also going to discuss the Pentagon coming out and saying that talking about the Chinese spy. Which is probably, if nothing else, just great comedy. I cannot believe that this, the white balloon floating through the sky became the, the biggest hit story for how many days . And we'll talk about what my thoughts are on that and why I think it was just a huge distraction for something else that was bigger going on. Uh, so we'll talk about what that is, and then we are also going to discuss the controversy that is surrounding the very new Harry Potter game. Now, I, for one, am stoked about this game. I read my daughter Harry Potter every single night. I love JK Rowling. I posted about her last week. I really appreciate her opinions on the, uh, current events that are going on surrounding the trans movement and some things like that that she's spoken out on, uh, protecting actual women's rights. So there's been some controversy surrounding that. We'll talk about why, but. Just know this. JK Rowling is on the good side, , she is on the good side, and there's not too many of us, right? Especially when it comes to, you know, authors and generally creative people in the the large spotlight of the world. So holding down the Fort JK Rowling, I appreciate you. All right. Then, like I said, we're gonna jump into our main topic of the week, which is all gonna be about how the education system is just indoctrinating your children and turning them into factory workers and how that started, who founded it, why, and how to correct it for you and your family moving forward. So without further ado, let's jump into it. But first things first, I need you to hit that subscribe button if you're new here. I appreciate you so much from the bottom of my heart. I love ya. Thank you for listening. If you're already here around with me every single. I love you too. Thank you. I appreciate you. I love these conversations with you guys. So go ahead and hit that subscribe button. If you are already subscribed, leave a five star review and tell me why you love the podcast. Tell me your favorite episode. Tell me something we should talk about, whatever it is. Tell me a guest that I should have on the show, which is the direction that we're moving here shortly, um, is we will be adding in additional shows with interviews. So tell me who that is, um, or who you think I should have on the show, but. Leave a review, then head over to the red pill revolution.dot com. You'll be able to get a free podcast companion every single week directly through your email, which will include all of the links, all of the articles that are discussed here. It will also include all of the subtopic videos, the full video podcast, the podcast directly to your email every week. And it's free. If you can imagine. Last week I released three different articles that we wrote, um, surrounding the topics that we were talking about that week. So I'll have an article out this week about JK Rowling and Harry Potter's video game In the controversy around that. We will have a article out about the spy balloons, and then we will have a article out as well about Sam Smith at the Grammy's. So, and then obviously we're gonna be writing and putting stuff out about the education system, so at least three, maybe four articles this week directly to your inbox on top of the podcast companion. So what the hell are you doing if you are not subscribed? What are you doing? Just head over there right now, red pill revolution.dot com and follow us on, uh, social media at Red Pill Revolt. All right, that's all I got. Go ahead and subscribe. Five star review. Love ya. Let's jump into it. Welcome to Red Pill Revolution. My name is Austin Adams. Red Pill Revolution started out with me, realizing everything that I knew, everything that I believed, everything I interpreted about my life is through the lens of the information I was spoonfed as a child. Religion, politics, history, conspiracies, Hollywood medicine, money, food, all of it. Everything we know was tactfully written to influence your decisions and your view on reality by those in power. Now I'm on a mission, a mission to retrain and reeducate myself to find the true reality of what is behind that curtain. And I'm taking your ass with me. Welcome to the Revolution. All right. All right. All right. And my best Matthew McConaughey impression, the very first thing we're gonna talk about today is Sam Smith's Grammy performance, where he was dressed as the devil on primetime television with women around him dancing in what appeared to be bondage materials with the flames all around them. it's like in primetime, televis. Right children watching this, uh, in, in one of the most celebrated Hollywood events right now, you have people out there like Alex Jones, who have been talking about Hollywood being satanic, calling them Satanists for decades, and everybody for how long has pointed to Alex Jones and called him a conspiracy theorist, and all of a sudden it's just rubbed in our face constantly from the artwork that was on the wall of Freaky Friday. Mom's, uh, business meeting office that we talked about last week to Sam Smith's Grammy performance to. Basically everything that comes out of Hollywood from the, uh, the cosmetic lines of the Kardashians to, uh, uh, there's basically nothing that you can point to that is not satanic at this point in Hollywood. that's an exaggeration, but this is probably one of the most egregious ones. So we're, there's a lot, a lot of pushback on this, and let's find out why. So this article comes from Yahoo News and it says, did we really need a satanic bondage show at the Grammys? And this again, comes from Yahoo News, which is kind of surprising to me because Yahoo News is primarily left-leaning and even they're critiquing this. All right, so it goes on to say that, wanna know why so many people are giving up on mainstream pop culture? Take a look at Sam Smith and Kim Petra's performance of their hit song, unholy at the Grammy Awards on Sunday night, in case you missed it. Variety described the performance as including Petras dancing in a cage, flanked by some dominatrices wearing satanic headgear. Smith also dawned a satanic top hat as huge flames heated up the stage, you know, wholesome family entertainment, . Uh, now it looks totally possible for a mature adult to watch this and see it for what it is, an aggressive reach for attention through controversy, right? And, and that's what some people have done is like a defense to this, right? When it came to Balenciaga, when it came to even this, you'll see a lot of people are just saying, oh, it's just they're, they're trying to push controversy. Well, here's the thing about. Right When we're talking about people's religions, when we're talking about like the actual good verse e like maybe this isn't the time when Balenciaga is literally subtweeting pedophilia and satanic ritualistic, I don't know, endeavors through their ad campaigns. And then Jamie Lee Curtis gets called out for having a, a, a pedophilia based artwork on her wall. And then, uh, you know, all, all of these things, all of these things that are happening simultaneously over the last, I don't know, two to three years maybe now's not the time to have a Satanic ritual on stage during the Grammys. That's all I'm saying. Maybe , maybe, maybe there's a better time for that and maybe it's not immediately after Balenciaga, Jamie Lee Curtis and all of these people. Epstein like maybe now is not the. Right. Maybe there's a better time for that or maybe there's no reason for it all when you're pushing it during mainstream hours, right? You have children watching the Grammys. It's the Grammys. It's like literally like going to watch American Idol and then all of a sudden they're pushing satanism down your throat and everybody's acting like satanism isn't an actual thing, right? I watched something on Joe Rogan. I was watching the, a recent Joe Rogan episode where it was, ah, gosh, what's the guy's name? Let me see if I can find it. The guy was on Joe Rogan and he was talking about how ridiculous it is that the, the right takes, the idea that there's satanism within high up political positions and within Hollywood and all of these things. Seriously, right? Like Kyle Kolinsky, Kyle Kolinsky, which wasn't, you know, wasn't, wasn't the most crazy positions that he held during this, and I would be happy to speak with him. Um, but. His position was this. He, he went on to Joe Rogan and said something along the lines of the fact that there's real conspiracies out there, right? There's things like Epstein Island are real, but things like the Q Conspiracy, which, yes, there's definitely some crazy weird, unrealistic, bizarre and far reaching positions within the Q movement, but one of them that he called out specifically was that there is, uh, satanic rituals happening in high up positions of Hollywood and government political positions. Right. He, he alluded to the idea that, oh, that's just a conspiracy and everybody wants to call them out. But, you know, Joe Rogan has talked about this specifically, that there's actually things going on like Bohemian Grove, where you have people who are in high political positions, who are in, who are multi-billionaires, who all meet each other at a certain little club. In California, in burn EFS that are supposed to be child sacrifices to a owl God at Bohemian Grove, which again, going back to Alex Jones, he actually went and did undercover work to be there during one of these and saw the whole thing go down. This is real right now. He talked about the comet ping pong pizza thing and like pizza gate and all of that, and how crazy that is. And maybe, maybe so. Maybe that's crazy, but you cannot tell me that there is not satanists riddled within high political and positions within high, uh, societal positions like Hollywood, like music, like politics. You cannot tell me that that is not a thing. It's already been proven in places like Bohemian Grove, and then these things just compound on top of it. Right. So when we see people like Bill Clinton riding on Epstein's plane to go to Epstein Island, bill Gates being best friends, it seems like with Epstein during all of this, right, all of these people having their own islands, and then you look at the, the altars sitting on the top of Epstein Island, you cannot tell me that there is not a deeper issue going on there at all. That is not motivated in some sort of anti, uh, anti Christianity, anti-God satanic ritualistic thing going on there that is self-admitted, in be the Bohemian Grove situation. We already know that to be true. So it's frustrating to me that everybody is still trying to say that you're crazy for saying that these things exist. If you tell me that I'm crazy for believing that Christians exist, everybody would look at you and go, yeah, you're done. And, but you tell people that there's actual satanism in high positions in politics or, or even that they just exist in general. And people all of a sudden think you're a wild conspiracy theorist. It's like, no, there is a good and there is an evil, there is a light and there is a dark it. It's a real thing, guys. Okay? Now that all kind of goes back to the music conversation here, right? The conversation here is that maybe this was a cry for attention. Maybe this was a cry for controversy. Maybe they wanted to get more eyes on the Grammys cuz nobody gives a shit about it at all anymore. Nobody watches the Grammys, at least not that I know. Nobody wa, nobody cares about any of these shows anymore. They're completely irrelevant. So maybe it is a cry for attention and all publicity is good publicity, even if it is Satanic, right? Maybe that's the case, but maybe now is not the time to do that with all these things coming out, like Balenciaga and all of these other campaigns that have been rearing their ugly heads during this time, right? So, . There's my thought on that. All right. It moves on to say that this, um, it says that there was the 1980s satanic panic when politicians wives were able to get congressional hearings held to tackle the supposed scourge of heavy metal bands that seemed harmlessly campy. With the passage of time and last night's Satan bonded show reminded me of that onion headline from 22 years ago. Marilyn Manson now goes door to door trying to shock people . But even if you see the Satanic shtick as more schlocky than disturbing, it's hard to make the case that images of women grinding in cages are appropriate for network television on a Sunday night during prime time, a time when the broadest audience available, including children are watching. Again, we are talking about the Grammy Awards mainstream Pop Music's Oscars, which aired on CBS b s from 8:00 PM Now, one thing about it too is c b s before the show said, ready. What did they say? They said in a tweet, ready to worship. CBS b s, the same CBS b s that you watched Arthur on, pretty sure that was Cbs b s, the same c b s that you throw on kids' cartoons is saying, ready to worship the devil with Sam ha Sam Smith at the Grammy Awards. Now to piggyback off of that and make things even worse on the transition out of the performance, the very next thing that pops on the screen with flames in the background is sponsored by none other than Pfizer, who would have thought, , you cannot write this. Why would they do that? Why would they do that? If I was, if I was sponsoring, you know, how much that ad position costs? Do you know how much Pfizer paid out to have that specific position during the Grammy? On the backs of a Satanic ritual music performance that was going on, whether it was for shock factor or if it was really what happened. Now some people are also showing and talking about the 2000 plus people that died from an earthquake the day following. I'm not saying anything about that, but it's an interesting coincidence. Um, but what in the world, right? So, um, this is not, it goes on to say, this is not to say art shouldn't be provocative. Petris whose past hits include, treat me like a slut. During her acceptance speech, after winning the Grammy best pop duo performance for unholy proclaimed that she was the first transition or transgender woman to win the award. And later backstage explained that she grew up wondering about religion and wanting to be a part of it, but slowly realizing it didn't want me to be a part of it. So it's a take on not being able to choose religion and not being able to live the way that people might want you to live. Because as a trans person, I'm already not kind of wanted in religion. So we were doing a take on that and I was kind of, hell keep Kim, what kind of bullshit response is that? That's the best you got for that. Like, oh, I'm trans. That was literally . Literally her response is, well, don't be mad at me. I'm trans. What a perfect response. What , as far as I'm concerned, this says, Willing. Adults can watch this if they want, but last night's TV audience didn't buy a ticket for this. Indeed, on a show intended for general audiences, it was meant to provoke, to push boundaries and very possibly designed to offend a good portion of the audience. At least 30, 40% of the audience is somebody not far left liberal. Which the fact that you even have to say that like the idea that being a associated with trans or the left is inherently makes you much closer to being on the side of the satanic ritualistic performance is kind of comical. Right. And I don't think that very many people would agree with that, that are on the left that would like this to be happening. Like I, I don't think that's, but the mainstream is trying to say that. Right. Anyways, all right, let's go ahead and read on, it goes on to say, All right. And when you're sticking your finger in the eye of millions of people, it's really hard to argue with those saying that Hollywood produces a mainstream popular culture that is openly intolerant of their values. It's also harder to tell them they're wrong and intolerant. If you would prefer to check out, unplug the TV and homeschool your kids, which we'll get to at the end of this choice is a two-way street. And many are making the informed choice to tune out while they still can. I may be attuned to this, more, attuned to this than some. Almost every Sunday, my wife and I sit back at the pew of a conservative church about once a month. The pastor preaches about how bad things are in America and how our culture is. So Deb botched and depraved. Um, so this must be a very opinionated piece from Yahoo that nobody approved cuz they would never let somebody who goes to church be a part of Yahoo All right. Anyways, uh, and then they have the actual performance here. Let's see if we can see the last. Minute there. So 30 seconds. Or not? Or not. All right. Um, moving on. Moving on. All right. The next thing that we're gonna discuss here is going to be, and I'd be interested to see your guys' thoughts. Do you think that they were being real? Do you think that it was all a ploy for controversy? I don't know. Either way, do better. That's like, that's so like, can't be is the right term. Like just cheap. Cheap. If that's what you're doing for controversy, right? That's like you can just maybe be better at singing and writing songs. You don't have to do satanic stuff to get people's attention. All right. Now the next thing discussed here is that the, the . So if you had been under a rock over the last week, there was a big white balloon floating over the United States for days, and allegedly it was a Chinese spy balloon. Now, if you were to engineer a Chinese spy balloon, a spy balloon, why would you make it white Why? Why is the first color that comes to mind in the sky going to be like they just didn't expect there to be clear skies? I don't know, but it was so easy to see. It looked like, like there was everybody who was zooming in on this, this spy balloon thought it was. They're like, there's the moon and what the hell is that? Right? If, if you're truly spending billions of dollars to spy on the United States, I don't think you're doing it by painting a white balloon and then sending it across the country at 14 miles an hour. , it seems like if China already has all of the information they ever need, you know what they needed to do, even if they're flying over Montana for the, the nuke bases that are there, or whatever's going on there that they were trying to gather data and intel for. You know what they had to do? They had to go to TikTok and they had to flip. You know what? They didn't even have to flip a switch. What is this? 1980. They had to search in the search bar, Montana, nuke site, military personnel, and then they would've had a list of every single person ever, and they would've all been actively scrolling, TikTok, talking about everything they would ever have wanted to know. Why in the hell would China need a spy balloon of all things in 20 2023 to spy on the United States? This seems so comical that they captivated the entire country with this and still managed somehow to make Biden look Incom even more incompetent than he already was in weak. But the fact that this balloon floated over the United States at four miles an hour with some type of solar panels underneath it for days. Days, and we're expected to believe that that was some type of spy balloon. To me, there's absolutely more going on here. Whether it was something to divert the public's attention away from other things that were going on, you know, like Pfizer being tried for crimes against humanity simultaneously. Hmm. Maybe that, which I think, uh, Marjorie Taylor Green brought up within some of the hearings that were going on during that time. Uh, how there was like ungodly amounts of money that were being funneled out of the covid relief sacks going to, you know, all types of horrible things. Um, so I I, I don't see how it was in the diversion. If it was, it worked and the fact that our, the American attention span, it's like, oh, a balloon. There must be nothing else going around that's worthy of news at this time. Like that's the best that they had to divert our attention. And it worked. Right? Like, how is the why? Why are we so easily fooled? Right? What , and if that was true, how, like, there's one of two options here. Option one is that we were truly, truly captivated by a balloon with no other information besides just the fact that there was a balloon. It would've been better if it was like a balloon with like the Chinese flag on it that said like, fuck you, United States or something, That would've been far more entertaining. Like that would've caught my attention better, at least have some good comedy involved. Uh, but it was just a white balloon and just everybody stopped to see what was going on. And somehow we knew it was Chinese before the Chinese even agreed with us. I heard some people saying potentially maybe it was diversion or, or it was some type of test to see if they floated these balloons across the United States simultaneously and like launched E em P attacks. They wanted to test the waters to see how capable we were of tracking them and finding them and how far into the US they would get. Maybe, maybe. But I also think that that, like, just the fact that news companies picked this up so quickly, social media picked this up so quickly. It just seems bizarre to me. Seems bizarre. I don't know, again, I'd be interested to see what your guys' thoughts are. I do not see how this balloon was the best way that China was going to surveil the United States. I, I don't buy it. They already have assets in every single military installation. They have them at every top university. They have every single person including mine, their phone bugged right now to where they're listening to this conversation of me making fun of them. , right? They can hear everything. They know everything. They can look at pictures of my dick on my phone or something. I don't know, right? They, they, they know everything about you. They know everything you're saying when you're saying it. Why the hell, anybody at all would believe they need to float a big white balloon over the United States to actually get any information that they needed is just puzzling and comical to me right now. I put something out there that was a little Babylon esque , which was like, it's my take because the Babylon bee missed on this one. They could have done better, so I put my own out there. Um, but which was that, uh, military too, too busy paying attention to completely harmless TikTok app to notice Chinese spy balloon, which is like kind of a double hit, right? Like the fact that we're gonna all sit and complain about China spying on us with this balloon. Yet every single one of you is sitting there with TikTok on your phone right now, right? Almost everybody. If you don't, and you're still holding all on TikTok, One of two things. You're either over 60, 50, maybe, maybe 45. And if you're under that and you don't got it, you lame, you gotta have TikTok, even if you're showing them off, you know, all your pictures, all your life, telling 'em everything, you know, holding outs, holding out. So just, just give your, give your life over to China. They already, they already have everybody else's information. They might as well own you too. Right. So I, I just, okay, so here's the next thing that came up. As a result of this, the Pentagon came out and said they did not detect previous Chinese spy balloons. Right? So, so the Biden administration came out and tried to say that during the Trump administration there was at least three times that Chinese spy balloons flew over the United States. which then Trump denied. Right. And that was after a top US general said that the Pentagon did not detect them, but there were, the Biden administration was trying to say, well, well it wasn't just us. Trump had two of these or three of these balloons too, right? Which is like just he said, she said H hilarity. Now it goes on and said that we did not detect any of those threats. Um, the Intel community after the fact, I believe, as has been briefed, already assessed those threats from additional means of collection and made us aware of these balloons that were previously approaching North America or transited North America. President Biden ordered the latest Chinese surveillance balloon, which spent days in US Aerospace to be shot down off the coast of South Carolina on Saturday. I highly doubt he had anything to do with that, but the US is currently trying to recover the debris, hoping to gain intelligence from the wreck. After a senior in this article is coming from the Hill. Um, after a senior defense official said over the weekend that the US was aware of at least three different times, such balloons flew over the US During the Trump administration, the former president and his intelligence officials came out to deny the claim. Now they are putting out that the balloon was put up by China during the Trump administration in order to take the heat off the slow moving Biden Fools Trump said in the post untruth social, China has had too much respect for Trump for this to have happened, and it never did just fake disinformation. The clash between the Biden administration and Trump and his former officials prompted rep, uh, representative Marjorie Taylor Green to call for a probe into why Trump was not made aware of the balloons during his presidency if they were detected. If it's true, the Pentagon purposefully did not tell Trump of Chinese spy balloons during his administration. Then we had a serious breach of command during the Trump administration. She said on Twitter, Senior administration officials cited Sunday in Bloomberg reporting said that the US didn't learn about the previous balloons until after Trump had left the Oval Office. It is unclear how the Biden administration learned about the previous flights. Alright, that's my take on the fricking spy balloon , like there's oh oh seven, there's, you know, like, and then there's the Chinese white spy balloon, like the, the, this just shows you how, how far the US has fallen. And then last but not least in the current events trained here is going to be that JK Rawling and the Harry Potter video game are taking heat for seemingly no reason at. Okay. JK Rowling wrote the Harry Potter series, and I put out a, a, a post a couple days ago, few days ago now, um, talking about how JK Rowling has been vehemently posting about how she is against the movement of men wearing wigs pretending to be women and moving into female spaces under the guise of being trans. Okay? She has been very public in her, her disavowing of this movement, of calling out the people that were allowed to be moved into jail. Cells who were like actual six foot four murderers going into jail with women, like, because they were calling themself trans and wearing a wig. So she's been very, very public about this and, and, and, Fully, we, there's, there's actually some people with the balls to do this that are, have this big of a platform because she's taken a ton of heat for it, right? And now here's the, here's what's going on with it. It says, why is Hogwarts legacy a Harry Potter video game so controversial right now? The, the, the, the cliff notes of this is going to be that she doesn't agree with the trans agenda, and she believes in encroachment on feminine spaces and on femininity as a whole, right? Men putting on a wig saying they feel like a woman wearing makeup, watching some YouTube contouring classes, and then all of a sudden going to pee in a women's bathroom. As a result, she doesn't agree with it. Okay? So now everybody's calling for boycotts of the Harry Potter game and like everybody's, like from Twitter perspective and all of these, like people trying to review Harry Potter. Like towing the line, but also really pissed that this video game is just crushing it. It's a sweet looking video game. I can't wait to play it. Um, and I haven't played video games in quite a while, uh, but this one is one that I will almost go out and buy a new gaming system just to be able to play. It looks incredible. So it's a role-playing game of Harry Potter. You start out as if you are a new stu, well, not a new student, a fifth year student at Hogwarts. And then you go through and, and you can create your character, you can go on missions, you get it's, it looks amazing and. Like, for all of us that grew up on Harry Potter, like this is a dream come true. That you have something like this incredible technology like the, the, the picture that I'm looking at of Harry flying a hippogriff right now, which is like a eagle mixed with a horse. If you don't know, the Harry Potter series just looks unbelievable. Like it looks beautiful, all right? And now they're calling for people to boycott it over her position on trans ideology. Now, here's what I have to say, just as like a metapoint over all of this is that I just got done. I've been on a little bit of a fiction kick recently. I haven't read very much fiction in my life at all. So I'm going back and reading like all the OG stuff, right? Like I I the first, this started a little bit, well, I actually say it started with fairy. Um, I just start, I just finished probably a month ago. Uh, Stephen King's new book. That was the number one book of 2022, which was Fairytale, which is an incredible, incredible book. I would highly recommend you go read it. It's a bit thick. It's like 700 pages. It was a bit thick for me to read for my very first fiction book and probably 10 years Um, but it was very good. Captivated my attention. It's an incredible story, beautifully written. Like, so much like it's, it's great. I would highly, highly recommend it. Fairytale by Stephen King. Go check it out. Um, literally if you have a, a library card and, and just go buy it from Amazon anyways, cause it's like 15 bucks. Um, but here's the deal. I don't agree with the things that Stephen King said about politics. I don't agree with his positions on politics. I don't. He he's constantly calling out the right, he's, he's very liberal in his ideology. He does not agree with the Second Amendment. I could give two shits what Stephen King thinks about politics. You know what? He's an incredible writer, and I don't care what he thinks about politics. He's an amazing artist, and regardless of his political stance, just like I, I would be friends with anybody who's on the, any side of the spectrum, right? I don't think that you need to condemn somebody's life work because they disagree with you politically then that that literally means that you're gonna take 50%, 50% of the, maybe not 50% of the artist, just with the way that personality traits lie when it comes to being leaning left or being right, but, A good portion of the talented people in the world. And if you're on the right and you have a problem with artists who are left leaning, then you literally are like, out of 75% of the conversations when it actually comes to enjoying art, enjoying music, enjoying Hollywood, like Hollywood movies. Like you're just out of the conversation and the whole, so like maybe in part this is just like self-preservation in, in my appreciation of art in this lifetime, but I, I just don't see how you can take somebody's political opinion and, and just completely discount their life's work and, and, and discount something that they, this universe that they built beautifully and incredibly over how much of their, their life that you. Like made my childhood at points, it was probably one, it was the only fiction books I really read growing up that I was just like, really Remember reading? I read almost, I read all the Harry Potter books. My grandma gave them to me every year that they came out and I read them every year. I loved Harry Potter, loved all the movies, right? And, and if it was Stephen King that wrote it, I would still enjoy it. And if the game was badass and looked like this, I would still play it. I don't care about, that's like, that's the difference to me between the left and the right is that the left is going to like, and, and maybe that's a powerful thing and for the left at least, maybe that's something that you can give 'em. It's like, man, they're really sticking by it. If you're not gonna go play this sick Gary Potter game because she spoke out against women being, or men being allowed in women's prison. after they murdered people. Like, that's your position then, you know, you're pretty, you're sticking to your guns pretty hard because I'll, I would still play this game for sure. Right. So let, let's read this article. We'll see what the actual, this is coming from Polygon. Not sure what the hell that website is, um, but let's read it. It says, Hogwarts legacy on the face of it, should have been the pure wish fulfillment for millions of fans who have been enchanted by the Lord of Harry Potter's world over the last 25 years in the video game launching next week, players will live the life of mystery and adventure that comes with being a student at pop culture's. Foremost school of witchcraft and wizardry still Hogwarts legacy and the Harry Potter franchise trouble. Many fans for reasons outside the video game, story or context. Why is that? We'll now go further behind the wizarding world curtains to explain the controversy. The game, which was announced at PlayStation State of Play event in September, 2020. Hogwarts legacy is an open world action r PPG adventure in which the player enrolls in Hogwarts school of witchcraft and witchy. Uh, the player character is user generated, however, they're a fifth stu, fifth year student, so they'll begin this, the game with some advanced magical aptitude. Why is the game controversial? Mainly because the public stances that author and series creator JK Rowling has chosen to take regarding gender identity. Going back to 2018, her views came into full display in the summer of 2020. At the time, Scotland Row, as a resident of Edenberg writing most Harry Potter series, there was considering changing its laws to allow individuals to change the gender assign in their birth certificates without a medical diagnosis. After a couple years of Corey's social media adjusters and replies on the subject, on June 10th, 2020 Row, published a confrontational 3,600 word essay on her personal website, spelling out her views on gender identity, her skepticism of transgender inclusive laws and policies, and the new trans activism row invoked her own survival of domestic abuse and surv sexual assault, while also raising a discredited hypothetical about male, a discredited hypothetical about male sexual predators being allowed into restrooms for girls and women as long as they identify as women. There is nothing hypothetical about that. There's literally countless articles out there of people predators. There's literally a school where they silence the girl and their parents for talking about this boy that was coming into the women's locker room and and preying on. I'm pretty sure raped them in this locker room. And then they were, the school was standing up for the man, the boy who was identifying as a girl and literally raped these girls. And, and like this's, not a high, a discredited hypothetical to say that this is happening. Like if you are a predator, why would you not do that? It's literally a backdoor like workaround, loophole to being able to be a fucking creep. And all you have to do is throw a wig on it and nobody gets to say anything to you like that. Yeah. Not a discredited hypothetical. Anyways, since the June, 2020 editorial rolling has continued to engage with the subject of transgender identity from the same point of view, her crime trouble, or crime crime novel, it's the Wine Troubled Blood, also published in 2020 under the Nome Day Plume, Robert Galbraith. Well, that was pretty good. Huh um, tells the story of a serial killer who dresses as a woman when he carries out his murders. LGBTQ plus advocacy organizations condemned it in Rowing's other writings as harmful and subor the harm and discrimination of transgender persons. Although some of Rowing's celebrity colleagues publicly came to her defense, um, is she developing it reportedly? Not immediately after Hogwarts legacy worldwide revealed in September, 2020, publishers, Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment Post, they frequently asked questions that distance the project from rolling. Hogwarts legacy is not a new story from rowing. Um, adding that rolling is not directly involved in the creation of the game. All right. It says, obviously, however it is built on the Harry Potter Kenos in concepts that Rolling had has developed since the book Harry Potter and The Philosopher Stone, which was published in 1997. Warner Bro's. Interactive Entertainment put its Utah based studio Avalanche software on Hogwarts legacy. W B I E acquired Avalanche. Who cares? All this said Rollings inevitably benefits from the publication in sale of ho like, yeah, of course. Whether that's in the form of royalty is a specific payment to adapt to her work. Who cares? Who cares? Um, yeah, who cares? Yes, she's involved. She literally created this entire universe in her head, along with all of the characters, all of the games, all of the spells, the entire school that you're going to all of it. And if you care to put a political statement down to not play it, she does not give a flying shit, as she said on Twitter. Um, literally actually said that on Twitter. I'll, I'll read you verbatim. She said. Uh, you're not required to buy it as she, oh, she retweeted this from Solomon Rushdi. Um, you're not required to buy it. The truth is the truth, whether you buy it or not, the planet is round. Even if you don't buy that and insist it's flat. But I'm, it, the, whoever tweeted that or retweeted somebody talking about it, um, deleted this. So I can't tell what the context of that was, but it seems to be about the video game, I would assume it is. Um, but another tweet by JK Rowling said, I don't know about you, but excluding women from women's prisons just because they've got penises, male pattern baldness and have committed a couple rapes, seems awfully turfy to me. . And that was a response to, does Scotland's first prime Minister believe all trans women are women? Uh, yeah, because they recently in Scotland said that men could not go live in women's prisons just because they think they're a girl. So, Anyways, let's go back and see if there's anything of merit on this. Here's something that Jesse Earl said, no idea who that is, but don't really care. Um, any support of the Harry Potter franchise current projects while JK Rowling is in charge of it and using her ongoing platform to target and also justify her continued targeting of trans people is harmful to trans people. I will not begrudge anyone their love of past works or things they've already owned that they take comfort in. I own the first nine movies and all seven books myself, but any support of something like Hogwarts legacy is harmful. It's so harmful to say that men who raped women should not be in prison with women. Um, and then JK Rowling said deeply disappointed. Jesse Granger doesn't realize, pure think is incompatible with owning anything connected with me in any form. The true righteous wouldn't just burn their books in movies, but the lo local library, anything with an owl on it. And their own bad dogs do better. Um, way to go JK Rowling. Um, yeah, so it's the fact that they're like, trying to say that you should just outright not play this game at all, to me, is like comical. Like I said, I read Stephen King's book. I I think that you should go read Stephen King's book regardless of his political opinion. It's a phenomenal book. Harry Potter's a phenomenal, apparently a video game now. Uh, it's phenomenal books. Who cares about their political ideology? You should appreciate good art regardless of what they think. And, and in a world where, you know, like 50 years ago, you would've never even known these things to begin with. So like, who cares? Go read Stephen King. Go read JK Rowling. Who cares? Uh, appreciate good art and art for what it is. And, and if you don't agree with their political opinions, then don't follow them on Twitter. Who gives a shit right? Those are my thoughts. All right, and last but not least, the very last thing we're gonna discuss is going to be the American education system. All right, now we'll see how long we get into this, cuz I have quite the lengthy article here that we're gonna read through, which goes into all of it, the history, who funded it, all of it. 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And then tomorrow, by the end of the day, I will have the CK ready for you, and I'll have three to four articles written about all of these things. All right? So go sign up. It is free, it does not cost you anything. And let's keep in touch. Even if for some silly reason I get shadow banned or banned completely off of social media, we'll always be there for each other. Ah, . So rad pill revolution.ck.com. Go. Sign up. It's free. All right. That's all I got. Oh, and if you want to be a paid subscriber, you can do so. You can do it two different ways. You can either subscribe at the very bottom, it says something like, here's a paywall. There's nothing below it. All right, guys. I tell you every time there's nothing below that paywall. All I'm doing is giving you a, like a virtual hug. If you wanna be a part of it. I will eventually start adding in paid content. But for now, I just want to give you guys everything. Um, there's nothing below the paywall, but there is the appreciation of my warmest, heartfelt appreciations. All right, so, But eventually we will be doing something with that. So for now it's free. Go ahead and sign up. All right, now moving on. Here we go. This is an article that was written up by the soul jam.com. All right. Now, I've been diving into this for a pretty long time now, the, the reason that I'm going into this today is because I believe wholeheartedly in the idea of educating your children. Right. I believe that as a society as a whole, we have been abdicating far too much of the responsibility of raising our children to corporations, governmental entities, and screens. Okay? That's what we've been doing, and we've been doing it in the name of like, easier, like, like just. Go away from me. Right? It's easier if your kid goes off to school every day and you don't have to deal with them. It's easier if you turn on a TV and the first thing in the morning when they wake up, so you don't have to deal with them. It's easier if you, you know, X, Y, and Z and, and fill it in. Every single thing that we do today in the modern society is for the ease of the parents and the, the lack of the child, right? So in school's, one of the biggest ones of that, my children that are of school age are all homeschooled by my wife. Okay? We sat down, we figured up a cur, figured out a curriculum. This is not something that I'm just. Talking about, and as a hypothetical, I live this every day, okay? And it's not easy to homeschool your children. It is not easy. But you know what else is not easy? Is knowing that your child is being indoctrinated in a school system that doesn't align with your belief systems. It's also knowing that your child is being indoctrinated in a school system, that there's 25 other children in the room where your child's getting very little, if any attention, and you could give them the same amount of quality of education, if not far greater in the fraction amount of the time. And all we're doing with public schools is literally just pushing our children into a glorified daycare, okay? Especially in an age where technology gives you the ability to educate yourself better than you can. Go online right now and take free Harvard courses. No problem. You can go online to YouTube right now and go find the single best person, and it's already curated for you. YouTube's already done all the legwork. They've found the single best person at teaching you something in, in, in the most engaging and entertaining way you can go find it, search literally anything, and you'll be able to find it. It's all done for you. That's how easy our lives are, but we've forgotten that. We're so far from that now that just because we have access to the information, we're still shoving our children off to schools just because it's easier. So there's my preempt. Let's read this article. It says, the Ugly Truth about the education system that You Were Never Told, quote by Alo Einstein says, education is not the learning of facts, but the training of minds. And Albert Einstein said, ever since I've gotten deeper, and, and this is an article written by, um, again, the Soulja. Um, it says, ever since I've gotten deeper into spirituality, meditation, and metaphysics, a lot of my views in the variety of subjects have changed dramatically. But something that hasn't changed since the time I was a kid is my views on the education system. We usually think of schools as environments to stimulate learning, but it ironically, ironically, manages to stifle the innate curiosity and the eagerness to learn that are present in all of us as children. It promotes mindless conformity and conveniently ignores the fact that we are all unique individuals with different talents, inclinations, and aspirations. Schools curtail independent thinking and inputs all of us through standardized tests and sees it as a good indicator to determine someone's level of intelligence. The system frankly never made sense to me, and I would often sit in class and wonder how most of what I was taught in class would have any real life application. But upon exploring the origins of the current education system, it has finally started to make perfect sense, and I've discovered that it is serving the very purpose it was designed to accomplish. What if I told you that it was never meant to, to meant for the objective of the current education system to nurture, learning, curiosity, critical thinking and creativity in students, but in fact, to do quite the opposite. In this post, I'd like to share with you a compilation of writings that reveal the veracity of the above statements by uncovering the startling origins and purpose of the education system, the factory model of education. Um, the famous author and futurist, Alwin Toffler describes the origins of the current education system in his 1970s book, future Shock, which goes on to say, pause for Wine, which goes on to. The American, the American education system, education system, as well as the system practiced here in India and around the world, was actually copied from the 18th century Prussian model designed to create docile subjects in factory workers. Mass education was the Indi or the ingenious machine, constructed by industrialism to produce the kind of adults that needed how to preap children for a new world, a world of repetitive indoor toil, smoke noise machines, crowded living conditions, collective discipline in a world in which time was to be regulated, not by the cycle of the sun and the moon, but by the factory whistle and the clock. The solution was an education system that in its very structure, simulated this new world. This new system did not emerge instantly, even today. It remains throwback elements from the pre-industrial society, yet the whole idea of assembling masses of a students to be processed by teachers in essentially located school. Was a stroke of industrial genius. The whole administration hierarchy of education as it grew up, followed the model of the industrial bureaucracy. The very organization of knowledge into permanent disciplines was grounded on industrial assumptions. Children's children's marched from place to place and sat in the signs stations bells rang to announce changes of time. The inner life of the school became an anticipatory mirror, a perfect introduction to industrial society. The most criticized feature of education today, the regimentation, lack of indus or individualization, the rigid systems of seating, grouping, grading and marking. The authoritarian rule of the teacher are precisely those that made mass public education so effective in instrument of adaptation for its place. And. Built on the factory model, mass education, taught basic reading, writing, and arithmetic, A bit of history and other subjects. The overt curriculum beneath it was the covert curriculum that was far more basic. It consisted of three courses, punctuality, obedience, and repetitive work. The basic training requirements to produce reliable, productive factory workers. Factory labor demanded workers who would take orders from a management hierarchy without questioning, and it demanded men and women prepared to slave away at machines or in offices performing brutally repetitive tasks. And that was a paraphrased article from Alan Toffler s Future Shock Book. All right, so now what we go on to find was that the model that was modeled off of the Prussian model of the 18th century was implemented by none other than the Rockefeller family, John d Rockefeller implemented. Using 129 million, the general education board, and provided major funding for schools across the nation and was very influential in shaping the school systems. He didn't exactly conceal his interests and motive in being actively involved in promoting the widespread adaptation of the education system. And once stated, and I quote, I don't want a nation of thinkers, I want a nation of workers, Frederick t. T Gates, a prominent member of the General Education Board, also stated, we shall not try to make these people or any of their children into philosophers or men of learning or men of science, we have not to raise up from among them, authors, editors, poets, or men of letters. We shall not search for embryo, great artists, painters, musicians, nor lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians, statements of whom we have an ample supply. There are even reports that Rockefeller and Industrial Giant, Andrew Carnegie played a significant role to influence the American education agenda to direct what students were taught in school. In 1914, the National Education Association alarmed by the activity of the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundation stated in their annual meeting, we view with alarm the activity of the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations agencies not in any way responsible to the people in their efforts to control the policies of our state education institutions to fashion after their contraception, conception, to factor after their conception, and to standardize our courses of study and to surround the institutions with conditions which menace true academic freedom and defeat the primary purpose of democracy as here to four, preserved and violate in our common schools, normal schools and universities. So, Very interesting. It goes on to say that don't miss how one man brainwashed humanity to be mindless consumers, which was an excerpt from a brief History of education published in Psychology Today by Research Professor Peter Gray. So what we find there is the John, the, the Rockefeller Foundation implemented the general education board and the general education board. The idea, and, and, and then we talked about this when we almost go back to our very first episode, right? Um, ins, uh, uh, assassinations. Um, go, go back to the very first episode, and we find out that during the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, the, the whole movement away from allopathic mess or towards allopathic medicine from osteopathic and homeopathic medicine was all because of the Rockefeller Foundation. They pumped money in and, and made certifications and basically pushed out anybody that didn't align with the allopathic way of medicine. The allopathic way of medicine being the fact that your body. It has nothing to do with what's fighting the diseases and all you need is our pharmaceuticals, and that makes a much more profitable model. Right. So it was about structuring the way of education and medical pharmaceuticals in a way that allowed them to profit from it and, and to profit from you being a worker, not by you being a good thinker. Right. So with this article goes on to say from Psychology Today, um, says, if we want to understand why standard schools are what they are, we have to abandon the idea that they are products of logical necessity or scientific insight. They are instead, products of history. Schooling as it exists today only makes sense if we view it from a historical perspective. The idea and practice of universal compulsory public education developed gradually in Europe from the early 16th century on into the 19th century. It was an idea that had many supporters who all had their own agendas concerning the lessons that children should learn. Employers in the industry saw schooling as a way to create better workers. To them, the most crucial lessons were punctuality, following directions. Tolerance for long hours of tedious work and a minimal ability to read and write. So you guys can read more into that, but, but here's my position on all of it. We're, we're in a position now as a society where, where we can gain control, right? We, we have such an ease of access to information, such an ease of access to education. You don't need a school system. You don't need to go to public school to, to learn how to do math. You can find a hundred TikTok channels that'll teach you in, in a hundred million times more interesting ways how to do basic math. You can learn history by going to the history channel and watching a a hundred documentaries and learning 10 times more than you're gonna learn from some boring ass history professor who forgot everything from college and just is pushing papers at you so they can make an income. Everybody has the one, one teacher that they remember. Everybody. Shout out Mr. Perry. Everybody has the one teacher that they remember that actually cared about their students, that actually cared about their education. Right. And you remember them for a reason, right? You remember the impact that they made because they actually cared. But 90% of the teachers that you had didn't give a shit and probably don't remember you. Right? And so once we realized that we are so far gone from the times where the, the, the school library held the information and, and the, the universities were able to gate, keep knowledge, we're so far away from that. And there's far more information out there that you can leverage the technology that we have to move away from where you're, you have to be like, my, my sister goes to a university and she's taking a basic composition class and every single assignment that she's. Done. Every single paper that she's written has been interwoven in the fabric of indoctrination towards liberal ideology. And I talk with her about it almost every time I see her. She has to write a paper about why pronouns are a good thing. She has to write a paper about, uh, why, um, anti-racism is, is, is good for society, right? The idea of like white, uh, guilt, right? Like all of these things that she has to write papers on to learn how to, I don't know, have proper grammar and write a paper. I like, I don't buy the idea that I have to wholeheartedly buy into your political ideology to learn how to write a paper, right? It's, it's just horseshit. It's a way for you to pay money into the education system for them to teach your child things and indoctrinate them the way that they wanna push their political ideologies. Right? And, and, and so what, and, and so what this allude you to know too is that that's, that's the fundamentals of education. The fundamentals of education that lie in the idea that you have to follow their thought processes. Because if you think of education as a whole, right? You think of a baby just like a computer, right? Or, or, or a, a system, like an application that you're trying to program, right? You're, you're programming a child on how to think, right? The framework of, in structuring of thought is what you're teaching a child from the time you take them at literally four years old, five years old, you're putting them in a full-time job. This is one of the biggest reasons me and my wife decided to homeschool our children. There is no reason that my child needs a literal eight to 4:00 PM job Monday through Friday. There's no reason that my child needs that. I make enough money, thankfully, that my wife can stay home and teach my children. And if you don't have that, I get it, right? But you should strive for that independence and freedom, right? You should strive for that for your family. And so, And if your wife doesn't wanna do that, that's fine too. That's cool. But for me, that's important, right? I can give my wife and my children the ability to be around each other, and my child does not have to go get a full-time job to learn how to write English. My child does not have to get a full-time job eight to four every single day, Monday through Friday to learn how to read. No. There's hundreds of things that you can utilize. There's books. I have hundreds of books in my home right now that my child can use to learn how to read. There's however many applications on an iPad that is specifically built for your child to learn how to read, to learn how to do math, to learn how to write right. All of these tools are out there. Yet the reason that we as a country, as, as a society, as a culture are not utilizing them is because we've spent so ourselves indoctrinated into the idea that you turn five, you go to school now as a parent, you can throw your hands up, your job's easier. , right? But what you're missing by that is you are no longer the driver of your child's programming. How many articles, how many times have we seen teachers who have, who have been caught with far more explicit things than what we're talking about here? But even just pushing bad thoughts, right? Pushing bad ideology, pushing, you know, the, the L G B T Q stuff within a, a fifth, fourth, third, first grade class. There's no reason for that. You don't need to teach my child about sexuality. You don't need to teach, which is inherently from the root word of sex, right? You don't need to teach my child that, right? But by abdicating the responsibility of that eight to four timeframe every single day, you give them the right to do. So here's my thought is why not take that power back? Why not realize that it is easier now than ever to take control of your child's education, to take control of your child's programming? Because that is what is happening, is the programming. When you're teaching a child math, when you're teaching them science, when you're teaching them the scientific method, you're teaching them how to think. You're teaching them the framework of thought with math, it's the same reason the Gates Foundation was pushing hundreds of millions of dollars trying to confuse your children with common core for what you think. Bill Gates gives a shit about how your child divides 16 by 70, right? Like he doesn't care. You know what he does wanna do? He wants to program the way that your child's underlying programming and thought processes work for the remainder of their life. Right. That is why he's pushing hundreds of millions of dollars in the common core math. He wants to muddy up the waters of what's going on between your ears, your child's ears. Right? And you're allowing it. We're allowing it because we wanna make our lives easier. Homeschooling is easier than ever. There's so many resources, so many resources that you can utilize to teach your child and not give the, the ability for the state to literally program your child into a walking, talking factory worker from the rest of their lives. It's just so wild to me. It's so wild that that's how it goes. Like five years old. Five years old, you're gonna send your child to school, nine to five, eight to. , right? Like a full-time job at four years old. And you wonder why your kid's crabby and you have troubles with them at night, and they're acting up at school is because you want them to sit their butt in the chair all day when they should be running outside in the grass and playing. That's what your child should be doing, not sitting there trying to learn Bill Gates common core. So it's a really interesting topic that I want to dive deeper into. I'm gonna be finding somebody that I can pull into this conversation that knows far more about it than I do. But I do think that there's a really interesting conversation around the Prussian model, um, about how the, uh, Rockefeller Foundation pushed 129 million into formulating our current structure for school systems, right? Even if it's just the, the alarms of the factory, right? The bell. There's literally
Hans julrimmar i tysk domstol, testar Petris hembrända och Jonas testar happy ending på polisens julfest. Musik i slutet för varje live: Thomas Richard Smith Sr - Gonna Drink Myself To Death If It Kills Me Lyssna på Inaktuellt Live VARJE torsdag från kl 09:30 på Podplay.se eller i Podplay-appen för att lyssna och ställa frågor direkt till Hans, Jonas och producenten Dawwa.
Noll, Andreaswww.deutschlandfunk.de, Europa heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Noll, Andreaswww.deutschlandfunk.de, Europa heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
A daily update on what's happening in the Rocket Pool community on Discord, Twitter, Reddit, and the DAO forum. 0:00 - Welcome 0:19 - High priority Teku update 0:36 - Lots of big deposits into the deposit pool 1:23 - All-time high deposit pool rETH mints! 2:45 - Minipool queue cleared and largest single day of new minipools! 4:11 - Ken runs a developer build on mainnet and nearly gets slashed! 6:27 - Ken does a good news/bad news update with some alpha from the eth R&D discord 9:30 - Joe is doing amazing things with the proteus 10:16 - Ryan Allis updates his DCF valuation for ETH. 11:27 - Marceau has a good reminder of the relationship between rETH minting and the RPL price. 12:42 - Shoutout to Ken, Petris, and Calurduran for clearing the queues 16:40 - No Rocket Fuel tomorrow unless you help!
Senda lanzó el Continuo Preventivo Online, la primera plataforma digital de prevención universal del consumo de drogas y alcohol, dirigida a escolares y establecimientos educacionales. El director subrogante de la institución, Roberto de Petris, detalló la iniciativa y la actual situación de las drogas en nuestro país.
Senda lanzó el Continuo Preventivo Online, la primera plataforma digital de prevención universal del consumo de drogas y alcohol, dirigida a escolares y establecimientos educacionales. El director subrogante de la institución, Roberto de Petris, detalló la iniciativa y la actual situación de las drogas en nuestro país.
¡Nos encanta conectar contigo en medio de tu gran semana! #nochesvida es el oasis de nuestra semana así que no te quedes sin compartir con tus amigos esta transmisión ¡Vamos a pasar un tiempo increíble!
Seguimi live tutti i giorni su Twitch alle 13.30 e alle 22.30! - https://twitch.tv/ivan_grieco---Iscriviti al canale e attiva la campanella - https://bit.ly/3nIb6ZO---Link per codice sconto Cuffie ASTRO 5% : http://astro.family/rampageEMEA ---Instagram ►https://instagram.com/ivangriecoTwitter ► https://twitter.com/RampageInTheBox
I normally just have conversations about subjects that I've heard on the news and how I feel about it just like anybody else with an opinion with no facts but today I said I was going to do some research and I did and I think these things are relevant to what we're going through today with all the violence in this country the bill was signed in 1967 by the governor of that time --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/j-w54/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/j-w54/support
Rebecca Petris started The Dry Eye Company and this website in 2005 as a dry eye information portal and community center for her fellow dry eye patients. Since then, it's grown and expanded in various ways, all focused on improving quality of life for people with dry eye. The Irlen Method is the only research-based method using colored overlays and filters. There are over 4,000 educators in school districts who have been trained, and millions of children use Irlen colored overlays and it is now being used in over 42 countries. The Irlen Method is non-invasive technology that uses colored overlays and filters to improve the brain's ability to process visual information. It is the only method scientifically proven to successfully correct the processing problems associated with Irlen Syndrome.
Rebecca Petris started The Dry Eye Company and this website in 2005 as a dry eye information portal and community center for her fellow dry eye patients. Since then, it's grown and expanded in various ways, all focused on improving quality of life for people with dry eye. The Irlen Method is the only research-based method using colored overlays and filters. There are over 4,000 educators in school districts who have been trained, and millions of children use Irlen colored overlays and it is now being used in over 42 countries. The Irlen Method is non-invasive technology that uses colored overlays and filters to improve the brain's ability to process visual information. It is the only method scientifically proven to successfully correct the processing problems associated with Irlen Syndrome.
Ouça neste episódio, um poema do livro "Cacto agridoce ", de Marcelo Petris, lançado em 2019, pela Editora Camus. Ficha técnica: Indicação e leitura: Dayara Balbinott Ortiz (Sesc Curitibanos) Roteiro: Cheisy Calabria (Sesc Itajaí) Edição: Marcos Oliveira (Sesc Ler Tijucas e São João Batista) Trilha: "Opôs 3" de Ricardo Rodrigues (Sesc Curitibanos)
In 2002, the Teas' Tea line of natural, unsweetened bottled tea was launched. The product line functions as the centerpiece of ITO EN (North America) Inc. for it upholds ITO EN's principles of Natural, Safe, Healthy, Well-Designed, and Delicious. The product was first introduced through wholesale distribution in New York City and the Tri-State area. The Dry eye zone is our portal. It's the information center where you can get things like consumer guides to various types of dry eye products, glossary definitions of dry eye terms, a reference list of BAK concentrations in prescription medications, a list of ongoing dry eye drug clinical trials, a chart comparing different types of punctual plugs, and much, much more.
In 2002, the Teas' Tea line of natural, unsweetened bottled tea was launched. The product line functions as the centerpiece of ITO EN (North America) Inc. for it upholds ITO EN's principles of Natural, Safe, Healthy, Well-Designed, and Delicious. The product was first introduced through wholesale distribution in New York City and the Tri-State area. The Dry eye zone is our portal. It's the information center where you can get things like consumer guides to various types of dry eye products, glossary definitions of dry eye terms, a reference list of BAK concentrations in prescription medications, a list of ongoing dry eye drug clinical trials, a chart comparing different types of punctual plugs, and much, much more.
Gianluca Petris, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, UK speaks on "CRISPR-Cas9 and beyond: delivery, specificity and therapy".
Bener kata pepatah, kepercayaan itu mahal harganya. Entah dalam keluarga, teman maupun pasangan. Seringkali kita menganggap ada kesempatan kedua untuk membangun kepercayaan, tapi apakah bisa? Petris dan Wicak akan membahas lebih lengkap soal trust issues mulai dari penyebab, cara mengendalikan hingga cerita pribadi mereka tentang trust issues. Yuk dengerin episodenya dan jangan lupa untuk follow serta komentar di instagram @thetalkativeguy_id --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ttg-id/support
A trajetória pessoal e profissional de Gustavo Petris na Odontologia – Reabilitação/Restaurações Adesivas
Kalau ada salah satu sifat yang bisa bikin ribet sebuah hubungan ya ini nih. Bahkan bisa terjadi pada saat belum menjalin hubungan loh. Tapi selain itu sebenernya sifat ini juga bisa menjadi bumbu agar sebuah hubungan tidak bosan. Trus apa lagi ya? Eitss dengerin aja langsung duet host Suci dan Petris akan membahas lebih lengkap tentang gengsi itu sendiri. Kamu pernah gengsi ga? Jujur :D --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ttg-id/support
The Modern Therapist's Survival Guide with Curt Widhalm and Katie Vernoy
Psychiatric Crises in the Emergency Room Continuing our series on Fixing Mental Healthcare in America. An interview with Kesy Yoon, LMHC and James McMahill, LMFT, two Modern Therapists with work experience in the United States hospital mental health system. Curt and Katie talk with Kesy and James about their perspective on the emergency room as an entry point (and revolving door) for mental health treatment. We look at the bureaucracy, the funding issues, and the difficulty in providing adequate care in these settings. We also discuss the ideal of a psychiatric ER, to improve mental health treatment for those in crisis. It's time to reimagine therapy and what it means to be a therapist. To support you as a whole person and a therapist, your hosts, Curt Widhalm and Katie Vernoy talk about how to approach the role of therapist in the modern age. Interview with Kesy Yoon, LMHC and James McMahill, LMFT Kesy Yoon, LMHC: As a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC), I am dedicated to helping my clients understand who they are and how they fit into the world around them. Over the past six years, I have worked in a variety of mental health settings with individuals from all walks of life. Currently, I work with clients struggling with anxiety, perfectionism, trauma, and major life transitions. Over the course of my career, I have developed a specialty in working with the Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) 1st generation population. My work in this area is informed by my own personal experience with navigating the differences between an American upbringing and traditional Asian values. I enjoy working with AAPI clients to identify solutions to improve quality of life while honoring important cultural values and needs. Therapy is dynamic and my style is centered upon empowerment and hope. I show up as a human first, therapist second. As a counselor, I believe that every individual is a unique and complicated being; therefore, I do not have one uniform approach. I draw inspiration from several evidence-based modalities such as EMDR, Solution Focused Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. I am also trained in the EMDR modality and I am currently in the process of EMDR Certification. James McMahill, LMFT: I am an LMFT in CA and MN specializing in crisis care for those struggling with psychosis, severe depression, PTSD and suicidality. The majority of my clinical experience has been in crisis work and includes all ages, from children and adolescents in inpatient, TAY and adults in county outpatient clinics, and as a member of a Geri Psyche urgent response team. While in San Diego, I was the Program Director for Heartland Wellness Recovery Center, a county outpatient program serving SPMI clients in East County, San Diego. Currently, I am a team member for a CRT (Crisis Response Team) in Carver County, MN, and spend much of my clinical time in Emergency Rooms or responding to community or Law Enforcement mental health crises. I may also be commonly found co moderating Therapists in Private Practice (TIPP) on Facebook, with my wife Namrata. In this episode we talk about: Continuing our special series on Fixing Mental Healthcare in America How emergency rooms become a part of the mental health system The role of emergency rooms as the first door for folks with a mental health crisis It can be a catchall and revolving door for some with longer term mental health concerns The challenges and overwhelm when someone comes into the ER The goals that emergency rooms can have when someone comes in with a psychiatric crisis The differences in ERs (whether they have psychiatric facilities or whether they transfer to other facilities) The challenges in placing clients in psychiatric inpatient care The revolving door – developing relationships and losing hope Potential legislation changes that could increase time for care Conflicting goals at different levels of the hospital and the hot potato syndrome Training of the emergency room staff, medical staff, law enforcement, fire services The criminogenic interpretation of behavior that can hinder law enforcement and seeing a patient as someone needing help The importance of patience in managing psychiatric crises Interacting with Law Enforcement in these situations Responses to the “mental health” being touted as the solution for mass shootings Challenges with reimbursement and insurance coverage Some solutions for smoother processes during psychiatric emergencies, ideas for ideal planning and training Our Generous Sponsor: The Healthcasters The Healthcasters is a podcasting course and community designed for therapists in private practice and therapists turned coaches + consultants that's supported the successful launch of over 270 podcasts. Wanted to tell you guys a little bit what's included in the Healthcasters podcasting course. It includes simple step by step videos to take your podcast from idea to one that generates income when it launches. Also includes cheatsheets and templates Melvin uses for the Selling The Couch podcast whether its scripts to reach out to guests or templates to let guests know a podcast is live. We recently released the Podcast Episode Tracker. This simple sheet helps you keep your podcast episodes organized whether you want to reference them later or re-purpose the content in the future. You can also choose to upgrade after purchasing the course to a community of over 250 other therapist podcasts. This also includes monthly group and 1 on 1 coaching calls with Melvin. You can learn more about Healthcasters at sellingthecouch.com/jointhehealthcasters (enter the promo code "therapyreimagined" at checkout for $100 off the listed price). Resources mentioned: We've pulled together resources mentioned in this episode and put together some handy-dandy links. Please note that some of the links below may be affiliate links, so if you purchase after clicking below, we may get a little bit of cash in our pockets. We thank you in advance! RAND Report: How to Transform the US Mental Health System Los Angeles Times Op-Ed: Our mental health laws are failing Laura's Law LPS: Lanterman-Petris-Short Law Relevant Episodes: Fixing Mental Healthcare in America Serious Mental Illness and Homelessness Connect with us! Our Facebook Group – The Modern Therapists Group Join us for Therapy Reimagined 2021 Our consultation services: The Fifty-Minute Hour Who we are: Curt Widhalm is in private practice in the Los Angeles area. He is the cofounder of the Therapy Reimagined conference, an Adjunct Professor at Pepperdine University and CSUN, a former Subject Matter Expert for the California Board of Behavioral Sciences, former CFO of the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists, and a loving husband and father. He is 1/2 great person, 1/2 provocateur, and 1/2 geek, in that order. He dabbles in the dark art of making "dad jokes" and usually has a half-empty cup of coffee somewhere nearby. Learn more at: www.curtwidhalm.com Katie Vernoy is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, coach, and consultant supporting leaders, visionaries, executives, and helping professionals to create sustainable careers. Katie, with Curt, has developed workshops and a conference, Therapy Reimagined, to support therapists navigating through the modern challenges of this profession. In her spare time, Katie is secretly siphoning off Curt's youthful energy, so that she can take over the world. Learn more at: www.katievernoy.com A Quick Note: Our opinions are our own. We are only speaking for ourselves – except when we speak for each other, or over each other. We're working on it. Our guests are also only speaking for themselves and have their own opinions. We aren't trying to take their voice, and no one speaks for us either. Mostly because they don't want to, but hey. Stay in Touch: www.mtsgpodcast.com www.therapyreimagined.com Our Facebook Group – The Modern Therapist's Group https://www.facebook.com/therapyreimagined/ https://twitter.com/therapymovement https://www.instagram.com/therapyreimagined/ Credits: Voice Over by DW McCann https://www.facebook.com/McCannDW/ Music by Crystal Grooms Mangano http://www.crystalmangano.com/ Transcripts (autogenerated) Curt Widhalm 00:00 This episode of the Modern Therapist's Survival Guide is brought to you by Healthcasters. Katie Vernoy 00:04 The health casters is a podcasting course and community designed for therapists in private practice and therapists turned coaches and consultants that supported the successful launch of over 270 podcasts. Learn more about the health casters at sellingthecouch.com/jointhehealthcasters and enter the promo code therapy reimagined at checkout for $100 off the listed price. Curt Widhalm 00:26 Listen at the end of the episode for more information about healthcasters. Announcer 00:29 You're listening to the Modern Therapist's Survival Guide where therapists live, breathe and practice as human beings to support you as a whole person and a therapist. Here are your hosts, Curt Widhalm and Katie Vernoy. Curt Widhalm 00:45 Welcome back modern therapists This is the modern therapist Survival Guide. I'm Curt Widhalm with Katie Vernoy. And this is part three of our special series fixing mental health care in America. And if you have not yet listened to parts one and two, please go back and listen to those and we'll include links to those in our show notes over at mtsgpodcast.com. When we look at mental health care in America, part of what Katie and I were looking at is the various ways that people needing mental health services interact with all the various systems and today's episode we're focusing on psychiatric emergencies and the ways that clients, patients, people in general in psychiatric emergency situations and up in the emergency room. And so our guest today, once again, interviewed separately spliced together so our guests are James with me Hill, who works in Minnesota and Casey Yoon, who formerly worked in an emergency room in Los Angeles, California. We are joined by James McMahill, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. James McMahill 02:04 Currently I'm in Crisis Response Team in Carver county in Minnesota, what's up Western suburb just right outside of the Twin Cities, Katie Vernoy 02:11 how do emergency rooms end up being a part of the mental health system James McMahill 02:17 I have such as arranged experience from having conversations like these about emergency rooms or about law enforcement, you know, because each system is such a fingerprint from one another one er is so distinctly different from another er my experience when I was a director of an outpatient program in San Diego is so different from what I experienced on a day to day basis in the Midwest, for the most part of what I experienced as a clinician, it is a it's essentially a holding place for someone who has usually come in for a medical issue. And then is witnessed by the attending MD or nurse to also be endorsing an issue that's synonymous with a mental health concern. And in the two ers in particular that I work with, they have become so used to referring out to the crisis team that even if someone is coming in and stating that they're experiencing depression or anxiety in any way, generally will lead to a mental health assessment by the crisis team. Once that's completed, and we've made a recommendation, then the ER becomes much more of a complicated place, because then they're kind of, particularly if we're recommending an inpatient like treatment program, then the client is just kind of hanging out we are until we are able to secure a program for their ongoing mental health care. And so there's this kind of tension following a disposition between the crisis teams and other hospitals who have short term residential or short term behavioral health units, and the two ers that we serve and who do not have behavioral health units in trying to get them to an appropriate level of care kind of as soon as possible. Because the ER is always concerned about how many beds are available, who's coming in what the tenor and the mood of the unit is. And so it's kind of a holding place for that moment. Curt Widhalm 04:12 We're also joined by Kesy Yoon lpcc, talking about some of the experiences of working in emergency departments when it comes to mental health. So thank you very much for joining us and spending some time tell us how mergency rooms work as part of the mental health system. Kesy Yoon 04:30 My experience, the emergency room is often the first kind of net or door into a line of resources for mental health in the community. It can be kind of the first step that patients and their families or people take when someone's having a mental health crisis. But on the other hand, I've also seen the ER function as a dead catch all net for individuals whom the system doesn't know what to do with. And so sometimes it's the first door that First kind of introduction to mental health and resources. But then it also becomes kind of this catch all, though, the person that's in transition or can't utilize their resources or in between resources, they also begin to use the emergency room as well. Curt Widhalm 05:16 So what do you see when it comes to? There's somebody brought in by law enforcement, it's typically under a 5150 type situation. Walk me through what that might look like, if we were observing this from somebody entering the door, working through the emergency department staffing, tell the psych staff gets there. What is this experience like for somebody going through this kind of a crisis? Kesy Yoon 05:43 That's a great question. I have often wondered that how alarming it must be depending on what symptoms have been presented. But there was a lot of noise and a lot of chaos when you come into the ER, depending on the day, but most of the time, that's what's going on. So you're coming in, usually, with law enforcement or fire, you're coming to the double doors, you're not coming to the waiting room, you're not being triage the traditional way. You're coming in, and everyone's looking at you, right, because the tension is shifting. It's just busy. And on top of that, you know, you're getting rushed through triage. And I think things are happening so fast. And I've often wondered how it must feel to be someone who's experiencing a mental health crises, to then be to be in a situation, it's difficult for a person who's not experiencing a mental health crisis. Katie Vernoy 06:31 I was thinking that exactly. And even if somebody is coming in with some sort of an injury or a severe illness, they might also be having a mental health crisis as well. But when the primary symptoms are psychosis, or suicidality, or homicide, ality, like, it seems like it would be hugely disorienting, Kesy Yoon 06:49 yes. And then your, your triage, you're put into a bed, and they tell you a bunch of commands, you know, change into a gown, they go for shoes, your stuff is taken away, and then you're maybe left alone. And then the doctor takes however much time to come see you. They're asking you a bunch of questions. And then sometimes you might get visited by a social worker, if you're lucky, you'll get a kind nurse who has some idea of what you're going through. And then after all of that, all the questions, all the stuff, all your stuff has been taken away, you're essentially told that you're on this 5150 dennis is quiet, you know, the only people that come in to check in US shift change. If you're in restraints, maybe someone comes every 15 minutes to check on you, and then kneels and then you're just waiting, like, after all of that barrage of communication, then it's just quiet for however, the rest of the time you're in the ER. Katie Vernoy 07:43 So that sounds really overwhelming. I could especially imagine for folks who are having psychosis or other psychotic symptoms, like it would just seem like, especially I just your stuff getting taken, you know, like, Yeah, wow, you know, just such a, I don't even though the right word, just very evolved a very vulnerable time. Right. You're, you're rushed in, you've got all this stuff happening. What is the goal? I mean, obviously, there's an assessment to get to the 5050. But what's the stated goal for the next 72 hours? For these folks? Kesy Yoon 08:19 I think it depends on the hospital. So if you're a designated LPS facility, which means essentially, you have a locked inpatient unit, your goal is to wait until a bed becomes available, if you meet the criteria, which is you know, this whole other broad maze of things. If you're not at an LPs designated hospital that hasn't locked psychiatric unit, then you're waiting to be transferred. And even those kind of progress updates are very few and far between. But I just wonder about that, too. Right? You come in or your stuff is taken, you're told that you're waiting for a bed somewhere else? I mean, what if you have no idea where you even are, right? You wandered somewhere in a psychotic, just mess, and then now you're kind of coming to and then they're telling you Oh, we're going to ship you to some hospital that's 40 miles away, you don't know anyone. So just wait for that you can deal with Curt Widhalm 09:10 on this piece about trying to get people placed when somebody has entered into an emergency room. There's a whole bunch of different departments who are either responding on the emergency side waiting for psychiatric to come in? What's the turnaround to getting somebody into one of these programs that you're talking about? James McMahill 09:30 I mean, that really waxes and wanes? It depends on kind of that bell curve of utilization. You know, usually as you approach the weekend, the ability to get someone into a short term bhcu goes, maybe it goes way, way down, it's a lot more difficult. So it really just depends on what's going on out in the system. You know, we have a database that shows all the available hospitals, all the available programs and all of the available beds. And so once we've made that determination, a recommendation for an inpatient program and the attending physician agrees with that decision. Then it still rests on the crisis team to do quote unquote, a bed search, which is to page the different programs within the region to try to find someone availability, we will do our behavioral health assessment in that moment. And until we get that completed in a way that's representative about what's going on with the client and his best way as possible, the clients just going to be kind of hanging out there in the ER, and then we make that presentation of the behavioral health assessment, to the different programs to review, then it is completely up to the whims in the mood of the different behavioral health units that we are sending that packet to for review, to determine whether or not facing that that client would be a good fit, or not a good fit. And so there's this odd kind of back and forth between, oh, my goodness, you know, this person has got a lot of severe issues versus and this isn't as big of a problem for me as maybe some of the other clinicians have, do I try to write this in a scalable way? So we don't get the person who's reviewing the client to be like, no, we're not, we're not going to be taken someone who's physically aggressive and struggling with schizophrenia, or any kind of psychosis. So it is really difficult to kind of find that balance between Okay, we've we've addressed the emergency situation, we've got backing by the attending physician. And now our job is essentially to find a place that will accept that client. And that's completely based upon our write up, it's based upon our ability to communicate with the behavioral health unit in a friendly and charismatic way to kind of get them in the mood to like to, to accept the client, and also just what the complications of the system are at that time. Katie Vernoy 11:46 What has been your experience with the kind of revolving door I think all of us have kind of heard about the ER being used, both for medical, but it also sounds like mental health crises, like that's where care happens. You know, the people just that revolving door, this is the catch all the lending? Yeah. For folks. What has been your experience of that? What does that actually look like? Kesy Yoon 12:06 I think it depends on the relationship with the client has with the staff, to be honest, you know, I think there's some clients who utilize the revolving door of the ER, and it's almost like, it's a homecoming every month, like, oh, they're back. Like, they know the system, right? That's the kind of client that's not going to complain, they're gonna give up their possessions willingly, they'll do all the labs, they get it, you know, but some clients are more difficult, more aggressive. And it just, it almost becomes not this mentality of Oh, we can treat them like crap, because they they come here all the time, you know, versus the kind of clown comes in, and they get treated a little bit better, because they might treat the staff better. For me, it's difficult because it almost compels this sense of defeat, like, they're back again, I thought they got connected with services. So I'm torn. There's some clients where I did, it's almost like you don't mind when they come back, because they know how to operate and you almost enjoy seeing them and catching up with them, right. But there's also a large majority where it's difficult, and it's difficult not to become resentful and think, Oh, well, this patient's just abusing the system and abusing our resources. It's not that you don't want to help. But I think when certain clients come in every month, you assume that they either don't want the help, or yet you assume they don't want the hope. And so you don't advocate for them, really, you're just trying to, you're waiting for them also to get transferred upstairs, because you just think to yourself, oh, you'll be back anyways, you're not really going to change, you're not really going to get help or seek treatment. James McMahill 13:42 Yeah, absolutely. I think that that's a much larger issue, or at least it was for me in Southern California than it is in Minnesota. It really impacts those who are unable to advocate for themselves who are homeless, who are untreated, in a much different way than it does the western suburbs of Minnesota, there isn't a ton of homelessness in the suburbs of Minnesota, the response of those who would be picking folks up and doing emergency transports, for example. It's just a lot different depending on what kind of er system that you're working with. So when I was in San Diego, it was a much bigger issue. We had folks who would be picked up by perks or who would be picked up by law enforcement on a weekly basis to the point where they would become regulars in the ER and regulars in the short term, bH USD in the area. And that in itself also creates kind of this interesting relationship because when when people become known in ers and their high acuity, but also like presenting with the high degree of affability there's almost a lower bar for those folks to be admitted into the ER and there's this kind of friendship relationship. Oh, so and so was here again, come on in Yeah, don't worry about it get up all taken care of. And yet there's nothing after that, really, for those folks who unpaired to long term services, regardless if that's because just voluntarily they feel better once they get out of the ER, and they've had their immediate needs met, and they don't want to engage in any kind of outpatient programming or act level programming. And so I know that there's a lot of discussion, a lot of work going on right now with quote, unquote, involuntary outpatient programs or mandated outpatient programs, particularly in Southern California. I don't see that as much in Minnesota, as I did in Southern California. Curt Widhalm 15:38 In an earlier part of this series, Senator Henry stern was talking about expanding the 50 to 50 part of the law and being able to hold some of these clients longer and beyond freedom and freedom of being able to essentially add a week a couple of weeks that would have assuming under his system would be reimbursed for the hospital. With more time and some of this treatment, do you think that that would help to alleviate some of the revolving door aspects that we see that if so much of this priority seems to be patch them up and ship them off? Right, right. What is treatment in these situations, some of these repeat customers that you've seen, just in some of your experience? Is there just that little bit more of stability that would alter their lives? Kesy Yoon 16:32 Yeah, I think the time, I definitely think it would help with stability and stabilizing the symptoms, or maybe just getting the right mix of medications for certain patients. And then they could also be watching monitor, see if they have side effects. I think the other part too, is that it gives a chance for the case manager or the discharge planner, to try and work out Bible placement for some of these folks, you know, I think it's difficult to try to find someone a place to live, if they're only in the hospital for let's just say 72 hour whole three days to to have them interviewed assessed by someone from a home and then for them to be accepted. Yes, I know, it's there waiting, essentially, in the inpatient unit. But at least they have some time, you know, it's not so hurried, and the case manager can really work on, let's find his personal home that they're not going to get kicked out of, or that we can hopefully pay for rent for a little bit longer than a week or so. Curt Widhalm 17:29 There can be a bunch of different goals, depending on who's working within the mental health system, you kind of have a hot potato syndrome of this particular client is too difficult where for estimate our program or funding goals, this can happen between administration and treatment. How do you in your experience, how have you seen this kind of stuff played out? James McMahill 17:55 It's a constant battle against the idea of Yes, I see that they need help. But no, this isn't the appropriate place for them to get that. And so you see that across modalities, you see that across presentations, you see that across programs, who have identified as having a specific scope. I know I experienced that on a daily basis as a administrator of an outpatient program when dealing with someone who, at the time we were wrangling with the idea of is this person substance primary, or is this person mental health primary? And so there was often kind of that passing back and forth between programs of Yes, I understand. But that person doesn't feel appropriate to our program. From an emergency room standpoint, some similar things go on, but it's much more about the folks who are providing services in that moment, the nurses, the doctors, the the aides, the watchers, who are concerned with what someone who is potentially coming to their bhcu, or how that person who will disrupt their familiar or how that person will disrupt their system. And so the folks who are high acuity, the folks who are really struggling, and really the most vulnerable are those who end up spending the most time in the least therapeutic of spaces. Because we often have such a hard time finding them, or finding a program was like, Yeah, absolutely. We are well equipped to deal with that. And we can absolutely provide them with services. I mean, I don't get that response. When I'm when I'm letting folks know that person is really struggling. They, they've been sober from methamphetamine after a year on and they're struggling hallucinations and paranoia and school aggression. Like I know immediately, that I'm more than likely going to have a very difficult time finding that person services and meanwhile, they're languishing in the ER in a in a box room. And so that's really the tension. That's where the hot potato for me lies in the ER of who is willing to accept this person and serve this person and give them the help they need. Curt Widhalm 20:00 So when you're talking about this cross training between emergency staff and psych staff, and part of this even gets into the training of the people who are bringing people in, like law enforcement or ambulance, paramedic type services, what kinds of training inadequacies from the sake perspective? Are you hoping that some of these other services would be able to have or what do you see as deficits that they have when they are working with patients who are coming in under these kinds of circumstances? Kesy Yoon 20:31 I saw that quite a lot. Unfortunately. You know, I think it's one of those things where again, it's it's very much about how do we not take responsibility for this person, this human being that we're bringing into the emergency room for law enforcement, if they're not criminal enough, or if it's not just if it doesn't fit into the standard or protocol for them to take them into their custody, they got to bring them into the ER. And then for fire, I mean, fire is even more broad. Right. So the Natalie's I saw a lot. We're just a very loose interpretation of LPs, and that's the lanterman Petris short, I always forget the what it stands for, but just very loose interpretation of what it means to be danger to yourself or danger, others gravely disabled, that's a, I mean, you can take all kinds of license with that, right. And I think with fire, it was also difficult, because I think oftentimes, the intention is good, like, if we give them to an ER, then they're going to get set up, they'll at least have a bed, they'll have some meals, and then the ER will take care of it. But, you know, there were so many times, even with fire, where even just bringing someone's wheelchair, that will be forgotten. I don't know if that's necessarily a deficiency in training, but the ER doesn't have an abundance of wheelchairs at them they could give to this patient once they're discharged. Right? So I think, even things like that, how do we see a patient as a whole person who has a life outside of the ER? And yes, who may need help. But that doesn't necessarily mean the right should be taken away? And then they're just left on the street, essentially, afterwards? Katie Vernoy 22:09 How does the lack of substantial Mental Health Training by law enforcement, fire etc. So the the lack of knowledge and training for the folks that typically work with you, how does that affect clients? James McMahill 22:24 I alluded to that image of impatience. And I think that that is what occurs the most when I'm dealing with law enforcement or emergency responders who are untrained in issues of mental health, because part of what law enforcement goes through on a daily basis is to address a criminal genic narrative, right. And it's really easy to get lost in the the who, what, where when of that narrative. And so I often see on train law enforcement trying to apply that same structure to a mental health emergency. And that doesn't mix well with someone who's having an incongruent, internalized process to what it is that they're also trying to communicate their words or with their actions. And so when that messaging is mixed, or is affected or impacted by what experiences someone's going through, there's that impatience and there's that tension. And there's a dismissal that says, Well, what you're talking about is not a big deal, right? Or there's that immediate kind of sense of, we've got bigger fish to fry. And so Meanwhile, I am seeing someone who is potentially responding to stimuli, who is exhibiting severe negative symptoms who might be having a dissociative event because of the trauma history. And it's so it's difficult to have to have a conversation with someone who hasn't had training in that regard. Like, hey, there's more going on here, than what's on the surface. And I think we need to kind of slow the pace down and really explore what it is that's going on. And so it's that time and impatience thing that really, I think creates a rift between the practitioners who are out there as first responders and law enforcement or fire who are out there trying to do the same thing. Curt Widhalm 24:11 So not only is there needs differences, but to this bottleneck that you're talking about. It's there's policy implications into creating this bottleneck and California where Katie and I are a lot more familiar with things. You bring up George Floyd, you're talking about this much more intertwined relationship between law enforcement and mental health where you're practicing now, with the current environment, the current changes, the defunding the police sort of discussions, how do you see that being implemented with the kinds of systems that you're interacting with now and is there really as much of a push for that where you're working compared to some of the experiences that we're seeing here? California. James McMahill 25:01 I was stunned at the difference in working with law enforcement in the suburbs of Minnesota. As I was working in East County, San Diego, my outpatient clinic was in El Cajon, California. And to be frank, that police department was fairly well known for a quick temper and quick decisions and a lot of impatience. You know, even when they were coming into the clinic on those rare occasions that we did need to call law enforcement and perked was not available. I had some really poor experiences with law enforcement. And so I don't know what the current climate is back in Southern California. But you know, when I came here, and I don't know whether or not this has been a change due to what happened in Minneapolis, but I started a couple of months before the George florid murder. And since then there has been kind of a combination of things is one, law enforcement. And again, depending on what officer you're dealing with, depending on what deputy you're dealing with, or Sheriff you're dealing with Sergeant you're dealing with, and, and depending on what their mood or what their experiences it has been on that day. But overall, the amount of collaboration and the amount of requests for me to come out and participate in a law enforcement event with someone that's struggling with mental health is way above what I experienced in Southern California, we're getting calls quite often to come out. And you know, all arrive on scene and and the the officers deputies will kind of tell me what the situation is. And they're always kind of waiting to see whether or not this is something that I can take care of on my own and give them the clear or whether or not I will stick around because there's concerns about violence. But there is a surprising level of patience that I'm seeing in dealing with law enforcement in Minnesota. And for me that patience has always been the most crucial element in those those crisis bubbles, right? Because if you have an increased amount of tension with law enforcement, and you can feel the resentment about having to be there in that moment, it makes for a really difficult situation. And it's very rarely results in a positive outcome for the client or positive outcome for the therapist, or for law enforcement. But there have been a couple of episodes here where where law enforcement was willing to work for hours with a client's trying to figure out levels of safety trying to figure out levels of cooperation. And I've yet to have a situation devolve into something worse than it was when I had arrived. You know, I've I've had positive outcomes with law enforcement in in Minnesota. Now. There's a lot of problems here. That is not to say that that's not the case. Obviously, that's the case. I mean, so far in my personal experience, of working with law enforcement, as it pertains to them wanting us to join and potentially give them space to remove themselves from a mental health situation. I've had pretty positive experiences. Now whether or not that's driven by altruism or driven by their desire to depart. Katie Vernoy 28:13 There's a number of times, especially if there's mass shootings or other things, whether it's this public outcry for more funding for mental health programs. Sure. And it's usually during some sort of a tragedy. What are your thoughts on those, those outcries? James McMahill 28:30 You know, usually, the expectations for me in those times is to fully understand that in that, in that month in that bubble, whatever that is, is that there's going to be the least amount of potential progress on actual mental health change than any other time, because it is used as such a such a red herring argument by folks who are looking for a distraction away from something but they don't want to talk about someone, you know, if someone wants to make sure that they don't have to talk about gun control, they'll say this isn't a gun issue. This is a mental health issue, and yet have very little desire to actually change anything within the mental health world. And then on the flip side of that, you have folks who may actually care about there being fundamental changes in mental health. But there needs to be this prioritization to having a conversation about gun control. And so they're kind of stuck in this space of saying, Well, yes, I mean, we should talk about mental health. But let's not get away from the issue that that dude in 30 seconds just mowed down 20 people with an assault rifle. And so I always cringe in that moment, because I know that there's going to be the least amount of productive conversation about mental health, as of any time outside of that window of a tragedy like that. Curt Widhalm 29:50 Part of the administration process is around this LPs designation of hospitals and you've had an experience For a hospital kind of walk this line that contributes to some of this placement process, especially for longer term treatment, from your perspective of working in these kinds of departments, there's some of these admin kind of decisions that then end up affecting even some of these clients ability to reliably even have the emergency room be part of their safety plan. Give us a little peek behind the scenes, as far as what you've seen is some of these kinds of policy level decisions that affects even just the accessibility of care for people going through situations where they need to end up in the emergency room for psychiatric reasons. Kesy Yoon 30:44 I wish I could be a fly on the wall and those meetings. In my experience, the first three years I worked in the ER, we worked with an inpatient unit that was opiates as needed, so it was locked. So if a patient did come in on a hold, there was almost an immediate transfer, or at least pending bed placement upstairs. So they had somewhere where they could really be stabilized and treated by psychiatric staff. Somewhere in between that time, I'm not quite sure all i knows there were very many audits, because when your LPs, Department of Mental Health, obviously there, they want to make sure things are running, they want to keep people accountable. But it would be it seemed like a very big burden of responsibility on the psychiatric staff. I felt like it was every quarter there the audited because we were designated. There was that reason, there was also a higher number of patients with admin days when we were locked, because we're waiting for higher levels of placement. And afterwards, we decided to forego the placement, the LPS designation, and we became a strictly volunteer voluntary psychiatric hospital, we still had beds, but we could no longer take patients that were on 5150 holds unless psychiatrists came to the ER, discharged the hole and then had the patient sign voluntary. And I think that made it it's hard to say because then at that point that the 5050 patients were either wait, they waited the 72 hours, er, and then they just got discharged with some paperwork, or we transfer them to a locked unit, where I don't know how long they would stay there. But it did become difficult because it's almost, it almost feels as though there's very little you can do at that point. If someone comes in, you either transfer them or you wait, and then you discharge them or they go upstairs, you almost want them to sign voluntarily. But sometimes if they don't have the cognitive abilities to understand what's going on, or they're in such a state where they can't sign voluntarily, then you're just either again, waiting it out or waiting to transfer them, which can be difficult. Katie Vernoy 32:48 So due to the bureaucratic, not, you know, nightmare, as well as it sounds like some of the really hard requirements, this smoother system, have they come into the ER we have a place for them became this weird convoluted, maybe we can take them but right somehow they have to not be eligible for 5150. Right? Kesy Yoon 33:20 Yes, they can't be too acute. They have to be acute enough where there's criteria. So you know, they're suicidal enough or homicidal enough or psychotic enough, but not so much worse than their video on picking material because then we have to call a pet team from a different hospital, Katie Vernoy 33:37 or then that's when they end up like 40 miles away Kesy Yoon 33:40 not knowing anyone. Yes, yes, exactly. And the hospital pays for those contracts as well. with certain lock it once you're an unlocked hospital, you can pay for contracts with locked hospitals, so that they will then take your patients, especially the ones that are uninsured, you know, with County Medical. Katie Vernoy 34:01 Yeah, it just seems like it becomes these silos again, when it was integrated in the hospital when you first started, right? Curt Widhalm 34:11 This whole reimbursement aspects, like you're talking about medical or uninsured people, but even for some of the insured people, what are some of the difficulties as far as a program of getting reimbursed, that essentially even contributes to this whole fiasco? Kesy Yoon 34:30 I think one of the difficulties I experienced in emergency room was the emergency room is technically outpatient. So then to have a psychiatrists, let's say from the inpatient unit, come in and do a consultation every 24 hours for a 72 hour hold, you know, depending on the psychiatry so it was difficult to get them to come down there because it's an outpatient service. And I want to say it gets a little confusing with billing and then how do they get reimbursed as an inpatient provider for an hour patient's service, which is also some of the barriers I experienced when we were in meetings about creating a psychiatric emergency room, because our hospital was in talks about that for a while. But I think again, there was just too much red tape, bureaucracy stuff. And a psychiatric emergency room is the fine line between outpatient and inpatient. Right, because they're not they're not they're getting treated, but they're not inpatient, or the waiting for a bed. And I think eventually administration didn't really want to go through with the idea. Katie Vernoy 35:31 It's so interesting that er is are considered outpatient when right, especially recently, I'm assuming a lot of people were staying in beds for days. Absolutely, absolutely. Curt Widhalm 35:43 It's almost like psychiatric illness shouldn't be treated entirely like a medical problem. Yeah, I want to go back to this question. You know, since we're talking about, you know, some of us idealize care, and we asked at the beginning, but even when it comes to the way that administration and reimbursement happens, or is there more that you think needs to go into this idealized care sort of answer? Kesy Yoon 36:12 I think so. I mean, I don't, I don't even know what that would look like, sometimes I have these, you said, these daydreams, or maybe are, what it would look like if we just had psychiatric staff and there wasn't this revolving door. But it's such a, it's a part of a system that needs help, you know, the actual episode with the senator, and then the medical director of gmh was, I was so enlightened. And I was also given so much hope by that episode, because I was thinking, yes, this is like, it needs to be a system thing, the ers part of that system. I don't know, obviously, it could start with policy, but it's sometimes I feel like it's just a smaller part of a much larger problem. Curt Widhalm 36:50 And so part of the system being that places like the ER, places like the prison, the jails that end up serving as de facto parts of the community care that has lost its funding over the last several decades that proper reimbursement, as I'm hearing, you say it is actually funding some of these community places to take care of people before and after some of these crisis. So that way, they're not sitting around waiting three days for a placement when there's no placements that can be found. Kesy Yoon 37:25 Exactly. I think that's very true. You know, I don't have that much experience with either, but even a psychiatric urgent care, there's not that many. I think the main one I know about is the line of Exodus, or who cares for mental health. And then there's a new one that was recently built Long Beach, but even having that and they also have their time constraints. Suppose the patients can only stay for 23 hours, I don't know who came up with that number. And then they get Yeah, or they get transferred. And long before I started in the ER, they told me stories of there was an exodus connected to our emergency room. So they would discharge a patient from the Exodus, urgent care, transfer them on a gurney, basically down the street to our er, and they will kind of just ping pong them around, because they didn't know what to do with these patients. And so yes, I think proactive care before and then actually having sustainable and viable trend plans after would be immensely helpful. Katie Vernoy 38:25 Well, I'm also hearing having some way to be comprehensive and how people can do services where the billing isn't, by the minute, yeah, based on type of service, and I even think the whole issue of inpatient versus outpatient. And can you bill for both services on the same day? Right. Seems like there's also insurance bureaucracy that needs to be addressed, because people are not doing the best care they can, because they won't get reimbursed for it. And they're being incentivized to treat and St. Hmm. Kesy Yoon 39:03 I agree with that. And I was actually talking to a psychiatrist the other day, what did I ask? I was thinking was asking about, you know, what was his experience like working in the emergency room? And it's difficult, because I think a lot of them are inpatient. psychiatrists are usually, I don't know, one group that's seeing inpatient psych and a detox unit, if they have that, which was the case of my hospital. And so getting someone to come down, just to see a patient out of 50 or 50. It was never fast enough for the ER doctors First of all, and it was difficult for them because, you know, they're, they're either going to discharge a patient or they're going to treat are they going to come every day, the patient's there, and I think that was difficult, as well. Katie Vernoy 39:48 It is very patchwork. Kesy Yoon 39:50 That's a great way to put it very patchwork. I felt like I was always scrambling to put pieces together and it within a very finite amount of time and everyone was always asking administration was always asking why? Why is the station here for so long? And what are you not doing to either get them upstairs? And it's, you know, it can be very frustrating. Katie Vernoy 40:10 I guess the question ties to the reverse, which is, how hopeful did you feel when someone came in with a mental health crisis that they would stabilize, get back to their life? And things would be good going forward? Like how Sure, were you that they were going to get the care that they needed? Honestly, Kesy Yoon 40:30 I think it would depend on some factors. I think if they came in with a family member, or a friend or roommate who was concerned, and I could tell that they could get connected after I would have, my hope would increase, if they came alone, there are no resources, no family, no social support, then I would almost think, well, there's a good chance they're going to be bad. But there's, there's some hope in that too, right. Like, I think when I first started working in the emergency room, I was so shocked by how much the ER becomes a part of some patient's treatment plan. They just know where they know, I don't know, in the middle of the month, I'm probably gonna have some kind of psychotic breakdown, and I'm going to come to the ER, I think that would affect how much Katie Vernoy 41:16 What do you see as an ideal for how er services would be working with in relationships, how they fit in the larger mental health system, because it sounds like as a, as a catch all, or sometimes even the first first door, it may be really the wrong match. So how do you think it should fit in to the mental health system? Kesy Yoon 41:36 You know, ideally, I would, I think the ER should operate, similar to how it should operate for just medical patients, which is for mental health crises and emergencies. Ideally, there would also be things like more psychiatric urgent care centers, where there's kind of this other level before they get triage as an emergency or a crises. And I think to be great in the ER staff, maybe nurses or whatnot, were cross trained on how to deal with mental health crises and mental health patients, every single er is dealing with mental health, right. And so I understand you don't need an extensive amount of training, but it's always divided between the ER staff, and then the site staff that comes in to help and support. So it's almost like this, oh, the psych nurse will take care of it. And so the ER staff, whatever training, they got nursing school, let's say, that's kind of it. So that would be another ideal if there was just more cross training involved, to deal with mental health crises, if that's what the ER was, in, of course, in my ideal if that's what was being used for. James McMahill 42:42 I think, in an in an ideal space, and I always dream about this, whenever I'm at the ER, and I'm really struggling with that tension of freeing up the ER bed, is that I would love to see a mirrored space, a space that is identical in, in every way to the ER, but is staffed with nurses who are trained specifically in mental health that is staffed with psychiatrists, as much as it is PhDs, or medical Doc's and a place that's really conducive to that moment of stabilization until you can get someone to a program that will better serve their needs than the ER, because, you know, the ER, fundamentally is about stabilization and about creation of, of safety. And so in particular, when you're dealing with a psychiatric crisis, a lot of times the moments of sad occurs, the environment in which we're going and seeing that the rooms for clients that we're going and doing Christ assessment, it's a, it is a safe room, you know, quote, unquote, and so it's a, it's a bed, and it is four walls, and it's a locked door. And so, there's so many incongruencies, to what it is that I'm trying to offer in that moment, which is real human connection, which is true visibility, which is, you know, making sure that that moment, or that person in that moment knows that they're being heard, and they're being seen, they're being treated by someone who has their best interests at heart. And meanwhile, I'm doing it in this hermetically sealed cube. And so, I'd like to see a psychiatric er, that's where that's where I would like to be treating the clients when I'm doing the assessment, but Katie Vernoy 44:22 How would the job for a clinician change in the ER, if this system were, quote unquote, fixed? If people actually were able to that it really was crisis or first door? Not rotten, not revolving door? Not, you know, casual? How would that change? how it feels to be a clinician in the ER? Kesy Yoon 44:49 That's I really liked that question. I always have never thought about that. I mean, I in moments, because you're just there's so everything is timed. And so you're just like, Oh my I just have to go out and assess this patient and get them out of here. or have a plan for the doctor because he doesn't want to deal with it? How would it change? I think there would be more care. I mean, I'll speak from my own experience. I think when I saw patients who were truly in a mental health crisis, maybe even some of those are revolving door when they would come in, and they were really having a hard time. I think it would just allow for more care, even in that kind of chaotic setting. If we're the first door, the first, the first learning for these kinds of patients, maybe wouldn't have to be so chaotic and so hurried, maybe they could feel like this was the right decision they made and it's safe. For me, that would be one way you could change. But I had to think about that a little bit more in terms of, I guess, I've just never thought about what it would be like if we weren't responsible for just getting them out as soon as possible. Katie Vernoy 45:55 So now it's our turn to reflect a little bit on what we heard, close it out. But I was very struck by how similar the perspective was, even though we've got folks that are working in two different areas in the country. I think that the desire for a psychiatric emergency room with the training the resources, that person to person connection, that could be possible. I really liked that vision. But I think as as you and I've talked about a number of times, it's huge systemic changes that are going to need to happen for that to really be the case. Curt Widhalm 46:31 And it's often with a part of society that gets overlooked as far as being a worthwhile investment. And that's part of why Katie and I are putting this whole series together is it's something where looking at one particular space in the system, as it's being isolated away from everything else doesn't do it justice, as far as how we look at fitting everything together. In our interviews and some of the stuff that got left on the cutting room floor, especially James was talking about some of the stark differences that he had seen between his work in Southern California and his work in Minnesota. But despite all that, there just seem to be more similarities than not, especially when it comes to where the shortcomings of the system is. And through the remainder of this series and our continued advocacy work of improving mental health in America. I'm hoping that by putting all of this in the context, we've got a really good opportunity for some calls to action for some good systemic change. Katie Vernoy 47:42 So keep listening. We've got more episodes that'll be coming out soon. And by soon it could be in a month or it could be in three months. We're trying our best to put together really solid interviews so that we're putting together a nice hole. But if you have ideas to share for our fixing mental health care in the United States series, please let us know. Curt Widhalm 48:02 Check out our show notes at mcsg podcast calm and for could links to the previous episodes as well as some information on James and Casey and also a welcome to our growing team of Alyssa Davis who helps make some editorial contributions on this episode as well. Till next time, I'm Kurt Woodham Katie Vernoy Katie Vernoy 48:27 Thanks again to our sponsor, the Healthcasters Curt Widhalm 48:30 wanted to tell you guys a little bit of what's included in the health casters podcasting course it includes simple step by step videos to take your podcast from idea to one that generates income when it launches also includes cheat sheets and templates Dr. Melvin Varghese uses for the selling the couch podcast, whether it's scripts to reach out to guests templates to let guests know that a podcast is live. The recently released the podcast episode tracker the simple sheet helps keep your podcast episodes organized, whether you want to reference them later or repurpose them for content in the future. You can also choose to upgrade the purchase of course the community of over 250 other therapists podcasts. This includes monthly group one on one coaching calls with Melvin and you can learn more about health casters, it's sellingthecouch.com/jointhe healthcasters Katie Vernoy 49:20 into the promo code therapy reimagined at checkout for $100 off the listed price. And just a reminder that sellingthecouch.com/jointhehealthcasters. Announcer 49:30 Thank you for listening to the modern therapist Survival Guide. Learn more about who we are and what we do at mtsgpodcast.com. You can also join us on Facebook and Twitter. And please don't forget to subscribe so you don't miss any of our episodes.
Grafisk designer og fotograf Petri Henriksson lager visuelle eksperimenter innen kunst, film og musikkfeltet – fra bokdesign til produksjon av musikkvideoer til platecover. Petri driver designbyrået Blank Blank som har base i Oslo, før det i Berlin. Petris tilnærming er at eksperimentering og testing leder til nye løsninger og ny form, og plutselig vokser prosjektene hans seg superstore. Petri er 40 år, er oppvokst i Finland, og er utdannet fra Kunsthøgskolen i Bergen. Christina snakker med ham om å ha blandet identitet, om hans hemmelige agenda om å få Norge og Finland til å jobbe mer sammen, om hans hang til å trekke folk sammen og skape samarbeidsprosjekter. Petri forteller også om at nye ideer ofte oppstår når du minst venter det og om å la tilfeldigheter oppstå i den skapende prosessen. Intervjuet av Christina Skreiberg
Kata orang proses PDKT tuh masa paling indah dibanding pacaran, apa iya? Terus biar PDKT kita lancar hal-hal apa aja ya yang gaboleh kita lakuin? Coba dengerin episode kali ini bareng Petris dan Adisha yuk mereka bakal cerita pengalaman dan berbagai info menarik seputar PDKT. PS: Yang masih jomblo sabar ya :p --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ttg-id/support
Ssstt..ternyata cinta itu punya bahasanya masing-masing loh dalam suatu hubungan. Gak hanya untuk pasangan tapi juga bisa ke orang-orang tersayang di sekitar kita. Mau tau apa aja? Dengerin yuk cerita Khasana & Petris kali ini. Abis dengerin terus boleh loh cerita love languages kamu apa, di instagram @thetalkativeguy_id. Mau jadi tamu di podcast kita dan ngobrol masalah percintaan? Boleh banget tinggal DM di instagram ya :) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ttg-id/support
You can now earn dental CE with a podcast through https://www.dentaldigestinstitute.com/ This episode features Dr. Gustavo Petris. Dr. Petris is a renowned international lecturer who has been providing continuing education and hands-on courses on restorative and biomimetic denitistry in Brazil and Latin America for several years. In this episode, he'll discuss the concept of the "indirect composite restoration." This approach is different from the traditional composite restoration in which the composite is directly placed. Dr. Petris will describe his entire workflow in managing this process. One advantage of this technique is it combats polymerization shrinkage stress. Click here to learn more about Dr. Petris.
Det exploderar i Myyrmanni en helt vanlig oktoberfredag år 2002. Man misstänker en gasexplosion eftersom alla vittnen minns clownen som fyllde ballonger. Från sjukhusen rapporteras något som ser ut som skottskador hos de skadade som kommer in. Polisen hittar ett ensamt körkort som tillhör 19 åriga Petri Gerdt. Också det har ett skotthål. Idag är det svårt att hitta någon av Petris skolkamrater som vill tala om honomi. De minns honom inte. Medverkande bl.a.: Kari Turunen, som blev skadad i explosionen Jussi Komokallio, som ledde Centralkriminalpolisens bombgrupp TePo Jan Antfolk, professor i rättspsykologi vid ÅA. Manus & regi: Fanny Malmberg Ljuddesign & klipp: Mikael Grönroos Dramaturgi: Fanny Malmberg, Are Nikkinen och Staffan von Martens
Hola a todos. Os dejamos una pildora en abierto de la entrevista a David Bernal, diseñador de los juegos 24h y Petris (que ahora mismo está en campaña de verkami) Para escuchar la entrevista completa os animamos a ser suscriptores de Ciudadano Meeple y escucharla en el Express. Métodos de contacto Blog: www.ciudadanomeeple.com Twitter: @ciudadanomeeple Correo: ciudadano.meeple@gmail.com Telegram: https://t.me/Ciudadanomeeple Instagram: ciudadanomeeple
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Os traemos un nuevo episodio para suscriptores de Ciudadano Meeple. En esta ocasión tenemos un rato de charla con David Bernal, creador de los juegos 24h y Petris, que ahora mismo está en campaña de financiación. David nos hablará de sus gustos como jugon, de sus autores favoritos y de mucho más. Esperamos que os guste. Métodos de contacto Blog: www.ciudadanomeeple.com Twitter: @ciudadanomeeple Correo: ciudadano.meeple@gmail.com Telegram: https://t.me/Ciudadanomeeple Instagram: ciudadanomeepleEscucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Ciudadano Meeple. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en http://www.ivoox.com/podcast-ciudadano-meeple_sq_f1474570_1.html
Hola a todos. Os dejamos una pildora en abierto de la entrevista a David Bernal, diseñador de los juegos 24h y Petris (que ahora mismo está en campaña de verkami) Para escuchar la entrevista completa os animamos a ser suscriptores de Ciudadano Meeple y escucharla en el Express. Métodos de contacto Blog: www.ciudadanomeeple.com Twitter: @ciudadanomeeple Correo: ciudadano.meeple@gmail.com Telegram: https://t.me/Ciudadanomeeple Instagram: ciudadanomeeple
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Os traemos un nuevo episodio para suscriptores de Ciudadano Meeple. En esta ocasión tenemos un rato de charla con David Bernal, creador de los juegos 24h y Petris, que ahora mismo está en campaña de financiación. David nos hablará de sus gustos como jugon, de sus autores favoritos y de mucho más. Esperamos que os guste. Métodos de contacto Blog: www.ciudadanomeeple.com Twitter: @ciudadanomeeple Correo: ciudadano.meeple@gmail.com Telegram: https://t.me/Ciudadanomeeple Instagram: ciudadanomeepleEscucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de Ciudadano Meeple. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-ciudadano-meeple_sq_f1474570_1.html
Prima parte: il voto sulle missioni all'estero e la questione della Libia, maggioranza divisa al Senato, ma si approva ordine del giorno per modificare gli accordi con Tripoli. Con Loredana de Petris, senatrice di Leu e presidente del gruppo Misto al Senato - Seconda parte: Brasile e Gran Bretagna accomunati dalla sorte di essere guidati da negazionisti che si sono ammalati. Cosa cambierà in Brasile ora che Bolsonaro è positivo? E come sta andando il contenimento dell'epidemia in Gran Bretagna? Con Alfredo Somoza e Daniele Fisichella - Terza parte: scuola, al lavoro per la riapertura. Con Paolo Limonta assessore alla edilizia scolastica del Comune di Milano, Giorgia Lauzi preside dell' ITC Torricelli di Milano e Lucia Mantegazza sindaca del comune di Gessate. Infine Brescia e Bergamo capitali della cultura nel 2023, per decisone del Governo. Commenti e reazioni dalle assessore alla cultura dei due comuni
Prima parte: il voto sulle missioni all'estero e la questione della Libia, maggioranza divisa al Senato, ma si approva ordine del giorno per modificare gli accordi con Tripoli. Con Loredana de Petris, senatrice di Leu e presidente del gruppo Misto al Senato - Seconda parte: Brasile e Gran Bretagna accomunati dalla sorte di essere guidati da negazionisti che si sono ammalati. Cosa cambierà in Brasile ora che Bolsonaro è positivo? E come sta andando il contenimento dell'epidemia in Gran Bretagna? Con Alfredo Somoza e Daniele Fisichella - Terza parte: scuola, al lavoro per la riapertura. Con Paolo Limonta assessore alla edilizia scolastica del Comune di Milano, Giorgia Lauzi preside dell' ITC Torricelli di Milano e Lucia Mantegazza sindaca del comune di Gessate. Infine Brescia e Bergamo capitali della cultura nel 2023, per decisone del Governo. Commenti e reazioni dalle assessore alla cultura dei due comuni
Prima parte: il voto sulle missioni all'estero e la questione della Libia, maggioranza divisa al Senato, ma si approva ordine del giorno per modificare gli accordi con Tripoli. Con Loredana de Petris, senatrice di Leu e presidente del gruppo Misto al Senato - Seconda parte: Brasile e Gran Bretagna accomunati dalla sorte di essere guidati da negazionisti che si sono ammalati. Cosa cambierà in Brasile ora che Bolsonaro è positivo? E come sta andando il contenimento dell'epidemia in Gran Bretagna? Con Alfredo Somoza e Daniele Fisichella - Terza parte: scuola, al lavoro per la riapertura. Con Paolo Limonta assessore alla edilizia scolastica del Comune di Milano, Giorgia Lauzi preside dell' ITC Torricelli di Milano e Lucia Mantegazza sindaca del comune di Gessate. Infine Brescia e Bergamo capitali della cultura nel 2023, per decisone del Governo. Commenti e reazioni dalle assessore alla cultura dei due comuni
Det här är det tredje avsnittet i Hjärnpoddens "Välmående-serie" som produceras sommaren 2020 för att ge bakgrund till välmående och de sätt vi kan träna på att må bättre - trots motgångar, oro och svårigheter. Gäst i avsnittet är Petri Partanen. Vi gör dessa avsnitt under hashtaggen #välmående2020 I det här avsnittet fortsätter vi utforska hur vi människor gör snabba antaganden/tankar och ibland (ganska ofta)hamnar i tankefällor som sätter krokben för oss själva, vår utveckling och ibland ställer till det i relationer. Tankefällor är de snabba slutsatser vi gör i form av snabba tankesystemet, som är ett sätt för att spara energi. Att utmana sina tankefällor kan vara hjälpsamt när vi hamnar i situationer som känns ohanterliga. Att ställa sig några kontrollfrågor kan bidra till att vi kan bedöma situationen mer realistiskt och inte så överväldigande. Här finns en länk till tankefällor och de kontrollfrågor man kan ställa när man "hör" sig fastna i en tankefälla. https://www.dropbox.com/s/j6mbf3hmkqt36jd/utmana%20tankef%C3%A4llor.pdf?dl=0 Petri Partanen är psykolog, handledare och utbildare, samt forskare på Mittuniversitetet och UCL London. Han har arbetat i 25 år med elevhälsa och med skolutveckling runt om i Sverige. I sitt arbete intresserar sig Petri särskilt för hur våra känslomässiga och tankemässiga förmågor påverkar vårt fungerande i vardagen, och särskilt i lärandet. Han har tidigare skrivit kunskapsöversikten ”Hälsa för lärande – lärande för hälsa” för Skolverket. Petris senaste bok ”Att utveckla förmågor på vetenskaplig grund i skolan” berör bland annat förmågorna metakognition och självreglering. Den handlar om hur vi hanterar våra tankar och känslor på ett medvetet sätt och planerar och styr vårt beteende. Petri har en blogg som du kan läsa här: https://skolutvecklarna.se/blogg-petri/ Vill du ha kontakt med Kristina efter avsnittet mailar du som vanligt till kristina@exist.se
Det här är det andra avsnittet i Hjärnpoddens "Välmående-serie" som produceras sommaren 2020 för att ge bakgrund till välmående och de sätt vi kan träna på att må bättre - trots motgångar, oro och svårigheter. Gäst i avsnittet är Petri Partanen. I det här avsnittet följer vi upp förra avsnittet kring medvetenhet kring sitt eget tänkande och emotionerna vi har och kopplar det till hur vi faktiskt kan använda den informationen vidare. I avsnittet introducerar vi tre verktyg för välmående; Tacksamhetsdagbok - att skriva gör tänkandet långsammare och kan hjälpa oss att få syn på det som är hjälpsamt i livet. Att varje dag skriva tre saker som du är tacksam för och koppla det till "varför" det hände ökar medvetenheten om de hjälpsamma situationer du medvetet kan använda dig av för att öka välmåendet. Tacksamhetsbrev: Att skriva ett handskrivet brev till någon och TACKA FÖR NÅGOT DE GJORT som betytt något för dig, och motivera varför det var viktigt, kommer att påverka både dig och den som får ditt brev. Skriv ett brev, sätt på ett frimärke, ta en bild och lägg ut i sociala medier med hashtagg #välmående2020 så skapar vi välmående för fler. Både för dig och den andre. :) Förundran: Att medvetet fånga de vackra stunderna i naturen, i möten med andra, i nyfikenhet eller harmoni och skriva ner eller självprata kring det kan vara ett sätt att förlänga den känslan några sekunder och efter träning kunna återvända till det för tröst eller lugn. De här verktygen presenteras i en kortversion i ett kort avsnitt efter detta. Petri Partanen är psykolog, handledare och utbildare, samt forskare på Mittuniversitetet och UCL London. Han har arbetat i 25 år med elevhälsa och med skolutveckling runt om i Sverige. I sitt arbete intresserar sig Petri särskilt för hur våra känslomässiga och tankemässiga förmågor påverkar vårt fungerande i vardagen, och särskilt i lärandet. Han har tidigare skrivit kunskapsöversikten ”Hälsa för lärande – lärande för hälsa” för Skolverket. Petris senaste bok ”Att utveckla förmågor på vetenskaplig grund i skolan” berör bland annat förmågorna metakognition och självreglering. Den handlar om hur vi hanterar våra tankar och känslor på ett medvetet sätt och planerar och styr vårt beteende. Petri har en blogg som du kan läsa här: https://skolutvecklarna.se/blogg-petri/ Vill du ha kontakt med Kristina efter avsnittet mailar du till kristina@exist.se
Det här är första avsnittet i Hjärnpoddens "Välmående-serie" som produceras sommaren 2020 för att ge bakgrund till välmående och de sätt vi kan träna på att må bättre – trots motgångar, oro och svårigheter. Gäst i detta och kommande avsnitt är Petri Partanen. Petri Partanen är psykolog, handledare och utbildare, samt forskare på Mittuniversitetet och UCL London. Han har arbetat i 25 år med elevhälsa och med skolutveckling runt om i Sverige. I sitt arbete intresserar sig Petri särskilt för hur våra känslomässiga och tankemässiga förmågor påverkar vårt fungerande i vardagen, och särskilt i lärandet. Han har tidigare skrivit kunskapsöversikten ”Hälsa för lärande – lärande för hälsa” för Skolverket. Petris senaste bok ”Att utveckla förmågor på vetenskaplig grund i skolan” berör bland annat förmågorna metakognition och självreglering. Den handlar om hur vi hanterar våra tankar och känslor på ett medvetet sätt och planerar och styr vårt beteende. Petri har en blogg som du kan läsa här: https://skolutvecklarna.se/blogg-petri/ I detta första avsnitt pratar vi om meningen med att tänka kring sitt eget tänkande - metakognition/mentalisering. Vi pratar också om sätt vi kan göra för att förstärka möjligheten att kunna tänka kring våra tankar och emotioner och ger exempel på några verktyg som går att använda. Exempelvis att skriva, prata med sig själv eller någon annan och medveten närvaro. Medveten närvaro tas upp från Petris sätt att se det hela. Sista delen av avsnittet innehåller övningarna och verktygen och kommer som en kortare del efter detta avsnitt som ett eget avsnitt kring "verktyg för välmående". Vill du ha kontakt med Kristina efter avsnittet mailar du kristina@exist.se Använd gärna Hashtag #välmående2020 för att sprida verktygen vidare. Någon i din närhet kanske kan ha nytta av den här serien.
We explore the future of cash flow financing with Charlotte Petris. Charlotte was the vice president of Fintech Australia and is currently co-founder of Timelio, a platform that seeks to revolutionise the way that organisations get short term financing by connecting investors with businesses in real time.
Hvem er rendt med Petris smukke hoved? Graven står tom, hovedet mangler og rygterne går… Hvor er det hoved mon i dag? Og kan det hoved hjælpe os med at finde Petris begravede skat? Kan videnskaben? To gravrøvere, en skråsikker videnskabsmand og en rig seminarist i dandytøj, det er bare nogen af dem, vi skal møde i tredje afsnit af Worms Skat… Credits: Skrevet, optaget og fortalt af Krister Moltzen Redigeret og mixet af Tim Hinman Musik og lyddesign af Tim Hinman Skuespillere: Henrik Koefoed, Rosalinde Mynster og Thure Lindhardt Kor: Kammerkoret Audite Produktionsassistent: Frederik Nielbo Research: Gert Moltzen og Rikke Ammitzbøll Produceret med støtte fra Det Danske Filminstitut - New Danish Screen v. kunstnerisk leder Mette Damgaard-Sørensen www.wormsskat.dk
När St Petri kyrka i Malmö skulle få en av världens mest moderna orglar gjorde arkeologer en upptäckt som skrev om Malmös historia. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Det här är en berättelse om hur den senaste tekniken på orgelområdet mötte Medeltiden. Den handlar om hur en 14 meter hög och 25 ton tung orgel, med sex manualer och styrning via touchscreen-skärmar, skulle byggas in i S:t Petris kor från år 1319. Orgelns tyngd gjorde att korets golv behövde säkras och under 2018 gjorde arkeologer fynd som skrev om Malmös historia: i en grav mer än två meter under korgolvet hittades skelettet efter en 40-årig kvinna som kan ha varit den allra första malmöbon. - Fyndet visar att det är mycket sannolikt att staden Malmö är äldre än vi hittills vetat, säger Malmös tidigare stadsantikvarie, arkeologen Anders Reisnert i programmet. I dokumentären medverkar också organisten Carl Adam Landström som varit drivande i projektet, prästen Albin Tanke, kyrkorådets ordförande socialdemokraten Claes Block, fastighetstekniker Magnus Friberg, arkeologerna Rikard Hedvall, Caroline Arcini och Sofia Lindberg samt geofysikern Sara Johansson. Orgeln invigdes den 27 april under en orgelfestival i St Petri och konserter därifrån sänds i mitten av maj 2019 i P2 Live. En P2 Dokumentär av Lotta Malmstedt.
När St Petri kyrka i Malmö skulle få en av världens mest moderna orglar gjorde arkeologer en upptäckt som skrev om Malmös historia. Det här är en berättelse om hur den senaste tekniken på orgelområdet mötte Medeltiden. Den handlar om hur en 14 meter hög och 25 ton tung orgel, med sex manualer och styrning via touchscreen-skärmar, skulle byggas in i S:t Petris kor från år 1319. Orgelns tyngd gjorde att korets golv behövde säkras och under 2018 gjorde arkeologer fynd som skrev om Malmös historia: i en grav mer än två meter under korgolvet hittades skelettet efter en 40-årig kvinna som kan ha varit den allra första malmöbon. - Fyndet visar att det är mycket sannolikt att staden Malmö är äldre än vi hittills vetat, säger Malmös tidigare stadsantikvarie, arkeologen Anders Reisnert i programmet. I dokumentären medverkar också organisten Carl Adam Landström som varit drivande i projektet, prästen Albin Tanke, kyrkorådets ordförande socialdemokraten Claes Block, fastighetstekniker Magnus Friberg, arkeologerna Rikard Hedvall, Caroline Arcini och Sofia Lindberg samt geofysikern Sara Johansson. Orgeln invigdes den 27 april under en orgelfestival i St Petri och konserter därifrån sänds i mitten av maj 2019 i P2 Live. En P2 Dokumentär av Lotta Malmstedt.
Oggi questa mia intervista alla Dottoressa De Petris è per sfatare la maggior parte dei falsi miti che ci sono in giro sull’alimentazione vegetale.Michela De Petris Nata a Milano. Laurea con lode in Medicina e Chirurgia nel 2000. Specialità, sempre con lode, in Scienza dell’Alimentazione nel 2004. Già medico specialista dell’Ospedale San Raffaele di Milano.Ricercatrice in studi di intervento alimentare presso l’Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori fino al 2008.Dietologa libero professionista Esperta in alimentazione vegetariana, vegana, macrobiotica, crudista e nella terapia nutrizionale del paziente oncologico.Membro del Comitato Medico Scientifico dell’Associazione Vegani Italiani (ASSOVEGAN) e dell’Istituto per la Certificazione Etica ed Ambientale (ICEA).Docente di Nutrizione Clinica nei corsi di Alimentazione e Benessere indetti dalla Regione Lombardia e dalla Provincia di Milano. Autrice di svariati libri : 1 guarire con la dieta vegan,2 buono sano vegano, 3 bimbo sano vegano, 4 mangio sano cucino vegan 5 scelta vegetariana e vita in biciclettaIniziamo con il cacao crudo, quello che fa bene! una passione che ci accomuna e ci ha fatto conoscere.Per poi parlare di qual è la miglior alimentazione per essere in forma oggi e costruire la salute del domani?Ancora in troppi hanno paura di avere delle carenze nutrizionali scegliendo un’alimentazione a base vegetale La dottoressa ci spiegherà perché si è arrivato a credere questo? Il primo passo più importante non è togliere gli alimenti di origine animale ma è di strutturare bene la propria alimentazione. È vero che per cambiare alimentazione bisogna per forza essere seguito da un nutrizionista?Tanti medici dicono che la carne fa bene, o meglio una certa quantità sembrerebbe indispensabile! È da tempo che viene ripetuta questa cosa, sarà vero o qualcosa è cambiato? Come posso compensare la carne?Il latte e i latticini animali sono sostituibili? È meglio il latte di mucca o il latte di mandorle?È possibile crescere dei bimbi con un’alimentazione a base vegetale? Anche donne in gravidanza possono seguire una dieta 100% vegetale?Si sente tanto parlare di vitamina B12: va davvero integrata e se sì perché?È proprio vere che carenze e problemi legati all’alimentazione sono solo per chi è vegano?per contattare la dott.ssa MICHELA DE PETRISinviare una email a:depetris@infinito.itoppure chiamare il numero: tel. 328.4747882https://www.facebook.com/micheladottoressa.depetris/
In today's edition of the podcast, Kim and Thabi are joined by Steven Petris. We discussed him becoming a Dad, being a Greek-Filipino New Zealander, and his budding bromance with Kim. To finish, we brought back our much loved segment, Know Your Stuff. Stay hydrated! Facebook: Waterboys | Instagram: Waterboys_nz | Email: Waterboysmedia@gmail.com
A sit down with Kim Petras to talk the new 'Turn Off The Light, Vol 1' mix tape, we meet Joe for hookup or hangup and from the chat Patrick and his friend Jennifer stop by to play a round of Family Feud!
Supralunar tar klivet upp på den stora scenen! Med nysläppt singel och video samt en stundande fullängdare går Petri Tuukil och hans mannar en ljus framtid tillmötes. Hör Petris spännande tankar och insikter om svenskt musikliv, att sätta upp mål, hur det är att spela inför en (1) betalade gäst, göra videos och mycket annat! SUPRALUNAR - For The Greater Good Of Rock'n'Roll - OFFICIAL VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=559qWQ8D5vs Följ Rockpodden; https://www.facebook.com/search/top/?init=quick&q=Rockpodden&tas=0.1694800944733892 https://www.instagram.com/rockpodden/
Sun, 11 Dec 2016 16:56:00 EST ht
In 2002, the Teas' Tea line of natural, unsweetened bottled tea was launched. The product line functions as the centerpiece of ITO EN (North America) Inc. for it upholds ITO EN's principles of Natural, Safe, Healthy, Well-Designed, and Delicious. The product was first introduced through wholesale distribution in New York City and the Tri-State area. The Dry eye zone is our portal. It's the information center where you can get things like consumer guides to various types of dry eye products, glossary definitions of dry eye terms, a reference list of BAK concentrations in prescription medications, a list of ongoing dry eye drug clinical trials, a chart comparing different types of punctual plugs, and much, much more.
In 2002, the Teas' Tea line of natural, unsweetened bottled tea was launched. The product line functions as the centerpiece of ITO EN (North America) Inc. for it upholds ITO EN's principles of Natural, Safe, Healthy, Well-Designed, and Delicious. The product was first introduced through wholesale distribution in New York City and the Tri-State area. The Dry eye zone is our portal. It's the information center where you can get things like consumer guides to various types of dry eye products, glossary definitions of dry eye terms, a reference list of BAK concentrations in prescription medications, a list of ongoing dry eye drug clinical trials, a chart comparing different types of punctual plugs, and much, much more.
In 2002, the Teas' Tea line of natural, unsweetened bottled tea was launched. The product line functions as the centerpiece of ITO EN (North America) Inc. for it upholds ITO EN's principles of Natural, Safe, Healthy, Well-Designed, and Delicious. The product was first introduced through wholesale distribution in New York City and the Tri-State area. The Dry eye zone is our portal. It's the information center where you can get things like consumer guides to various types of dry eye products, glossary definitions of dry eye terms, a reference list of BAK concentrations in prescription medications, a list of ongoing dry eye drug clinical trials, a chart comparing different types of punctual plugs, and much, much more.
Rebecca Petris started The Dry Eye Company and this website in 2005 as a dry eye information portal and community center for her fellow dry eye patients. Since then, it's grown and expanded in various ways, all focused on improving quality of life for people with dry eye. The Irlen Method is the only research-based method using colored overlays and filters. There are over 4,000 educators in school districts who have been trained, and millions of children use Irlen colored overlays and it is now being used in over 42 countries. The Irlen Method is non-invasive technology that uses colored overlays and filters to improve the brain's ability to process visual information. It is the only method scientifically proven to successfully correct the processing problems associated with Irlen Syndrome.
Rebecca Petris started The Dry Eye Company and this website in 2005 as a dry eye information portal and community center for her fellow dry eye patients. Since then, it's grown and expanded in various ways, all focused on improving quality of life for people with dry eye. The Irlen Method is the only research-based method using colored overlays and filters. There are over 4,000 educators in school districts who have been trained, and millions of children use Irlen colored overlays and it is now being used in over 42 countries. The Irlen Method is non-invasive technology that uses colored overlays and filters to improve the brain's ability to process visual information. It is the only method scientifically proven to successfully correct the processing problems associated with Irlen Syndrome.